- The Project Gutenberg eBook, Poems, by Oscar Wilde, Edited by Robert Ross
- 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
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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- Title: Poems
- with the Ballad of Reading Gaol
- Author: Oscar Wilde
- Editor: Robert Ross
- Release Date: March 31, 2013 [eBook #1057]
- [This file was first posted on September 24, 1997]
- [Last updated: July 2, 2014]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS***
- Transcribed from the 1913 Methuen & Co. edition by David Price, email
- ccx074@pglaf.org
- POEMS
- BY
- OSCAR WILDE
- WITH THE BALLAD OF
- READING GAOL
- * * * * *
- METHUEN & CO. LTD.
- 36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
- LONDON
- _Twelfth Edition_
- _First Published_—
- _Ravenna_ _1878_
- _Poems_ _1881_
- ,, _Fifth Edition_ _1882_
- _The Sphinx_ _1894_
- _The Ballad of Reading Gaol_ _1898_
- _First Issued by Methuen and Co._ (_Limited _March 1908_
- Editions on Handmade Paper and Japanese Vellum_)
- _Seventh Edition_ (_F’cap. 8vo_). _September 1909_
- _Eighth Edition_ ( ,, ,, ) _November 1909_
- _Ninth Edition_ ( ,, ,, ) _December 1909_
- _Tenth Edition_ ( ,, ,, ) _November 1910_
- _Eleventh Edition_ ( ,, ,, ) _December 1911_
- _Twelfth Edition_ ( ,, ,, ) _April 1913_
- NOTE
- _This collection of Wilde’s Poems contains the volume of_ 1881 _in its
- entirety_, ‘_The Sphinx_’, ‘_The Ballad of Reading Gaol_,’ _and_
- ‘_Ravenna_.’ _Of the Uncollected Poems published in the Uniform Edition
- of_ 1908, _a few_, _including the Translations from the Greek and the
- Polish_, _are omitted_. _Two new poems_, ‘_Désespoir_’ _and_ ‘_Pan_,’_
- which I have recently discovered in manuscript_, _are now printed for the
- first time_. _Particulars as to the original publication of each poem
- will be found in_ ‘_A Bibliography of the Poems of Oscar Wilde_,’ _by
- Stuart Mason_, _London_ 1907.
- _ROBERT ROSS_.
- CONTENTS
- POEMS (1881): PAGE
- Hélas! 3
- ELEUTHERIA:
- Sonnet To Liberty 7
- Ave Imperatrix 8
- To Milton 14
- Louis Napoleon 15
- Sonnet on the Massacre of the Christians in 16
- Bulgaria
- Quantum Mutata 17
- Libertatis Sacra Fames 18
- Theoretikos 19
- THE GARDEN OF EROS 21
- ROSA MYSTICA:
- Requiescat 39
- Sonnet on approaching Italy 40
- San Miniato 41
- Ave Maria Gratia Plena 42
- Italia 43
- Sonnet written in Holy Week at Genoa 44
- Rome Unvisited 45
- Urbs Sacra Æterna 49
- Sonnet on hearing the Dies Iræ sung in the Sistine 50
- Chapel
- Easter Day 51
- E Tenebris 52
- Vita Nuova 53
- Madonna Mia 54
- The New Helen 55
- THE BURDEN OF ITYS 61
- WIND FLOWERS:
- Impression du Matin 83
- Magdalen Walks 84
- Athanasia 86
- Serenade 89
- Endymion 91
- La Bella Donna della mia Mente 93
- Chanson 95
- CHARMIDES 97
- FLOWERS OF GOLD:
- Impressions: I. Les Silhouettes 135
- II. La Fuite de la Lune 136
- The Grave of Keats 137
- Theocritus: A Villanelle 138
- In the Gold Room: A Harmony 139
- Ballade de Marguerite 140
- The Dole of the King’s Daughter 143
- Amor Intellectualis 145
- Santa Decca 146
- A Vision 147
- Impression de Voyage 148
- The Grave of Shelley 149
- By the Arno 150
- IMPRESSIONS DE THÉÀTRE:
- Fabien dei Franchi 155
- Phèdre 156
- Sonnets written at the Lyceum Theatre
- I. Portia 157
- II. Queen Henrietta Maria 158
- III. Camma 159
- PANTHEA 161
- THE FOURTH MOVEMENT:
- Impression: Le Réveillon 175
- At Verona 176
- Apologia 177
- Quia Multum Amavi 179
- Silentium Amoris 180
- Her Voice 181
- My Voice 183
- Tædium Vitæ 184
- HUMANITAD 185
- FLOWER OF LOVE:
- ΓΛΥΚΥΠΙΚΡΟΣ ΕΡΩΣ 211
- UNCOLLECTED POEMS (1876–1893):
- From Spring Days to Winter 217
- Tristitiæ 219
- The True Knowledge 220
- Impressions: I. Le Jardin 221
- II. La Mer 222
- Under the Balcony 223
- The Harlot’s House 225
- Le Jardin des Tuileries 227
- On the Sale by Auction of Keats’ Love Letters 228
- The New Remorse 229
- Fantasisies Décoratives: I. Le Panneau 230
- II. Les Ballons 232
- Canzonet 233
- Symphony in Yellow 235
- In the Forest 236
- To my Wife: With a Copy of my Poems 237
- With a Copy of ‘A House of Pomegranates’ 238
- Roses and Rue 239
- Désespoir 242
- Pan: Double Villanelle 243
- THE SPHINX (1894) 245
- THE BALLAD OF READING GAOL (1898) 269
- RAVENNA (1878) 305
- POEMS
- HÉLAS!
- TO _drift with every passion till my soul_
- _Is a stringed lute on which all winds can play_,
- _Is it for this that I have given away_
- _Mine ancient wisdom, and austere control_?
- _Methinks my life is a twice-written scroll_
- _Scrawled over on some boyish holiday_
- _With idle songs for pipe and virelay_,
- _Which do but mar the secret of the whole_.
- _Surely there was a time I might have trod_
- _The sunlit heights, and from life’s dissonance_
- _Struck one clear chord to reach the ears of God_:
- _Is that time dead_? _lo_! _with a little rod_
- _I did but touch the honey of romance_—
- _And must I lose a soul’s inheritance_?
- ELEUTHERIA
- SONNET TO LIBERTY
- NOT that I love thy children, whose dull eyes
- See nothing save their own unlovely woe,
- Whose minds know nothing, nothing care to know,—
- But that the roar of thy Democracies,
- Thy reigns of Terror, thy great Anarchies,
- Mirror my wildest passions like the sea
- And give my rage a brother—! Liberty!
- For this sake only do thy dissonant cries
- Delight my discreet soul, else might all kings
- By bloody knout or treacherous cannonades
- Rob nations of their rights inviolate
- And I remain unmoved—and yet, and yet,
- These Christs that die upon the barricades,
- God knows it I am with them, in some things.
- AVE IMPERATRIX
- SET in this stormy Northern sea,
- Queen of these restless fields of tide,
- England! what shall men say of thee,
- Before whose feet the worlds divide?
- The earth, a brittle globe of glass,
- Lies in the hollow of thy hand,
- And through its heart of crystal pass,
- Like shadows through a twilight land,
- The spears of crimson-suited war,
- The long white-crested waves of fight,
- And all the deadly fires which are
- The torches of the lords of Night.
- The yellow leopards, strained and lean,
- The treacherous Russian knows so well,
- With gaping blackened jaws are seen
- Leap through the hail of screaming shell.
- The strong sea-lion of England’s wars
- Hath left his sapphire cave of sea,
- To battle with the storm that mars
- The stars of England’s chivalry.
- The brazen-throated clarion blows
- Across the Pathan’s reedy fen,
- And the high steeps of Indian snows
- Shake to the tread of armèd men.
- And many an Afghan chief, who lies
- Beneath his cool pomegranate-trees,
- Clutches his sword in fierce surmise
- When on the mountain-side he sees
- The fleet-foot Marri scout, who comes
- To tell how he hath heard afar
- The measured roll of English drums
- Beat at the gates of Kandahar.
- For southern wind and east wind meet
- Where, girt and crowned by sword and fire,
- England with bare and bloody feet
- Climbs the steep road of wide empire.
- O lonely Himalayan height,
- Grey pillar of the Indian sky,
- Where saw’st thou last in clanging flight
- Our wingèd dogs of Victory?
- The almond-groves of Samarcand,
- Bokhara, where red lilies blow,
- And Oxus, by whose yellow sand
- The grave white-turbaned merchants go:
- And on from thence to Ispahan,
- The gilded garden of the sun,
- Whence the long dusty caravan
- Brings cedar wood and vermilion;
- And that dread city of Cabool
- Set at the mountain’s scarpèd feet,
- Whose marble tanks are ever full
- With water for the noonday heat:
- Where through the narrow straight Bazaar
- A little maid Circassian
- Is led, a present from the Czar
- Unto some old and bearded khan,—
- Here have our wild war-eagles flown,
- And flapped wide wings in fiery fight;
- But the sad dove, that sits alone
- In England—she hath no delight.
- In vain the laughing girl will lean
- To greet her love with love-lit eyes:
- Down in some treacherous black ravine,
- Clutching his flag, the dead boy lies.
- And many a moon and sun will see
- The lingering wistful children wait
- To climb upon their father’s knee;
- And in each house made desolate
- Pale women who have lost their lord
- Will kiss the relics of the slain—
- Some tarnished epaulette—some sword—
- Poor toys to soothe such anguished pain.
- For not in quiet English fields
- Are these, our brothers, lain to rest,
- Where we might deck their broken shields
- With all the flowers the dead love best.
- For some are by the Delhi walls,
- And many in the Afghan land,
- And many where the Ganges falls
- Through seven mouths of shifting sand.
- And some in Russian waters lie,
- And others in the seas which are
- The portals to the East, or by
- The wind-swept heights of Trafalgar.
- O wandering graves! O restless sleep!
- O silence of the sunless day!
- O still ravine! O stormy deep!
- Give up your prey! Give up your prey!
- And thou whose wounds are never healed,
- Whose weary race is never won,
- O Cromwell’s England! must thou yield
- For every inch of ground a son?
- Go! crown with thorns thy gold-crowned head,
- Change thy glad song to song of pain;
- Wind and wild wave have got thy dead,
- And will not yield them back again.
- Wave and wild wind and foreign shore
- Possess the flower of English land—
- Lips that thy lips shall kiss no more,
- Hands that shall never clasp thy hand.
- What profit now that we have bound
- The whole round world with nets of gold,
- If hidden in our heart is found
- The care that groweth never old?
- What profit that our galleys ride,
- Pine-forest-like, on every main?
- Ruin and wreck are at our side,
- Grim warders of the House of Pain.
- Where are the brave, the strong, the fleet?
- Where is our English chivalry?
- Wild grasses are their burial-sheet,
- And sobbing waves their threnody.
- O loved ones lying far away,
- What word of love can dead lips send!
- O wasted dust! O senseless clay!
- Is this the end! is this the end!
- Peace, peace! we wrong the noble dead
- To vex their solemn slumber so;
- Though childless, and with thorn-crowned head,
- Up the steep road must England go,
- Yet when this fiery web is spun,
- Her watchmen shall descry from far
- The young Republic like a sun
- Rise from these crimson seas of war.
- TO MILTON
- MILTON! I think thy spirit hath passed away
- From these white cliffs and high-embattled towers;
- This gorgeous fiery-coloured world of ours
- Seems fallen into ashes dull and grey,
- And the age changed unto a mimic play
- Wherein we waste our else too-crowded hours:
- For all our pomp and pageantry and powers
- We are but fit to delve the common clay,
- Seeing this little isle on which we stand,
- This England, this sea-lion of the sea,
- By ignorant demagogues is held in fee,
- Who love her not: Dear God! is this the land
- Which bare a triple empire in her hand
- When Cromwell spake the word Democracy!
- LOUIS NAPOLEON
- EAGLE of Austerlitz! where were thy wings
- When far away upon a barbarous strand,
- In fight unequal, by an obscure hand,
- Fell the last scion of thy brood of Kings!
- Poor boy! thou shalt not flaunt thy cloak of red,
- Or ride in state through Paris in the van
- Of thy returning legions, but instead
- Thy mother France, free and republican,
- Shall on thy dead and crownless forehead place
- The better laurels of a soldier’s crown,
- That not dishonoured should thy soul go down
- To tell the mighty Sire of thy race
- That France hath kissed the mouth of Liberty,
- And found it sweeter than his honied bees,
- And that the giant wave Democracy
- Breaks on the shores where Kings lay couched at ease.
- SONNET
- ON THE MASSACRE OF THE CHRISTIANS IN BULGARIA
- CHRIST, dost Thou live indeed? or are Thy bones
- Still straitened in their rock-hewn sepulchre?
- And was Thy Rising only dreamed by her
- Whose love of Thee for all her sin atones?
- For here the air is horrid with men’s groans,
- The priests who call upon Thy name are slain,
- Dost Thou not hear the bitter wail of pain
- From those whose children lie upon the stones?
- Come down, O Son of God! incestuous gloom
- Curtains the land, and through the starless night
- Over Thy Cross a Crescent moon I see!
- If Thou in very truth didst burst the tomb
- Come down, O Son of Man! and show Thy might
- Lest Mahomet be crowned instead of Thee!
- QUANTUM MUTATA
- THERE was a time in Europe long ago
- When no man died for freedom anywhere,
- But England’s lion leaping from its lair
- Laid hands on the oppressor! it was so
- While England could a great Republic show.
- Witness the men of Piedmont, chiefest care
- Of Cromwell, when with impotent despair
- The Pontiff in his painted portico
- Trembled before our stern ambassadors.
- How comes it then that from such high estate
- We have thus fallen, save that Luxury
- With barren merchandise piles up the gate
- Where noble thoughts and deeds should enter by:
- Else might we still be Milton’s heritors.
- LIBERTATIS SACRA FAMES
- ALBEIT nurtured in democracy,
- And liking best that state republican
- Where every man is Kinglike and no man
- Is crowned above his fellows, yet I see,
- Spite of this modern fret for Liberty,
- Better the rule of One, whom all obey,
- Than to let clamorous demagogues betray
- Our freedom with the kiss of anarchy.
- Wherefore I love them not whose hands profane
- Plant the red flag upon the piled-up street
- For no right cause, beneath whose ignorant reign
- Arts, Culture, Reverence, Honour, all things fade,
- Save Treason and the dagger of her trade,
- Or Murder with his silent bloody feet.
- THEORETIKOS
- THIS mighty empire hath but feet of clay:
- Of all its ancient chivalry and might
- Our little island is forsaken quite:
- Some enemy hath stolen its crown of bay,
- And from its hills that voice hath passed away
- Which spake of Freedom: O come out of it,
- Come out of it, my Soul, thou art not fit
- For this vile traffic-house, where day by day
- Wisdom and reverence are sold at mart,
- And the rude people rage with ignorant cries
- Against an heritage of centuries.
- It mars my calm: wherefore in dreams of Art
- And loftiest culture I would stand apart,
- Neither for God, nor for his enemies.
- THE GARDEN OF EROS
- IT is full summer now, the heart of June;
- Not yet the sunburnt reapers are astir
- Upon the upland meadow where too soon
- Rich autumn time, the season’s usurer,
- Will lend his hoarded gold to all the trees,
- And see his treasure scattered by the wild and spendthrift breeze.
- Too soon indeed! yet here the daffodil,
- That love-child of the Spring, has lingered on
- To vex the rose with jealousy, and still
- The harebell spreads her azure pavilion,
- And like a strayed and wandering reveller
- Abandoned of its brothers, whom long since June’s messenger
- The missel-thrush has frighted from the glade,
- One pale narcissus loiters fearfully
- Close to a shadowy nook, where half afraid
- Of their own loveliness some violets lie
- That will not look the gold sun in the face
- For fear of too much splendour,—ah! methinks it is a place
- Which should be trodden by Persephone
- When wearied of the flowerless fields of Dis!
- Or danced on by the lads of Arcady!
- The hidden secret of eternal bliss
- Known to the Grecian here a man might find,
- Ah! you and I may find it now if Love and Sleep be kind.
- There are the flowers which mourning Herakles
- Strewed on the tomb of Hylas, columbine,
- Its white doves all a-flutter where the breeze
- Kissed them too harshly, the small celandine,
- That yellow-kirtled chorister of eve,
- And lilac lady’s-smock,—but let them bloom alone, and leave
- Yon spirèd hollyhock red-crocketed
- To sway its silent chimes, else must the bee,
- Its little bellringer, go seek instead
- Some other pleasaunce; the anemone
- That weeps at daybreak, like a silly girl
- Before her love, and hardly lets the butterflies unfurl
- Their painted wings beside it,—bid it pine
- In pale virginity; the winter snow
- Will suit it better than those lips of thine
- Whose fires would but scorch it, rather go
- And pluck that amorous flower which blooms alone,
- Fed by the pander wind with dust of kisses not its own.
- The trumpet-mouths of red convolvulus
- So dear to maidens, creamy meadow-sweet
- Whiter than Juno’s throat and odorous
- As all Arabia, hyacinths the feet
- Of Huntress Dian would be loth to mar
- For any dappled fawn,—pluck these, and those fond flowers which are
- Fairer than what Queen Venus trod upon
- Beneath the pines of Ida, eucharis,
- That morning star which does not dread the sun,
- And budding marjoram which but to kiss
- Would sweeten Cytheræa’s lips and make
- Adonis jealous,—these for thy head,—and for thy girdle take
- Yon curving spray of purple clematis
- Whose gorgeous dye outflames the Tyrian King,
- And foxgloves with their nodding chalices,
- But that one narciss which the startled Spring
- Let from her kirtle fall when first she heard
- In her own woods the wild tempestuous song of summer’s bird,
- Ah! leave it for a subtle memory
- Of those sweet tremulous days of rain and sun,
- When April laughed between her tears to see
- The early primrose with shy footsteps run
- From the gnarled oak-tree roots till all the wold,
- Spite of its brown and trampled leaves, grew bright with shimmering
- gold.
- Nay, pluck it too, it is not half so sweet
- As thou thyself, my soul’s idolatry!
- And when thou art a-wearied at thy feet
- Shall oxlips weave their brightest tapestry,
- For thee the woodbine shall forget its pride
- And veil its tangled whorls, and thou shalt walk on daisies pied.
- And I will cut a reed by yonder spring
- And make the wood-gods jealous, and old Pan
- Wonder what young intruder dares to sing
- In these still haunts, where never foot of man
- Should tread at evening, lest he chance to spy
- The marble limbs of Artemis and all her company.
- And I will tell thee why the jacinth wears
- Such dread embroidery of dolorous moan,
- And why the hapless nightingale forbears
- To sing her song at noon, but weeps alone
- When the fleet swallow sleeps, and rich men feast,
- And why the laurel trembles when she sees the lightening east.
- And I will sing how sad Proserpina
- Unto a grave and gloomy Lord was wed,
- And lure the silver-breasted Helena
- Back from the lotus meadows of the dead,
- So shalt thou see that awful loveliness
- For which two mighty Hosts met fearfully in war’s abyss!
- And then I’ll pipe to thee that Grecian tale
- How Cynthia loves the lad Endymion,
- And hidden in a grey and misty veil
- Hies to the cliffs of Latmos once the Sun
- Leaps from his ocean bed in fruitless chase
- Of those pale flying feet which fade away in his embrace.
- And if my flute can breathe sweet melody,
- We may behold Her face who long ago
- Dwelt among men by the Ægean sea,
- And whose sad house with pillaged portico
- And friezeless wall and columns toppled down
- Looms o’er the ruins of that fair and violet cinctured town.
- Spirit of Beauty! tarry still awhile,
- They are not dead, thine ancient votaries;
- Some few there are to whom thy radiant smile
- Is better than a thousand victories,
- Though all the nobly slain of Waterloo
- Rise up in wrath against them! tarry still, there are a few
- Who for thy sake would give their manlihood
- And consecrate their being; I at least
- Have done so, made thy lips my daily food,
- And in thy temples found a goodlier feast
- Than this starved age can give me, spite of all
- Its new-found creeds so sceptical and so dogmatical.
- Here not Cephissos, not Ilissos flows,
- The woods of white Colonos are not here,
- On our bleak hills the olive never blows,
- No simple priest conducts his lowing steer
- Up the steep marble way, nor through the town
- Do laughing maidens bear to thee the crocus-flowered gown.
- Yet tarry! for the boy who loved thee best,
- Whose very name should be a memory
- To make thee linger, sleeps in silent rest
- Beneath the Roman walls, and melody
- Still mourns her sweetest lyre; none can play
- The lute of Adonais: with his lips Song passed away.
- Nay, when Keats died the Muses still had left
- One silver voice to sing his threnody,
- But ah! too soon of it we were bereft
- When on that riven night and stormy sea
- Panthea claimed her singer as her own,
- And slew the mouth that praised her; since which time we walk alone,
- Save for that fiery heart, that morning star
- Of re-arisen England, whose clear eye
- Saw from our tottering throne and waste of war
- The grand Greek limbs of young Democracy
- Rise mightily like Hesperus and bring
- The great Republic! him at least thy love hath taught to sing,
- And he hath been with thee at Thessaly,
- And seen white Atalanta fleet of foot
- In passionless and fierce virginity
- Hunting the tuskèd boar, his honied lute
- Hath pierced the cavern of the hollow hill,
- And Venus laughs to know one knee will bow before her still.
- And he hath kissed the lips of Proserpine,
- And sung the Galilæan’s requiem,
- That wounded forehead dashed with blood and wine
- He hath discrowned, the Ancient Gods in him
- Have found their last, most ardent worshipper,
- And the new Sign grows grey and dim before its conqueror.
- Spirit of Beauty! tarry with us still,
- It is not quenched the torch of poesy,
- The star that shook above the Eastern hill
- Holds unassailed its argent armoury
- From all the gathering gloom and fretful fight—
- O tarry with us still! for through the long and common night,
- Morris, our sweet and simple Chaucer’s child,
- Dear heritor of Spenser’s tuneful reed,
- With soft and sylvan pipe has oft beguiled
- The weary soul of man in troublous need,
- And from the far and flowerless fields of ice
- Has brought fair flowers to make an earthly paradise.
- We know them all, Gudrun the strong men’s bride,
- Aslaug and Olafson we know them all,
- How giant Grettir fought and Sigurd died,
- And what enchantment held the king in thrall
- When lonely Brynhild wrestled with the powers
- That war against all passion, ah! how oft through summer hours,
- Long listless summer hours when the noon
- Being enamoured of a damask rose
- Forgets to journey westward, till the moon
- The pale usurper of its tribute grows
- From a thin sickle to a silver shield
- And chides its loitering car—how oft, in some cool grassy field
- Far from the cricket-ground and noisy eight,
- At Bagley, where the rustling bluebells come
- Almost before the blackbird finds a mate
- And overstay the swallow, and the hum
- Of many murmuring bees flits through the leaves,
- Have I lain poring on the dreamy tales his fancy weaves,
- And through their unreal woes and mimic pain
- Wept for myself, and so was purified,
- And in their simple mirth grew glad again;
- For as I sailed upon that pictured tide
- The strength and splendour of the storm was mine
- Without the storm’s red ruin, for the singer is divine;
- The little laugh of water falling down
- Is not so musical, the clammy gold
- Close hoarded in the tiny waxen town
- Has less of sweetness in it, and the old
- Half-withered reeds that waved in Arcady
- Touched by his lips break forth again to fresher harmony.
- Spirit of Beauty, tarry yet awhile!
- Although the cheating merchants of the mart
- With iron roads profane our lovely isle,
- And break on whirling wheels the limbs of Art,
- Ay! though the crowded factories beget
- The blindworm Ignorance that slays the soul, O tarry yet!
- For One at least there is,—He bears his name
- From Dante and the seraph Gabriel,—
- Whose double laurels burn with deathless flame
- To light thine altar; He too loves thee well,
- Who saw old Merlin lured in Vivien’s snare,
- And the white feet of angels coming down the golden stair,
- Loves thee so well, that all the World for him
- A gorgeous-coloured vestiture must wear,
- And Sorrow take a purple diadem,
- Or else be no more Sorrow, and Despair
- Gild its own thorns, and Pain, like Adon, be
- Even in anguish beautiful;—such is the empery
- Which Painters hold, and such the heritage
- This gentle solemn Spirit doth possess,
- Being a better mirror of his age
- In all his pity, love, and weariness,
- Than those who can but copy common things,
- And leave the Soul unpainted with its mighty questionings.
- But they are few, and all romance has flown,
- And men can prophesy about the sun,
- And lecture on his arrows—how, alone,
- Through a waste void the soulless atoms run,
- How from each tree its weeping nymph has fled,
- And that no more ’mid English reeds a Naiad shows her head.
- Methinks these new Actæons boast too soon
- That they have spied on beauty; what if we
- Have analysed the rainbow, robbed the moon
- Of her most ancient, chastest mystery,
- Shall I, the last Endymion, lose all hope
- Because rude eyes peer at my mistress through a telescope!
- What profit if this scientific age
- Burst through our gates with all its retinue
- Of modern miracles! Can it assuage
- One lover’s breaking heart? what can it do
- To make one life more beautiful, one day
- More godlike in its period? but now the Age of Clay
- Returns in horrid cycle, and the earth
- Hath borne again a noisy progeny
- Of ignorant Titans, whose ungodly birth
- Hurls them against the august hierarchy
- Which sat upon Olympus; to the Dust
- They have appealed, and to that barren arbiter they must
- Repair for judgment; let them, if they can,
- From Natural Warfare and insensate Chance,
- Create the new Ideal rule for man!
- Methinks that was not my inheritance;
- For I was nurtured otherwise, my soul
- Passes from higher heights of life to a more supreme goal.
- Lo! while we spake the earth did turn away
- Her visage from the God, and Hecate’s boat
- Rose silver-laden, till the jealous day
- Blew all its torches out: I did not note
- The waning hours, to young Endymions
- Time’s palsied fingers count in vain his rosary of suns!
