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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Andromeda and Other Poems, by Charles Kingsley
+
+
+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
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Andromeda and Other Poems
+
+Author: Charles Kingsley
+
+Release Date: February 12, 2004 [eBook #11064]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANDROMEDA AND OTHER POEMS***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+ANDROMEDA AND OTHER POEMS
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+
+ Andromeda
+ Hypotheses Hypochondriacae
+ Trehill Well
+ In an Illuminated Missal
+ The Weird Lady
+ Palinodia
+ A Hope
+ The Poetry of a Root Crop
+ Child Ballad
+ Airly Beacon
+ Sappho
+ The Bad Squire
+ Scotch Song
+ The Young Knight
+ A New Forest Ballad
+ The Red King
+ The Outlaw
+ Sing Heigh-ho!
+ A March
+ A Lament
+ The Night Bird
+ The Dead Church
+ A Parable from Liebig
+ The Starlings
+ Old and New
+ The Watchman
+ The World's Age
+ The Sands of Dee
+ The Tide Rock
+ Elegiacs
+ Dartside
+ My Hunting Song
+ Alton Locke's Song
+ The Day of the Lord
+ A Christmas Carol
+ The Oubit
+ The Three Fishers
+ Sonnet
+ Margaret to Dolcino
+ Dolcino to Margaret
+ The Ugly Princess
+ Sonnet
+ The Swan-neck
+ A Thought from the Rhine
+ The Longbeards' Saga. A.D. 400
+ Saint Maura. A.D. 304
+ On the Death of a Certain Journal
+ Down to the Mothers
+ To Miss Mitford
+ Ballad of Earl Haldan's Daughter
+ Frank Leigh's Song. A.D. 1586
+ Ode to the North-east Wind
+ A Farewell
+ To G. A. G.
+ The South Wind
+ The Invitation
+ The Find
+ Fishing Song
+ The Last Buccaneer
+ The Knight's Return
+ Pen-y-gwrydd
+ Ode
+ Songs from 'The Water-babies'
+ The Tide River
+ Young and Old
+ The Summer Sea
+ My Little Doll
+ The Knight's Leap
+ The Song of the Little Baltung. A.D. 395
+ On the Death of Leopold, King of the Belgians
+ Easter Week
+ Drifting Away
+ Christmas Day
+ September 21, 1870
+ The Mango-tree
+ The Priest's Heart
+ 'Qu'est Qu'il Dit'
+ The Legend of La Brea
+ Hymn
+ The Delectable Day
+ Juventus Mundi
+ Valentine's Day
+ Ballad
+ Martin Lightfoot's Song
+
+
+
+ANDROMEDA
+
+
+
+Over the sea, past Crete, on the Syrian shore to the southward,
+Dwells in the well-tilled lowland a dark-haired AEthiop people,
+Skilful with needle and loom, and the arts of the dyer and carver,
+Skilful, but feeble of heart; for they know not the lords of Olympus,
+Lovers of men; neither broad-browed Zeus, nor Pallas Athene,
+Teacher of wisdom to heroes, bestower of might in the battle;
+Share not the cunning of Hermes, nor list to the songs of Apollo.
+Fearing the stars of the sky, and the roll of the blue salt water,
+Fearing all things that have life in the womb of the seas and the livers,
+Eating no fish to this day, nor ploughing the main, like the Phoenics,
+Manful with black-beaked ships, they abide in a sorrowful region,
+Vexed with the earthquake, and flame, and the sea-floods, scourge of
+Poseidon.
+ Whelming the dwellings of men, and the toils of the slow-footed oxen,
+Drowning the barley and flax, and the hard-earned gold of the harvest,
+Up to the hillside vines, and the pastures skirting the woodland,
+Inland the floods came yearly; and after the waters a monster,
+Bred of the slime, like the worms which are bred from the slime of the Nile-
+bank,
+Shapeless, a terror to see; and by night it swam out to the seaward,
+Daily returning to feed with the dawn, and devoured of the fairest,
+Cattle, and children, and maids, till the terrified people fled inland.
+ Fasting in sackcloth and ashes they came, both the king and his people,
+Came to the mountain of oaks, to the house of the terrible sea-gods,
+Hard by the gulf in the rocks, where of old the world-wide deluge
+Sank to the inner abyss; and the lake where the fish of the goddess,
+Holy, undying, abide; whom the priests feed daily with dainties.
+There to the mystical fish, high-throned in her chamber of cedar,
+Burnt they the fat of the flock; till the flame shone far to the seaward.
+Three days fasting they prayed; but the fourth day the priests of the
+goddess,
+Cunning in spells, cast lots, to discover the crime of the people.
+All day long they cast, till the house of the monarch was taken,
+Cepheus, king of the land; and the faces of all gathered blackness.
+Then once more they cast; and Cassiopoeia was taken,
+Deep-bosomed wife of the king, whom oft far-seeing Apollo
+Watched well-pleased from the welkin, the fairest of AEthiop women:
+Fairest, save only her daughter; for down to the ankle her tresses
+Rolled, blue-black as the night, ambrosial, joy to beholders.
+Awful and fair she arose, most like in her coming to Here,
+Queen before whom the Immortals arise, as she comes on Olympus,
+Out of the chamber of gold, which her son Hephaestos has wrought her.
+Such in her stature and eyes, and the broad white light of her forehead.
+Stately she came from her place, and she spoke in the midst of the people.
+ 'Pure are my hands from blood: most pure this heart in my bosom.
+Yet one fault I remember this day; one word have I spoken;
+Rashly I spoke on the shore, and I dread lest the sea should have heard it.
+Watching my child at her bath, as she plunged in the joy of her girlhood,
+Fairer I called her in pride than Atergati, queen of the ocean.
+Judge ye if this be my sin, for I know none other.' She ended;
+Wrapping her head in her mantle she stood, and the people were silent.
+ Answered the dark-browed priests, 'No word, once spoken, returneth,
+Even if uttered unwitting. Shall gods excuse our rashness?
+That which is done, that abides; and the wrath of the sea is against us;
+Hers, and the wrath of her brother, the Sun-god, lord of the sheepfolds.
+Fairer than her hast thou boasted thy daughter? Ah folly! for hateful,
+Hateful are they to the gods, whoso, impious, liken a mortal,
+Fair though he be, to their glory; and hateful is that which is likened,
+Grieving the eyes of their pride, and abominate, doomed to their anger.