- Mark how the yellow iris wearily
- Leans back its throat, as though it would be kissed
- By its false chamberer, the dragon-fly,
- Who, like a blue vein on a girl’s white wrist,
- Sleeps on that snowy primrose of the night,
- Which ’gins to flush with crimson shame, and die beneath the light.
- Come let us go, against the pallid shield
- Of the wan sky the almond blossoms gleam,
- The corncrake nested in the unmown field
- Answers its mate, across the misty stream
- On fitful wing the startled curlews fly,
- And in his sedgy bed the lark, for joy that Day is nigh,
- Scatters the pearlèd dew from off the grass,
- In tremulous ecstasy to greet the sun,
- Who soon in gilded panoply will pass
- Forth from yon orange-curtained pavilion
- Hung in the burning east: see, the red rim
- O’ertops the expectant hills! it is the God! for love of him
- Already the shrill lark is out of sight,
- Flooding with waves of song this silent dell,—
- Ah! there is something more in that bird’s flight
- Than could be tested in a crucible!—
- But the air freshens, let us go, why soon
- The woodmen will be here; how we have lived this night of June!
- ROSA MYSTICA
- REQUIESCAT
- TREAD lightly, she is near
- Under the snow,
- Speak gently, she can hear
- The daisies grow.
- All her bright golden hair
- Tarnished with rust,
- She that was young and fair
- Fallen to dust.
- Lily-like, white as snow,
- She hardly knew
- She was a woman, so
- Sweetly she grew.
- Coffin-board, heavy stone,
- Lie on her breast,
- I vex my heart alone,
- She is at rest.
- Peace, Peace, she cannot hear
- Lyre or sonnet,
- All my life’s buried here,
- Heap earth upon it.
- AVIGNON.
- SONNET ON APPROACHING ITALY
- I REACHED the Alps: the soul within me burned,
- Italia, my Italia, at thy name:
- And when from out the mountain’s heart I came
- And saw the land for which my life had yearned,
- I laughed as one who some great prize had earned:
- And musing on the marvel of thy fame
- I watched the day, till marked with wounds of flame
- The turquoise sky to burnished gold was turned.
- The pine-trees waved as waves a woman’s hair,
- And in the orchards every twining spray
- Was breaking into flakes of blossoming foam:
- But when I knew that far away at Rome
- In evil bonds a second Peter lay,
- I wept to see the land so very fair.
- TURIN.
- SAN MINIATO
- SEE, I have climbed the mountain side
- Up to this holy house of God,
- Where once that Angel-Painter trod
- Who saw the heavens opened wide,
- And throned upon the crescent moon
- The Virginal white Queen of Grace,—
- Mary! could I but see thy face
- Death could not come at all too soon.
- O crowned by God with thorns and pain!
- Mother of Christ! O mystic wife!
- My heart is weary of this life
- And over-sad to sing again.
- O crowned by God with love and flame!
- O crowned by Christ the Holy One!
- O listen ere the searching sun
- Show to the world my sin and shame.
- AVE MARIA GRATIA PLENA
- WAS this His coming! I had hoped to see
- A scene of wondrous glory, as was told
- Of some great God who in a rain of gold
- Broke open bars and fell on Danae:
- Or a dread vision as when Semele
- Sickening for love and unappeased desire
- Prayed to see God’s clear body, and the fire
- Caught her brown limbs and slew her utterly:
- With such glad dreams I sought this holy place,
- And now with wondering eyes and heart I stand
- Before this supreme mystery of Love:
- Some kneeling girl with passionless pale face,
- An angel with a lily in his hand,
- And over both the white wings of a Dove.
- FLORENCE.
- ITALIA
- ITALIA! thou art fallen, though with sheen
- Of battle-spears thy clamorous armies stride
- From the north Alps to the Sicilian tide!
- Ay! fallen, though the nations hail thee Queen
- Because rich gold in every town is seen,
- And on thy sapphire-lake in tossing pride
- Of wind-filled vans thy myriad galleys ride
- Beneath one flag of red and white and green.
- O Fair and Strong! O Strong and Fair in vain!
- Look southward where Rome’s desecrated town
- Lies mourning for her God-anointed King!
- Look heaven-ward! shall God allow this thing?
- Nay! but some flame-girt Raphael shall come down,
- And smite the Spoiler with the sword of pain.
- VENICE.
- SONNET
- WRITTEN IN HOLY WEEK AT GENOA
- I WANDERED through Scoglietto’s far retreat,
- The oranges on each o’erhanging spray
- Burned as bright lamps of gold to shame the day;
- Some startled bird with fluttering wings and fleet
- Made snow of all the blossoms; at my feet
- Like silver moons the pale narcissi lay:
- And the curved waves that streaked the great green bay
- Laughed i’ the sun, and life seemed very sweet.
- Outside the young boy-priest passed singing clear,
- ‘Jesus the son of Mary has been slain,
- O come and fill His sepulchre with flowers.’
- Ah, God! Ah, God! those dear Hellenic hours
- Had drowned all memory of Thy bitter pain,
- The Cross, the Crown, the Soldiers and the Spear.
- ROME UNVISITED
- I.
- THE corn has turned from grey to red,
- Since first my spirit wandered forth
- From the drear cities of the north,
- And to Italia’s mountains fled.
- And here I set my face towards home,
- For all my pilgrimage is done,
- Although, methinks, yon blood-red sun
- Marshals the way to Holy Rome.
- O Blessed Lady, who dost hold
- Upon the seven hills thy reign!
- O Mother without blot or stain,
- Crowned with bright crowns of triple gold!
- O Roma, Roma, at thy feet
- I lay this barren gift of song!
- For, ah! the way is steep and long
- That leads unto thy sacred street.
- II.
- AND yet what joy it were for me
- To turn my feet unto the south,
- And journeying towards the Tiber mouth
- To kneel again at Fiesole!
- And wandering through the tangled pines
- That break the gold of Arno’s stream,
- To see the purple mist and gleam
- Of morning on the Apennines
- By many a vineyard-hidden home,
- Orchard and olive-garden grey,
- Till from the drear Campagna’s way
- The seven hills bear up the dome!
- III.
- A PILGRIM from the northern seas—
- What joy for me to seek alone
- The wondrous temple and the throne
- Of him who holds the awful keys!
- When, bright with purple and with gold
- Come priest and holy cardinal,
- And borne above the heads of all
- The gentle Shepherd of the Fold.
- O joy to see before I die
- The only God-anointed king,
- And hear the silver trumpets ring
- A triumph as he passes by!
- Or at the brazen-pillared shrine
- Holds high the mystic sacrifice,
- And shows his God to human eyes
- Beneath the veil of bread and wine.
- IV.
- FOR lo, what changes time can bring!
- The cycles of revolving years
- May free my heart from all its fears,
- And teach my lips a song to sing.
- Before yon field of trembling gold
- Is garnered into dusty sheaves,
- Or ere the autumn’s scarlet leaves
- Flutter as birds adown the wold,
- I may have run the glorious race,
- And caught the torch while yet aflame,
- And called upon the holy name
- Of Him who now doth hide His face.
- ARONA.
- URBS SACRA ÆTERNA
- ROME! what a scroll of History thine has been;
- In the first days thy sword republican
- Ruled the whole world for many an age’s span:
- Then of the peoples wert thou royal Queen,
- Till in thy streets the bearded Goth was seen;
- And now upon thy walls the breezes fan
- (Ah, city crowned by God, discrowned by man!)
- The hated flag of red and white and green.
- When was thy glory! when in search for power
- Thine eagles flew to greet the double sun,
- And the wild nations shuddered at thy rod?
- Nay, but thy glory tarried for this hour,
- When pilgrims kneel before the Holy One,
- The prisoned shepherd of the Church of God.
- MONTRE MARIO.
- SONNET
- ON HEARING THE DIES IRÆ SUNG IN THE SISTINE CHAPEL
- NAY, Lord, not thus! white lilies in the spring,
- Sad olive-groves, or silver-breasted dove,
- Teach me more clearly of Thy life and love
- Than terrors of red flame and thundering.
- The hillside vines dear memories of Thee bring:
- A bird at evening flying to its nest
- Tells me of One who had no place of rest:
- I think it is of Thee the sparrows sing.
- Come rather on some autumn afternoon,
- When red and brown are burnished on the leaves,
- And the fields echo to the gleaner’s song,
- Come when the splendid fulness of the moon
- Looks down upon the rows of golden sheaves,
- And reap Thy harvest: we have waited long.
- EASTER DAY
- THE silver trumpets rang across the Dome:
- The people knelt upon the ground with awe:
- And borne upon the necks of men I saw,
- Like some great God, the Holy Lord of Rome.
- Priest-like, he wore a robe more white than foam,
- And, king-like, swathed himself in royal red,
- Three crowns of gold rose high upon his head:
- In splendour and in light the Pope passed home.
- My heart stole back across wide wastes of years
- To One who wandered by a lonely sea,
- And sought in vain for any place of rest:
- ‘Foxes have holes, and every bird its nest.
- I, only I, must wander wearily,
- And bruise my feet, and drink wine salt with tears.’
- E TENEBRIS
- COME down, O Christ, and help me! reach Thy hand,
- For I am drowning in a stormier sea
- Than Simon on Thy lake of Galilee:
- The wine of life is spilt upon the sand,
- My heart is as some famine-murdered land
- Whence all good things have perished utterly,
- And well I know my soul in Hell must lie
- If I this night before God’s throne should stand.
- ‘He sleeps perchance, or rideth to the chase,
- Like Baal, when his prophets howled that name
- From morn to noon on Carmel’s smitten height.’
- Nay, peace, I shall behold, before the night,
- The feet of brass, the robe more white than flame,
- The wounded hands, the weary human face.
- VITA NUOVA
- I STOOD by the unvintageable sea
- Till the wet waves drenched face and hair with spray;
- The long red fires of the dying day
- Burned in the west; the wind piped drearily;
- And to the land the clamorous gulls did flee:
- ‘Alas!’ I cried, ‘my life is full of pain,
- And who can garner fruit or golden grain
- From these waste fields which travail ceaselessly!’
- My nets gaped wide with many a break and flaw,
- Nathless I threw them as my final cast
- Into the sea, and waited for the end.
- When lo! a sudden glory! and I saw
- From the black waters of my tortured past
- The argent splendour of white limbs ascend!
- MADONNA MIA
- A LILY-GIRL, not made for this world’s pain,
- With brown, soft hair close braided by her ears,
- And longing eyes half veiled by slumberous tears
- Like bluest water seen through mists of rain:
- Pale cheeks whereon no love hath left its stain,
- Red underlip drawn in for fear of love,
- And white throat, whiter than the silvered dove,
- Through whose wan marble creeps one purple vein.
- Yet, though my lips shall praise her without cease,
- Even to kiss her feet I am not bold,
- Being o’ershadowed by the wings of awe,
- Like Dante, when he stood with Beatrice
- Beneath the flaming Lion’s breast, and saw
- The seventh Crystal, and the Stair of Gold.
- THE NEW HELEN
- WHERE hast thou been since round the walls of Troy
- The sons of God fought in that great emprise?
- Why dost thou walk our common earth again?
- Hast thou forgotten that impassioned boy,
- His purple galley and his Tyrian men
- And treacherous Aphrodite’s mocking eyes?
- For surely it was thou, who, like a star
- Hung in the silver silence of the night,
- Didst lure the Old World’s chivalry and might
- Into the clamorous crimson waves of war!
- Or didst thou rule the fire-laden moon?
- In amorous Sidon was thy temple built
- Over the light and laughter of the sea
- Where, behind lattice scarlet-wrought and gilt,
- Some brown-limbed girl did weave thee tapestry,
- All through the waste and wearied hours of noon;
- Till her wan cheek with flame of passion burned,
- And she rose up the sea-washed lips to kiss
- Of some glad Cyprian sailor, safe returned
- From Calpé and the cliffs of Herakles!
- No! thou art Helen, and none other one!
- It was for thee that young Sarpedôn died,
- And Memnôn’s manhood was untimely spent;
- It was for thee gold-crested Hector tried
- With Thetis’ child that evil race to run,
- In the last year of thy beleaguerment;
- Ay! even now the glory of thy fame
- Burns in those fields of trampled asphodel,
- Where the high lords whom Ilion knew so well
- Clash ghostly shields, and call upon thy name.
- Where hast thou been? in that enchanted land
- Whose slumbering vales forlorn Calypso knew,
- Where never mower rose at break of day
- But all unswathed the trammelling grasses grew,
- And the sad shepherd saw the tall corn stand
- Till summer’s red had changed to withered grey?
- Didst thou lie there by some Lethæan stream
- Deep brooding on thine ancient memory,
- The crash of broken spears, the fiery gleam
- From shivered helm, the Grecian battle-cry?
- Nay, thou wert hidden in that hollow hill
- With one who is forgotten utterly,
- That discrowned Queen men call the Erycine;
- Hidden away that never mightst thou see
- The face of Her, before whose mouldering shrine
- To-day at Rome the silent nations kneel;
- Who gat from Love no joyous gladdening,
- But only Love’s intolerable pain,
- Only a sword to pierce her heart in twain,
- Only the bitterness of child-bearing.
- The lotus-leaves which heal the wounds of Death
- Lie in thy hand; O, be thou kind to me,
- While yet I know the summer of my days;
- For hardly can my tremulous lips draw breath
- To fill the silver trumpet with thy praise,
- So bowed am I before thy mystery;
- So bowed and broken on Love’s terrible wheel,
- That I have lost all hope and heart to sing,
- Yet care I not what ruin time may bring
- If in thy temple thou wilt let me kneel.
- Alas, alas, thou wilt not tarry here,
- But, like that bird, the servant of the sun,
- Who flies before the north wind and the night,
- So wilt thou fly our evil land and drear,
- Back to the tower of thine old delight,
- And the red lips of young Euphorion;
- Nor shall I ever see thy face again,
- But in this poisonous garden-close must stay,
- Crowning my brows with the thorn-crown of pain,
- Till all my loveless life shall pass away.
- O Helen! Helen! Helen! yet a while,
- Yet for a little while, O, tarry here,
- Till the dawn cometh and the shadows flee!
- For in the gladsome sunlight of thy smile
- Of heaven or hell I have no thought or fear,
- Seeing I know no other god but thee:
- No other god save him, before whose feet
- In nets of gold the tired planets move,
- The incarnate spirit of spiritual love
- Who in thy body holds his joyous seat.
- Thou wert not born as common women are!
- But, girt with silver splendour of the foam,
- Didst from the depths of sapphire seas arise!
- And at thy coming some immortal star,
- Bearded with flame, blazed in the Eastern skies,
- And waked the shepherds on thine island-home.
- Thou shalt not die: no asps of Egypt creep
- Close at thy heels to taint the delicate air;
- No sullen-blooming poppies stain thy hair,
- Those scarlet heralds of eternal sleep.
- Lily of love, pure and inviolate!
- Tower of ivory! red rose of fire!
- Thou hast come down our darkness to illume:
- For we, close-caught in the wide nets of Fate,
- Wearied with waiting for the World’s Desire,
- Aimlessly wandered in the House of gloom,
- Aimlessly sought some slumberous anodyne
- For wasted lives, for lingering wretchedness,
- Till we beheld thy re-arisen shrine,
- And the white glory of thy loveliness.
- THE BURDEN OF ITYS
- THIS English Thames is holier far than Rome,
- Those harebells like a sudden flush of sea
- Breaking across the woodland, with the foam
- Of meadow-sweet and white anemone
- To fleck their blue waves,—God is likelier there
- Than hidden in that crystal-hearted star the pale monks bear!
- Those violet-gleaming butterflies that take
- Yon creamy lily for their pavilion
- Are monsignores, and where the rushes shake
- A lazy pike lies basking in the sun,
- His eyes half shut,—he is some mitred old
- Bishop in _partibus_! look at those gaudy scales all green and gold.
- The wind the restless prisoner of the trees
- Does well for Palæstrina, one would say
- The mighty master’s hands were on the keys
- Of the Maria organ, which they play
- When early on some sapphire Easter morn
- In a high litter red as blood or sin the Pope is borne
- From his dark House out to the Balcony
- Above the bronze gates and the crowded square,
- Whose very fountains seem for ecstasy
- To toss their silver lances in the air,
- And stretching out weak hands to East and West
- In vain sends peace to peaceless lands, to restless nations rest.
- Is not yon lingering orange after-glow
- That stays to vex the moon more fair than all
- Rome’s lordliest pageants! strange, a year ago
- I knelt before some crimson Cardinal
- Who bare the Host across the Esquiline,
- And now—those common poppies in the wheat seem twice as fine.
- The blue-green beanfields yonder, tremulous
- With the last shower, sweeter perfume bring
- Through this cool evening than the odorous
- Flame-jewelled censers the young deacons swing,
- When the grey priest unlocks the curtained shrine,
- And makes God’s body from the common fruit of corn and vine.
- Poor Fra Giovanni bawling at the mass
- Were out of tune now, for a small brown bird
- Sings overhead, and through the long cool grass
- I see that throbbing throat which once I heard
- On starlit hills of flower-starred Arcady,
- Once where the white and crescent sand of Salamis meets sea.
- Sweet is the swallow twittering on the eaves
- At daybreak, when the mower whets his scythe,
- And stock-doves murmur, and the milkmaid leaves
- Her little lonely bed, and carols blithe
- To see the heavy-lowing cattle wait
- Stretching their huge and dripping mouths across the farmyard gate.
- And sweet the hops upon the Kentish leas,
- And sweet the wind that lifts the new-mown hay,
- And sweet the fretful swarms of grumbling bees
- That round and round the linden blossoms play;
- And sweet the heifer breathing in the stall,
- And the green bursting figs that hang upon the red-brick wall,
- And sweet to hear the cuckoo mock the spring
- While the last violet loiters by the well,
- And sweet to hear the shepherd Daphnis sing
- The song of Linus through a sunny dell
- Of warm Arcadia where the corn is gold
- And the slight lithe-limbed reapers dance about the wattled fold.
- And sweet with young Lycoris to recline
- In some Illyrian valley far away,
- Where canopied on herbs amaracine
- We too might waste the summer-trancèd day
- Matching our reeds in sportive rivalry,
- While far beneath us frets the troubled purple of the sea.
- But sweeter far if silver-sandalled foot
- Of some long-hidden God should ever tread
- The Nuneham meadows, if with reeded flute
- Pressed to his lips some Faun might raise his head
- By the green water-flags, ah! sweet indeed
- To see the heavenly herdsman call his white-fleeced flock to feed.
- Then sing to me thou tuneful chorister,
- Though what thou sing’st be thine own requiem!
- Tell me thy tale thou hapless chronicler
- Of thine own tragedies! do not contemn
- These unfamiliar haunts, this English field,
- For many a lovely coronal our northern isle can yield
- Which Grecian meadows know not, many a rose
- Which all day long in vales Æolian
- A lad might seek in vain for over-grows
- Our hedges like a wanton courtesan
- Unthrifty of its beauty; lilies too
- Ilissos never mirrored star our streams, and cockles blue
- Dot the green wheat which, though they are the signs
- For swallows going south, would never spread
- Their azure tents between the Attic vines;
- Even that little weed of ragged red,
- Which bids the robin pipe, in Arcady
- Would be a trespasser, and many an unsung elegy
- Sleeps in the reeds that fringe our winding Thames
- Which to awake were sweeter ravishment
- Than ever Syrinx wept for; diadems
- Of brown bee-studded orchids which were meant
- For Cytheræa’s brows are hidden here
- Unknown to Cytheræa, and by yonder pasturing steer
- There is a tiny yellow daffodil,
- The butterfly can see it from afar,
- Although one summer evening’s dew could fill
- Its little cup twice over ere the star
- Had called the lazy shepherd to his fold
- And be no prodigal; each leaf is flecked with spotted gold
- As if Jove’s gorgeous leman Danae
- Hot from his gilded arms had stooped to kiss
- The trembling petals, or young Mercury
- Low-flying to the dusky ford of Dis
- Had with one feather of his pinions
- Just brushed them! the slight stem which bears the burden of its suns
- Is hardly thicker than the gossamer,
- Or poor Arachne’s silver tapestry,—
- Men say it bloomed upon the sepulchre
- Of One I sometime worshipped, but to me
- It seems to bring diviner memories
- Of faun-loved Heliconian glades and blue nymph-haunted seas,
- Of an untrodden vale at Tempe where
- On the clear river’s marge Narcissus lies,
- The tangle of the forest in his hair,
- The silence of the woodland in his eyes,
- Wooing that drifting imagery which is
- No sooner kissed than broken; memories of Salmacis
- Who is not boy nor girl and yet is both,
- Fed by two fires and unsatisfied
- Through their excess, each passion being loth
- For love’s own sake to leave the other’s side
- Yet killing love by staying; memories
- Of Oreads peeping through the leaves of silent moonlit trees,
- Of lonely Ariadne on the wharf
- At Naxos, when she saw the treacherous crew
- Far out at sea, and waved her crimson scarf
- And called false Theseus back again nor knew
- That Dionysos on an amber pard
- Was close behind her; memories of what Mæonia’s bard
- With sightless eyes beheld, the wall of Troy,
- Queen Helen lying in the ivory room,
- And at her side an amorous red-lipped boy
- Trimming with dainty hand his helmet’s plume,
- And far away the moil, the shout, the groan,
- As Hector shielded off the spear and Ajax hurled the stone;
- Of wingèd Perseus with his flawless sword
- Cleaving the snaky tresses of the witch,
- And all those tales imperishably stored
- In little Grecian urns, freightage more rich
- Than any gaudy galleon of Spain
- Bare from the Indies ever! these at least bring back again,
- For well I know they are not dead at all,
- The ancient Gods of Grecian poesy:
- They are asleep, and when they hear thee call
- Will wake and think ’t is very Thessaly,
- This Thames the Daulian waters, this cool glade
- The yellow-irised mead where once young Itys laughed and played.
- If it was thou dear jasmine-cradled bird
- Who from the leafy stillness of thy throne
- Sang to the wondrous boy, until he heard
- The horn of Atalanta faintly blown
- Across the Cumnor hills, and wandering
- Through Bagley wood at evening found the Attic poets’ spring,—
- Ah! tiny sober-suited advocate
- That pleadest for the moon against the day!
- If thou didst make the shepherd seek his mate
- On that sweet questing, when Proserpina
- Forgot it was not Sicily and leant
- Across the mossy Sandford stile in ravished wonderment,—
- Light-winged and bright-eyed miracle of the wood!
- If ever thou didst soothe with melody
- One of that little clan, that brotherhood
- Which loved the morning-star of Tuscany
- More than the perfect sun of Raphael
- And is immortal, sing to me! for I too love thee well.
- Sing on! sing on! let the dull world grow young,
- Let elemental things take form again,
- And the old shapes of Beauty walk among
- The simple garths and open crofts, as when
- The son of Leto bare the willow rod,
- And the soft sheep and shaggy goats followed the boyish God.
- Sing on! sing on! and Bacchus will be here
- Astride upon his gorgeous Indian throne,
- And over whimpering tigers shake the spear
- With yellow ivy crowned and gummy cone,
- While at his side the wanton Bassarid
- Will throw the lion by the mane and catch the mountain kid!
- Sing on! and I will wear the leopard skin,
- And steal the moonèd wings of Ashtaroth,
- Upon whose icy chariot we could win
- Cithæron in an hour ere the froth
- Has over-brimmed the wine-vat or the Faun
- Ceased from the treading! ay, before the flickering lamp of dawn
- Has scared the hooting owlet to its nest,
- And warned the bat to close its filmy vans,
- Some Mænad girl with vine-leaves on her breast
- Will filch their beech-nuts from the sleeping Pans
- So softly that the little nested thrush
- Will never wake, and then with shrilly laugh and leap will rush
- Down the green valley where the fallen dew
- Lies thick beneath the elm and count her store,
- Till the brown Satyrs in a jolly crew
- Trample the loosestrife down along the shore,
- And where their hornèd master sits in state
- Bring strawberries and bloomy plums upon a wicker crate!
- Sing on! and soon with passion-wearied face
- Through the cool leaves Apollo’s lad will come,
- The Tyrian prince his bristled boar will chase
- Adown the chestnut-copses all a-bloom,
- And ivory-limbed, grey-eyed, with look of pride,
- After yon velvet-coated deer the virgin maid will ride.
- Sing on! and I the dying boy will see
- Stain with his purple blood the waxen bell
- That overweighs the jacinth, and to me
- The wretched Cyprian her woe will tell,
- And I will kiss her mouth and streaming eyes,
- And lead her to the myrtle-hidden grove where Adon lies!
- Cry out aloud on Itys! memory
- That foster-brother of remorse and pain
- Drops poison in mine ear,—O to be free,
- To burn one’s old ships! and to launch again
- Into the white-plumed battle of the waves
- And fight old Proteus for the spoil of coral-flowered caves!
- O for Medea with her poppied spell!
- O for the secret of the Colchian shrine!
- O for one leaf of that pale asphodel
- Which binds the tired brows of Proserpine,
- And sheds such wondrous dews at eve that she
- Dreams of the fields of Enna, by the far Sicilian sea,
- Where oft the golden-girdled bee she chased
- From lily to lily on the level mead,
- Ere yet her sombre Lord had bid her taste
- The deadly fruit of that pomegranate seed,
- Ere the black steeds had harried her away
- Down to the faint and flowerless land, the sick and sunless day.
- O for one midnight and as paramour
- The Venus of the little Melian farm!
- O that some antique statue for one hour
- Might wake to passion, and that I could charm
- The Dawn at Florence from its dumb despair,
- Mix with those mighty limbs and make that giant breast my lair!
- Sing on! sing on! I would be drunk with life,
- Drunk with the trampled vintage of my youth,
- I would forget the wearying wasted strife,
- The riven veil, the Gorgon eyes of Truth,
- The prayerless vigil and the cry for prayer,
- The barren gifts, the lifted arms, the dull insensate air!
- Sing on! sing on! O feathered Niobe,
- Thou canst make sorrow beautiful, and steal
- From joy its sweetest music, not as we
- Who by dead voiceless silence strive to heal
- Our too untented wounds, and do but keep
- Pain barricadoed in our hearts, and murder pillowed sleep.
- Sing louder yet, why must I still behold
- The wan white face of that deserted Christ,
- Whose bleeding hands my hands did once enfold,
- Whose smitten lips my lips so oft have kissed,
- And now in mute and marble misery
- Sits in his lone dishonoured House and weeps, perchance for me?
- O Memory cast down thy wreathèd shell!
- Break thy hoarse lute O sad Melpomene!
- O Sorrow, Sorrow keep thy cloistered cell
- Nor dim with tears this limpid Castaly!
- Cease, Philomel, thou dost the forest wrong
- To vex its sylvan quiet with such wild impassioned song!
- Cease, cease, or if ’t is anguish to be dumb
- Take from the pastoral thrush her simpler air,
- Whose jocund carelessness doth more become
- This English woodland than thy keen despair,
- Ah! cease and let the north wind bear thy lay
- Back to the rocky hills of Thrace, the stormy Daulian bay.
- A moment more, the startled leaves had stirred,
- Endymion would have passed across the mead
- Moonstruck with love, and this still Thames had heard
- Pan plash and paddle groping for some reed
- To lure from her blue cave that Naiad maid
- Who for such piping listens half in joy and half afraid.
- A moment more, the waking dove had cooed,
- The silver daughter of the silver sea
- With the fond gyves of clinging hands had wooed
- Her wanton from the chase, and Dryope
- Had thrust aside the branches of her oak
- To see the lusty gold-haired lad rein in his snorting yoke.
- A moment more, the trees had stooped to kiss
- Pale Daphne just awakening from the swoon
- Of tremulous laurels, lonely Salmacis
- Had bared his barren beauty to the moon,
- And through the vale with sad voluptuous smile
- Antinous had wandered, the red lotus of the Nile
- Down leaning from his black and clustering hair,
- To shade those slumberous eyelids’ caverned bliss,
- Or else on yonder grassy slope with bare
- High-tuniced limbs unravished Artemis
- Had bade her hounds give tongue, and roused the deer
- From his green ambuscade with shrill halloo and pricking spear.
- Lie still, lie still, O passionate heart, lie still!
- O Melancholy, fold thy raven wing!
- O sobbing Dryad, from thy hollow hill
- Come not with such despondent answering!
- No more thou wingèd Marsyas complain,
- Apollo loveth not to hear such troubled songs of pain!
- It was a dream, the glade is tenantless,
- No soft Ionian laughter moves the air,
- The Thames creeps on in sluggish leadenness,
- And from the copse left desolate and bare
- Fled is young Bacchus with his revelry,
- Yet still from Nuneham wood there comes that thrilling melody
- So sad, that one might think a human heart
- Brake in each separate note, a quality
- Which music sometimes has, being the Art
- Which is most nigh to tears and memory;
- Poor mourning Philomel, what dost thou fear?
- Thy sister doth not haunt these fields, Pandion is not here,
- Here is no cruel Lord with murderous blade,
- No woven web of bloody heraldries,
- But mossy dells for roving comrades made,
- Warm valleys where the tired student lies
- With half-shut book, and many a winding walk
- Where rustic lovers stray at eve in happy simple talk.
- The harmless rabbit gambols with its young
- Across the trampled towing-path, where late
- A troop of laughing boys in jostling throng
- Cheered with their noisy cries the racing eight;
- The gossamer, with ravelled silver threads,
- Works at its little loom, and from the dusky red-eaved sheds
- Of the lone Farm a flickering light shines out
- Where the swinked shepherd drives his bleating flock
- Back to their wattled sheep-cotes, a faint shout
- Comes from some Oxford boat at Sandford lock,
- And starts the moor-hen from the sedgy rill,
- And the dim lengthening shadows flit like swallows up the hill.
- The heron passes homeward to the mere,
- The blue mist creeps among the shivering trees,
- Gold world by world the silent stars appear,
- And like a blossom blown before the breeze
- A white moon drifts across the shimmering sky,
- Mute arbitress of all thy sad, thy rapturous threnody.
- She does not heed thee, wherefore should she heed,
- She knows Endymion is not far away;
- ’Tis I, ’tis I, whose soul is as the reed
- Which has no message of its own to play,
- So pipes another’s bidding, it is I,
- Drifting with every wind on the wide sea of misery.
- Ah! the brown bird has ceased: one exquisite trill
- About the sombre woodland seems to cling
- Dying in music, else the air is still,
- So still that one might hear the bat’s small wing
- Wander and wheel above the pines, or tell
- Each tiny dew-drop dripping from the bluebell’s brimming cell.
- And far away across the lengthening wold,
- Across the willowy flats and thickets brown,
- Magdalen’s tall tower tipped with tremulous gold
- Marks the long High Street of the little town,
- And warns me to return; I must not wait,
- Hark! ’t is the curfew booming from the bell at Christ Church gate.
- WIND FLOWERS
- IMPRESSION DU MATIN
- THE Thames nocturne of blue and gold
- Changed to a Harmony in grey:
- A barge with ochre-coloured hay
- Dropt from the wharf: and chill and cold
- The yellow fog came creeping down
- The bridges, till the houses’ walls
- Seemed changed to shadows and St. Paul’s
- Loomed like a bubble o’er the town.
- Then suddenly arose the clang
- Of waking life; the streets were stirred
- With country waggons: and a bird
- Flew to the glistening roofs and sang.
- But one pale woman all alone,
- The daylight kissing her wan hair,
- Loitered beneath the gas lamps’ flare,
- With lips of flame and heart of stone.
- MAGDALEN WALKS
- THE little white clouds are racing over the sky,
- And the fields are strewn with the gold of the flower of March,
- The daffodil breaks under foot, and the tasselled larch
- Sways and swings as the thrush goes hurrying by.
- A delicate odour is borne on the wings of the morning breeze,
- The odour of deep wet grass, and of brown new-furrowed earth,
- The birds are singing for joy of the Spring’s glad birth,
- Hopping from branch to branch on the rocking trees.
- And all the woods are alive with the murmur and sound of Spring,
- And the rose-bud breaks into pink on the climbing briar,
- And the crocus-bed is a quivering moon of fire
- Girdled round with the belt of an amethyst ring.
- And the plane to the pine-tree is whispering some tale of love
- Till it rustles with laughter and tosses its mantle of green,
- And the gloom of the wych-elm’s hollow is lit with the iris sheen
- Of the burnished rainbow throat and the silver breast of a dove.
- See! the lark starts up from his bed in the meadow there,
- Breaking the gossamer threads and the nets of dew,
- And flashing adown the river, a flame of blue!
- The kingfisher flies like an arrow, and wounds the air.
- ATHANASIA
- TO that gaunt House of Art which lacks for naught
- Of all the great things men have saved from Time,
- The withered body of a girl was brought
- Dead ere the world’s glad youth had touched its prime,
- And seen by lonely Arabs lying hid
- In the dim womb of some black pyramid.
- But when they had unloosed the linen band
- Which swathed the Egyptian’s body,—lo! was found
- Closed in the wasted hollow of her hand
- A little seed, which sown in English ground
- Did wondrous snow of starry blossoms bear
- And spread rich odours through our spring-tide air.
- With such strange arts this flower did allure
- That all forgotten was the asphodel,
- And the brown bee, the lily’s paramour,
- Forsook the cup where he was wont to dwell,
- For not a thing of earth it seemed to be,
- But stolen from some heavenly Arcady.
- In vain the sad narcissus, wan and white
- At its own beauty, hung across the stream,
- The purple dragon-fly had no delight
- With its gold dust to make his wings a-gleam,
- Ah! no delight the jasmine-bloom to kiss,
- Or brush the rain-pearls from the eucharis.
- For love of it the passionate nightingale
- Forgot the hills of Thrace, the cruel king,
- And the pale dove no longer cared to sail
- Through the wet woods at time of blossoming,
- But round this flower of Egypt sought to float,
- With silvered wing and amethystine throat.
- While the hot sun blazed in his tower of blue
- A cooling wind crept from the land of snows,
- And the warm south with tender tears of dew
- Drenched its white leaves when Hesperos up-rose
- Amid those sea-green meadows of the sky
- On which the scarlet bars of sunset lie.
- But when o’er wastes of lily-haunted field
- The tired birds had stayed their amorous tune,
- And broad and glittering like an argent shield
- High in the sapphire heavens hung the moon,
- Did no strange dream or evil memory make
- Each tremulous petal of its blossoms shake?
- Ah no! to this bright flower a thousand years
- Seemed but the lingering of a summer’s day,
- It never knew the tide of cankering fears
- Which turn a boy’s gold hair to withered grey,
- The dread desire of death it never knew,
- Or how all folk that they were born must rue.
- For we to death with pipe and dancing go,
- Nor would we pass the ivory gate again,
- As some sad river wearied of its flow
- Through the dull plains, the haunts of common men,
- Leaps lover-like into the terrible sea!
- And counts it gain to die so gloriously.
- We mar our lordly strength in barren strife
- With the world’s legions led by clamorous care,
- It never feels decay but gathers life
- From the pure sunlight and the supreme air,
- We live beneath Time’s wasting sovereignty,
- It is the child of all eternity.
- SERENADE
- (FOR MUSIC)
- THE western wind is blowing fair
- Across the dark Ægean sea,
- And at the secret marble stair
- My Tyrian galley waits for thee.
- Come down! the purple sail is spread,
- The watchman sleeps within the town,
- O leave thy lily-flowered bed,
- O Lady mine come down, come down!
- She will not come, I know her well,
- Of lover’s vows she hath no care,
- And little good a man can tell
- Of one so cruel and so fair.
- True love is but a woman’s toy,
- They never know the lover’s pain,
- And I who loved as loves a boy
- Must love in vain, must love in vain.
- O noble pilot, tell me true,
- Is that the sheen of golden hair?
- Or is it but the tangled dew
- That binds the passion-flowers there?
- Good sailor come and tell me now
- Is that my Lady’s lily hand?
- Or is it but the gleaming prow,
- Or is it but the silver sand?
- No! no! ’tis not the tangled dew,
- ’Tis not the silver-fretted sand,
- It is my own dear Lady true
- With golden hair and lily hand!
- O noble pilot, steer for Troy,
- Good sailor, ply the labouring oar,
- This is the Queen of life and joy
- Whom we must bear from Grecian shore!
- The waning sky grows faint and blue,
- It wants an hour still of day,
- Aboard! aboard! my gallant crew,
- O Lady mine, away! away!
- O noble pilot, steer for Troy,
- Good sailor, ply the labouring oar,
- O loved as only loves a boy!
- O loved for ever evermore!
- ENDYMION
- (FOR MUSIC)
- THE apple trees are hung with gold,
- And birds are loud in Arcady,
- The sheep lie bleating in the fold,
- The wild goat runs across the wold,
- But yesterday his love he told,
- I know he will come back to me.
- O rising moon! O Lady moon!
- Be you my lover’s sentinel,
- You cannot choose but know him well,
- For he is shod with purple shoon,
- You cannot choose but know my love,
- For he a shepherd’s crook doth bear,
- And he is soft as any dove,
- And brown and curly is his hair.
- The turtle now has ceased to call
- Upon her crimson-footed groom,
- The grey wolf prowls about the stall,
- The lily’s singing seneschal
- Sleeps in the lily-bell, and all
- The violet hills are lost in gloom.
- O risen moon! O holy moon!
- Stand on the top of Helice,
- And if my own true love you see,
- Ah! if you see the purple shoon,
- The hazel crook, the lad’s brown hair,
- The goat-skin wrapped about his arm,
- Tell him that I am waiting where
- The rushlight glimmers in the Farm.
- The falling dew is cold and chill,
- And no bird sings in Arcady,
- The little fauns have left the hill,
- Even the tired daffodil
- Has closed its gilded doors, and still
- My lover comes not back to me.
- False moon! False moon! O waning moon!
- Where is my own true lover gone,
- Where are the lips vermilion,
- The shepherd’s crook, the purple shoon?
- Why spread that silver pavilion,
- Why wear that veil of drifting mist?
- Ah! thou hast young Endymion,
- Thou hast the lips that should be kissed!
- LA BELLA DONNA DELLA MIA MENTE
- MY limbs are wasted with a flame,
- My feet are sore with travelling,
- For, calling on my Lady’s name,
- My lips have now forgot to sing.
- O Linnet in the wild-rose brake
- Strain for my Love thy melody,
- O Lark sing louder for love’s sake,
- My gentle Lady passeth by.
- She is too fair for any man
- To see or hold his heart’s delight,
- Fairer than Queen or courtesan
- Or moonlit water in the night.
- Her hair is bound with myrtle leaves,
- (Green leaves upon her golden hair!)
- Green grasses through the yellow sheaves
- Of autumn corn are not more fair.
- Her little lips, more made to kiss
- Than to cry bitterly for pain,
- Are tremulous as brook-water is,
- Or roses after evening rain.
- Her neck is like white melilote
- Flushing for pleasure of the sun,
- The throbbing of the linnet’s throat
- Is not so sweet to look upon.
- As a pomegranate, cut in twain,
- White-seeded, is her crimson mouth,
- Her cheeks are as the fading stain
- Where the peach reddens to the south.
- O twining hands! O delicate
- White body made for love and pain!
- O House of love! O desolate
- Pale flower beaten by the rain!
- CHANSON
- A RING of gold and a milk-white dove
- Are goodly gifts for thee,
- And a hempen rope for your own love
- To hang upon a tree.
- For you a House of Ivory,
- (Roses are white in the rose-bower)!
- A narrow bed for me to lie,
- (White, O white, is the hemlock flower)!
- Myrtle and jessamine for you,
- (O the red rose is fair to see)!
- For me the cypress and the rue,
- (Finest of all is rosemary)!
- For you three lovers of your hand,
- (Green grass where a man lies dead)!
- For me three paces on the sand,
- (Plant lilies at my head)!
- CHARMIDES
- I.
- HE was a Grecian lad, who coming home
- With pulpy figs and wine from Sicily
- Stood at his galley’s prow, and let the foam
- Blow through his crisp brown curls unconsciously,
- And holding wave and wind in boy’s despite
- Peered from his dripping seat across the wet and stormy night.
- Till with the dawn he saw a burnished spear
- Like a thin thread of gold against the sky,
- And hoisted sail, and strained the creaking gear,
- And bade the pilot head her lustily
- Against the nor’west gale, and all day long
- Held on his way, and marked the rowers’ time with measured song.
- And when the faint Corinthian hills were red
- Dropped anchor in a little sandy bay,
- And with fresh boughs of olive crowned his head,
- And brushed from cheek and throat the hoary spray,
- And washed his limbs with oil, and from the hold
- Brought out his linen tunic and his sandals brazen-soled,
- And a rich robe stained with the fishers’ juice
- Which of some swarthy trader he had bought
- Upon the sunny quay at Syracuse,
- And was with Tyrian broideries inwrought,
- And by the questioning merchants made his way
- Up through the soft and silver woods, and when the labouring day
- Had spun its tangled web of crimson cloud,
- Clomb the high hill, and with swift silent feet
- Crept to the fane unnoticed by the crowd
- Of busy priests, and from some dark retreat
- Watched the young swains his frolic playmates bring
- The firstling of their little flock, and the shy shepherd fling
- The crackling salt upon the flame, or hang
- His studded crook against the temple wall
- To Her who keeps away the ravenous fang
- Of the base wolf from homestead and from stall;
- And then the clear-voiced maidens ’gan to sing,
- And to the altar each man brought some goodly offering,
- A beechen cup brimming with milky foam,
- A fair cloth wrought with cunning imagery
- Of hounds in chase, a waxen honey-comb
- Dripping with oozy gold which scarce the bee
- Had ceased from building, a black skin of oil
- Meet for the wrestlers, a great boar the fierce and white-tusked spoil
- Stolen from Artemis that jealous maid
- To please Athena, and the dappled hide
- Of a tall stag who in some mountain glade
- Had met the shaft; and then the herald cried,
- And from the pillared precinct one by one
- Went the glad Greeks well pleased that they their simple vows had
- done.
- And the old priest put out the waning fires
- Save that one lamp whose restless ruby glowed
- For ever in the cell, and the shrill lyres
- Came fainter on the wind, as down the road
- In joyous dance these country folk did pass,
- And with stout hands the warder closed the gates of polished brass.
- Long time he lay and hardly dared to breathe,
- And heard the cadenced drip of spilt-out wine,
- And the rose-petals falling from the wreath
- As the night breezes wandered through the shrine,
- And seemed to be in some entrancèd swoon
- Till through the open roof above the full and brimming moon
- Flooded with sheeny waves the marble floor,
- When from his nook up leapt the venturous lad,
- And flinging wide the cedar-carven door
- Beheld an awful image saffron-clad
- And armed for battle! the gaunt Griffin glared
- From the huge helm, and the long lance of wreck and ruin flared
- Like a red rod of flame, stony and steeled
- The Gorgon’s head its leaden eyeballs rolled,
- And writhed its snaky horrors through the shield,
- And gaped aghast with bloodless lips and cold
- In passion impotent, while with blind gaze
- The blinking owl between the feet hooted in shrill amaze.
- The lonely fisher as he trimmed his lamp
- Far out at sea off Sunium, or cast
- The net for tunnies, heard a brazen tramp
- Of horses smite the waves, and a wild blast
- Divide the folded curtains of the night,
- And knelt upon the little poop, and prayed in holy fright.
- And guilty lovers in their venery
- Forgat a little while their stolen sweets,
- Deeming they heard dread Dian’s bitter cry;
- And the grim watchmen on their lofty seats
- Ran to their shields in haste precipitate,
- Or strained black-bearded throats across the dusky parapet.
- For round the temple rolled the clang of arms,
- And the twelve Gods leapt up in marble fear,
- And the air quaked with dissonant alarums
- Till huge Poseidon shook his mighty spear,
- And on the frieze the prancing horses neighed,
- And the low tread of hurrying feet rang from the cavalcade.
- Ready for death with parted lips he stood,
- And well content at such a price to see
- That calm wide brow, that terrible maidenhood,
- The marvel of that pitiless chastity,
- Ah! well content indeed, for never wight
- Since Troy’s young shepherd prince had seen so wonderful a sight.
- Ready for death he stood, but lo! the air
- Grew silent, and the horses ceased to neigh,
- And off his brow he tossed the clustering hair,
- And from his limbs he throw the cloak away;
- For whom would not such love make desperate?
- And nigher came, and touched her throat, and with hands violate
- Undid the cuirass, and the crocus gown,
- And bared the breasts of polished ivory,
- Till from the waist the peplos falling down
- Left visible the secret mystery
- Which to no lover will Athena show,
- The grand cool flanks, the crescent thighs, the bossy hills of snow.
- Those who have never known a lover’s sin
- Let them not read my ditty, it will be
- To their dull ears so musicless and thin
- That they will have no joy of it, but ye
- To whose wan cheeks now creeps the lingering smile,
- Ye who have learned who Eros is,—O listen yet awhile.
- A little space he let his greedy eyes
- Rest on the burnished image, till mere sight
- Half swooned for surfeit of such luxuries,
- And then his lips in hungering delight
- Fed on her lips, and round the towered neck
- He flung his arms, nor cared at all his passion’s will to check.
- Never I ween did lover hold such tryst,
- For all night long he murmured honeyed word,
- And saw her sweet unravished limbs, and kissed
- Her pale and argent body undisturbed,
- And paddled with the polished throat, and pressed
- His hot and beating heart upon her chill and icy breast.
- It was as if Numidian javelins
- Pierced through and through his wild and whirling brain,
- And his nerves thrilled like throbbing violins
- In exquisite pulsation, and the pain
- Was such sweet anguish that he never drew
- His lips from hers till overhead the lark of warning flew.
- They who have never seen the daylight peer
- Into a darkened room, and drawn the curtain,
- And with dull eyes and wearied from some dear
- And worshipped body risen, they for certain
- Will never know of what I try to sing,
- How long the last kiss was, how fond and late his lingering.
- The moon was girdled with a crystal rim,
- The sign which shipmen say is ominous
- Of wrath in heaven, the wan stars were dim,
- And the low lightening east was tremulous
- With the faint fluttering wings of flying dawn,
- Ere from the silent sombre shrine his lover had withdrawn.
- Down the steep rock with hurried feet and fast
- Clomb the brave lad, and reached the cave of Pan,
- And heard the goat-foot snoring as he passed,
- And leapt upon a grassy knoll and ran
- Like a young fawn unto an olive wood
- Which in a shady valley by the well-built city stood;
- And sought a little stream, which well he knew,
- For oftentimes with boyish careless shout
- The green and crested grebe he would pursue,
- Or snare in woven net the silver trout,
- And down amid the startled reeds he lay
- Panting in breathless sweet affright, and waited for the day.
- On the green bank he lay, and let one hand
- Dip in the cool dark eddies listlessly,
- And soon the breath of morning came and fanned
- His hot flushed cheeks, or lifted wantonly
- The tangled curls from off his forehead, while
- He on the running water gazed with strange and secret smile.
- And soon the shepherd in rough woollen cloak
- With his long crook undid the wattled cotes,
- And from the stack a thin blue wreath of smoke
- Curled through the air across the ripening oats,
- And on the hill the yellow house-dog bayed
- As through the crisp and rustling fern the heavy cattle strayed.
- And when the light-foot mower went afield
- Across the meadows laced with threaded dew,
- And the sheep bleated on the misty weald,
- And from its nest the waking corncrake flew,
- Some woodmen saw him lying by the stream
- And marvelled much that any lad so beautiful could seem,
- Nor deemed him born of mortals, and one said,
- ‘It is young Hylas, that false runaway
- Who with a Naiad now would make his bed
- Forgetting Herakles,’ but others, ‘Nay,
- It is Narcissus, his own paramour,
- Those are the fond and crimson lips no woman can allure.’
- And when they nearer came a third one cried,
- ‘It is young Dionysos who has hid
- His spear and fawnskin by the river side
- Weary of hunting with the Bassarid,
- And wise indeed were we away to fly:
- They live not long who on the gods immortal come to spy.’
- So turned they back, and feared to look behind,
- And told the timid swain how they had seen
- Amid the reeds some woodland god reclined,
- And no man dared to cross the open green,
- And on that day no olive-tree was slain,
- Nor rushes cut, but all deserted was the fair domain,
- Save when the neat-herd’s lad, his empty pail
- Well slung upon his back, with leap and bound
- Raced on the other side, and stopped to hail,
- Hoping that he some comrade new had found,
- And gat no answer, and then half afraid
- Passed on his simple way, or down the still and silent glade
- A little girl ran laughing from the farm,
- Not thinking of love’s secret mysteries,
- And when she saw the white and gleaming arm
- And all his manlihood, with longing eyes
- Whose passion mocked her sweet virginity
- Watched him awhile, and then stole back sadly and wearily.
- Far off he heard the city’s hum and noise,
- And now and then the shriller laughter where
- The passionate purity of brown-limbed boys
- Wrestled or raced in the clear healthful air,
- And now and then a little tinkling bell
- As the shorn wether led the sheep down to the mossy well.
- Through the grey willows danced the fretful gnat,
- The grasshopper chirped idly from the tree,
- In sleek and oily coat the water-rat
- Breasting the little ripples manfully
- Made for the wild-duck’s nest, from bough to bough
- Hopped the shy finch, and the huge tortoise crept across the slough.
- On the faint wind floated the silky seeds
- As the bright scythe swept through the waving grass,
- The ouzel-cock splashed circles in the reeds
- And flecked with silver whorls the forest’s glass,
- Which scarce had caught again its imagery
- Ere from its bed the dusky tench leapt at the dragon-fly.
- But little care had he for any thing
- Though up and down the beech the squirrel played,
- And from the copse the linnet ’gan to sing
- To its brown mate its sweetest serenade;
- Ah! little care indeed, for he had seen
- The breasts of Pallas and the naked wonder of the Queen.
- But when the herdsman called his straggling goats
- With whistling pipe across the rocky road,
- And the shard-beetle with its trumpet-notes
- Boomed through the darkening woods, and seemed to bode
- Of coming storm, and the belated crane
- Passed homeward like a shadow, and the dull big drops of rain
- Fell on the pattering fig-leaves, up he rose,
- And from the gloomy forest went his way
- Past sombre homestead and wet orchard-close,
- And came at last unto a little quay,
- And called his mates aboard, and took his seat
- On the high poop, and pushed from land, and loosed the dripping sheet,
- And steered across the bay, and when nine suns
- Passed down the long and laddered way of gold,
- And nine pale moons had breathed their orisons
- To the chaste stars their confessors, or told
- Their dearest secret to the downy moth
- That will not fly at noonday, through the foam and surging froth
- Came a great owl with yellow sulphurous eyes
- And lit upon the ship, whose timbers creaked
- As though the lading of three argosies
- Were in the hold, and flapped its wings and shrieked,
- And darkness straightway stole across the deep,
- Sheathed was Orion’s sword, dread Mars himself fled down the steep,
- And the moon hid behind a tawny mask
- Of drifting cloud, and from the ocean’s marge
- Rose the red plume, the huge and hornèd casque,
- The seven-cubit spear, the brazen targe!
- And clad in bright and burnished panoply
- Athena strode across the stretch of sick and shivering sea!
- To the dull sailors’ sight her loosened looks
- Seemed like the jagged storm-rack, and her feet
- Only the spume that floats on hidden rocks,
- And, marking how the rising waters beat
- Against the rolling ship, the pilot cried
- To the young helmsman at the stern to luff to windward side
- But he, the overbold adulterer,
- A dear profaner of great mysteries,
- An ardent amorous idolater,
- When he beheld those grand relentless eyes
- Laughed loud for joy, and crying out ‘I come’
- Leapt from the lofty poop into the chill and churning foam.
- Then fell from the high heaven one bright star,
- One dancer left the circling galaxy,
- And back to Athens on her clattering car
- In all the pride of venged divinity
- Pale Pallas swept with shrill and steely clank,
- And a few gurgling bubbles rose where her boy lover sank.
- And the mast shuddered as the gaunt owl flew
- With mocking hoots after the wrathful Queen,
- And the old pilot bade the trembling crew
- Hoist the big sail, and told how he had seen
- Close to the stern a dim and giant form,
- And like a dipping swallow the stout ship dashed through the storm.