+What shall be likened to gods? The unknown, who deep in the darkness
+Ever abide, twyformed, many-handed, terrible, shapeless.
+Woe to the queen; for the land is defiled, and the people accursed.
+Take thou her therefore by night, thou ill-starred Cassiopoeia,
+Take her with us in the night, when the moon sinks low to the westward;
+Bind her aloft for a victim, a prey for the gorge of the monster,
+Far on the sea-girt rock, which is washed by the surges for ever;
+So may the goddess accept her, and so may the land make atonement,
+Purged by her blood from its sin: so obey thou the doom of the rulers.'
+ Bitter in soul they went out, Cepheus and Cassiopoeia,
+Bitter in soul; and their hearts whirled round, as the leaves in the eddy.
+Weak was the queen, and rebelled: but the king, like a shepherd of people,
+Willed not the land should waste; so he yielded the life of his daughter.
+ Deep in the wane of the night, as the moon sank low to the westward,
+They by the shade of the cliffs, with the horror of darkness around them,
+Stole, as ashamed, to a deed which became not the light of the sunshine,
+Slowly, the priests, and the queen, and the virgin bound in the galley,
+Slowly they rowed to the rocks: but Cepheus far in the palace
+Sate in the midst of the hall, on his throne, like a shepherd of people,
+Choking his woe, dry-eyed, while the slaves wailed loudly around him.
+They on the sea-girt rock, which is washed by the surges for ever,
+Set her in silence, the guiltless, aloft with her face to the eastward.
+Under a crag of the stone, where a ledge sloped down to the water;
+There they set Andromeden, most beautiful, shaped like a goddess,
+Lifting her long white arms wide-spread to the walls of the basalt,
+Chaining them, ruthless, with brass; and they called on the might of the
+Rulers.
+ 'Mystical fish of the seas, dread Queen whom AEthiops honour,
+Whelming the land in thy wrath, unavoidable, sharp as the sting-ray,
+Thou, and thy brother the Sun, brain-smiting, lord of the sheepfold,
+Scorching the earth all day, and then resting at night in thy bosom,
+Take ye this one life for many, appeased by the blood of a maiden,
+Fairest, and born of the fairest, a queen, most priceless of victims.'
+ Thrice they spat as they went by the maid: but her mother delaying
+Fondled her child to the last, heart-crushed; and the warmth of her weeping
+Fell on the breast of the maid, as her woe broke forth into wailing.
+ 'Daughter! my daughter! forgive me! Oh curse not the murderess! Curse
+not!
+How have I sinned, but in love? Do the gods grudge glory to mothers?
+Loving I bore thee in vain in the fate-cursed bride-bed of Cepheus,
+Loving I fed thee and tended, and loving rejoiced in thy beauty,
+Blessing thy limbs as I bathed them, and blessing thy locks as I combed them;
+Decking thee, ripening to woman, I blest thee: yet blessing I slew thee!
+How have I sinned, but in love? Oh swear to me, swear to thy mother,
+Never to haunt me with curse, as I go to the grave in my sorrow,
+Childless and lone: may the gods never send me another, to slay it!
+See, I embrace thy knees--soft knees, where no babe will be fondled--
+Swear to me never to curse me, the hapless one, not in the death-pang.'
+ Weeping she clung to the knees of the maid; and the maid low answered--
+'Curse thee! Not in the death-pang!' The heart of the lady was lightened.
+Slowly she went by the ledge; and the maid was alone in the darkness.
+ Watching the pulse of the oars die down, as her own died with them,
+Tearless, dumb with amaze she stood, as a storm-stunned nestling
+Fallen from bough or from eave lies dumb, which the home-going herdsman
+Fancies a stone, till he catches the light of its terrified eyeball.
+So through the long long hours the maid stood helpless and hopeless,
+Wide-eyed, downward gazing in vain at the black blank darkness.
+Feebly at last she began, while wild thoughts bubbled within her--
+'Guiltless I am: why thus, then? Are gods more ruthless than mortals?
+Have they no mercy for youth? no love for the souls who have loved them?
+Even as I loved thee, dread sea, as I played by thy margin,
+Blessing thy wave as it cooled me, thy wind as it breathed on my forehead,
+Bowing my head to thy tempest, and opening my heart to thy children,
+Silvery fish, wreathed shell, and the strange lithe things of the water,
+Tenderly casting them back, as they gasped on the beach in the sunshine,
+Home to their mother--in vain! for mine sits childless in anguish!
+O false sea! false sea! I dreamed what I dreamed of thy goodness;
+Dreamed of a smile in thy gleam, of a laugh in the plash of thy ripple:
+False and devouring thou art, and the great world dark and despiteful.'
+ Awed by her own rash words she was still: and her eyes to the seaward
+Looked for an answer of wrath: far off, in the heart of the darkness,
+Blight white mists rose slowly; beneath them the wandering ocean
+Glimmered and glowed to the deepest abyss; and the knees of the maiden
+Trembled and sunk in her fear, as afar, like a dawn in the midnight,
+Rose from their seaweed chamber the choir of the mystical sea-maids.
+Onward toward her they came, and her heart beat loud at their coming,
+Watching the bliss of the gods, as they wakened the cliffs with their
+laughter.
+ Onward they came in their joy, and before them the roll of the surges
+Sank, as the breeze sank dead, into smooth green foam-flecked marble,
+Awed; and the crags of the cliff, and the pines of the mountain were silent.
+Onward they came in their joy, and around them the lamps of the sea-nymphs,
+Myriad fiery globes, swam panting and heaving; and rainbows
+Crimson and azure and emerald, were broken in star-showers, lighting
+Far through the wine-dark depths of the crystal, the gardens of Nereus,
+Coral and sea-fan and tangle, the blooms and the palms of the ocean.
+ Onward they came in their joy, more white than the foam which they
+scattered,
+Laughing and singing, and tossing and twining, while eager, the Tritons
+Blinded with kisses their eyes, unreproved, and above them in worship
+Hovered the terns, and the seagulls swept past them on silvery pinions
+Echoing softly their laughter; around them the wantoning dolphins
+Sighed as they plunged, full of love; and the great sea-horses which bore
+them
+Curved up their crests in their pride to the delicate arms of the maidens,
+Pawing the spray into gems, till a fiery rainfall, unharming,
+Sparkled and gleamed on the limbs of the nymphs, and the coils of the mermen.
+ Onward they went in their joy, bathed round with the fiery coolness,
+Needing nor sun nor moon, self-lighted, immortal: but others,
+Pitiful, floated in silence apart; in their bosoms the sea-boys,
+Slain by the wrath of the seas, swept down by the anger of Nereus;
+Hapless, whom never again on strand or on quay shall their mothers
+Welcome with garlands and vows to the temple, but wearily pining
+Gaze over island and bay for the sails of the sunken; they heedless
+Sleep in soft bosoms for ever, and dream of the surge and the sea-maids.
+ Onward they passed in their joy; on their brows neither sorrow nor anger;
+Self-sufficing, as gods, never heeding the woe of the maiden.
+She would have shrieked for their mercy: but shame made her dumb; and their
+eyeballs
+Stared on her careless and still, like the eyes in the house of the idols.
+Seeing they saw not, and passed, like a dream, on the murmuring ripple.
+ Stunned by the wonder she gazed, wide-eyed, as the glory departed.
+'O fair shapes! far fairer than I! Too fair to be ruthless!
+Gladden mine eyes once more with your splendour, unlike to my fancies;
+You, then, smiled in the sea-gleam, and laughed in the plash of the ripple.
+Awful I deemed you and formless; inhuman, monstrous as idols;
+Lo, when ye came, ye were women, more loving and lovelier, only;
+Like in all else; and I blest you: why blest ye not me for my worship?
+Had you no mercy for me, thus guiltless? Ye pitied the sea-boys:
+Why not me, then, more hapless by far? Does your sight and your knowledge
+End with the marge of the waves? Is the world which ye dwell in not our
+world?'
+
+ Over the mountain aloft ran a rush and a roll and a roaring;
+Downward the breeze came indignant, and leapt with a howl to the water,
+Roaring in cranny and crag, till the pillars and clefts of the basalt
+Rang like a god-swept lyre, and her brain grew mad with the noises;
+Crashing and lapping of waters, and sighing and tossing of weed-beds,
+Gurgle and whisper and hiss of the foam, while thundering surges
+Boomed in the wave-worn halls, as they champed at the roots of the mountain.
+Hour after hour in the darkness the wind rushed fierce to the landward,
+Drenching the maiden with spray; she shivering, weary and drooping,
+Stood with her heart full of thoughts, till the foam-crests gleamed in the
+twilight,
+Leaping and laughing around, and the east grew red with the dawning.
+ Then on the ridge of the hills rose the broad bright sun in his glory,
+Hurling his arrows abroad on the glittering crests of the surges,
+Gilding the soft round bosoms of wood, and the downs of the coastland;
+Gilding the weeds at her feet, and the foam-laced teeth of the ledges,
+Showing the maiden her home through the veil of her locks, as they floated
+Glistening, damp with the spray, in a long black cloud to the landward.
+High in the far-off glens rose thin blue curls from the homesteads;
+Softly the low of the herds, and the pipe of the outgoing herdsman,
+Slid to her ear on the water, and melted her heart into weeping.
+Shuddering, she tried to forget them; and straining her eyes to the seaward,
+Watched for her doom, as she wailed, but in vain, to the terrible Sun-god.
+ 'Dost thou not pity me, Sun, though thy wild dark sister be ruthless;
+Dost thou not pity me here, as thou seest me desolate, weary,
+Sickened with shame and despair, like a kid torn young from its mother?
+What if my beauty insult thee, then blight it: but me--Oh spare me!
+Spare me yet, ere he be here, fierce, tearing, unbearable! See me,
+See me, how tender and soft, and thus helpless! See how I shudder,
+Fancying only my doom. Wilt thou shine thus bright, when it takes me?
+Are there no deaths save this, great Sun? No fiery arrow,
+Lightning, or deep-mouthed wave? Why thus? What music in shrieking,
+Pleasure in warm live limbs torn slowly? And dar'st thou behold them!
+Oh, thou hast watched worse deeds! All sights are alike to thy brightness!
+What if thou waken the birds to their song, dost thou waken no sorrow;
+Waken no sick to their pain; no captive to wrench at his fetters?
+Smile on the garden and fold, and on maidens who sing at the milking;
+Flash into tapestried chambers, and peep in the eyelids of lovers,
+Showing the blissful their bliss--Dost love, then, the place where thou
+smilest?
+Lovest thou cities aflame, fierce blows, and the shrieks of the widow?
+Lovest thou corpse-strewn fields, as thou lightest the path of the vulture?
+Lovest thou these, that thou gazest so gay on my tears, and my mother's,
+Laughing alike at the horror of one, and the bliss of another?
+What dost thou care, in thy sky, for the joys and the sorrows of mortals?
+Colder art thou than the nymphs: in thy broad bright eye is no seeing.
+Hadst thou a soul--as much soul as the slaves in the house of my father,
+Wouldst thou not save? Poor thralls! they pitied me, clung to me weeping,
+Kissing my hands and my feet--What, are gods more ruthless than mortals?
+Worse than the souls which they rule? Let me die: they war not with ashes!'
+ Sudden she ceased, with a shriek: in the spray, like a hovering foam-bow,
+Hung, more fair than the foam-bow, a boy in the bloom of his manhood,
+Golden-haired, ivory-limbed, ambrosial; over his shoulder
+Hung for a veil of his beauty the gold-fringed folds of the goat-skin,
+Bearing the brass of his shield, as the sun flashed clear on its clearness.
+Curved on his thigh lay a falchion, and under the gleam of his helmet
+Eyes more blue than the main shone awful; around him Athene
+Shed in her love such grace, such state, and terrible daring.
+Hovering over the water he came, upon glittering pinions,
+Living, a wonder, outgrown from the tight-laced gold of his sandals;
+Bounding from billow to billow, and sweeping the crests like a sea-gull;
+Leaping the gulfs of the surge, as he laughed in the joy of his leaping.
+Fair and majestic he sprang to the rock; and the maiden in wonder
+Gazed for a while, and then hid in the dark-rolling wave of her tresses,
+Fearful, the light of her eyes; while the boy (for her sorrow had awed him)
+Blushed at her blushes, and vanished, like mist on the cliffs at the sunrise.
+Fearful at length she looked forth: he was gone: she, wild with amazement,
+Wailed for her mother aloud: but the wail of the wind only answered.