- And no man dared to speak of Charmides
- Deeming that he some evil thing had wrought,
- And when they reached the strait Symplegades
- They beached their galley on the shore, and sought
- The toll-gate of the city hastily,
- And in the market showed their brown and pictured pottery.
- II.
- BUT some good Triton-god had ruth, and bare
- The boy’s drowned body back to Grecian land,
- And mermaids combed his dank and dripping hair
- And smoothed his brow, and loosed his clenching hand;
- Some brought sweet spices from far Araby,
- And others bade the halcyon sing her softest lullaby.
- And when he neared his old Athenian home,
- A mighty billow rose up suddenly
- Upon whose oily back the clotted foam
- Lay diapered in some strange fantasy,
- And clasping him unto its glassy breast
- Swept landward, like a white-maned steed upon a venturous quest!
- Now where Colonos leans unto the sea
- There lies a long and level stretch of lawn;
- The rabbit knows it, and the mountain bee
- For it deserts Hymettus, and the Faun
- Is not afraid, for never through the day
- Comes a cry ruder than the shout of shepherd lads at play.
- But often from the thorny labyrinth
- And tangled branches of the circling wood
- The stealthy hunter sees young Hyacinth
- Hurling the polished disk, and draws his hood
- Over his guilty gaze, and creeps away,
- Nor dares to wind his horn, or—else at the first break of day
- The Dryads come and throw the leathern ball
- Along the reedy shore, and circumvent
- Some goat-eared Pan to be their seneschal
- For fear of bold Poseidon’s ravishment,
- And loose their girdles, with shy timorous eyes,
- Lest from the surf his azure arms and purple beard should rise.
- On this side and on that a rocky cave,
- Hung with the yellow-belled laburnum, stands
- Smooth is the beach, save where some ebbing wave
- Leaves its faint outline etched upon the sands,
- As though it feared to be too soon forgot
- By the green rush, its playfellow,—and yet, it is a spot
- So small, that the inconstant butterfly
- Could steal the hoarded money from each flower
- Ere it was noon, and still not satisfy
- Its over-greedy love,—within an hour
- A sailor boy, were he but rude enow
- To land and pluck a garland for his galley’s painted prow,
- Would almost leave the little meadow bare,
- For it knows nothing of great pageantry,
- Only a few narcissi here and there
- Stand separate in sweet austerity,
- Dotting the unmown grass with silver stars,
- And here and there a daffodil waves tiny scimitars.
- Hither the billow brought him, and was glad
- Of such dear servitude, and where the land
- Was virgin of all waters laid the lad
- Upon the golden margent of the strand,
- And like a lingering lover oft returned
- To kiss those pallid limbs which once with intense fire burned,
- Ere the wet seas had quenched that holocaust,
- That self-fed flame, that passionate lustihead,
- Ere grisly death with chill and nipping frost
- Had withered up those lilies white and red
- Which, while the boy would through the forest range,
- Answered each other in a sweet antiphonal counter-change.
- And when at dawn the wood-nymphs, hand-in-hand,
- Threaded the bosky dell, their satyr spied
- The boy’s pale body stretched upon the sand,
- And feared Poseidon’s treachery, and cried,
- And like bright sunbeams flitting through a glade
- Each startled Dryad sought some safe and leafy ambuscade.
- Save one white girl, who deemed it would not be
- So dread a thing to feel a sea-god’s arms
- Crushing her breasts in amorous tyranny,
- And longed to listen to those subtle charms
- Insidious lovers weave when they would win
- Some fencèd fortress, and stole back again, nor thought it sin
- To yield her treasure unto one so fair,
- And lay beside him, thirsty with love’s drouth,
- Called him soft names, played with his tangled hair,
- And with hot lips made havoc of his mouth
- Afraid he might not wake, and then afraid
- Lest he might wake too soon, fled back, and then, fond renegade,
- Returned to fresh assault, and all day long
- Sat at his side, and laughed at her new toy,
- And held his hand, and sang her sweetest song,
- Then frowned to see how froward was the boy
- Who would not with her maidenhood entwine,
- Nor knew that three days since his eyes had looked on Proserpine;
- Nor knew what sacrilege his lips had done,
- But said, ‘He will awake, I know him well,
- He will awake at evening when the sun
- Hangs his red shield on Corinth’s citadel;
- This sleep is but a cruel treachery
- To make me love him more, and in some cavern of the sea
- Deeper than ever falls the fisher’s line
- Already a huge Triton blows his horn,
- And weaves a garland from the crystalline
- And drifting ocean-tendrils to adorn
- The emerald pillars of our bridal bed,
- For sphered in foaming silver, and with coral crownèd head,
- We two will sit upon a throne of pearl,
- And a blue wave will be our canopy,
- And at our feet the water-snakes will curl
- In all their amethystine panoply
- Of diamonded mail, and we will mark
- The mullets swimming by the mast of some storm-foundered bark,
- Vermilion-finned with eyes of bossy gold
- Like flakes of crimson light, and the great deep
- His glassy-portaled chamber will unfold,
- And we will see the painted dolphins sleep
- Cradled by murmuring halcyons on the rocks
- Where Proteus in quaint suit of green pastures his monstrous flocks.
- And tremulous opal-hued anemones
- Will wave their purple fringes where we tread
- Upon the mirrored floor, and argosies
- Of fishes flecked with tawny scales will thread
- The drifting cordage of the shattered wreck,
- And honey-coloured amber beads our twining limbs will deck.’
- But when that baffled Lord of War the Sun
- With gaudy pennon flying passed away
- Into his brazen House, and one by one
- The little yellow stars began to stray
- Across the field of heaven, ah! then indeed
- She feared his lips upon her lips would never care to feed,
- And cried, ‘Awake, already the pale moon
- Washes the trees with silver, and the wave
- Creeps grey and chilly up this sandy dune,
- The croaking frogs are out, and from the cave
- The nightjar shrieks, the fluttering bats repass,
- And the brown stoat with hollow flanks creeps through the dusky grass.
- Nay, though thou art a god, be not so coy,
- For in yon stream there is a little reed
- That often whispers how a lovely boy
- Lay with her once upon a grassy mead,
- Who when his cruel pleasure he had done
- Spread wings of rustling gold and soared aloft into the sun.
- Be not so coy, the laurel trembles still
- With great Apollo’s kisses, and the fir
- Whose clustering sisters fringe the seaward hill
- Hath many a tale of that bold ravisher
- Whom men call Boreas, and I have seen
- The mocking eyes of Hermes through the poplar’s silvery sheen.
- Even the jealous Naiads call me fair,
- And every morn a young and ruddy swain
- Woos me with apples and with locks of hair,
- And seeks to soothe my virginal disdain
- By all the gifts the gentle wood-nymphs love;
- But yesterday he brought to me an iris-plumaged dove
- With little crimson feet, which with its store
- Of seven spotted eggs the cruel lad
- Had stolen from the lofty sycamore
- At daybreak, when her amorous comrade had
- Flown off in search of berried juniper
- Which most they love; the fretful wasp, that earliest vintager
- Of the blue grapes, hath not persistency
- So constant as this simple shepherd-boy
- For my poor lips, his joyous purity
- And laughing sunny eyes might well decoy
- A Dryad from her oath to Artemis;
- For very beautiful is he, his mouth was made to kiss;
- His argent forehead, like a rising moon
- Over the dusky hills of meeting brows,
- Is crescent shaped, the hot and Tyrian noon
- Leads from the myrtle-grove no goodlier spouse
- For Cytheræa, the first silky down
- Fringes his blushing cheeks, and his young limbs are strong and brown;
- And he is rich, and fat and fleecy herds
- Of bleating sheep upon his meadows lie,
- And many an earthen bowl of yellow curds
- Is in his homestead for the thievish fly
- To swim and drown in, the pink clover mead
- Keeps its sweet store for him, and he can pipe on oaten reed.
- And yet I love him not; it was for thee
- I kept my love; I knew that thou would’st come
- To rid me of this pallid chastity,
- Thou fairest flower of the flowerless foam
- Of all the wide Ægean, brightest star
- Of ocean’s azure heavens where the mirrored planets are!
- I knew that thou would’st come, for when at first
- The dry wood burgeoned, and the sap of spring
- Swelled in my green and tender bark or burst
- To myriad multitudinous blossoming
- Which mocked the midnight with its mimic moons
- That did not dread the dawn, and first the thrushes’ rapturous tunes
- Startled the squirrel from its granary,
- And cuckoo flowers fringed the narrow lane,
- Through my young leaves a sensuous ecstasy
- Crept like new wine, and every mossy vein
- Throbbed with the fitful pulse of amorous blood,
- And the wild winds of passion shook my slim stem’s maidenhood.
- The trooping fawns at evening came and laid
- Their cool black noses on my lowest boughs,
- And on my topmost branch the blackbird made
- A little nest of grasses for his spouse,
- And now and then a twittering wren would light
- On a thin twig which hardly bare the weight of such delight.
- I was the Attic shepherd’s trysting place,
- Beneath my shadow Amaryllis lay,
- And round my trunk would laughing Daphnis chase
- The timorous girl, till tired out with play
- She felt his hot breath stir her tangled hair,
- And turned, and looked, and fled no more from such delightful snare.
- Then come away unto my ambuscade
- Where clustering woodbine weaves a canopy
- For amorous pleasaunce, and the rustling shade
- Of Paphian myrtles seems to sanctify
- The dearest rites of love; there in the cool
- And green recesses of its farthest depth there is pool,
- The ouzel’s haunt, the wild bee’s pasturage,
- For round its rim great creamy lilies float
- Through their flat leaves in verdant anchorage,
- Each cup a white-sailed golden-laden boat
- Steered by a dragon-fly,—be not afraid
- To leave this wan and wave-kissed shore, surely the place was made
- For lovers such as we; the Cyprian Queen,
- One arm around her boyish paramour,
- Strays often there at eve, and I have seen
- The moon strip off her misty vestiture
- For young Endymion’s eyes; be not afraid,
- The panther feet of Dian never tread that secret glade.
- Nay if thou will’st, back to the beating brine,
- Back to the boisterous billow let us go,
- And walk all day beneath the hyaline
- Huge vault of Neptune’s watery portico,
- And watch the purple monsters of the deep
- Sport in ungainly play, and from his lair keen Xiphias leap.
- For if my mistress find me lying here
- She will not ruth or gentle pity show,
- But lay her boar-spear down, and with austere
- Relentless fingers string the cornel bow,
- And draw the feathered notch against her breast,
- And loose the archèd cord; aye, even now upon the quest
- I hear her hurrying feet,—awake, awake,
- Thou laggard in love’s battle! once at least
- Let me drink deep of passion’s wine, and slake
- My parchèd being with the nectarous feast
- Which even gods affect! O come, Love, come,
- Still we have time to reach the cavern of thine azure home.’
- Scarce had she spoken when the shuddering trees
- Shook, and the leaves divided, and the air
- Grew conscious of a god, and the grey seas
- Crawled backward, and a long and dismal blare
- Blew from some tasselled horn, a sleuth-hound bayed,
- And like a flame a barbèd reed flew whizzing down the glade.
- And where the little flowers of her breast
- Just brake into their milky blossoming,
- This murderous paramour, this unbidden guest,
- Pierced and struck deep in horrid chambering,
- And ploughed a bloody furrow with its dart,
- And dug a long red road, and cleft with wingèd death her heart.
- Sobbing her life out with a bitter cry
- On the boy’s body fell the Dryad maid,
- Sobbing for incomplete virginity,
- And raptures unenjoyed, and pleasures dead,
- And all the pain of things unsatisfied,
- And the bright drops of crimson youth crept down her throbbing side.
- Ah! pitiful it was to hear her moan,
- And very pitiful to see her die
- Ere she had yielded up her sweets, or known
- The joy of passion, that dread mystery
- Which not to know is not to live at all,
- And yet to know is to be held in death’s most deadly thrall.
- But as it hapt the Queen of Cythere,
- Who with Adonis all night long had lain
- Within some shepherd’s hut in Arcady,
- On team of silver doves and gilded wain
- Was journeying Paphos-ward, high up afar
- From mortal ken between the mountains and the morning star,
- And when low down she spied the hapless pair,
- And heard the Oread’s faint despairing cry,
- Whose cadence seemed to play upon the air
- As though it were a viol, hastily
- She bade her pigeons fold each straining plume,
- And dropt to earth, and reached the strand, and saw their dolorous
- doom.
- For as a gardener turning back his head
- To catch the last notes of the linnet, mows
- With careless scythe too near some flower bed,
- And cuts the thorny pillar of the rose,
- And with the flower’s loosened loneliness
- Strews the brown mould; or as some shepherd lad in wantonness
- Driving his little flock along the mead
- Treads down two daffodils, which side by aide
- Have lured the lady-bird with yellow brede
- And made the gaudy moth forget its pride,
- Treads down their brimming golden chalices
- Under light feet which were not made for such rude ravages;
- Or as a schoolboy tired of his book
- Flings himself down upon the reedy grass
- And plucks two water-lilies from the brook,
- And for a time forgets the hour glass,
- Then wearies of their sweets, and goes his way,
- And lets the hot sun kill them, even go these lovers lay.
- And Venus cried, ‘It is dread Artemis
- Whose bitter hand hath wrought this cruelty,
- Or else that mightier maid whose care it is
- To guard her strong and stainless majesty
- Upon the hill Athenian,—alas!
- That they who loved so well unloved into Death’s house should pass.’
- So with soft hands she laid the boy and girl
- In the great golden waggon tenderly
- (Her white throat whiter than a moony pearl
- Just threaded with a blue vein’s tapestry
- Had not yet ceased to throb, and still her breast
- Swayed like a wind-stirred lily in ambiguous unrest)
- And then each pigeon spread its milky van,
- The bright car soared into the dawning sky,
- And like a cloud the aerial caravan
- Passed over the Ægean silently,
- Till the faint air was troubled with the song
- From the wan mouths that call on bleeding Thammuz all night long.
- But when the doves had reached their wonted goal
- Where the wide stair of orbèd marble dips
- Its snows into the sea, her fluttering soul
- Just shook the trembling petals of her lips
- And passed into the void, and Venus knew
- That one fair maid the less would walk amid her retinue,
- And bade her servants carve a cedar chest
- With all the wonder of this history,
- Within whose scented womb their limbs should rest
- Where olive-trees make tender the blue sky
- On the low hills of Paphos, and the Faun
- Pipes in the noonday, and the nightingale sings on till dawn.
- Nor failed they to obey her hest, and ere
- The morning bee had stung the daffodil
- With tiny fretful spear, or from its lair
- The waking stag had leapt across the rill
- And roused the ouzel, or the lizard crept
- Athwart the sunny rock, beneath the grass their bodies slept.
- And when day brake, within that silver shrine
- Fed by the flames of cressets tremulous,
- Queen Venus knelt and prayed to Proserpine
- That she whose beauty made Death amorous
- Should beg a guerdon from her pallid Lord,
- And let Desire pass across dread Charon’s icy ford.
- III
- IN melancholy moonless Acheron,
- Farm for the goodly earth and joyous day
- Where no spring ever buds, nor ripening sun
- Weighs down the apple trees, nor flowery May
- Chequers with chestnut blooms the grassy floor,
- Where thrushes never sing, and piping linnets mate no more,
- There by a dim and dark Lethæan well
- Young Charmides was lying; wearily
- He plucked the blossoms from the asphodel,
- And with its little rifled treasury
- Strewed the dull waters of the dusky stream,
- And watched the white stars founder, and the land was like a dream,
- When as he gazed into the watery glass
- And through his brown hair’s curly tangles scanned
- His own wan face, a shadow seemed to pass
- Across the mirror, and a little hand
- Stole into his, and warm lips timidly
- Brushed his pale cheeks, and breathed their secret forth into a sigh.
- Then turned he round his weary eyes and saw,
- And ever nigher still their faces came,
- And nigher ever did their young mouths draw
- Until they seemed one perfect rose of flame,
- And longing arms around her neck he cast,
- And felt her throbbing bosom, and his breath came hot and fast,
- And all his hoarded sweets were hers to kiss,
- And all her maidenhood was his to slay,
- And limb to limb in long and rapturous bliss
- Their passion waxed and waned,—O why essay
- To pipe again of love, too venturous reed!
- Enough, enough that Eros laughed upon that flowerless mead.
- Too venturous poesy, O why essay
- To pipe again of passion! fold thy wings
- O’er daring Icarus and bid thy lay
- Sleep hidden in the lyre’s silent strings
- Till thou hast found the old Castalian rill,
- Or from the Lesbian waters plucked drowned Sappho’s golden quid!
- Enough, enough that he whose life had been
- A fiery pulse of sin, a splendid shame,
- Could in the loveless land of Hades glean
- One scorching harvest from those fields of flame
- Where passion walks with naked unshod feet
- And is not wounded,—ah! enough that once their lips could meet
- In that wild throb when all existences
- Seemed narrowed to one single ecstasy
- Which dies through its own sweetness and the stress
- Of too much pleasure, ere Persephone
- Had bade them serve her by the ebon throne
- Of the pale God who in the fields of Enna loosed her zone.
- FLOWERS OF GOLD
- IMPRESSIONS
- I
- LES SILHOUETTES
- THE sea is flecked with bars of grey,
- The dull dead wind is out of tune,
- And like a withered leaf the moon
- Is blown across the stormy bay.
- Etched clear upon the pallid sand
- Lies the black boat: a sailor boy
- Clambers aboard in careless joy
- With laughing face and gleaming hand.
- And overhead the curlews cry,
- Where through the dusky upland grass
- The young brown-throated reapers pass,
- Like silhouettes against the sky.
- II
- LA FUITE DE LA LUNE
- TO outer senses there is peace,
- A dreamy peace on either hand
- Deep silence in the shadowy land,
- Deep silence where the shadows cease.
- Save for a cry that echoes shrill
- From some lone bird disconsolate;
- A corncrake calling to its mate;
- The answer from the misty hill.
- And suddenly the moon withdraws
- Her sickle from the lightening skies,
- And to her sombre cavern flies,
- Wrapped in a veil of yellow gauze.
- THE GRAVE OF KEATS
- RID of the world’s injustice, and his pain,
- He rests at last beneath God’s veil of blue:
- Taken from life when life and love were new
- The youngest of the martyrs here is lain,
- Fair as Sebastian, and as early slain.
- No cypress shades his grave, no funeral yew,
- But gentle violets weeping with the dew
- Weave on his bones an ever-blossoming chain.
- O proudest heart that broke for misery!
- O sweetest lips since those of Mitylene!
- O poet-painter of our English Land!
- Thy name was writ in water—it shall stand:
- And tears like mine will keep thy memory green,
- As Isabella did her Basil-tree.
- ROME.
- THEOCRITUS
- A VILLANELLE
- O SINGER of Persephone!
- In the dim meadows desolate
- Dost thou remember Sicily?
- Still through the ivy flits the bee
- Where Amaryllis lies in state;
- O Singer of Persephone!
- Simætha calls on Hecate
- And hears the wild dogs at the gate;
- Dost thou remember Sicily?
- Still by the light and laughing sea
- Poor Polypheme bemoans his fate;
- O Singer of Persephone!
- And still in boyish rivalry
- Young Daphnis challenges his mate;
- Dost thou remember Sicily?
- Slim Lacon keeps a goat for thee,
- For thee the jocund shepherds wait;
- O Singer of Persephone!
- Dost thou remember Sicily?
- IN THE GOLD ROOM
- A HARMONY
- HER ivory hands on the ivory keys
- Strayed in a fitful fantasy,
- Like the silver gleam when the poplar trees
- Rustle their pale-leaves listlessly,
- Or the drifting foam of a restless sea
- When the waves show their teeth in the flying breeze.
- Her gold hair fell on the wall of gold
- Like the delicate gossamer tangles spun
- On the burnished disk of the marigold,
- Or the sunflower turning to meet the sun
- When the gloom of the dark blue night is done,
- And the spear of the lily is aureoled.
- And her sweet red lips on these lips of mine
- Burned like the ruby fire set
- In the swinging lamp of a crimson shrine,
- Or the bleeding wounds of the pomegranate,
- Or the heart of the lotus drenched and wet
- With the spilt-out blood of the rose-red wine.
- BALLADE DE MARGUERITE
- (NORMANDE)
- I AM weary of lying within the chase
- When the knights are meeting in market-place.
- Nay, go not thou to the red-roofed town
- Lest the hoofs of the war-horse tread thee down.
- But I would not go where the Squires ride,
- I would only walk by my Lady’s side.
- Alack! and alack! thou art overbold,
- A Forester’s son may not eat off gold.
- Will she love me the less that my Father is seen
- Each Martinmas day in a doublet green?
- Perchance she is sewing at tapestrie,
- Spindle and loom are not meet for thee.
- Ah, if she is working the arras bright
- I might ravel the threads by the fire-light.
- Perchance she is hunting of the deer,
- How could you follow o’er hill and mere?
- Ah, if she is riding with the court,
- I might run beside her and wind the morte.
- Perchance she is kneeling in St. Denys,
- (On her soul may our Lady have gramercy!)
- Ah, if she is praying in lone chapelle,
- I might swing the censer and ring the bell.
- Come in, my son, for you look sae pale,
- The father shall fill thee a stoup of ale.
- But who are these knights in bright array?
- Is it a pageant the rich folks play?
- ’T is the King of England from over sea,
- Who has come unto visit our fair countrie.
- But why does the curfew toll sae low?
- And why do the mourners walk a-row?
- O ’t is Hugh of Amiens my sister’s son
- Who is lying stark, for his day is done.
- Nay, nay, for I see white lilies clear,
- It is no strong man who lies on the bier.
- O ’t is old Dame Jeannette that kept the hall,
- I knew she would die at the autumn fall.
- Dame Jeannette had not that gold-brown hair,
- Old Jeannette was not a maiden fair.
- O ’t is none of our kith and none of our kin,
- (Her soul may our Lady assoil from sin!)
- But I hear the boy’s voice chaunting sweet,
- ‘Elle est morte, la Marguerite.’
- Come in, my son, and lie on the bed,
- And let the dead folk bury their dead.
- O mother, you know I loved her true:
- O mother, hath one grave room for two?
- THE DOLE OF THE KING’S DAUGHTER
- (BRETON)
- SEVEN stars in the still water,
- And seven in the sky;
- Seven sins on the King’s daughter,
- Deep in her soul to lie.
- Red roses are at her feet,
- (Roses are red in her red-gold hair)
- And O where her bosom and girdle meet
- Red roses are hidden there.
- Fair is the knight who lieth slain
- Amid the rush and reed,
- See the lean fishes that are fain
- Upon dead men to feed.
- Sweet is the page that lieth there,
- (Cloth of gold is goodly prey,)
- See the black ravens in the air,
- Black, O black as the night are they.
- What do they there so stark and dead?
- (There is blood upon her hand)
- Why are the lilies flecked with red?
- (There is blood on the river sand.)
- There are two that ride from the south and east,
- And two from the north and west,
- For the black raven a goodly feast,
- For the King’s daughter rest.
- There is one man who loves her true,
- (Red, O red, is the stain of gore!)
- He hath duggen a grave by the darksome yew,
- (One grave will do for four.)
- No moon in the still heaven,
- In the black water none,
- The sins on her soul are seven,
- The sin upon his is one.
- AMOR INTELLECTUALIS
- OFT have we trod the vales of Castaly
- And heard sweet notes of sylvan music blown
- From antique reeds to common folk unknown:
- And often launched our bark upon that sea
- Which the nine Muses hold in empery,
- And ploughed free furrows through the wave and foam,
- Nor spread reluctant sail for more safe home
- Till we had freighted well our argosy.
- Of which despoilèd treasures these remain,
- Sordello’s passion, and the honeyed line
- Of young Endymion, lordly Tamburlaine
- Driving his pampered jades, and more than these,
- The seven-fold vision of the Florentine,
- And grave-browed Milton’s solemn harmonies.
- SANTA DECCA
- THE Gods are dead: no longer do we bring
- To grey-eyed Pallas crowns of olive-leaves!
- Demeter’s child no more hath tithe of sheaves,
- And in the noon the careless shepherds sing,
- For Pan is dead, and all the wantoning
- By secret glade and devious haunt is o’er:
- Young Hylas seeks the water-springs no more;
- Great Pan is dead, and Mary’s son is King.
- And yet—perchance in this sea-trancèd isle,
- Chewing the bitter fruit of memory,
- Some God lies hidden in the asphodel.
- Ah Love! if such there be, then it were well
- For us to fly his anger: nay, but see,
- The leaves are stirring: let us watch awhile.
- CORFU.
- A VISION
- TWO crownèd Kings, and One that stood alone
- With no green weight of laurels round his head,
- But with sad eyes as one uncomforted,
- And wearied with man’s never-ceasing moan
- For sins no bleating victim can atone,
- And sweet long lips with tears and kisses fed.
- Girt was he in a garment black and red,
- And at his feet I marked a broken stone
- Which sent up lilies, dove-like, to his knees.
- Now at their sight, my heart being lit with flame,
- I cried to Beatricé, ‘Who are these?’
- And she made answer, knowing well each name,
- ‘Æschylos first, the second Sophokles,
- And last (wide stream of tears!) Euripides.’
- IMPRESSION DE VOYAGE
- THE sea was sapphire coloured, and the sky
- Burned like a heated opal through the air;
- We hoisted sail; the wind was blowing fair
- For the blue lands that to the eastward lie.
- From the steep prow I marked with quickening eye
- Zakynthos, every olive grove and creek,
- Ithaca’s cliff, Lycaon’s snowy peak,
- And all the flower-strewn hills of Arcady.
- The flapping of the sail against the mast,
- The ripple of the water on the side,
- The ripple of girls’ laughter at the stern,
- The only sounds:—when ’gan the West to burn,
- And a red sun upon the seas to ride,
- I stood upon the soil of Greece at last!
- KATAKOLO.
- THE GRAVE OF SHELLEY
- LIKE burnt-out torches by a sick man’s bed
- Gaunt cypress-trees stand round the sun-bleached stone;
- Here doth the little night-owl make her throne,
- And the slight lizard show his jewelled head.