+Sudden he flashed into sight, by her side; in his pity and anger
+Moist were his eyes; and his breath like a rose-bed, as bolder and bolder,
+Hovering under her brows, like a swallow that haunts by the house-eaves,
+Delicate-handed, he lifted the veil of her hair; while the maiden
+Motionless, frozen with fear, wept loud; till his lips unclosing
+Poured from their pearl-strung portal the musical wave of his wonder.
+ 'Ah, well spoke she, the wise one, the gray-eyed Pallas Athene,--
+Known to Immortals alone are the prizes which lie for the heroes
+Ready prepared at their feet; for requiring a little, the rulers
+Pay back the loan tenfold to the man who, careless of pleasure,
+Thirsting for honour and toil, fares forth on a perilous errand
+Led by the guiding of gods, and strong in the strength of Immortals.
+Thus have they led me to thee: from afar, unknowing, I marked thee,
+Shining, a snow-white cross on the dark-green walls of the sea-cliff;
+Carven in marble I deemed thee, a perfect work of the craftsman.
+Likeness of Amphitrite, or far-famed Queen Cythereia.
+Curious I came, till I saw how thy tresses streamed in the sea-wind,
+Glistening, black as the night, and thy lips moved slow in thy wailing.
+Speak again now--Oh speak! For my soul is stirred to avenge thee;
+Tell me what barbarous horde, without law, unrighteous and heartless,
+Hateful to gods and to men, thus have bound thee, a shame to the sunlight,
+Scorn and prize to the sailor: but my prize now; for a coward,
+Coward and shameless were he, who so finding a glorious jewel
+Cast on the wayside by fools, would not win it and keep it and wear it,
+Even as I will thee; for I swear by the head of my father,
+Bearing thee over the sea-wave, to wed thee in Argos the fruitful,
+Beautiful, meed of my toil no less than this head which I carry,
+Hidden here fearful--Oh speak!'
+ But the maid, still dumb with amazement,
+Watered her bosom with weeping, and longed for her home and her mother.
+Beautiful, eager, he wooed her, and kissed off her tears as he hovered,
+Roving at will, as a bee, on the brows of a rock nymph-haunted,
+Garlanded over with vine, and acanthus, and clambering roses,
+Cool in the fierce still noon, where streams glance clear in the mossbeds,
+Hums on from blossom to blossom, and mingles the sweets as he tastes them.
+Beautiful, eager, he kissed her, and clasped her yet closer and closer,
+Praying her still to speak--
+ 'Not cruel nor rough did my mother
+Bear me to broad-browed Zeus in the depths of the brass-covered dungeon;
+Neither in vain, as I think, have I talked with the cunning of Hermes,
+Face unto face, as a friend; or from gray-eyed Pallas Athene
+Learnt what is fit, and respecting myself, to respect in my dealings
+Those whom the gods should love; so fear not; to chaste espousals
+Only I woo thee, and swear, that a queen, and alone without rival
+By me thou sittest in Argos of Hellas, throne of my fathers,
+Worshipped by fair-haired kings: why callest thou still on thy mother?
+Why did she leave thee thus here? For no foeman has bound thee; no foeman
+Winning with strokes of the sword such a prize, would so leave it behind
+him.'
+ Just as at first some colt, wild-eyed, with quivering nostril,
+Plunges in fear of the curb, and the fluttering robes of the rider;
+Soon, grown bold by despair, submits to the will of his master,
+Tamer and tamer each hour, and at last, in the pride of obedience,
+Answers the heel with a curvet, and arches his neck to be fondled,
+Cowed by the need that maid grew tame; while the hero indignant
+Tore at the fetters which held her: the brass, too cunningly tempered,
+Held to the rock by the nails, deep wedged: till the boy, red with anger,
+Drew from his ivory thigh, keen flashing, a falchion of diamond--
+'Now let the work of the smith try strength with the arms of Immortals!'
+Dazzling it fell; and the blade, as the vine-hook shears off the vine-bough,
+Carved through the strength of the brass, till her arms fell soft on his
+shoulder.
+Once she essayed to escape: but the ring of the water was round her,
+Round her the ring of his arms; and despairing she sank on his bosom.
+Then, like a fawn when startled, she looked with a shriek to the seaward.
+ 'Touch me not, wretch that I am! For accursed, a shame and a hissing,
+Guiltless, accurst no less, I await the revenge of the sea-gods.
+Yonder it comes! Ah go! Let me perish unseen, if I perish!
+Spare me the shame of thine eyes, when merciless fangs must tear me
+Piecemeal! Enough to endure by myself in the light of the sunshine
+Guiltless, the death of a kid!'
+ But the boy still lingered around her,
+Loth, like a boy, to forego her, and waken the cliffs with his laughter.
+'Yon is the foe, then? A beast of the sea? I had deemed him immortal.
+Titan, or Proteus' self, or Nereus, foeman of sailors:
+Yet would I fight with them all, but Poseidon, shaker of mountains,
+Uncle of mine, whom I fear, as is fit; for he haunts on Olympus,
+Holding the third of the world; and the gods all rise at his coming.
+Unto none else will I yield, god-helped: how then to a monster,
+Child of the earth and of night, unreasoning, shapeless, accursed?'
+ 'Art thou, too, then a god?'
+ 'No god I,' smiling he answered;
+'Mortal as thou, yet divine: but mortal the herds of the ocean,
+Equal to men in that only, and less in all else; for they nourish
+Blindly the life of the lips, untaught by the gods, without wisdom:
+Shame if I fled before such!'
+ In her heart new life was enkindled,
+Worship and trust, fair parents of love: but she answered him sighing.
+ 'Beautiful, why wilt thou die? Is the light of the sun, then, so
+worthless,
+Worthless to sport with thy fellows in flowery glades of the forest,
+Under the broad green oaks, where never again shall I wander,
+Tossing the ball with my maidens, or wreathing the altar in garlands,
+Careless, with dances and songs, till the glens rang loud to our laughter.
+Too full of death the sad earth is already: the halls full of weepers,
+Quarried by tombs all cliffs, and the bones gleam white on the sea-floor,
+Numberless, gnawn by the herds who attend on the pitiless sea-gods,
+Even as mine will be soon: and yet noble it seems to me, dying,
+Giving my life for a people, to save to the arms of their lovers
+Maidens and youths for a while: thee, fairest of all, shall I slay thee?
+Add not thy bones to the many, thus angering idly the dread ones!
+Either the monster will crush, or the sea-queen's self overwhelm thee,
+Vengeful, in tempest and foam, and the thundering walls of the surges.
+Why wilt thou follow me down? can we love in the black blank darkness?
+Love in the realms of the dead, in the land where all is forgotten?
+Why wilt thou follow me down? is it joy, on the desolate oozes,
+Meagre to flit, gray ghosts in the depths of the gray salt water?
+Beautiful! why wilt thou die, and defraud fair girls of thy manhood?
+Surely one waits for thee longing, afar in the isles of the ocean.
+Go thy way; I mine; for the gods grudge pleasure to mortals.'
+ Sobbing she ended her moan, as her neck, like a storm-bent lily,
+Drooped with the weight of her woe, and her limbs sank, weary with watching,
+Soft on the hard-ledged rock: but the boy, with his eye on the monster,
+Clasped her, and stood, like a god; and his lips curved proud as he answered--
+ 'Great are the pitiless sea-gods: but greater the Lords of Olympus;
+Greater the AEgis-wielder, and greater is she who attends him.
+Clear-eyed Justice her name is, the counsellor, loved of Athene;
+Helper of heroes, who dare, in the god-given might of their manhood,
+Greatly to do and to suffer, and far in the fens' and the forests
+Smite the devourers of men, Heaven-hated, brood of the giants,
+Twyformed, strange, without like, who obey not the golden-haired Rulers.
+Vainly rebelling they rage, till they die by the swords of the heroes,
+Even as this must die; for I burn with the wrath of my father,
+Wandering, led by Athene; and dare whatsoever betides me.
+Led by Athene I won from the gray-haired terrible sisters
+Secrets hidden from men, when I found them asleep on the sand-hills,
+Keeping their eye and their tooth, till they showed me the perilous pathway
+Over the waterless ocean, the valley that led to the Gorgon.
+Her too I slew in my craft, Medusa, the beautiful horror;
+Taught by Athene I slew her, and saw not herself, but her image,
+Watching the mirror of brass, in the shield which a goddess had lent me.
+Cleaving her brass-scaled throat, as she lay with her adders around her,
+Fearless I bore off her head, in the folds of the mystical goat-skin
+Hide of Amaltheie, fair nurse of the AEgis-wielder.
+Hither I bear it, a gift to the gods, and a death to my foe-men,
+Freezing the seer to stone; to hide thine eyes from the horror.
+Kiss me but once, and I go.'
+ Then lifting her neck, like a sea-bird
+Peering up over the wave, from the foam-white swells of her bosom,
+Blushing she kissed him: afar, on the topmost Idalian summit
+Laughed in the joy of her heart, far-seeing, the queen Aphrodite.
+ Loosing his arms from her waist he flew upward, awaiting the sea-beast.
+Onward it came from the southward, as bulky and black as a galley,
+Lazily coasting along, as the fish fled leaping before it;
+Lazily breasting the ripple, and watching by sandbar and headland,
+Listening for laughter of maidens at bleaching, or song of the fisher,
+Children at play on the pebbles, or cattle that pawed on the sand-hills.
+Rolling and dripping it came, where bedded in glistening purple
+Cold on the cold sea-weeds lay the long white sides of the maiden,
+Trembling, her face in her hands, and her tresses afloat on the water.
+ As when an osprey aloft, dark-eyebrowed, royally crested,
+Flags on by creek and by cove, and in scorn of the anger of Nereus
+Ranges, the king of the shore; if he see on a glittering shallow,
+Chasing the bass and the mullet, the fin of a wallowing dolphin,
+Halting, he wheels round slowly, in doubt at the weight of his quarry,
+Whether to clutch it alive, or to fall on the wretch like a plummet,
+Stunning with terrible talon the life of the brain in the hindhead:
+Then rushes up with a scream, and stooping the wrath of his eyebrows
+Falls from the sky, like a star, while the wind rattles hoarse in his
+pinions.
+Over him closes the foam for a moment; and then from the sand-bed
+Rolls up the great fish, dead, and his side gleams white in the sunshine.
+Thus fell the boy on the beast, unveiling the face of the Gorgon;
+Thus fell the boy on the beast; thus rolled up the beast in his horror,
+Once, as the dead eyes glared into his; then his sides, death-sharpened,
+Stiffened and stood, brown rock, in the wash of the wandering water.
+ Beautiful, eager, triumphant, he leapt back again to his treasure;
+Leapt back again, full blest, toward arms spread wide to receive him.
+Brimful of honour he clasped her, and brimful of love she caressed him,
+Answering lip with lip; while above them the queen Aphrodite
+Poured on their foreheads and limbs, unseen, ambrosial odours,
+Givers of longing, and rapture, and chaste content in espousals.
+Happy whom ere they be wedded anoints she, the Queen Aphrodite!
+ Laughing she called to her sister, the chaste Tritonid Athene,
+'Seest thou yonder thy pupil, thou maid of the AEgis-wielder?
+How he has turned himself wholly to love, and caresses a damsel,
+Dreaming no longer of honour, or danger, or Pallas Athene?
+Sweeter, it seems, to the young my gifts are; so yield me the stripling;
+Yield him me now, lest he die in his prime, like hapless Adonis.'
+ Smiling she answered in turn, that chaste Tritonid Athene:
+'Dear unto me, no less than to thee, is the wedlock of heroes;
+Dear, who can worthily win him a wife not unworthy; and noble,
+Pure with the pure to beget brave children, the like of their father.
+Happy, who thus stands linked to the heroes who were, and who shall be;
+Girdled with holiest awe, not sparing of self; for his mother
+Watches his steps with the eyes of the gods; and his wife and his children
+Move him to plan and to do in the farm and the camp and the council.
+Thence comes weal to a nation: but woe upon woe, when the people
+Mingle in love at their will, like the brutes, not heeding the future.'
+ Then from her gold-strung loom, where she wrought in her chamber of cedar,
+Awful and fair she arose; and she went by the glens of Olympus;
+Went by the isles of the sea, and the wind never ruffled her mantle;
+Went by the water of Crete, and the black-beaked fleets of the Phoenics;
+Came to the sea-girt rock which is washed by the surges for ever,
+Bearing the wealth of the gods, for a gift to the bride of a hero.
+There she met Andromeden and Persea, shaped like Immortals;
+Solemn and sweet was her smile, while their hearts beat loud at her coming;
+Solemn and sweet was her smile, as she spoke to the pair in her wisdom.