- And, where the chaliced poppies flame to red,
- In the still chamber of yon pyramid
- Surely some Old-World Sphinx lurks darkly hid,
- Grim warder of this pleasaunce of the dead.
- Ah! sweet indeed to rest within the womb
- Of Earth, great mother of eternal sleep,
- But sweeter far for thee a restless tomb
- In the blue cavern of an echoing deep,
- Or where the tall ships founder in the gloom
- Against the rocks of some wave-shattered steep.
- ROME.
- BY THE ARNO
- THE oleander on the wall
- Grows crimson in the dawning light,
- Though the grey shadows of the night
- Lie yet on Florence like a pall.
- The dew is bright upon the hill,
- And bright the blossoms overhead,
- But ah! the grasshoppers have fled,
- The little Attic song is still.
- Only the leaves are gently stirred
- By the soft breathing of the gale,
- And in the almond-scented vale
- The lonely nightingale is heard.
- The day will make thee silent soon,
- O nightingale sing on for love!
- While yet upon the shadowy grove
- Splinter the arrows of the moon.
- Before across the silent lawn
- In sea-green vest the morning steals,
- And to love’s frightened eyes reveals
- The long white fingers of the dawn
- Fast climbing up the eastern sky
- To grasp and slay the shuddering night,
- All careless of my heart’s delight,
- Or if the nightingale should die.
- IMPRESSIONS DE THÉÂTRE
- FABIEN DEI FRANCHI
- TO MY FRIEND HENRY IRVING
- THE silent room, the heavy creeping shade,
- The dead that travel fast, the opening door,
- The murdered brother rising through the floor,
- The ghost’s white fingers on thy shoulders laid,
- And then the lonely duel in the glade,
- The broken swords, the stifled scream, the gore,
- Thy grand revengeful eyes when all is o’er,—
- These things are well enough,—but thou wert made
- For more august creation! frenzied Lear
- Should at thy bidding wander on the heath
- With the shrill fool to mock him, Romeo
- For thee should lure his love, and desperate fear
- Pluck Richard’s recreant dagger from its sheath—
- Thou trumpet set for Shakespeare’s lips to blow!
- PHÈDRE
- TO SARAH BERNHARDT
- HOW vain and dull this common world must seem
- To such a One as thou, who should’st have talked
- At Florence with Mirandola, or walked
- Through the cool olives of the Academe:
- Thou should’st have gathered reeds from a green stream
- For Goat-foot Pan’s shrill piping, and have played
- With the white girls in that Phæacian glade
- Where grave Odysseus wakened from his dream.
- Ah! surely once some urn of Attic clay
- Held thy wan dust, and thou hast come again
- Back to this common world so dull and vain,
- For thou wert weary of the sunless day,
- The heavy fields of scentless asphodel,
- The loveless lips with which men kiss in Hell.
- WRITTEN AT THE LYCEUM THEATRE
- I
- PORTIA
- TO ELLEN TERRY
- I MARVEL not Bassanio was so bold
- To peril all he had upon the lead,
- Or that proud Aragon bent low his head
- Or that Morocco’s fiery heart grew cold:
- For in that gorgeous dress of beaten gold
- Which is more golden than the golden sun
- No woman Veronesé looked upon
- Was half so fair as thou whom I behold.
- Yet fairer when with wisdom as your shield
- The sober-suited lawyer’s gown you donned,
- And would not let the laws of Venice yield
- Antonio’s heart to that accursèd Jew—
- O Portia! take my heart: it is thy due:
- I think I will not quarrel with the Bond.
- II
- QUEEN HENRIETTA MARIA
- TO ELLEN TERRY
- IN the lone tent, waiting for victory,
- She stands with eyes marred by the mists of pain,
- Like some wan lily overdrenched with rain:
- The clamorous clang of arms, the ensanguined sky,
- War’s ruin, and the wreck of chivalry
- To her proud soul no common fear can bring:
- Bravely she tarrieth for her Lord the King,
- Her soul a-flame with passionate ecstasy.
- O Hair of Gold! O Crimson Lips! O Face
- Made for the luring and the love of man!
- With thee I do forget the toil and stress,
- The loveless road that knows no resting place,
- Time’s straitened pulse, the soul’s dread weariness,
- My freedom, and my life republican!
- III
- CAMMA
- TO ELLEN TERRY
- AS one who poring on a Grecian urn
- Scans the fair shapes some Attic hand hath made,
- God with slim goddess, goodly man with maid,
- And for their beauty’s sake is loth to turn
- And face the obvious day, must I not yearn
- For many a secret moon of indolent bliss,
- When in midmost shrine of Artemis
- I see thee standing, antique-limbed, and stern?
- And yet—methinks I’d rather see thee play
- That serpent of old Nile, whose witchery
- Made Emperors drunken,—come, great Egypt, shake
- Our stage with all thy mimic pageants! Nay,
- I am grown sick of unreal passions, make
- The world thine Actium, me thine Anthony!
- PANTHEA
- NAY, let us walk from fire unto fire,
- From passionate pain to deadlier delight,—
- I am too young to live without desire,
- Too young art thou to waste this summer night
- Asking those idle questions which of old
- Man sought of seer and oracle, and no reply was told.
- For, sweet, to feel is better than to know,
- And wisdom is a childless heritage,
- One pulse of passion—youth’s first fiery glow,—
- Are worth the hoarded proverbs of the sage:
- Vex not thy soul with dead philosophy,
- Have we not lips to kiss with, hearts to love and eyes to see!
- Dost thou not hear the murmuring nightingale,
- Like water bubbling from a silver jar,
- So soft she sings the envious moon is pale,
- That high in heaven she is hung so far
- She cannot hear that love-enraptured tune,—
- Mark how she wreathes each horn with mist, yon late and labouring
- moon.
- White lilies, in whose cups the gold bees dream,
- The fallen snow of petals where the breeze
- Scatters the chestnut blossom, or the gleam
- Of boyish limbs in water,—are not these
- Enough for thee, dost thou desire more?
- Alas! the Gods will give nought else from their eternal store.
- For our high Gods have sick and wearied grown
- Of all our endless sins, our vain endeavour
- For wasted days of youth to make atone
- By pain or prayer or priest, and never, never,
- Hearken they now to either good or ill,
- But send their rain upon the just and the unjust at will.
- They sit at ease, our Gods they sit at ease,
- Strewing with leaves of rose their scented wine,
- They sleep, they sleep, beneath the rocking trees
- Where asphodel and yellow lotus twine,
- Mourning the old glad days before they knew
- What evil things the heart of man could dream, and dreaming do.
- And far beneath the brazen floor they see
- Like swarming flies the crowd of little men,
- The bustle of small lives, then wearily
- Back to their lotus-haunts they turn again
- Kissing each others’ mouths, and mix more deep
- The poppy-seeded draught which brings soft purple-lidded sleep.
- There all day long the golden-vestured sun,
- Their torch-bearer, stands with his torch ablaze,
- And, when the gaudy web of noon is spun
- By its twelve maidens, through the crimson haze
- Fresh from Endymion’s arms comes forth the moon,
- And the immortal Gods in toils of mortal passions swoon.
- There walks Queen Juno through some dewy mead,
- Her grand white feet flecked with the saffron dust
- Of wind-stirred lilies, while young Ganymede
- Leaps in the hot and amber-foaming must,
- His curls all tossed, as when the eagle bare
- The frightened boy from Ida through the blue Ionian air.
- There in the green heart of some garden close
- Queen Venus with the shepherd at her side,
- Her warm soft body like the briar rose
- Which would be white yet blushes at its pride,
- Laughs low for love, till jealous Salmacis
- Peers through the myrtle-leaves and sighs for pain of lonely bliss.
- There never does that dreary north-wind blow
- Which leaves our English forests bleak and bare,
- Nor ever falls the swift white-feathered snow,
- Nor ever doth the red-toothed lightning dare
- To wake them in the silver-fretted night
- When we lie weeping for some sweet sad sin, some dead delight.
- Alas! they know the far Lethæan spring,
- The violet-hidden waters well they know,
- Where one whose feet with tired wandering
- Are faint and broken may take heart and go,
- And from those dark depths cool and crystalline
- Drink, and draw balm, and sleep for sleepless souls, and anodyne.
- But we oppress our natures, God or Fate
- Is our enemy, we starve and feed
- On vain repentance—O we are born too late!
- What balm for us in bruisèd poppy seed
- Who crowd into one finite pulse of time
- The joy of infinite love and the fierce pain of infinite crime.
- O we are wearied of this sense of guilt,
- Wearied of pleasure’s paramour despair,
- Wearied of every temple we have built,
- Wearied of every right, unanswered prayer,
- For man is weak; God sleeps: and heaven is high:
- One fiery-coloured moment: one great love; and lo! we die.
- Ah! but no ferry-man with labouring pole
- Nears his black shallop to the flowerless strand,
- No little coin of bronze can bring the soul
- Over Death’s river to the sunless land,
- Victim and wine and vow are all in vain,
- The tomb is sealed; the soldiers watch; the dead rise not again.
- We are resolved into the supreme air,
- We are made one with what we touch and see,
- With our heart’s blood each crimson sun is fair,
- With our young lives each spring-impassioned tree
- Flames into green, the wildest beasts that range
- The moor our kinsmen are, all life is one, and all is change.
- With beat of systole and of diastole
- One grand great life throbs through earth’s giant heart,
- And mighty waves of single Being roll
- From nerveless germ to man, for we are part
- Of every rock and bird and beast and hill,
- One with the things that prey on us, and one with what we kill.
- From lower cells of waking life we pass
- To full perfection; thus the world grows old:
- We who are godlike now were once a mass
- Of quivering purple flecked with bars of gold,
- Unsentient or of joy or misery,
- And tossed in terrible tangles of some wild and wind-swept sea.
- This hot hard flame with which our bodies burn
- Will make some meadow blaze with daffodil,
- Ay! and those argent breasts of thine will turn
- To water-lilies; the brown fields men till
- Will be more fruitful for our love to-night,
- Nothing is lost in nature, all things live in Death’s despite.
- The boy’s first kiss, the hyacinth’s first bell,
- The man’s last passion, and the last red spear
- That from the lily leaps, the asphodel
- Which will not let its blossoms blow for fear
- Of too much beauty, and the timid shame
- Of the young bridegroom at his lover’s eyes,—these with the same
- One sacrament are consecrate, the earth
- Not we alone hath passions hymeneal,
- The yellow buttercups that shake for mirth
- At daybreak know a pleasure not less real
- Than we do, when in some fresh-blossoming wood,
- We draw the spring into our hearts, and feel that life is good.
- So when men bury us beneath the yew
- Thy crimson-stainèd mouth a rose will be,
- And thy soft eyes lush bluebells dimmed with dew,
- And when the white narcissus wantonly
- Kisses the wind its playmate some faint joy
- Will thrill our dust, and we will be again fond maid and boy.
- And thus without life’s conscious torturing pain
- In some sweet flower we will feel the sun,
- And from the linnet’s throat will sing again,
- And as two gorgeous-mailèd snakes will run
- Over our graves, or as two tigers creep
- Through the hot jungle where the yellow-eyed huge lions sleep
- And give them battle! How my heart leaps up
- To think of that grand living after death
- In beast and bird and flower, when this cup,
- Being filled too full of spirit, bursts for breath,
- And with the pale leaves of some autumn day
- The soul earth’s earliest conqueror becomes earth’s last great prey.
- O think of it! We shall inform ourselves
- Into all sensuous life, the goat-foot Faun,
- The Centaur, or the merry bright-eyed Elves
- That leave their dancing rings to spite the dawn
- Upon the meadows, shall not be more near
- Than you and I to nature’s mysteries, for we shall hear
- The thrush’s heart beat, and the daisies grow,
- And the wan snowdrop sighing for the sun
- On sunless days in winter, we shall know
- By whom the silver gossamer is spun,
- Who paints the diapered fritillaries,
- On what wide wings from shivering pine to pine the eagle flies.
- Ay! had we never loved at all, who knows
- If yonder daffodil had lured the bee
- Into its gilded womb, or any rose
- Had hung with crimson lamps its little tree!
- Methinks no leaf would ever bud in spring,
- But for the lovers’ lips that kiss, the poets’ lips that sing.
- Is the light vanished from our golden sun,
- Or is this dædal-fashioned earth less fair,
- That we are nature’s heritors, and one
- With every pulse of life that beats the air?
- Rather new suns across the sky shall pass,
- New splendour come unto the flower, new glory to the grass.
- And we two lovers shall not sit afar,
- Critics of nature, but the joyous sea
- Shall be our raiment, and the bearded star
- Shoot arrows at our pleasure! We shall be
- Part of the mighty universal whole,
- And through all æons mix and mingle with the Kosmic Soul!
- We shall be notes in that great Symphony
- Whose cadence circles through the rhythmic spheres,
- And all the live World’s throbbing heart shall be
- One with our heart; the stealthy creeping years
- Have lost their terrors now, we shall not die,
- The Universe itself shall be our Immortality.
- THE FOURTH MOVEMENT
- IMPRESSION
- LE RÉVEILLON
- THE sky is laced with fitful red,
- The circling mists and shadows flee,
- The dawn is rising from the sea,
- Like a white lady from her bed.
- And jagged brazen arrows fall
- Athwart the feathers of the night,
- And a long wave of yellow light
- Breaks silently on tower and hall,
- And spreading wide across the wold
- Wakes into flight some fluttering bird,
- And all the chestnut tops are stirred,
- And all the branches streaked with gold.
- AT VERONA
- HOW steep the stairs within Kings’ houses are
- For exile-wearied feet as mine to tread,
- And O how salt and bitter is the bread
- Which falls from this Hound’s table,—better far
- That I had died in the red ways of war,
- Or that the gate of Florence bare my head,
- Than to live thus, by all things comraded
- Which seek the essence of my soul to mar.
- ‘Curse God and die: what better hope than this?
- He hath forgotten thee in all the bliss
- Of his gold city, and eternal day’—
- Nay peace: behind my prison’s blinded bars
- I do possess what none can take away
- My love, and all the glory of the stars.
- APOLOGIA
- IS it thy will that I should wax and wane,
- Barter my cloth of gold for hodden grey,
- And at thy pleasure weave that web of pain
- Whose brightest threads are each a wasted day?
- Is it thy will—Love that I love so well—
- That my Soul’s House should be a tortured spot
- Wherein, like evil paramours, must dwell
- The quenchless flame, the worm that dieth not?
- Nay, if it be thy will I shall endure,
- And sell ambition at the common mart,
- And let dull failure be my vestiture,
- And sorrow dig its grave within my heart.
- Perchance it may be better so—at least
- I have not made my heart a heart of stone,
- Nor starved my boyhood of its goodly feast,
- Nor walked where Beauty is a thing unknown.
- Many a man hath done so; sought to fence
- In straitened bonds the soul that should be free,
- Trodden the dusty road of common sense,
- While all the forest sang of liberty,
- Not marking how the spotted hawk in flight
- Passed on wide pinion through the lofty air,
- To where some steep untrodden mountain height
- Caught the last tresses of the Sun God’s hair.
- Or how the little flower he trod upon,
- The daisy, that white-feathered shield of gold,
- Followed with wistful eyes the wandering sun
- Content if once its leaves were aureoled.
- But surely it is something to have been
- The best belovèd for a little while,
- To have walked hand in hand with Love, and seen
- His purple wings flit once across thy smile.
- Ay! though the gorgèd asp of passion feed
- On my boy’s heart, yet have I burst the bars,
- Stood face to face with Beauty, known indeed
- The Love which moves the Sun and all the stars!
- QUIA MULTUM AMAVI
- DEAR Heart, I think the young impassioned priest
- When first he takes from out the hidden shrine
- His God imprisoned in the Eucharist,
- And eats the bread, and drinks the dreadful wine,
- Feels not such awful wonder as I felt
- When first my smitten eyes beat full on thee,
- And all night long before thy feet I knelt
- Till thou wert wearied of Idolatry.
- Ah! hadst thou liked me less and loved me more,
- Through all those summer days of joy and rain,
- I had not now been sorrow’s heritor,
- Or stood a lackey in the House of Pain.
- Yet, though remorse, youth’s white-faced seneschal,
- Tread on my heels with all his retinue,
- I am most glad I loved thee—think of all
- The suns that go to make one speedwell blue!
- SILENTIUM AMORIS
- AS often-times the too resplendent sun
- Hurries the pallid and reluctant moon
- Back to her sombre cave, ere she hath won
- A single ballad from the nightingale,
- So doth thy Beauty make my lips to fail,
- And all my sweetest singing out of tune.
- And as at dawn across the level mead
- On wings impetuous some wind will come,
- And with its too harsh kisses break the reed
- Which was its only instrument of song,
- So my too stormy passions work me wrong,
- And for excess of Love my Love is dumb.
- But surely unto Thee mine eyes did show
- Why I am silent, and my lute unstrung;
- Else it were better we should part, and go,
- Thou to some lips of sweeter melody,
- And I to nurse the barren memory
- Of unkissed kisses, and songs never sung.
- HER VOICE
- THE wild bee reels from bough to bough
- With his furry coat and his gauzy wing,
- Now in a lily-cup, and now
- Setting a jacinth bell a-swing,
- In his wandering;
- Sit closer love: it was here I trow
- I made that vow,
- Swore that two lives should be like one
- As long as the sea-gull loved the sea,
- As long as the sunflower sought the sun,—
- It shall be, I said, for eternity
- ’Twixt you and me!
- Dear friend, those times are over and done;
- Love’s web is spun.
- Look upward where the poplar trees
- Sway and sway in the summer air,
- Here in the valley never a breeze
- Scatters the thistledown, but there
- Great winds blow fair
- From the mighty murmuring mystical seas,
- And the wave-lashed leas.
- Look upward where the white gull screams,
- What does it see that we do not see?
- Is that a star? or the lamp that gleams
- On some outward voyaging argosy,—
- Ah! can it be
- We have lived our lives in a land of dreams!
- How sad it seems.
- Sweet, there is nothing left to say
- But this, that love is never lost,
- Keen winter stabs the breasts of May
- Whose crimson roses burst his frost,
- Ships tempest-tossed
- Will find a harbour in some bay,
- And so we may.
- And there is nothing left to do
- But to kiss once again, and part,
- Nay, there is nothing we should rue,
- I have my beauty,—you your Art,
- Nay, do not start,
- One world was not enough for two
- Like me and you.
- MY VOICE
- WITHIN this restless, hurried, modern world
- We took our hearts’ full pleasure—You and I,
- And now the white sails of our ship are furled,
- And spent the lading of our argosy.
- Wherefore my cheeks before their time are wan,
- For very weeping is my gladness fled,
- Sorrow has paled my young mouth’s vermilion,
- And Ruin draws the curtains of my bed.
- But all this crowded life has been to thee
- No more than lyre, or lute, or subtle spell
- Of viols, or the music of the sea
- That sleeps, a mimic echo, in the shell.
- TÆDIUM VITÆ
- TO stab my youth with desperate knives, to wear
- This paltry age’s gaudy livery,
- To let each base hand filch my treasury,
- To mesh my soul within a woman’s hair,
- And be mere Fortune’s lackeyed groom,—I swear
- I love it not! these things are less to me
- Than the thin foam that frets upon the sea,
- Less than the thistledown of summer air
- Which hath no seed: better to stand aloof
- Far from these slanderous fools who mock my life
- Knowing me not, better the lowliest roof
- Fit for the meanest hind to sojourn in,
- Than to go back to that hoarse cave of strife
- Where my white soul first kissed the mouth of sin.
- HUMANITAD
- IT is full winter now: the trees are bare,
- Save where the cattle huddle from the cold
- Beneath the pine, for it doth never wear
- The autumn’s gaudy livery whose gold
- Her jealous brother pilfers, but is true
- To the green doublet; bitter is the wind, as though it blew
- From Saturn’s cave; a few thin wisps of hay
- Lie on the sharp black hedges, where the wain
- Dragged the sweet pillage of a summer’s day
- From the low meadows up the narrow lane;
- Upon the half-thawed snow the bleating sheep
- Press close against the hurdles, and the shivering house-dogs creep
- From the shut stable to the frozen stream
- And back again disconsolate, and miss
- The bawling shepherds and the noisy team;
- And overhead in circling listlessness
- The cawing rooks whirl round the frosted stack,
- Or crowd the dripping boughs; and in the fen the ice-pools crack
- Where the gaunt bittern stalks among the reeds
- And flaps his wings, and stretches back his neck,
- And hoots to see the moon; across the meads
- Limps the poor frightened hare, a little speck;
- And a stray seamew with its fretful cry
- Flits like a sudden drift of snow against the dull grey sky.
- Full winter: and the lusty goodman brings
- His load of faggots from the chilly byre,
- And stamps his feet upon the hearth, and flings
- The sappy billets on the waning fire,
- And laughs to see the sudden lightening scare
- His children at their play, and yet,—the spring is in the air;
- Already the slim crocus stirs the snow,
- And soon yon blanchèd fields will bloom again
- With nodding cowslips for some lad to mow,
- For with the first warm kisses of the rain
- The winter’s icy sorrow breaks to tears,
- And the brown thrushes mate, and with bright eyes the rabbit peers
- From the dark warren where the fir-cones lie,
- And treads one snowdrop under foot, and runs
- Over the mossy knoll, and blackbirds fly
- Across our path at evening, and the suns
- Stay longer with us; ah! how good to see
- Grass-girdled spring in all her joy of laughing greenery
- Dance through the hedges till the early rose,
- (That sweet repentance of the thorny briar!)
- Burst from its sheathèd emerald and disclose
- The little quivering disk of golden fire
- Which the bees know so well, for with it come
- Pale boy’s-love, sops-in-wine, and daffadillies all in bloom.
- Then up and down the field the sower goes,
- While close behind the laughing younker scares
- With shrilly whoop the black and thievish crows,
- And then the chestnut-tree its glory wears,
- And on the grass the creamy blossom falls
- In odorous excess, and faint half-whispered madrigals
- Steal from the bluebells’ nodding carillons
- Each breezy morn, and then white jessamine,
- That star of its own heaven, snap-dragons
- With lolling crimson tongues, and eglantine
- In dusty velvets clad usurp the bed
- And woodland empery, and when the lingering rose hath shed
- Red leaf by leaf its folded panoply,
- And pansies closed their purple-lidded eyes,
- Chrysanthemums from gilded argosy
- Unload their gaudy scentless merchandise,
- And violets getting overbold withdraw
- From their shy nooks, and scarlet berries dot the leafless haw.
- O happy field! and O thrice happy tree!
- Soon will your queen in daisy-flowered smock
- And crown of flower-de-luce trip down the lea,
- Soon will the lazy shepherds drive their flock
- Back to the pasture by the pool, and soon
- Through the green leaves will float the hum of murmuring bees at noon.
- Soon will the glade be bright with bellamour,
- The flower which wantons love, and those sweet nuns
- Vale-lilies in their snowy vestiture
- Will tell their beaded pearls, and carnations
- With mitred dusky leaves will scent the wind,
- And straggling traveller’s-joy each hedge with yellow stars will bind.
- Dear bride of Nature and most bounteous spring,
- That canst give increase to the sweet-breath’d kine,
- And to the kid its little horns, and bring
- The soft and silky blossoms to the vine,
- Where is that old nepenthe which of yore
- Man got from poppy root and glossy-berried mandragore!
- There was a time when any common bird
- Could make me sing in unison, a time
- When all the strings of boyish life were stirred
- To quick response or more melodious rhyme
- By every forest idyll;—do I change?
- Or rather doth some evil thing through thy fair pleasaunce range?
- Nay, nay, thou art the same: ’tis I who seek
- To vex with sighs thy simple solitude,
- And because fruitless tears bedew my cheek
- Would have thee weep with me in brotherhood;
- Fool! shall each wronged and restless spirit dare
- To taint such wine with the salt poison of own despair!
- Thou art the same: ’tis I whose wretched soul
- Takes discontent to be its paramour,
- And gives its kingdom to the rude control
- Of what should be its servitor,—for sure
- Wisdom is somewhere, though the stormy sea
- Contain it not, and the huge deep answer ‘’Tis not in me.’
- To burn with one clear flame, to stand erect
- In natural honour, not to bend the knee
- In profitless prostrations whose effect
- Is by itself condemned, what alchemy
- Can teach me this? what herb Medea brewed
- Will bring the unexultant peace of essence not subdued?
- The minor chord which ends the harmony,
- And for its answering brother waits in vain
- Sobbing for incompleted melody,
- Dies a swan’s death; but I the heir of pain,
- A silent Memnon with blank lidless eyes,
- Wait for the light and music of those suns which never rise.
- The quenched-out torch, the lonely cypress-gloom,
- The little dust stored in the narrow urn,
- The gentle ΧΑΙΡΕ of the Attic tomb,—
- Were not these better far than to return
- To my old fitful restless malady,
- Or spend my days within the voiceless cave of misery?
- Nay! for perchance that poppy-crownèd god
- Is like the watcher by a sick man’s bed
- Who talks of sleep but gives it not; his rod
- Hath lost its virtue, and, when all is said,
- Death is too rude, too obvious a key
- To solve one single secret in a life’s philosophy.
- And Love! that noble madness, whose august
- And inextinguishable might can slay
- The soul with honeyed drugs,—alas! I must
- From such sweet ruin play the runaway,
- Although too constant memory never can
- Forget the archèd splendour of those brows Olympian
- Which for a little season made my youth
- So soft a swoon of exquisite indolence
- That all the chiding of more prudent Truth
- Seemed the thin voice of jealousy,—O hence
- Thou huntress deadlier than Artemis!
- Go seek some other quarry! for of thy too perilous bliss.
- My lips have drunk enough,—no more, no more,—
- Though Love himself should turn his gilded prow
- Back to the troubled waters of this shore
- Where I am wrecked and stranded, even now
- The chariot wheels of passion sweep too near,
- Hence! Hence! I pass unto a life more barren, more austere.
- More barren—ay, those arms will never lean
- Down through the trellised vines and draw my soul
- In sweet reluctance through the tangled green;
- Some other head must wear that aureole,
- For I am hers who loves not any man
- Whose white and stainless bosom bears the sign Gorgonian.
- Let Venus go and chuck her dainty page,
- And kiss his mouth, and toss his curly hair,
- With net and spear and hunting equipage
- Let young Adonis to his tryst repair,
- But me her fond and subtle-fashioned spell
- Delights no more, though I could win her dearest citadel.
- Ay, though I were that laughing shepherd boy
- Who from Mount Ida saw the little cloud
- Pass over Tenedos and lofty Troy
- And knew the coming of the Queen, and bowed
- In wonder at her feet, not for the sake
- Of a new Helen would I bid her hand the apple take.
- Then rise supreme Athena argent-limbed!
- And, if my lips be musicless, inspire
- At least my life: was not thy glory hymned
- By One who gave to thee his sword and lyre
- Like Æschylos at well-fought Marathon,
- And died to show that Milton’s England still could bear a son!
- And yet I cannot tread the Portico
- And live without desire, fear and pain,
- Or nurture that wise calm which long ago
- The grave Athenian master taught to men,
- Self-poised, self-centred, and self-comforted,
- To watch the world’s vain phantasies go by with unbowed head.
- Alas! that serene brow, those eloquent lips,
- Those eyes that mirrored all eternity,
- Rest in their own Colonos, an eclipse
- Hath come on Wisdom, and Mnemosyne
- Is childless; in the night which she had made
- For lofty secure flight Athena’s owl itself hath strayed.
- Nor much with Science do I care to climb,
- Although by strange and subtle witchery
- She drew the moon from heaven: the Muse Time
- Unrolls her gorgeous-coloured tapestry
- To no less eager eyes; often indeed
- In the great epic of Polymnia’s scroll I love to read
- How Asia sent her myriad hosts to war
- Against a little town, and panoplied
- In gilded mail with jewelled scimitar,
- White-shielded, purple-crested, rode the Mede
- Between the waving poplars and the sea
- Which men call Artemisium, till he saw Thermopylæ
- Its steep ravine spanned by a narrow wall,
- And on the nearer side a little brood
- Of careless lions holding festival!
- And stood amazèd at such hardihood,
- And pitched his tent upon the reedy shore,
- And stayed two days to wonder, and then crept at midnight o’er
- Some unfrequented height, and coming down
- The autumn forests treacherously slew
- What Sparta held most dear and was the crown
- Of far Eurotas, and passed on, nor knew
- How God had staked an evil net for him
- In the small bay at Salamis,—and yet, the page grows dim,
- Its cadenced Greek delights me not, I feel
- With such a goodly time too out of tune
- To love it much: for like the Dial’s wheel
- That from its blinded darkness strikes the noon
- Yet never sees the sun, so do my eyes
- Restlessly follow that which from my cheated vision flies.
- O for one grand unselfish simple life
- To teach us what is Wisdom! speak ye hills
- Of lone Helvellyn, for this note of strife
- Shunned your untroubled crags and crystal rills,
- Where is that Spirit which living blamelessly
- Yet dared to kiss the smitten mouth of his own century!
- Speak ye Rydalian laurels! where is he
- Whose gentle head ye sheltered, that pure soul
- Whose gracious days of uncrowned majesty
- Through lowliest conduct touched the lofty goal
- Where love and duty mingle! Him at least
- The most high Laws were glad of, he had sat at Wisdom’s feast;
- But we are Learning’s changelings, know by rote
- The clarion watchword of each Grecian school
- And follow none, the flawless sword which smote
- The pagan Hydra is an effete tool
- Which we ourselves have blunted, what man now
- Shall scale the august ancient heights and to old Reverence bow?
- One such indeed I saw, but, Ichabod!
- Gone is that last dear son of Italy,
- Who being man died for the sake of God,
- And whose unrisen bones sleep peacefully,
- O guard him, guard him well, my Giotto’s tower,
- Thou marble lily of the lily town! let not the lour
- Of the rude tempest vex his slumber, or
- The Arno with its tawny troubled gold
- O’er-leap its marge, no mightier conqueror
- Clomb the high Capitol in the days of old
- When Rome was indeed Rome, for Liberty
- Walked like a bride beside him, at which sight pale Mystery
- Fled shrieking to her farthest sombrest cell
- With an old man who grabbled rusty keys,
- Fled shuddering, for that immemorial knell
- With which oblivion buries dynasties
- Swept like a wounded eagle on the blast,
- As to the holy heart of Rome the great triumvir passed.
- He knew the holiest heart and heights of Rome,
- He drave the base wolf from the lion’s lair,
- And now lies dead by that empyreal dome
- Which overtops Valdarno hung in air
- By Brunelleschi—O Melpomene
- Breathe through thy melancholy pipe thy sweetest threnody!
- Breathe through the tragic stops such melodies
- That Joy’s self may grow jealous, and the Nine
- Forget awhile their discreet emperies,
- Mourning for him who on Rome’s lordliest shrine
- Lit for men’s lives the light of Marathon,
- And bare to sun-forgotten fields the fire of the sun!
- O guard him, guard him well, my Giotto’s tower!
- Let some young Florentine each eventide
- Bring coronals of that enchanted flower
- Which the dim woods of Vallombrosa hide,
- And deck the marble tomb wherein he lies
- Whose soul is as some mighty orb unseen of mortal eyes;
- Some mighty orb whose cycled wanderings,
- Being tempest-driven to the farthest rim
- Where Chaos meets Creation and the wings
- Of the eternal chanting Cherubim
- Are pavilioned on Nothing, passed away
- Into a moonless void,—and yet, though he is dust and clay,
- He is not dead, the immemorial Fates
- Forbid it, and the closing shears refrain.
- Lift up your heads ye everlasting gates!
- Ye argent clarions, sound a loftier strain
- For the vile thing he hated lurks within
- Its sombre house, alone with God and memories of sin.
- Still what avails it that she sought her cave
- That murderous mother of red harlotries?
- At Munich on the marble architrave
- The Grecian boys die smiling, but the seas
- Which wash Ægina fret in loneliness
- Not mirroring their beauty; so our lives grow colourless
- For lack of our ideals, if one star
- Flame torch-like in the heavens the unjust
- Swift daylight kills it, and no trump of war
- Can wake to passionate voice the silent dust
- Which was Mazzini once! rich Niobe
- For all her stony sorrows hath her sons; but Italy,
- What Easter Day shall make her children rise,
- Who were not Gods yet suffered? what sure feet
- Shall find their grave-clothes folded? what clear eyes
- Shall see them bodily? O it were meet
- To roll the stone from off the sepulchre
- And kiss the bleeding roses of their wounds, in love of her,
- Our Italy! our mother visible!
- Most blessed among nations and most sad,
- For whose dear sake the young Calabrian fell
- That day at Aspromonte and was glad
- That in an age when God was bought and sold
- One man could die for Liberty! but we, burnt out and cold,
- See Honour smitten on the cheek and gyves
- Bind the sweet feet of Mercy: Poverty
- Creeps through our sunless lanes and with sharp knives
- Cuts the warm throats of children stealthily,
- And no word said:—O we are wretched men
- Unworthy of our great inheritance! where is the pen
- Of austere Milton? where the mighty sword
- Which slew its master righteously? the years
- Have lost their ancient leader, and no word
- Breaks from the voiceless tripod on our ears:
- While as a ruined mother in some spasm
- Bears a base child and loathes it, so our best enthusiasm
- Genders unlawful children, Anarchy
- Freedom’s own Judas, the vile prodigal
- Licence who steals the gold of Liberty
- And yet has nothing, Ignorance the real
- One Fraticide since Cain, Envy the asp
- That stings itself to anguish, Avarice whose palsied grasp
- Is in its extent stiffened, moneyed Greed
- For whose dull appetite men waste away
- Amid the whirr of wheels and are the seed
- Of things which slay their sower, these each day
- Sees rife in England, and the gentle feet
- Of Beauty tread no more the stones of each unlovely street.
- What even Cromwell spared is desecrated
- By weed and worm, left to the stormy play
- Of wind and beating snow, or renovated
- By more destructful hands: Time’s worst decay
- Will wreathe its ruins with some loveliness,
- But these new Vandals can but make a rain-proof barrenness.
- Where is that Art which bade the Angels sing
- Through Lincoln’s lofty choir, till the air
- Seems from such marble harmonies to ring
- With sweeter song than common lips can dare
- To draw from actual reed? ah! where is now
- The cunning hand which made the flowering hawthorn branches bow
- For Southwell’s arch, and carved the House of One
- Who loved the lilies of the field with all
- Our dearest English flowers? the same sun
- Rises for us: the seasons natural
- Weave the same tapestry of green and grey:
- The unchanged hills are with us: but that Spirit hath passed away.
- And yet perchance it may be better so,
- For Tyranny is an incestuous Queen,
- Murder her brother is her bedfellow,
- And the Plague chambers with her: in obscene
- And bloody paths her treacherous feet are set;
- Better the empty desert and a soul inviolate!
- For gentle brotherhood, the harmony
- Of living in the healthful air, the swift
- Clean beauty of strong limbs when men are free
- And women chaste, these are the things which lift
- Our souls up more than even Agnolo’s
- Gaunt blinded Sibyl poring o’er the scroll of human woes,
- Or Titian’s little maiden on the stair
- White as her own sweet lily and as tall,
- Or Mona Lisa smiling through her hair,—
- Ah! somehow life is bigger after all
- Than any painted angel, could we see
- The God that is within us! The old Greek serenity
- Which curbs the passion of that level line
- Of marble youths, who with untroubled eyes
- And chastened limbs ride round Athena’s shrine
- And mirror her divine economies,
- And balanced symmetry of what in man
- Would else wage ceaseless warfare,—this at least within the span
- Between our mother’s kisses and the grave
- Might so inform our lives, that we could win
- Such mighty empires that from her cave
- Temptation would grow hoarse, and pallid Sin
- Would walk ashamed of his adulteries,
- And Passion creep from out the House of Lust with startled eyes.
- To make the body and the spirit one
- With all right things, till no thing live in vain
- From morn to noon, but in sweet unison
- With every pulse of flesh and throb of brain
- The soul in flawless essence high enthroned,
- Against all outer vain attack invincibly bastioned,
- Mark with serene impartiality
- The strife of things, and yet be comforted,
- Knowing that by the chain causality
- All separate existences are wed
- Into one supreme whole, whose utterance
- Is joy, or holier praise! ah! surely this were governance
- Of Life in most august omnipresence,
- Through which the rational intellect would find
- In passion its expression, and mere sense,
- Ignoble else, lend fire to the mind,
- And being joined with it in harmony
- More mystical than that which binds the stars planetary,
- Strike from their several tones one octave chord
- Whose cadence being measureless would fly
- Through all the circling spheres, then to its Lord
- Return refreshed with its new empery
- And more exultant power,—this indeed
- Could we but reach it were to find the last, the perfect creed.
- Ah! it was easy when the world was young
- To keep one’s life free and inviolate,
- From our sad lips another song is rung,
- By our own hands our heads are desecrate,
- Wanderers in drear exile, and dispossessed
- Of what should be our own, we can but feed on wild unrest.
- Somehow the grace, the bloom of things has flown,
- And of all men we are most wretched who
- Must live each other’s lives and not our own
- For very pity’s sake and then undo
- All that we lived for—it was otherwise
- When soul and body seemed to blend in mystic symphonies.
- But we have left those gentle haunts to pass
- With weary feet to the new Calvary,
- Where we behold, as one who in a glass
- Sees his own face, self-slain Humanity,
- And in the dumb reproach of that sad gaze
- Learn what an awful phantom the red hand of man can raise.
- O smitten mouth! O forehead crowned with thorn!
- O chalice of all common miseries!
- Thou for our sakes that loved thee not hast borne
- An agony of endless centuries,
- And we were vain and ignorant nor knew
- That when we stabbed thy heart it was our own real hearts we slew.
- Being ourselves the sowers and the seeds,
- The night that covers and the lights that fade,
- The spear that pierces and the side that bleeds,
- The lips betraying and the life betrayed;
- The deep hath calm: the moon hath rest: but we
- Lords of the natural world are yet our own dread enemy.
- Is this the end of all that primal force
- Which, in its changes being still the same,
- From eyeless Chaos cleft its upward course,
- Through ravenous seas and whirling rocks and flame,
- Till the suns met in heaven and began
- Their cycles, and the morning stars sang, and the Word was Man!
- Nay, nay, we are but crucified, and though
- The bloody sweat falls from our brows like rain
- Loosen the nails—we shall come down I know,
- Staunch the red wounds—we shall be whole again,
- No need have we of hyssop-laden rod,
- That which is purely human, that is godlike, that is God.
- FLOWER OF LOVE
- ΓΛΥΚΥΠΙΚΡΟΣ ΕΡΩΣ
- SWEET, I blame you not, for mine the fault
- was, had I not been made of common clay
- I had climbed the higher heights unclimbed
- yet, seen the fuller air, the larger day.
- From the wildness of my wasted passion I had
- struck a better, clearer song,
- Lit some lighter light of freer freedom, battled
- with some Hydra-headed wrong.
- Had my lips been smitten into music by the
- kisses that but made them bleed,
- You had walked with Bice and the angels on
- that verdant and enamelled mead.
- I had trod the road which Dante treading saw
- the suns of seven circles shine,
- Ay! perchance had seen the heavens opening,
- as they opened to the Florentine.
- And the mighty nations would have crowned
- me, who am crownless now and without name,
- And some orient dawn had found me kneeling
- on the threshold of the House of Fame.
- I had sat within that marble circle where the
- oldest bard is as the young,
- And the pipe is ever dropping honey, and the
- lyre’s strings are ever strung.
- Keats had lifted up his hymeneal curls from out
- the poppy-seeded wine,
- With ambrosial mouth had kissed my forehead,
- clasped the hand of noble love in mine.
- And at springtide, when the apple-blossoms brush
- the burnished bosom of the dove,
- Two young lovers lying in an orchard would
- have read the story of our love.
- Would have read the legend of my passion,
- known the bitter secret of my heart,
- Kissed as we have kissed, but never parted as
- we two are fated now to part.
- For the crimson flower of our life is eaten by
- the cankerworm of truth,
- And no hand can gather up the fallen withered
- petals of the rose of youth.
- Yet I am not sorry that I loved you—ah! what
- else had I a boy to do,—
- For the hungry teeth of time devour, and the
- silent-footed years pursue.
- Rudderless, we drift athwart a tempest, and
- when once the storm of youth is past,
- Without lyre, without lute or chorus, Death
- the silent pilot comes at last.
- And within the grave there is no pleasure, for
- the blindworm battens on the root,
- And Desire shudders into ashes, and the tree of
- Passion bears no fruit.
- Ah! what else had I to do but love you, God’s
- own mother was less dear to me,
- And less dear the Cytheræan rising like an
- argent lily from the sea.
- I have made my choice, have lived my poems,
- and, though youth is gone in wasted days,
- I have found the lover’s crown of myrtle better
- than the poet’s crown of bays.
- UNCOLLECTED POEMS
- FROM SPRING DAYS TO WINTER
- (FOR MUSIC)
- IN the glad springtime when leaves were green,
- O merrily the throstle sings!
- I sought, amid the tangled sheen,
- Love whom mine eyes had never seen,
- O the glad dove has golden wings!
- Between the blossoms red and white,
- O merrily the throstle sings!
- My love first came into my sight,
- O perfect vision of delight,
- O the glad dove has golden wings!
- The yellow apples glowed like fire,
- O merrily the throstle sings!
- O Love too great for lip or lyre,
- Blown rose of love and of desire,
- O the glad dove has golden wings!
- But now with snow the tree is grey,
- Ah, sadly now the throstle sings!
- My love is dead: ah! well-a-day,
- See at her silent feet I lay
- A dove with broken wings!
- Ah, Love! ah, Love! that thou wert slain—
- Fond Dove, fond Dove return again!
- TRISTITÆ
- _Αἴλινον_, _αἴλινον εἰπέ_, _τὸ δ’ εὖ νικάτω_
- O WELL for him who lives at ease
- With garnered gold in wide domain,
- Nor heeds the splashing of the rain,
- The crashing down of forest trees.
- O well for him who ne’er hath known
- The travail of the hungry years,
- A father grey with grief and tears,
- A mother weeping all alone.
- But well for him whose foot hath trod
- The weary road of toil and strife,
- Yet from the sorrows of his life.
- Builds ladders to be nearer God.
- THE TRUE KNOWLEDGE
- . . . _ἀναyκαίως δ’ ἔχει_
- _Βίον θερίζειν ὥστε κάρπιμον στάχυν_,
- _καὶ τὸν yὲν εἶναι τὸν δὲ yή_.
- THOU knowest all; I seek in vain
- What lands to till or sow with seed—
- The land is black with briar and weed,
- Nor cares for falling tears or rain.
- Thou knowest all; I sit and wait
- With blinded eyes and hands that fail,
- Till the last lifting of the veil
- And the first opening of the gate.
- Thou knowest all; I cannot see.
- I trust I shall not live in vain,
- I know that we shall meet again
- In some divine eternity.
- IMPRESSIONS
- I
- LE JARDIN
- THE lily’s withered chalice falls
- Around its rod of dusty gold,
- And from the beech-trees on the wold
- The last wood-pigeon coos and calls.
- The gaudy leonine sunflower
- Hangs black and barren on its stalk,
- And down the windy garden walk
- The dead leaves scatter,—hour by hour.
- Pale privet-petals white as milk
- Are blown into a snowy mass:
- The roses lie upon the grass
- Like little shreds of crimson silk.
- II
- LA MER
- A WHITE mist drifts across the shrouds,
- A wild moon in this wintry sky
- Gleams like an angry lion’s eye
- Out of a mane of tawny clouds.
- The muffled steersman at the wheel
- Is but a shadow in the gloom;—
- And in the throbbing engine-room
- Leap the long rods of polished steel.
- The shattered storm has left its trace
- Upon this huge and heaving dome,
- For the thin threads of yellow foam
- Float on the waves like ravelled lace.
- UNDER THE BALCONY
- O BEAUTIFUL star with the crimson mouth!
- O moon with the brows of gold!
- Rise up, rise up, from the odorous south!
- And light for my love her way,
- Lest her little feet should stray
- On the windy hill and the wold!
- O beautiful star with the crimson mouth!
- O moon with the brows of gold!
- O ship that shakes on the desolate sea!
- O ship with the wet, white sail!
- Put in, put in, to the port to me!
- For my love and I would go
- To the land where the daffodils blow
- In the heart of a violet dale!
- O ship that shakes on the desolate sea!
- O ship with the wet, white sail!
- O rapturous bird with the low, sweet note!
- O bird that sits on the spray!
- Sing on, sing on, from your soft brown throat!
- And my love in her little bed
- Will listen, and lift her head
- From the pillow, and come my way!
- O rapturous bird with the low, sweet note!
- O bird that sits on the spray!
- O blossom that hangs in the tremulous air!
- O blossom with lips of snow!
- Come down, come down, for my love to wear!
- You will die on her head in a crown,
- You will die in a fold of her gown,
- To her little light heart you will go!
- O blossom that hangs in the tremulous air!
- O blossom with lips of snow!
- THE HARLOT’S HOUSE
- WE caught the tread of dancing feet,
- We loitered down the moonlit street,
- And stopped beneath the harlot’s house.
- Inside, above the din and fray,
- We heard the loud musicians play
- The ‘Treues Liebes Herz’ of Strauss.
- Like strange mechanical grotesques,
- Making fantastic arabesques,
- The shadows raced across the blind.
- We watched the ghostly dancers spin
- To sound of horn and violin,
- Like black leaves wheeling in the wind.
- Like wire-pulled automatons,
- Slim silhouetted skeletons
- Went sidling through the slow quadrille,
- Then took each other by the hand,
- And danced a stately saraband;
- Their laughter echoed thin and shrill.
- Sometimes a clockwork puppet pressed
- A phantom lover to her breast,
- Sometimes they seemed to try to sing.
- Sometimes a horrible marionette
- Came out, and smoked its cigarette
- Upon the steps like a live thing.
- Then, turning to my love, I said,
- ‘The dead are dancing with the dead,
- The dust is whirling with the dust.’
- But she—she heard the violin,
- And left my side, and entered in:
- Love passed into the house of lust.
- Then suddenly the tune went false,
- The dancers wearied of the waltz,
- The shadows ceased to wheel and whirl.
- And down the long and silent street,
- The dawn, with silver-sandalled feet,
- Crept like a frightened girl.
- LE JARDIN DES TUILERIES
- THIS winter air is keen and cold,
- And keen and cold this winter sun,
- But round my chair the children run
- Like little things of dancing gold.
- Sometimes about the painted kiosk
- The mimic soldiers strut and stride,
- Sometimes the blue-eyed brigands hide
- In the bleak tangles of the bosk.
- And sometimes, while the old nurse cons
- Her book, they steal across the square,
- And launch their paper navies where
- Huge Triton writhes in greenish bronze.
- And now in mimic flight they flee,
- And now they rush, a boisterous band—
- And, tiny hand on tiny hand,
- Climb up the black and leafless tree.
- Ah! cruel tree! if I were you,
- And children climbed me, for their sake
- Though it be winter I would break
- Into spring blossoms white and blue!
- ON THE SALE BY AUCTION OF KEATS’ LOVE LETTERS
- THESE are the letters which Endymion wrote
- To one he loved in secret, and apart.
- And now the brawlers of the auction mart
- Bargain and bid for each poor blotted note,
- Ay! for each separate pulse of passion quote
- The merchant’s price. I think they love not art
- Who break the crystal of a poet’s heart
- That small and sickly eyes may glare and gloat.
- Is it not said that many years ago,
- In a far Eastern town, some soldiers ran
- With torches through the midnight, and began
- To wrangle for mean raiment, and to throw
- Dice for the garments of a wretched man,
- Not knowing the God’s wonder, or His woe?
- THE NEW REMORSE
- THE sin was mine; I did not understand.
- So now is music prisoned in her cave,
- Save where some ebbing desultory wave
- Frets with its restless whirls this meagre strand.
- And in the withered hollow of this land
- Hath Summer dug herself so deep a grave,
- That hardly can the leaden willow crave
- One silver blossom from keen Winter’s hand.
- But who is this who cometh by the shore?
- (Nay, love, look up and wonder!) Who is this
- Who cometh in dyed garments from the South?
- It is thy new-found Lord, and he shall kiss
- The yet unravished roses of thy mouth,
- And I shall weep and worship, as before.
- FANTAISIES DÉCORATIVES
- I
- LE PANNEAU
- UNDER the rose-tree’s dancing shade
- There stands a little ivory girl,
- Pulling the leaves of pink and pearl
- With pale green nails of polished jade.
- The red leaves fall upon the mould,
- The white leaves flutter, one by one,
- Down to a blue bowl where the sun,
- Like a great dragon, writhes in gold.
- The white leaves float upon the air,
- The red leaves flutter idly down,
- Some fall upon her yellow gown,
- And some upon her raven hair.
- She takes an amber lute and sings,
- And as she sings a silver crane
- Begins his scarlet neck to strain,
- And flap his burnished metal wings.
- She takes a lute of amber bright,
- And from the thicket where he lies
- Her lover, with his almond eyes,
- Watches her movements in delight.
- And now she gives a cry of fear,
- And tiny tears begin to start:
- A thorn has wounded with its dart
- The pink-veined sea-shell of her ear.
- And now she laughs a merry note:
- There has fallen a petal of the rose
- Just where the yellow satin shows
- The blue-veined flower of her throat.
- With pale green nails of polished jade,
- Pulling the leaves of pink and pearl,
- There stands a little ivory girl
- Under the rose-tree’s dancing shade.
- II
- LES BALLONS
- AGAINST these turbid turquoise skies
- The light and luminous balloons
- Dip and drift like satin moons,
- Drift like silken butterflies;
- Reel with every windy gust,
- Rise and reel like dancing girls,
- Float like strange transparent pearls,
- Fall and float like silver dust.
- Now to the low leaves they cling,
- Each with coy fantastic pose,
- Each a petal of a rose
- Straining at a gossamer string.
- Then to the tall trees they climb,
- Like thin globes of amethyst,
- Wandering opals keeping tryst
- With the rubies of the lime.
- CANZONET
- I HAVE no store
- Of gryphon-guarded gold;
- Now, as before,
- Bare is the shepherd’s fold.
- Rubies nor pearls
- Have I to gem thy throat;
- Yet woodland girls
- Have loved the shepherd’s note.
- Then pluck a reed
- And bid me sing to thee,
- For I would feed
- Thine ears with melody,
- Who art more fair
- Than fairest fleur-de-lys,
- More sweet and rare
- Than sweetest ambergris.
- What dost thou fear?
- Young Hyacinth is slain,
- Pan is not here,
- And will not come again.
- No hornèd Faun
- Treads down the yellow leas,
- No God at dawn
- Steals through the olive trees.
- Hylas is dead,
- Nor will he e’er divine
- Those little red
- Rose-petalled lips of thine.
- On the high hill
- No ivory dryads play,
- Silver and still
- Sinks the sad autumn day.
- SYMPHONY IN YELLOW
- AN omnibus across the bridge
- Crawls like a yellow butterfly,
- And, here and there, a passer-by
- Shows like a little restless midge.
- Big barges full of yellow hay
- Are moored against the shadowy wharf,
- And, like a yellow silken scarf,
- The thick fog hangs along the quay.
- The yellow leaves begin to fade
- And flutter from the Temple elms,
- And at my feet the pale green Thames
- Lies like a rod of rippled jade.
- IN THE FOREST
- OUT of the mid-wood’s twilight
- Into the meadow’s dawn,
- Ivory limbed and brown-eyed,
- Flashes my Faun!
- He skips through the copses singing,
- And his shadow dances along,
- And I know not which I should follow,
- Shadow or song!
- O Hunter, snare me his shadow!
- O Nightingale, catch me his strain!
- Else moonstruck with music and madness
- I track him in vain!