+ 'Three things hold we, the Rulers, who sit by the founts of Olympus,
+Wisdom, and prowess, and beauty; and freely we pour them on mortals;
+Pleased at our image in man, as a father at his in his children.
+One thing only we grudge to mankind: when a hero, unthankful,
+Boasts of our gifts as his own, stiffnecked, and dishonours the givers,
+Turning our weapons against us. Him Ate follows avenging;
+Slowly she tracks him and sure, as a lyme-hound; sudden she grips him,
+Crushing him, blind in his pride, for a sign and a terror to folly.
+This we avenge, as is fit; in all else never weary of giving.
+Come, then, damsel, and know if the gods grudge pleasure to mortals.'
+ Loving and gentle she spoke: but the maid stood in awe, as the goddess
+Plaited with soft swift finger her tresses, and decked her in jewels,
+Armlet and anklet and earbell; and over her shoulders a necklace,
+Heavy, enamelled, the flower of the gold and the brass of the mountain.
+Trembling with joy she gazed, so well Haephaistos had made it,
+Deep in the forges of AEtna, while Charis his lady beside him
+Mingled her grace in his craft, as he wrought for his sister Athene.
+Then on the brows of the maiden a veil bound Pallas Athene;
+Ample it fell to her feet, deep-fringed, a wonder of weaving.
+Ages and ages agone it was wrought on the heights of Olympus,
+Wrought in the gold-strung loom, by the finger of cunning Athene.
+In it she wove all creatures that teem in the womb of the ocean;
+Nereid, siren, and triton, and dolphin, and arrowy fishes
+Glittering round, many-hued, on the flame-red folds of the mantle.
+In it she wove, too, a town where gray-haired kings sat in judgment;
+Sceptre in hand in the market they sat, doing right by the people,
+Wise: while above watched Justice, and near, far-seeing Apollo.
+Round it she wove for a fringe all herbs of the earth and the water,
+Violet, asphodel, ivy, and vine-leaves, roses and lilies,
+Coral and sea-fan and tangle, the blooms and the palms of the ocean:
+Now from Olympus she bore it, a dower to the bride of a hero.
+Over the limbs of the damsel she wrapt it: the maid still trembled,
+Shading her face with her hands; for the eyes of the goddess were awful.
+ Then, as a pine upon Ida when southwest winds blow landward,
+Stately she bent to the damsel, and breathed on her: under her breathing
+Taller and fairer she grew; and the goddess spoke in her wisdom.
+ 'Courage I give thee; the heart of a queen, and the mind of Immortals;
+Godlike to talk with the gods, and to look on their eyes unshrinking;
+Fearing the sun and the stars no more, and the blue salt water;
+Fearing us only, the lords of Olympus, friends of the heroes;
+Chastely and wisely to govern thyself and thy house and thy people,
+Bearing a godlike race to thy spouse, till dying I set thee
+High for a star in the heavens, a sign and a hope to the seamen,
+Spreading thy long white arms all night in the heights of the aether,
+Hard by thy sire and the hero thy spouse, while near thee thy mother
+Sits in her ivory chair, as she plaits ambrosial tresses.
+All night long thou wilt shine; all day thou wilt feast on Olympus,
+Happy, the guest of the gods, by thy husband, the god-begotten.'
+ Blissful, they turned them to go: but the fair-tressed Pallas Athene
+Rose, like a pillar of tall white cloud, toward silver Olympus;
+Far above ocean and shore, and the peaks of the isles and the mainland;
+Where no frost nor storm is, in clear blue windless abysses,
+High in the home of the summer, the seats of the happy Immortals,
+Shrouded in keen deep blaze, unapproachable; there ever youthful
+Hebe, Harmonie, and the daughter of Jove, Aphrodite,
+Whirled in the white-linked dance with the gold-crowned Hours and the Graces,
+Hand within hand, while clear piped Phoebe, queen of the woodlands.
+All day long they rejoiced: but Athene still in her chamber
+Bent herself over her loom, as the stars rang loud to her singing,
+Chanting of order and right, and of foresight, warden of nations;
+Chanting of labour and craft, and of wealth in the port and the garner;
+Chanting of valour and fame, and the man who can fall with the foremost,
+Fighting for children and wife, and the field which his father bequeathed
+him.
+Sweetly and solemnly sang she, and planned new lessons for mortals:
+Happy, who hearing obey her, the wise unsullied Athene.
+
+Eversley, 1852,
+
+
+
+HYPOTHESES HYPOCHONDRIACAE {211}
+
+
+
+And should she die, her grave should be
+Upon the bare top of a sunny hill,
+Among the moorlands of her own fair land,
+Amid a ring of old and moss-grown stones
+In gorse and heather all embosomed.
+There should be no tall stone, no marble tomb
+Above her gentle corse;--the ponderous pile
+Would press too rudely on those fairy limbs.
+The turf should lightly he, that marked her home.
+A sacred spot it would be--every bird
+That came to watch her lone grave should be holy.
+The deer should browse around her undisturbed;
+The whin bird by, her lonely nest should build
+All fearless; for in life she loved to see
+Happiness in all things--
+And we would come on summer days
+When all around was bright, and set us down
+And think of all that lay beneath that turf
+On which the heedless moor-bird sits, and whistles
+His long, shrill, painful song, as though he plained
+For her that loved him and his pleasant hills;
+And we would dream again of bygone days
+Until our eyes should swell with natural tears
+For brilliant hopes--all faded into air!
+As, on the sands of Irak, near approach
+Destroys the traveller's vision of still lakes,
+And goodly streams reed-clad, and meadows green;
+And leaves behind the drear reality
+Of shadeless, same, yet ever-changing sand!
+And when the sullen clouds rose thick on high
+Mountains on mountains rolling--and dark mist
+Wrapped itself round the hill-tops like a shroud,
+When on her grave swept by the moaning wind
+Bending the heather-bells--then would I come
+And watch by her, in silent loneliness,
+And smile upon the storm--as knowing well
+The lightning's flash would surely turn aside,
+Nor mar the lowly mound, where peaceful sleeps
+All that gave life and love to one fond heart!
+I talk of things that are not; and if prayers
+By night and day availed from my weak lips,
+Then should they never be! till I was gone,
+Before the friends I loved, to my long home.
+Oh pardon me, if e'er I say too much; my mind
+Too often strangely turns to ribald mirth,
+As though I had no doubt nor hope beyond--
+Or brooding melancholy cloys my soul
+With thoughts of days misspent, of wasted time
+And bitter feelings swallowed up in jests.
+Then strange and fearful thoughts flit o'er my brain
+By indistinctness made more terrible,
+And incubi mock at me with fierce eyes
+Upon my couch: and visions, crude and dire,
+Of planets, suns, millions of miles, infinity,
+Space, time, thought, being, blank nonentity,
+Things incorporeal, fancies of the brain,
+Seen, heard, as though they were material,
+All mixed in sickening mazes, trouble me,
+And lead my soul away from earth and heaven
+Until I doubt whether I be or not!
+And then I see all frightful shapes--lank ghosts,
+Hydras, chimeras, krakens, wastes of sand,
+Herbless and void of living voice--tall mountains
+Cleaving the skies with height immeasurable,
+On which perchance I climb for infinite years; broad seas,
+Studded with islands numberless, that stretch
+Beyond the regions of the sun, and fade
+Away in distance vast, or dreary clouds,
+Cold, dark, and watery, where wander I for ever!
+Or space of ether, where I hang for aye!
+A speck, an atom--inconsumable--
+Immortal, hopeless, voiceless, powerless!
+And oft I fancy, I am weak and old,
+And all who loved me, one by one, are dead,
+And I am left alone--and cannot die!
+Surely there is no rest on earth for souls
+Whose dreams are like a madman's! I am young
+And much is yet before me--after years
+May bring peace with them to my weary heart!
+
+Helston, 1835.
+
+
+
+TREHILL WELL
+
+
+
+There stood a low and ivied roof,
+ As gazing rustics tell,
+In times of chivalry and song
+ 'Yclept the holy well.
+
+Above the ivies' branchlets gray
+ In glistening clusters shone;
+While round the base the grass-blades bright
+ And spiry foxglove sprung.
+
+The brambles clung in graceful bands,
+ Chequering the old gray stone
+With shining leaflets, whose bright face
+ In autumn's tinting shone.
+
+Around the fountain's eastern base
+ A babbling brooklet sped,
+With sleepy murmur purling soft
+ Adown its gravelly bed.
+
+Within the cell the filmy ferns
+ To woo the clear wave bent;
+And cushioned mosses to the stone
+ Their quaint embroidery lent.
+
+The fountain's face lay still as glass--
+ Save where the streamlet free
+Across the basin's gnarled lip
+ Flowed ever silently.
+
+Above the well a little nook
+ Once held, as rustics tell,
+All garland-decked, an image of
+ The Lady of the Well.
+
+They tell of tales of mystery,
+ Of darkling deeds of woe;
+But no! such doings might not brook
+ The holy streamlet's flow.
+
+Oh tell me not of bitter thoughts,
+ Of melancholy dreams,
+By that fair fount whose sunny wall
+ Basks in the western beams.
+
+When last I saw that little stream,
+ A form of light there stood,
+That seemed like a precious gem,
+ Beneath that archway rude:
+
+And as I gazed with love and awe
+ Upon that sylph-like thing,
+Methought that airy form must be
+ The fairy of the spring.
+
+Helston, 1835.
+
+
+
+IN AN ILLUMINATED MISSAL {216}
+
+
+
+I would have loved: there are no mates in heaven;
+I would be great: there is no pride in heaven;
+I would have sung, as doth the nightingale
+The summer's night beneath the moone pale,
+But Saintes hymnes alone in heaven prevail.
+My love, my song, my skill, my high intent,
+Have I within this seely book y-pent:
+And all that beauty which from every part
+I treasured still alway within mine heart,
+Whether of form or face angelical,
+Or herb or flower, or lofty cathedral,
+Upon these sheets below doth lie y-spred,
+In quaint devices deftly blazoned.
+ Lord, in this tome to thee I sanctify
+ The sinful fruits of worldly fantasy.
+
+1839.
+
+
+
+THE WEIRD LADY
+
+
+
+The swevens came up round Harold the Earl,
+ Like motes in the sunnes beam;
+And over him stood the Weird Lady,
+In her charmed castle over the sea,
+ Sang 'Lie thou still and dream.'
+
+'Thy steed is dead in his stall, Earl Harold,
+ Since thou hast been with me;
+The rust has eaten thy harness bright,
+And the rats have eaten thy greyhound light,
+ That was so fair and free.'
+
+Mary Mother she stooped from heaven;
+She wakened Earl Harold out of his sweven,
+ To don his harness on;
+And over the land and over the sea
+He wended abroad to his own countrie,
+ A weary way to gon.
+
+Oh but his beard was white with eld,
+ Oh but his hair was gray;
+He stumbled on by stock and stone,
+And as he journeyed he made his moan
+ Along that weary way.
+
+Earl Harold came to his castle wall;
+ The gate was burnt with fire;
+Roof and rafter were fallen down,
+The folk were strangers all in the town,
+ And strangers all in the shire.
+
+Earl Harold came to a house of nuns,
+ And he heard the dead-bell toll;
+He saw the sexton stand by a grave;
+'Now Christ have mercy, who did us save,
+ Upon yon fair nun's soul.'
+
+The nuns they came from the convent gate
+ By one, by two, by three;
+They sang for the soul of a lady bright
+Who died for the love of a traitor knight:
+ It was his own lady.
+
+He stayed the corpse beside the grave;
+ 'A sign, a sign!' quod he.
+'Mary Mother who rulest heaven,
+Send me a sign if I be forgiven
+ By the woman who so loved me.'
+
+A white dove out of the coffin flew;
+ Earl Harold's mouth it kist;
+He fell on his face, wherever he stood;
+And the white dove carried his soul to God
+ Or ever the bearers wist.
+
+Durham, 1840.
+
+
+
+PALINODIA
+
+
+
+Ye mountains, on whose torrent-furrowed slopes,
+And bare and silent brows uplift to heaven,
+I envied oft the soul which fills your wastes
+Of pure and stern sublime, and still expanse
+Unbroken by the petty incidents
+Of noisy life: Oh hear me once again!
+
+Winds, upon whose racked eddies, far aloft,
+Above the murmur of the uneasy world,
+My thoughts in exultation held their way:
+Whose tremulous whispers through the rustling glade
+Were once to me unearthly tones of love,
+Joy without object, wordless music, stealing
+Through all my soul, until my pulse beat fast
+With aimless hope, and unexpressed desire--
+Thou sea, who wast to me a prophet deep
+Through all thy restless waves, and wasting shores,
+Of silent labour, and eternal change;
+First teacher of the dense immensity
+Of ever-stirring life, in thy strange forms
+Of fish, and shell, and worm, and oozy weed:
+To me alike thy frenzy and thy sleep
+Have been a deep and breathless joy: Oh hear!