- TO MY WIFE
- WITH A COPY OF MY POEMS
- I CAN write no stately proem
- As a prelude to my lay;
- From a poet to a poem
- I would dare to say.
- For if of these fallen petals
- One to you seem fair,
- Love will waft it till it settles
- On your hair.
- And when wind and winter harden
- All the loveless land,
- It will whisper of the garden,
- You will understand.
- WITH A COPY OF ‘A HOUSE OF POMEGRANATES’
- GO, little book,
- To him who, on a lute with horns of pearl,
- Sang of the white feet of the Golden Girl:
- And bid him look
- Into thy pages: it may hap that he
- May find that golden maidens dance through thee.
- ROSES AND RUE
- (To L. L.)
- COULD we dig up this long-buried treasure,
- Were it worth the pleasure,
- We never could learn love’s song,
- We are parted too long.
- Could the passionate past that is fled
- Call back its dead,
- Could we live it all over again,
- Were it worth the pain!
- I remember we used to meet
- By an ivied seat,
- And you warbled each pretty word
- With the air of a bird;
- And your voice had a quaver in it,
- Just like a linnet,
- And shook, as the blackbird’s throat
- With its last big note;
- And your eyes, they were green and grey
- Like an April day,
- But lit into amethyst
- When I stooped and kissed;
- And your mouth, it would never smile
- For a long, long while,
- Then it rippled all over with laughter
- Five minutes after.
- You were always afraid of a shower,
- Just like a flower:
- I remember you started and ran
- When the rain began.
- I remember I never could catch you,
- For no one could match you,
- You had wonderful, luminous, fleet,
- Little wings to your feet.
- I remember your hair—did I tie it?
- For it always ran riot—
- Like a tangled sunbeam of gold:
- These things are old.
- I remember so well the room,
- And the lilac bloom
- That beat at the dripping pane
- In the warm June rain;
- And the colour of your gown,
- It was amber-brown,
- And two yellow satin bows
- From your shoulders rose.
- And the handkerchief of French lace
- Which you held to your face—
- Had a small tear left a stain?
- Or was it the rain?
- On your hand as it waved adieu
- There were veins of blue;
- In your voice as it said good-bye
- Was a petulant cry,
- ‘You have only wasted your life.’
- (Ah, that was the knife!)
- When I rushed through the garden gate
- It was all too late.
- Could we live it over again,
- Were it worth the pain,
- Could the passionate past that is fled
- Call back its dead!
- Well, if my heart must break,
- Dear love, for your sake,
- It will break in music, I know,
- Poets’ hearts break so.
- But strange that I was not told
- That the brain can hold
- In a tiny ivory cell
- God’s heaven and hell.
- DÉSESPOIR
- THE seasons send their ruin as they go,
- For in the spring the narciss shows its head
- Nor withers till the rose has flamed to red,
- And in the autumn purple violets blow,
- And the slim crocus stirs the winter snow;
- Wherefore yon leafless trees will bloom again
- And this grey land grow green with summer rain
- And send up cowslips for some boy to mow.
- But what of life whose bitter hungry sea
- Flows at our heels, and gloom of sunless night
- Covers the days which never more return?
- Ambition, love and all the thoughts that burn
- We lose too soon, and only find delight
- In withered husks of some dead memory.
- PAN
- DOUBLE VILLANELLE
- I
- O goat-foot God of Arcady!
- This modern world is grey and old,
- And what remains to us of thee?
- No more the shepherd lads in glee
- Throw apples at thy wattled fold,
- O goat-foot God of Arcady!
- Nor through the laurels can one see
- Thy soft brown limbs, thy beard of gold,
- And what remains to us of thee?
- And dull and dead our Thames would be,
- For here the winds are chill and cold,
- O goat-foot God of Arcady!
- Then keep the tomb of Helice,
- Thine olive-woods, thy vine-clad wold,
- And what remains to us of thee?
- Though many an unsung elegy
- Sleeps in the reeds our rivers hold,
- O goat-foot God of Arcady!
- Ah, what remains to us of thee?
- II
- Ah, leave the hills of Arcady,
- Thy satyrs and their wanton play,
- This modern world hath need of thee.
- No nymph or Faun indeed have we,
- For Faun and nymph are old and grey,
- Ah, leave the hills of Arcady!
- This is the land where liberty
- Lit grave-browed Milton on his way,
- This modern world hath need of thee!
- A land of ancient chivalry
- Where gentle Sidney saw the day,
- Ah, leave the hills of Arcady!
- This fierce sea-lion of the sea,
- This England lacks some stronger lay,
- This modern world hath need of thee!
- Then blow some trumpet loud and free,
- And give thine oaten pipe away,
- Ah, leave the hills of Arcady!
- This modern world hath need of thee!
- THE SPHINX
- TO
- MARCEL SCHWOB
- IN FRIENDSHIP
- AND
- IN ADMIRATION
- THE SPHINX
- IN a dim corner of my room for longer than my fancy thinks
- A beautiful and silent Sphinx has watched me through the shifting
- gloom.
- Inviolate and immobile she does not rise she does not stir
- For silver moons are naught to her and naught to her the suns that
- reel.
- Red follows grey across the air, the waves of moonlight ebb and flow
- But with the Dawn she does not go and in the night-time she is there.
- Dawn follows Dawn and Nights grow old and all the while this curious
- cat
- Lies couching on the Chinese mat with eyes of satin rimmed with gold.
- Upon the mat she lies and leers and on the tawny throat of her
- Flutters the soft and silky fur or ripples to her pointed ears.
- Come forth, my lovely seneschal! so somnolent, so statuesque!
- Come forth you exquisite grotesque! half woman and half animal!
- Come forth my lovely languorous Sphinx! and put your head upon my
- knee!
- And let me stroke your throat and see your body spotted like the Lynx!
- And let me touch those curving claws of yellow ivory and grasp
- The tail that like a monstrous Asp coils round your heavy velvet paws!
- * * * * *
- A THOUSAND weary centuries are thine while I have hardly seen
- Some twenty summers cast their green for Autumn’s gaudy liveries.
- But you can read the Hieroglyphs on the great sandstone obelisks,
- And you have talked with Basilisks, and you have looked on
- Hippogriffs.
- O tell me, were you standing by when Isis to Osiris knelt?
- And did you watch the Egyptian melt her union for Antony
- And drink the jewel-drunken wine and bend her head in mimic awe
- To see the huge proconsul draw the salted tunny from the brine?
- And did you mark the Cyprian kiss white Adon on his catafalque?
- And did you follow Amenalk, the God of Heliopolis?
- And did you talk with Thoth, and did you hear the moon-horned Io weep?
- And know the painted kings who sleep beneath the wedge-shaped Pyramid?
- * * * * *
- LIFT up your large black satin eyes which are like cushions where one
- sinks!
- Fawn at my feet, fantastic Sphinx! and sing me all your memories!
- Sing to me of the Jewish maid who wandered with the Holy Child,
- And how you led them through the wild, and how they slept beneath your
- shade.
- Sing to me of that odorous green eve when crouching by the marge
- You heard from Adrian’s gilded barge the laughter of Antinous
- And lapped the stream and fed your drouth and watched with hot and
- hungry stare
- The ivory body of that rare young slave with his pomegranate mouth!
- Sing to me of the Labyrinth in which the twi-formed bull was stalled!
- Sing to me of the night you crawled across the temple’s granite plinth
- When through the purple corridors the screaming scarlet Ibis flew
- In terror, and a horrid dew dripped from the moaning Mandragores,
- And the great torpid crocodile within the tank shed slimy tears,
- And tare the jewels from his ears and staggered back into the Nile,
- And the priests cursed you with shrill psalms as in your claws you
- seized their snake
- And crept away with it to slake your passion by the shuddering palms.
- * * * * *
- WHO were your lovers? who were they who wrestled for you in the dust?
- Which was the vessel of your Lust? What Leman had you, every day?
- Did giant Lizards come and crouch before you on the reedy banks?
- Did Gryphons with great metal flanks leap on you in your trampled
- couch?
- Did monstrous hippopotami come sidling toward you in the mist?
- Did gilt-scaled dragons writhe and twist with passion as you passed
- them by?
- And from the brick-built Lycian tomb what horrible Chimera came
- With fearful heads and fearful flame to breed new wonders from your
- womb?
- * * * * *
- OR had you shameful secret quests and did you harry to your home
- Some Nereid coiled in amber foam with curious rock crystal breasts?
- Or did you treading through the froth call to the brown Sidonian
- For tidings of Leviathan, Leviathan or Behemoth?
- Or did you when the sun was set climb up the cactus-covered slope
- To meet your swarthy Ethiop whose body was of polished jet?
- Or did you while the earthen skiffs dropped down the grey Nilotic
- flats
- At twilight and the flickering bats flew round the temple’s triple
- glyphs
- Steal to the border of the bar and swim across the silent lake
- And slink into the vault and make the Pyramid your lúpanar
- Till from each black sarcophagus rose up the painted swathèd dead?
- Or did you lure unto your bed the ivory-horned Tragelaphos?
- Or did you love the god of flies who plagued the Hebrews and was
- splashed
- With wine unto the waist? or Pasht, who had green beryls for her eyes?
- Or that young god, the Tyrian, who was more amorous than the dove
- Of Ashtaroth? or did you love the god of the Assyrian
- Whose wings, like strange transparent talc, rose high above his
- hawk-faced head,
- Painted with silver and with red and ribbed with rods of Oreichalch?
- Or did huge Apis from his car leap down and lay before your feet
- Big blossoms of the honey-sweet and honey-coloured nenuphar?
- * * * * *
- HOW subtle-secret is your smile! Did you love none then? Nay, I know
- Great Ammon was your bedfellow! He lay with you beside the Nile!
- The river-horses in the slime trumpeted when they saw him come
- Odorous with Syrian galbanum and smeared with spikenard and with
- thyme.
- He came along the river bank like some tall galley argent-sailed,
- He strode across the waters, mailed in beauty, and the waters sank.
- He strode across the desert sand: he reached the valley where you lay:
- He waited till the dawn of day: then touched your black breasts with
- his hand.
- You kissed his mouth with mouths of flame: you made the hornèd god
- your own:
- You stood behind him on his throne: you called him by his secret name.
- You whispered monstrous oracles into the caverns of his ears:
- With blood of goats and blood of steers you taught him monstrous
- miracles.
- White Ammon was your bedfellow! Your chamber was the steaming Nile!
- And with your curved archaic smile you watched his passion come and
- go.
- * * * * *
- WITH Syrian oils his brows were bright: and wide-spread as a tent at
- noon
- His marble limbs made pale the moon and lent the day a larger light.
- His long hair was nine cubits’ span and coloured like that yellow gem
- Which hidden in their garment’s hem the merchants bring from
- Kurdistan.
- His face was as the must that lies upon a vat of new-made wine:
- The seas could not insapphirine the perfect azure of his eyes.
- His thick soft throat was white as milk and threaded with thin veins
- of blue:
- And curious pearls like frozen dew were broidered on his flowing silk.
- * * * * *
- ON pearl and porphyry pedestalled he was too bright to look upon:
- For on his ivory breast there shone the wondrous ocean-emerald,
- That mystic moonlit jewel which some diver of the Colchian caves
- Had found beneath the blackening waves and carried to the Colchian
- witch.
- Before his gilded galiot ran naked vine-wreathed corybants,
- And lines of swaying elephants knelt down to draw his chariot,
- And lines of swarthy Nubians bare up his litter as he rode
- Down the great granite-paven road between the nodding peacock-fans.
- The merchants brought him steatite from Sidon in their painted ships:
- The meanest cup that touched his lips was fashioned from a chrysolite.
- The merchants brought him cedar chests of rich apparel bound with
- cords:
- His train was borne by Memphian lords: young kings were glad to be his
- guests.
- Ten hundred shaven priests did bow to Ammon’s altar day and night,
- Ten hundred lamps did wave their light through Ammon’s carven
- house—and now
- Foul snake and speckled adder with their young ones crawl from stone
- to stone
- For ruined is the house and prone the great rose-marble monolith!
- Wild ass or trotting jackal comes and couches in the mouldering gates:
- Wild satyrs call unto their mates across the fallen fluted drums.
- And on the summit of the pile the blue-faced ape of Horus sits
- And gibbers while the fig-tree splits the pillars of the peristyle
- * * * * *
- THE god is scattered here and there: deep hidden in the windy sand
- I saw his giant granite hand still clenched in impotent despair.
- And many a wandering caravan of stately negroes silken-shawled,
- Crossing the desert, halts appalled before the neck that none can
- span.
- And many a bearded Bedouin draws back his yellow-striped burnous
- To gaze upon the Titan thews of him who was thy paladin.
- * * * * *
- GO, seek his fragments on the moor and wash them in the evening dew,
- And from their pieces make anew thy mutilated paramour!
- Go, seek them where they lie alone and from their broken pieces make
- Thy bruisèd bedfellow! And wake mad passions in the senseless stone!
- Charm his dull ear with Syrian hymns! he loved your body! oh, be kind,
- Pour spikenard on his hair, and wind soft rolls of linen round his
- limbs!
- Wind round his head the figured coins! stain with red fruits those
- pallid lips!
- Weave purple for his shrunken hips! and purple for his barren loins!
- * * * * *
- AWAY to Egypt! Have no fear. Only one God has ever died.
- Only one God has let His side be wounded by a soldier’s spear.
- But these, thy lovers, are not dead. Still by the hundred-cubit gate
- Dog-faced Anubis sits in state with lotus-lilies for thy head.
- Still from his chair of porphyry gaunt Memnon strains his lidless eyes
- Across the empty land, and cries each yellow morning unto thee.
- And Nilus with his broken horn lies in his black and oozy bed
- And till thy coming will not spread his waters on the withering corn.
- Your lovers are not dead, I know. They will rise up and hear your
- voice
- And clash their cymbals and rejoice and run to kiss your mouth! And
- so,
- Set wings upon your argosies! Set horses to your ebon car!
- Back to your Nile! Or if you are grown sick of dead divinities
- Follow some roving lion’s spoor across the copper-coloured plain,
- Reach out and hale him by the mane and bid him be your paramour!
- Couch by his side upon the grass and set your white teeth in his
- throat
- And when you hear his dying note lash your long flanks of polished
- brass
- And take a tiger for your mate, whose amber sides are flecked with
- black,
- And ride upon his gilded back in triumph through the Theban gate,
- And toy with him in amorous jests, and when he turns, and snarls, and
- gnaws,
- O smite him with your jasper claws! and bruise him with your agate
- breasts!
- * * * * *
- WHY are you tarrying? Get hence! I weary of your sullen ways,
- I weary of your steadfast gaze, your somnolent magnificence.
- Your horrible and heavy breath makes the light flicker in the lamp,
- And on my brow I feel the damp and dreadful dews of night and death.
- Your eyes are like fantastic moons that shiver in some stagnant lake,
- Your tongue is like a scarlet snake that dances to fantastic tunes,
- Your pulse makes poisonous melodies, and your black throat is like the
- hole
- Left by some torch or burning coal on Saracenic tapestries.
- Away! The sulphur-coloured stars are hurrying through the Western
- gate!
- Away! Or it may be too late to climb their silent silver cars!
- See, the dawn shivers round the grey gilt-dialled towers, and the rain
- Streams down each diamonded pane and blurs with tears the wannish day.
- What snake-tressed fury fresh from Hell, with uncouth gestures and
- unclean,
- Stole from the poppy-drowsy queen and led you to a student’s cell?
- * * * * *
- WHAT songless tongueless ghost of sin crept through the curtains of
- the night,
- And saw my taper burning bright, and knocked, and bade you enter in?
- Are there not others more accursed, whiter with leprosies than I?
- Are Abana and Pharphar dry that you come here to slake your thirst?
- Get hence, you loathsome mystery! Hideous animal, get hence!
- You wake in me each bestial sense, you make me what I would not be.
- You make my creed a barren sham, you wake foul dreams of sensual life,
- And Atys with his blood-stained knife were better than the thing I am.
- False Sphinx! False Sphinx! By reedy Styx old Charon, leaning on his
- oar,
- Waits for my coin. Go thou before, and leave me to my crucifix,
- Whose pallid burden, sick with pain, watches the world with wearied
- eyes,
- And weeps for every soul that dies, and weeps for every soul in vain.
- THE BALLAD OF READING GAOL
- IN MEMORIAM
- C. T. W.
- SOMETIME TROOPER OF THE ROYAL HORSE GUARDS
- OBIIT H.M. PRISON, READING, BERKSHIRE
- JULY 7, 1896
- THE BALLAD OF READING GAOL
- I
- HE did not wear his scarlet coat,
- For blood and wine are red,
- And blood and wine were on his hands
- When they found him with the dead,
- The poor dead woman whom he loved,
- And murdered in her bed.
- He walked amongst the Trial Men
- In a suit of shabby grey;
- A cricket cap was on his head,
- And his step seemed light and gay;
- But I never saw a man who looked
- So wistfully at the day.
- I never saw a man who looked
- With such a wistful eye
- Upon that little tent of blue
- Which prisoners call the sky,
- And at every drifting cloud that went
- With sails of silver by.
- I walked, with other souls in pain,
- Within another ring,
- And was wondering if the man had done
- A great or little thing,
- When a voice behind me whispered low,
- ‘_That fellow’s got to swing_.’
- Dear Christ! the very prison walls
- Suddenly seemed to reel,
- And the sky above my head became
- Like a casque of scorching steel;
- And, though I was a soul in pain,
- My pain I could not feel.
- I only knew what hunted thought
- Quickened his step, and why
- He looked upon the garish day
- With such a wistful eye;
- The man had killed the thing he loved,
- And so he had to die.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- Yet each man kills the thing he loves,
- By each let this be heard,
- Some do it with a bitter look,
- Some with a flattering word,
- The coward does it with a kiss,
- The brave man with a sword!
- Some kill their love when they are young,
- And some when they are old;
- Some strangle with the hands of Lust,
- Some with the hands of Gold:
- The kindest use a knife, because
- The dead so soon grow cold.
- Some love too little, some too long,
- Some sell, and others buy;
- Some do the deed with many tears,
- And some without a sigh:
- For each man kills the thing he loves,
- Yet each man does not die.
- He does not die a death of shame
- On a day of dark disgrace,
- Nor have a noose about his neck,
- Nor a cloth upon his face,
- Nor drop feet foremost through the floor
- Into an empty space.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- He does not sit with silent men
- Who watch him night and day;
- Who watch him when he tries to weep,
- And when he tries to pray;
- Who watch him lest himself should rob
- The prison of its prey.
- He does not wake at dawn to see
- Dread figures throng his room,
- The shivering Chaplain robed in white,
- The Sheriff stern with gloom,
- And the Governor all in shiny black,
- With the yellow face of Doom.
- He does not rise in piteous haste
- To put on convict-clothes,
- While some coarse-mouthed Doctor gloats, and notes
- Each new and nerve-twitched pose,
- Fingering a watch whose little ticks
- Are like horrible hammer-blows.
- He does not know that sickening thirst
- That sands one’s throat, before
- The hangman with his gardener’s gloves
- Slips through the padded door,
- And binds one with three leathern thongs,
- That the throat may thirst no more.
- He does not bend his head to hear
- The Burial Office read,
- Nor, while the terror of his soul
- Tells him he is not dead,
- Cross his own coffin, as he moves
- Into the hideous shed.
- He does not stare upon the air
- Through a little roof of glass:
- He does not pray with lips of clay
- For his agony to pass;
- Nor feel upon his shuddering cheek
- The kiss of Caiaphas.
- II
- SIX weeks our guardsman walked the yard,
- In the suit of shabby grey:
- His cricket cap was on his head,
- And his step seemed light and gay,
- But I never saw a man who looked
- So wistfully at the day.
- I never saw a man who looked
- With such a wistful eye
- Upon that little tent of blue
- Which prisoners call the sky,
- And at every wandering cloud that trailed
- Its ravelled fleeces by.
- He did not wring his hands, as do
- Those witless men who dare
- To try to rear the changeling Hope
- In the cave of black Despair:
- He only looked upon the sun,
- And drank the morning air.
- He did not wring his hands nor weep,
- Nor did he peek or pine,
- But he drank the air as though it held
- Some healthful anodyne;
- With open mouth he drank the sun
- As though it had been wine!
- And I and all the souls in pain,
- Who tramped the other ring,
- Forgot if we ourselves had done
- A great or little thing,
- And watched with gaze of dull amaze
- The man who had to swing.
- And strange it was to see him pass
- With a step so light and gay,
- And strange it was to see him look
- So wistfully at the day,
- And strange it was to think that he
- Had such a debt to pay.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- For oak and elm have pleasant leaves
- That in the springtime shoot:
- But grim to see is the gallows-tree,
- With its adder-bitten root,
- And, green or dry, a man must die
- Before it bears its fruit!
- The loftiest place is that seat of grace
- For which all worldlings try:
- But who would stand in hempen band
- Upon a scaffold high,
- And through a murderer’s collar take
- His last look at the sky?
- It is sweet to dance to violins
- When Love and Life are fair:
- To dance to flutes, to dance to lutes
- Is delicate and rare:
- But it is not sweet with nimble feet
- To dance upon the air!
- So with curious eyes and sick surmise
- We watched him day by day,
- And wondered if each one of us
- Would end the self-same way,
- For none can tell to what red Hell
- His sightless soul may stray.
- At last the dead man walked no more
- Amongst the Trial Men,
- And I knew that he was standing up
- In the black dock’s dreadful pen,
- And that never would I see his face
- In God’s sweet world again.
- Like two doomed ships that pass in storm
- We had crossed each other’s way:
- But we made no sign, we said no word,
- We had no word to say;
- For we did not meet in the holy night,
- But in the shameful day.
- A prison wall was round us both,
- Two outcast men we were:
- The world had thrust us from its heart,
- And God from out His care:
- And the iron gin that waits for Sin
- Had caught us in its snare.
- III
- IN Debtors’ Yard the stones are hard,
- And the dripping wall is high,
- So it was there he took the air
- Beneath the leaden sky,
- And by each side a Warder walked,
- For fear the man might die.
- Or else he sat with those who watched
- His anguish night and day;
- Who watched him when he rose to weep,
- And when he crouched to pray;
- Who watched him lest himself should rob
- Their scaffold of its prey.
- The Governor was strong upon
- The Regulations Act:
- The Doctor said that Death was but
- A scientific fact:
- And twice a day the Chaplain called,
- And left a little tract.
- And twice a day he smoked his pipe,
- And drank his quart of beer:
- His soul was resolute, and held
- No hiding-place for fear;
- He often said that he was glad
- The hangman’s hands were near.
- But why he said so strange a thing
- No Warder dared to ask:
- For he to whom a watcher’s doom
- Is given as his task,
- Must set a lock upon his lips,
- And make his face a mask.
- Or else he might be moved, and try
- To comfort or console:
- And what should Human Pity do
- Pent up in Murderers’ Hole?
- What word of grace in such a place
- Could help a brother’s soul?
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- With slouch and swing around the ring
- We trod the Fools’ Parade!
- We did not care: we knew we were
- The Devil’s Own Brigade:
- And shaven head and feet of lead
- Make a merry masquerade.
- We tore the tarry rope to shreds
- With blunt and bleeding nails;
- We rubbed the doors, and scrubbed the floors,
- And cleaned the shining rails:
- And, rank by rank, we soaped the plank,
- And clattered with the pails.
- We sewed the sacks, we broke the stones,
- We turned the dusty drill:
- We banged the tins, and bawled the hymns,
- And sweated on the mill:
- But in the heart of every man
- Terror was lying still.
- So still it lay that every day
- Crawled like a weed-clogged wave:
- And we forgot the bitter lot
- That waits for fool and knave,
- Till once, as we tramped in from work,
- We passed an open grave.
- With yawning mouth the yellow hole
- Gaped for a living thing;
- The very mud cried out for blood
- To the thirsty asphalte ring:
- And we knew that ere one dawn grew fair
- Some prisoner had to swing.
- Right in we went, with soul intent
- On Death and Dread and Doom:
- The hangman, with his little bag,
- Went shuffling through the gloom:
- And each man trembled as he crept
- Into his numbered tomb.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- That night the empty corridors
- Were full of forms of Fear,
- And up and down the iron town
- Stole feet we could not hear,
- And through the bars that hide the stars
- White faces seemed to peer.
- He lay as one who lies and dreams
- In a pleasant meadow-land,
- The watchers watched him as he slept,
- And could not understand
- How one could sleep so sweet a sleep
- With a hangman close at hand.
- But there is no sleep when men must weep
- Who never yet have wept:
- So we—the fool, the fraud, the knave—
- That endless vigil kept,
- And through each brain on hands of pain
- Another’s terror crept.
- Alas! it is a fearful thing
- To feel another’s guilt!
- For, right within, the sword of Sin
- Pierced to its poisoned hilt,
- And as molten lead were the tears we shed
- For the blood we had not spilt.
- The Warders with their shoes of felt
- Crept by each padlocked door,
- And peeped and saw, with eyes of awe,
- Grey figures on the floor,
- And wondered why men knelt to pray
- Who never prayed before.
- All through the night we knelt and prayed,
- Mad mourners of a corse!
- The troubled plumes of midnight were
- The plumes upon a hearse:
- And bitter wine upon a sponge
- Was the savour of Remorse.
- * * * * *
- The grey cock crew, the red cock crew,
- But never came the day:
- And crooked shapes of Terror crouched,
- In the corners where we lay:
- And each evil sprite that walks by night
- Before us seemed to play.
- They glided past, they glided fast,
- Like travellers through a mist:
- They mocked the moon in a rigadoon
- Of delicate turn and twist,
- And with formal pace and loathsome grace
- The phantoms kept their tryst.
- With mop and mow, we saw them go,
- Slim shadows hand in hand:
- About, about, in ghostly rout
- They trod a saraband:
- And the damned grotesques made arabesques,
- Like the wind upon the sand!
- With the pirouettes of marionettes,
- They tripped on pointed tread:
- But with flutes of Fear they filled the ear,
- As their grisly masque they led,
- And loud they sang, and long they sang,
- For they sang to wake the dead.
- ‘_Oho_!’ _they cried_, ‘_The world is wide_,
- _But fettered limbs go lame_!
- _And once_, _or twice_, _to throw the dice_
- _Is a gentlemanly game_,
- _But he does not win who plays with Sin_
- _In the secret House of Shame_.’
- No things of air these antics were,
- That frolicked with such glee:
- To men whose lives were held in gyves,
- And whose feet might not go free,
- Ah! wounds of Christ! they were living things,
- Most terrible to see.
- Around, around, they waltzed and wound;
- Some wheeled in smirking pairs;
- With the mincing step of a demirep
- Some sidled up the stairs:
- And with subtle sneer, and fawning leer,
- Each helped us at our prayers.
- The morning wind began to moan,
- But still the night went on:
- Through its giant loom the web of gloom
- Crept till each thread was spun:
- And, as we prayed, we grew afraid
- Of the Justice of the Sun.
- The moaning wind went wandering round
- The weeping prison-wall:
- Till like a wheel of turning steel
- We felt the minutes crawl:
- O moaning wind! what had we done
- To have such a seneschal?
- At last I saw the shadowed bars,
- Like a lattice wrought in lead,
- Move right across the whitewashed wall
- That faced my three-plank bed,
- And I knew that somewhere in the world
- God’s dreadful dawn was red.
- At six o’clock we cleaned our cells,
- At seven all was still,
- But the sough and swing of a mighty wing
- The prison seemed to fill,
- For the Lord of Death with icy breath
- Had entered in to kill.
- He did not pass in purple pomp,
- Nor ride a moon-white steed.
- Three yards of cord and a sliding board
- Are all the gallows’ need:
- So with rope of shame the Herald came
- To do the secret deed.
- We were as men who through a fen
- Of filthy darkness grope:
- We did not dare to breathe a prayer,
- Or to give our anguish scope:
- Something was dead in each of us,
- And what was dead was Hope.
- For Man’s grim Justice goes its way,
- And will not swerve aside:
- It slays the weak, it slays the strong,
- It has a deadly stride:
- With iron heel it slays the strong,
- The monstrous parricide!
- We waited for the stroke of eight:
- Each tongue was thick with thirst:
- For the stroke of eight is the stroke of Fate
- That makes a man accursed,
- And Fate will use a running noose
- For the best man and the worst.
- We had no other thing to do,
- Save to wait for the sign to come:
- So, like things of stone in a valley lone,
- Quiet we sat and dumb:
- But each man’s heart beat thick and quick,
- Like a madman on a drum!
- With sudden shock the prison-clock
- Smote on the shivering air,
- And from all the gaol rose up a wail
- Of impotent despair,
- Like the sound that frightened marshes hear
- From some leper in his lair.
- And as one sees most fearful things
- In the crystal of a dream,
- We saw the greasy hempen rope
- Hooked to the blackened beam,
- And heard the prayer the hangman’s snare
- Strangled into a scream.
- And all the woe that moved him so
- That he gave that bitter cry,
- And the wild regrets, and the bloody sweats,
- None knew so well as I:
- For he who lives more lives than one
- More deaths than one must die.
- IV
- THERE is no chapel on the day
- On which they hang a man:
- The Chaplain’s heart is far too sick,
- Or his face is far too wan,
- Or there is that written in his eyes
- Which none should look upon.
- So they kept us close till nigh on noon,
- And then they rang the bell,
- And the Warders with their jingling keys
- Opened each listening cell,
- And down the iron stair we tramped,
- Each from his separate Hell.
- Out into God’s sweet air we went,
- But not in wonted way,
- For this man’s face was white with fear,
- And that man’s face was grey,
- And I never saw sad men who looked
- So wistfully at the day.
- I never saw sad men who looked
- With such a wistful eye
- Upon that little tent of blue
- We prisoners called the sky,
- And at every careless cloud that passed
- In happy freedom by.
- But there were those amongst us all
- Who walked with downcast head,
- And knew that, had each got his due,
- They should have died instead:
- He had but killed a thing that lived,
- Whilst they had killed the dead.
- For he who sins a second time
- Wakes a dead soul to pain,
- And draws it from its spotted shroud,
- And makes it bleed again,
- And makes it bleed great gouts of blood,
- And makes it bleed in vain!
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- Like ape or clown, in monstrous garb
- With crooked arrows starred,
- Silently we went round and round
- The slippery asphalte yard;
- Silently we went round and round,
- And no man spoke a word.
- Silently we went round and round,
- And through each hollow mind
- The Memory of dreadful things
- Rushed like a dreadful wind,
- And Horror stalked before each man,
- And Terror crept behind.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- The Warders strutted up and down,
- And kept their herd of brutes,
- Their uniforms were spick and span,
- And they wore their Sunday suits,
- But we knew the work they had been at,
- By the quicklime on their boots.
- For where a grave had opened wide,
- There was no grave at all:
- Only a stretch of mud and sand
- By the hideous prison-wall,
- And a little heap of burning lime,
- That the man should have his pall.
- For he has a pall, this wretched man,
- Such as few men can claim:
- Deep down below a prison-yard,
- Naked for greater shame,
- He lies, with fetters on each foot,
- Wrapt in a sheet of flame!
- And all the while the burning lime
- Eats flesh and bone away,
- It eats the brittle bone by night,
- And the soft flesh by day,
- It eats the flesh and bone by turns,
- But it eats the heart alway.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- For three long years they will not sow
- Or root or seedling there:
- For three long years the unblessed spot
- Will sterile be and bare,
- And look upon the wondering sky
- With unreproachful stare.
- They think a murderer’s heart would taint
- Each simple seed they sow.
- It is not true! God’s kindly earth
- Is kindlier than men know,
- And the red rose would but blow more red,
- The white rose whiter blow.
- Out of his mouth a red, red rose!
- Out of his heart a white!
- For who can say by what strange way,
- Christ brings His will to light,
- Since the barren staff the pilgrim bore
- Bloomed in the great Pope’s sight?
- But neither milk-white rose nor red
- May bloom in prison-air;
- The shard, the pebble, and the flint,
- Are what they give us there:
- For flowers have been known to heal
- A common man’s despair.
- So never will wine-red rose or white,
- Petal by petal, fall
- On that stretch of mud and sand that lies
- By the hideous prison-wall,
- To tell the men who tramp the yard
- That God’s Son died for all.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- Yet though the hideous prison-wall
- Still hems him round and round,
- And a spirit may not walk by night
- That is with fetters bound,
- And a spirit may but weep that lies
- In such unholy ground,
- He is at peace—this wretched man—
- At peace, or will be soon:
- There is no thing to make him mad,
- Nor does Terror walk at noon,
- For the lampless Earth in which he lies
- Has neither Sun nor Moon.
- They hanged him as a beast is hanged:
- They did not even toll
- A requiem that might have brought
- Rest to his startled soul,
- But hurriedly they took him out,
- And hid him in a hole.
- They stripped him of his canvas clothes,
- And gave him to the flies:
- They mocked the swollen purple throat,
- And the stark and staring eyes:
- And with laughter loud they heaped the shroud
- In which their convict lies.
- The Chaplain would not kneel to pray
- By his dishonoured grave:
- Nor mark it with that blessed Cross
- That Christ for sinners gave,
- Because the man was one of those
- Whom Christ came down to save.
- Yet all is well; he has but passed
- To Life’s appointed bourne:
- And alien tears will fill for him
- Pity’s long-broken urn,
- For his mourners will be outcast men,
- And outcasts always mourn
- V
- I KNOW not whether Laws be right,
- Or whether Laws be wrong;
- All that we know who lie in gaol
- Is that the wall is strong;
- And that each day is like a year,
- A year whose days are long.
- But this I know, that every Law
- That men have made for Man,
- Since first Man took his brother’s life,
- And the sad world began,
- But straws the wheat and saves the chaff
- With a most evil fan.
- This too I know—and wise it were
- If each could know the same—
- That every prison that men build
- Is built with bricks of shame,
- And bound with bars lest Christ should see
- How men their brothers maim.
- With bars they blur the gracious moon,
- And blind the goodly sun:
- And they do well to hide their Hell,
- For in it things are done
- That Son of God nor son of Man
- Ever should look upon!
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- The vilest deeds like poison weeds,
- Bloom well in prison-air;
- It is only what is good in Man
- That wastes and withers there:
- Pale Anguish keeps the heavy gate,
- And the Warder is Despair.
- For they starve the little frightened child
- Till it weeps both night and day:
- And they scourge the weak, and flog the fool,
- And gibe the old and grey,
- And some grow mad, and all grow bad,
- And none a word may say.
- Each narrow cell in which we dwell
- Is a foul and dark latrine,
- And the fetid breath of living Death
- Chokes up each grated screen,
- And all, but Lust, is turned to dust
- In Humanity’s machine.
- The brackish water that we drink
- Creeps with a loathsome slime,
- And the bitter bread they weigh in scales
- Is full of chalk and lime,
- And Sleep will not lie down, but walks
- Wild-eyed, and cries to Time.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- But though lean Hunger and green Thirst
- Like asp with adder fight,
- We have little care of prison fare,
- For what chills and kills outright
- Is that every stone one lifts by day
- Becomes one’s heart by night.
- With midnight always in one’s heart,
- And twilight in one’s cell,
- We turn the crank, or tear the rope,
- Each in his separate Hell,
- And the silence is more awful far
- Than the sound of a brazen bell.
- And never a human voice comes near
- To speak a gentle word:
- And the eye that watches through the door
- Is pitiless and hard:
- And by all forgot, we rot and rot,
- With soul and body marred.
- And thus we rust Life’s iron chain
- Degraded and alone:
- And some men curse, and some men weep,
- And some men make no moan:
- But God’s eternal Laws are kind
- And break the heart of stone.
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- And every human heart that breaks,
- In prison-cell or yard,
- Is as that broken box that gave
- Its treasure to the Lord,
- And filled the unclean leper’s house
- With the scent of costliest nard.
- Ah! happy they whose hearts can break
- And peace of pardon win!
- How else may man make straight his plan
- And cleanse his soul from Sin?
- How else but through a broken heart
- May Lord Christ enter in?
- [Picture: Decorative graphic]
- And he of the swollen purple throat,
- And the stark and staring eyes,
- Waits for the holy hands that took
- The Thief to Paradise;
- And a broken and a contrite heart
- The Lord will not despise.
- The man in red who reads the Law
- Gave him three weeks of life,
- Three little weeks in which to heal
- His soul of his soul’s strife,
- And cleanse from every blot of blood
- The hand that held the knife.
- And with tears of blood he cleansed the hand,
- The hand that held the steel:
- For only blood can wipe out blood,
- And only tears can heal:
- And the crimson stain that was of Cain
- Became Christ’s snow-white seal.
- VI
- IN Reading gaol by Reading town
- There is a pit of shame,
- And in it lies a wretched man
- Eaten by teeth of flame,
- In a burning winding-sheet he lies,
- And his grave has got no name.
- And there, till Christ call forth the dead,
- In silence let him lie:
- No need to waste the foolish tear,
- Or heave the windy sigh:
- The man had killed the thing he loved,
- And so he had to die.
- And all men kill the thing they love,
- By all let this be heard,
- Some do it with a bitter look,
- Some with a flattering word,
- The coward does it with a kiss,
- The brave man with a sword!
- RAVENNA
- _Newdigate Prize Poem_
- Recited in the Sheldonian Theatre
- Oxford
- June 26th, 1878
- * * * * *
- TO MY FRIEND
- GEORGE FLEMING
- AUTHOR OF
- ‘THE NILE NOVEL’ AND ‘MIRAGE’
- _Ravenna_, _March_ 1877
- _Oxford_, _March_ 1878
- RAVENNA
- I.
- A YEAR ago I breathed the Italian air,—
- And yet, methinks this northern Spring is fair,—
- These fields made golden with the flower of March,
- The throstle singing on the feathered larch,
- The cawing rooks, the wood-doves fluttering by,
- The little clouds that race across the sky;
- And fair the violet’s gentle drooping head,
- The primrose, pale for love uncomforted,
- The rose that burgeons on the climbing briar,
- The crocus-bed, (that seems a moon of fire
- Round-girdled with a purple marriage-ring);
- And all the flowers of our English Spring,
- Fond snowdrops, and the bright-starred daffodil.
- Up starts the lark beside the murmuring mill,
- And breaks the gossamer-threads of early dew;
- And down the river, like a flame of blue,
- Keen as an arrow flies the water-king,
- While the brown linnets in the greenwood sing.
- A year ago!—it seems a little time
- Since last I saw that lordly southern clime,
- Where flower and fruit to purple radiance blow,
- And like bright lamps the fabled apples glow.
- Full Spring it was—and by rich flowering vines,
- Dark olive-groves and noble forest-pines,
- I rode at will; the moist glad air was sweet,
- The white road rang beneath my horse’s feet,
- And musing on Ravenna’s ancient name,
- I watched the day till, marked with wounds of flame,
- The turquoise sky to burnished gold was turned.
- O how my heart with boyish passion burned,
- When far away across the sedge and mere
- I saw that Holy City rising clear,
- Crowned with her crown of towers!—On and on
- I galloped, racing with the setting sun,
- And ere the crimson after-glow was passed,
- I stood within Ravenna’s walls at last!
- II.
- How strangely still! no sound of life or joy
- Startles the air; no laughing shepherd-boy
- Pipes on his reed, nor ever through the day
- Comes the glad sound of children at their play:
- O sad, and sweet, and silent! surely here
- A man might dwell apart from troublous fear,
- Watching the tide of seasons as they flow
- From amorous Spring to Winter’s rain and snow,
- And have no thought of sorrow;—here, indeed,
- Are Lethe’s waters, and that fatal weed
- Which makes a man forget his fatherland.
- Ay! amid lotus-meadows dost thou stand,
- Like Proserpine, with poppy-laden head,
- Guarding the holy ashes of the dead.
- For though thy brood of warrior sons hath ceased,
- Thy noble dead are with thee!—they at least
- Are faithful to thine honour:—guard them well,
- O childless city! for a mighty spell,
- To wake men’s hearts to dreams of things sublime,
- Are the lone tombs where rest the Great of Time.
- III.
- Yon lonely pillar, rising on the plain,
- Marks where the bravest knight of France was slain,—
- The Prince of chivalry, the Lord of war,
- Gaston de Foix: for some untimely star
- Led him against thy city, and he fell,
- As falls some forest-lion fighting well.
- Taken from life while life and love were new,
- He lies beneath God’s seamless veil of blue;
- Tall lance-like reeds wave sadly o’er his head,
- And oleanders bloom to deeper red,
- Where his bright youth flowed crimson on the ground.
- Look farther north unto that broken mound,—
- There, prisoned now within a lordly tomb
- Raised by a daughter’s hand, in lonely gloom,
- Huge-limbed Theodoric, the Gothic king,
- Sleeps after all his weary conquering.
- Time hath not spared his ruin,—wind and rain
- Have broken down his stronghold; and again
- We see that Death is mighty lord of all,
- And king and clown to ashen dust must fall
- Mighty indeed _their_ glory! yet to me
- Barbaric king, or knight of chivalry,
- Or the great queen herself, were poor and vain,
- Beside the grave where Dante rests from pain.
- His gilded shrine lies open to the air;
- And cunning sculptor’s hands have carven there
- The calm white brow, as calm as earliest morn,
- The eyes that flashed with passionate love and scorn,
- The lips that sang of Heaven and of Hell,
- The almond-face which Giotto drew so well,
- The weary face of Dante;—to this day,
- Here in his place of resting, far away
- From Arno’s yellow waters, rushing down
- Through the wide bridges of that fairy town,
- Where the tall tower of Giotto seems to rise
- A marble lily under sapphire skies!
- Alas! my Dante! thou hast known the pain
- Of meaner lives,—the exile’s galling chain,
- How steep the stairs within kings’ houses are,
- And all the petty miseries which mar
- Man’s nobler nature with the sense of wrong.
- Yet this dull world is grateful for thy song;
- Our nations do thee homage,—even she,
- That cruel queen of vine-clad Tuscany,
- Who bound with crown of thorns thy living brow,
- Hath decked thine empty tomb with laurels now,
- And begs in vain the ashes of her son.
- O mightiest exile! all thy grief is done:
- Thy soul walks now beside thy Beatrice;
- Ravenna guards thine ashes: sleep in peace.
- IV.
- How lone this palace is; how grey the walls!
- No minstrel now wakes echoes in these halls.
- The broken chain lies rusting on the door,
- And noisome weeds have split the marble floor:
- Here lurks the snake, and here the lizards run
- By the stone lions blinking in the sun.
- Byron dwelt here in love and revelry
- For two long years—a second Anthony,
- Who of the world another Actium made!
- Yet suffered not his royal soul to fade,
- Or lyre to break, or lance to grow less keen,
- ’Neath any wiles of an Egyptian queen.
- For from the East there came a mighty cry,
- And Greece stood up to fight for Liberty,
- And called him from Ravenna: never knight
- Rode forth more nobly to wild scenes of fight!
- None fell more bravely on ensanguined field,
- Borne like a Spartan back upon his shield!
- O Hellas! Hellas! in thine hour of pride,
- Thy day of might, remember him who died
- To wrest from off thy limbs the trammelling chain:
- O Salamis! O lone Platæan plain!
- O tossing waves of wild Euboean sea!
- O wind-swept heights of lone Thermopylæ!
- He loved you well—ay, not alone in word,
- Who freely gave to thee his lyre and sword,
- Like Æschylos at well-fought Marathon:
- And England, too, shall glory in her son,
- Her warrior-poet, first in song and fight.
- No longer now shall Slander’s venomed spite
- Crawl like a snake across his perfect name,
- Or mar the lordly scutcheon of his fame.
- For as the olive-garland of the race,
- Which lights with joy each eager runner’s face,
- As the red cross which saveth men in war,
- As a flame-bearded beacon seen from far
- By mariners upon a storm-tossed sea,—
- Such was his love for Greece and Liberty!
- Byron, thy crowns are ever fresh and green:
- Red leaves of rose from Sapphic Mitylene
- Shall bind thy brows; the myrtle blooms for thee,
- In hidden glades by lonely Castaly;
- The laurels wait thy coming: all are thine,
- And round thy head one perfect wreath will twine.
- V.
- The pine-tops rocked before the evening breeze
- With the hoarse murmur of the wintry seas,
- And the tall stems were streaked with amber bright;—
- I wandered through the wood in wild delight,
- Some startled bird, with fluttering wings and fleet,
- Made snow of all the blossoms; at my feet,
- Like silver crowns, the pale narcissi lay,
- And small birds sang on every twining spray.
- O waving trees, O forest liberty!
- Within your haunts at least a man is free,
- And half forgets the weary world of strife:
- The blood flows hotter, and a sense of life
- Wakes i’ the quickening veins, while once again
- The woods are filled with gods we fancied slain.
- Long time I watched, and surely hoped to see
- Some goat-foot Pan make merry minstrelsy
- Amid the reeds! some startled Dryad-maid
- In girlish flight! or lurking in the glade,
- The soft brown limbs, the wanton treacherous face
- Of woodland god! Queen Dian in the chase,
- White-limbed and terrible, with look of pride,
- And leash of boar-hounds leaping at her side!
- Or Hylas mirrored in the perfect stream.
- O idle heart! O fond Hellenic dream!
- Ere long, with melancholy rise and swell,
- The evening chimes, the convent’s vesper bell,
- Struck on mine ears amid the amorous flowers.
- Alas! alas! these sweet and honied hours
- Had whelmed my heart like some encroaching sea,
- And drowned all thoughts of black Gethsemane.
- VI.
- O lone Ravenna! many a tale is told
- Of thy great glories in the days of old:
- Two thousand years have passed since thou didst see
- Cæsar ride forth to royal victory.
- Mighty thy name when Rome’s lean eagles flew
- From Britain’s isles to far Euphrates blue;
- And of the peoples thou wast noble queen,
- Till in thy streets the Goth and Hun were seen.
- Discrowned by man, deserted by the sea,
- Thou sleepest, rocked in lonely misery!
- No longer now upon thy swelling tide,
- Pine-forest-like, thy myriad galleys ride!
- For where the brass-beaked ships were wont to float,
- The weary shepherd pipes his mournful note;
- And the white sheep are free to come and go
- Where Adria’s purple waters used to flow.
- O fair! O sad! O Queen uncomforted!
- In ruined loveliness thou liest dead,
- Alone of all thy sisters; for at last
- Italia’s royal warrior hath passed
- Rome’s lordliest entrance, and hath worn his crown
- In the high temples of the Eternal Town!
- The Palatine hath welcomed back her king,
- And with his name the seven mountains ring!
- And Naples hath outlived her dream of pain,
- And mocks her tyrant! Venice lives again,
- New risen from the waters! and the cry
- Of Light and Truth, of Love and Liberty,
- Is heard in lordly Genoa, and where
- The marble spires of Milan wound the air,
- Rings from the Alps to the Sicilian shore,
- And Dante’s dream is now a dream no more.
- But thou, Ravenna, better loved than all,
- Thy ruined palaces are but a pall
- That hides thy fallen greatness! and thy name
- Burns like a grey and flickering candle-flame
- Beneath the noonday splendour of the sun
- Of new Italia! for the night is done,
- The night of dark oppression, and the day
- Hath dawned in passionate splendour: far away
- The Austrian hounds are hunted from the land,
- Beyond those ice-crowned citadels which stand
- Girdling the plain of royal Lombardy,
- From the far West unto the Eastern sea.
- I know, indeed, that sons of thine have died
- In Lissa’s waters, by the mountain-side
- Of Aspromonte, on Novara’s plain,—
- Nor have thy children died for thee in vain:
- And yet, methinks, thou hast not drunk this wine
- From grapes new-crushed of Liberty divine,
- Thou hast not followed that immortal Star
- Which leads the people forth to deeds of war.
- Weary of life, thou liest in silent sleep,
- As one who marks the lengthening shadows creep,
- Careless of all the hurrying hours that run,
- Mourning some day of glory, for the sun
- Of Freedom hath not shewn to thee his face,
- And thou hast caught no flambeau in the race.
- Yet wake not from thy slumbers,—rest thee well,
- Amidst thy fields of amber asphodel,
- Thy lily-sprinkled meadows,—rest thee there,
- To mock all human greatness: who would dare
- To vent the paltry sorrows of his life
- Before thy ruins, or to praise the strife
- Of kings’ ambition, and the barren pride
- Of warring nations! wert not thou the Bride
- Of the wild Lord of Adria’s stormy sea!
- The Queen of double Empires! and to thee
- Were not the nations given as thy prey!
- And now—thy gates lie open night and day,
- The grass grows green on every tower and hall,
- The ghastly fig hath cleft thy bastioned wall;
- And where thy mailèd warriors stood at rest
- The midnight owl hath made her secret nest.
- O fallen! fallen! from thy high estate,
- O city trammelled in the toils of Fate,
- Doth nought remain of all thy glorious days,
- But a dull shield, a crown of withered bays!
- Yet who beneath this night of wars and fears,
- From tranquil tower can watch the coming years;
- Who can foretell what joys the day shall bring,
- Or why before the dawn the linnets sing?
- Thou, even thou, mayst wake, as wakes the rose
- To crimson splendour from its grave of snows;
- As the rich corn-fields rise to red and gold
- From these brown lands, now stiff with Winter’s cold;
- As from the storm-rack comes a perfect star!
- O much-loved city! I have wandered far
- From the wave-circled islands of my home;
- Have seen the gloomy mystery of the Dome
- Rise slowly from the drear Campagna’s way,
- Clothed in the royal purple of the day:
- I from the city of the violet crown
- Have watched the sun by Corinth’s hill go down,
- And marked the ‘myriad laughter’ of the sea
- From starlit hills of flower-starred Arcady;
- Yet back to thee returns my perfect love,
- As to its forest-nest the evening dove.
- O poet’s city! one who scarce has seen
- Some twenty summers cast their doublets green
- For Autumn’s livery, would seek in vain
- To wake his lyre to sing a louder strain,
- Or tell thy days of glory;—poor indeed
- Is the low murmur of the shepherd’s reed,
- Where the loud clarion’s blast should shake the sky,
- And flame across the heavens! and to try
- Such lofty themes were folly: yet I know
- That never felt my heart a nobler glow
- Than when I woke the silence of thy street
- With clamorous trampling of my horse’s feet,
- And saw the city which now I try to sing,
- After long days of weary travelling.
- VII.
- Adieu, Ravenna! but a year ago,
- I stood and watched the crimson sunset glow
- From the lone chapel on thy marshy plain:
- The sky was as a shield that caught the stain
- Of blood and battle from the dying sun,
- And in the west the circling clouds had spun
- A royal robe, which some great God might wear,
- While into ocean-seas of purple air
- Sank the gold galley of the Lord of Light.
- Yet here the gentle stillness of the night
- Brings back the swelling tide of memory,
- And wakes again my passionate love for thee:
- Now is the Spring of Love, yet soon will come
- On meadow and tree the Summer’s lordly bloom;
- And soon the grass with brighter flowers will blow,
- And send up lilies for some boy to mow.
- Then before long the Summer’s conqueror,
- Rich Autumn-time, the season’s usurer,
- Will lend his hoarded gold to all the trees,
- And see it scattered by the spendthrift breeze;
- And after that the Winter cold and drear.
- So runs the perfect cycle of the year.
- And so from youth to manhood do we go,
- And fall to weary days and locks of snow.
- Love only knows no winter; never dies:
- Nor cares for frowning storms or leaden skies
- And mine for thee shall never pass away,
- Though my weak lips may falter in my lay.
- Adieu! Adieu! yon silent evening star,
- The night’s ambassador, doth gleam afar,
- And bid the shepherd bring his flocks to fold.
- Perchance before our inland seas of gold
- Are garnered by the reapers into sheaves,
- Perchance before I see the Autumn leaves,
- I may behold thy city; and lay down
- Low at thy feet the poet’s laurel crown.
- Adieu! Adieu! yon silver lamp, the moon,
- Which turns our midnight into perfect noon,
- Doth surely light thy towers, guarding well
- Where Dante sleeps, where Byron loved to dwell.
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