+
+Mountains, and winds, and waves, take back your child!
+Upon thy balmy bosom, Mother Nature,
+Where my young spirit dreamt its years away,
+Give me once more to nestle: I have strayed
+Far through another world, which is not thine.
+Through sunless cities, and the weary haunts
+Of smoke-grimed labour, and foul revelry
+My flagging wing has swept. A mateless bird's
+My pilgrimage has been; through sin, and doubt,
+And darkness, seeking love. Oh hear me, Nature!
+Receive me once again: but not alone;
+No more alone, Great Mother! I have brought
+One who has wandered, yet not sinned, like me.
+Upon thy lap, twin children, let us lie;
+And in the light of thine immortal eyes
+Let our souls mingle, till The Father calls
+To some eternal home the charge He gives thee.
+
+Cambridge, 1841.
+
+
+
+A HOPE
+
+
+
+Twin stars, aloft in ether clear,
+ Around each other roll alway,
+Within one common atmosphere
+ Of their own mutual light and day.
+
+And myriad happy eyes are bent
+ Upon their changeless love alway;
+As, strengthened by their one intent,
+ They pour the flood of life and day.
+
+So we through this world's waning night
+ May, hand in hand, pursue our way;
+Shed round us order, love, and light,
+ And shine unto the perfect day.
+
+1842.
+
+
+
+THE POETRY OF A ROOT CROP
+
+
+
+Underneath their eider-robe
+Russet swede and golden globe,
+Feathered carrot, burrowing deep,
+Steadfast wait in charmed sleep;
+Treasure-houses wherein lie,
+Locked by angels' alchemy,
+Milk and hair, and blood, and bone,
+Children of the barren stone;
+Children of the flaming Air,
+With his blue eye keen and bare,
+Spirit-peopled smiling down
+On frozen field and toiling town--
+Toiling town that will not heed
+God His voice for rage and greed;
+Frozen fields that surpliced lie,
+Gazing patient at the sky;
+Like some marble carven nun,
+With folded hands when work is done,
+Who mute upon her tomb doth pray,
+Till the resurrection day.
+
+Eversley, 1845.
+
+
+
+CHILD BALLAD
+
+
+
+Jesus, He loves one and all,
+Jesus, He loves children small,
+Their souls are waiting round His feet
+On high, before His mercy-seat.
+
+While He wandered here below
+Children small to Him did go,
+At His feet they knelt and prayed,
+On their heads His hands He laid.
+
+Came a Spirit on them then,
+Better than of mighty men,
+A Spirit faithful, pure and mild,
+A Spirit fit for king and child.
+
+Oh! that Spirit give to me,
+Jesu Lord, where'er I be!
+
+1847.
+
+
+
+AIRLY BEACON
+
+
+
+Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;
+ Oh the pleasant sight to see
+Shires and towns from Airly Beacon,
+ While my love climbed up to me!
+
+Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;
+ Oh the happy hours we lay
+Deep in fern on Airly Beacon,
+ Courting through the summer's day!
+
+Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon;
+ Oh the weary haunt for me,
+All alone on Airly Beacon,
+ With his baby on my knee!
+
+1847.
+
+
+
+SAPPHO
+
+
+
+She lay among the myrtles on the cliff;
+Above her glared the noon; beneath, the sea.
+Upon the white horizon Atho's peak
+Weltered in burning haze; all airs were dead;
+The cicale slept among the tamarisk's hair;
+The birds sat dumb and drooping. Far below
+The lazy sea-weed glistened in the sun;
+The lazy sea-fowl dried their steaming wings;
+The lazy swell crept whispering up the ledge,
+And sank again. Great Pan was laid to rest;
+And Mother Earth watched by him as he slept,
+And hushed her myriad children for a while.
+She lay among the myrtles on the cliff;
+And sighed for sleep, for sleep that would not hear,
+But left her tossing still; for night and day
+A mighty hunger yearned within her heart,
+Till all her veins ran fever; and her cheek,
+Her long thin hands, and ivory-channelled feet,
+Were wasted with the wasting of her soul.
+Then peevishly she flung her on her face,
+And hid her eyeballs from the blinding glare,
+And fingered at the grass, and tried to cool
+Her crisp hot lips against the crisp hot sward:
+And then she raised her head, and upward cast
+Wild looks from homeless eyes, whose liquid light
+Gleamed out between deep folds of blue-black hair,
+As gleam twin lakes between the purple peaks
+Of deep Parnassus, at the mournful moon.
+Beside her lay her lyre. She snatched the shell,
+And waked wild music from its silver strings;
+Then tossed it sadly by.--'Ah, hush!' she cries;
+'Dead offspring of the tortoise and the mine!
+Why mock my discords with thine harmonies?
+Although a thrice-Olympian lot be thine,
+Only to echo back in every tone
+The moods of nobler natures than thine own.'
+
+Eversley, 1847
+From Yeast.
+
+
+
+THE BAD SQUIRE
+
+
+
+The merry brown hares came leaping
+ Over the crest of the hill,
+Where the clover and corn lay sleeping
+ Under the moonlight still.
+
+Leaping late and early,
+ Till under their bite and their tread
+The swedes and the wheat and the barley
+ Lay cankered and trampled and dead.
+
+A poacher's widow sat sighing
+ On the side of the white chalk bank,
+Where under the gloomy fir-woods
+ One spot in the ley throve rank.
+
+She watched a long tuft of clover,
+ Where rabbit or hare never ran;
+For its black sour haulm covered over
+ The blood of a murdered man.
+
+She thought of the dark plantation,
+ And the hares, and her husband's blood,
+And the voice of her indignation
+ Rose up to the throne of God.
+
+'I am long past wailing and whining--
+ I have wept too much in my life:
+I've had twenty years of pining
+ As an English labourer's wife.
+
+'A labourer in Christian England,
+ Where they cant of a Saviour's name,
+And yet waste men's lives like the vermin's
+ For a few more brace of game.
+
+'There's blood on your new foreign shrubs, squire,
+ There's blood on your pointer's feet;
+There's blood on the game you sell, squire,
+ And there's blood on the game you eat.
+
+'You have sold the labouring-man, squire,
+ Body and soul to shame,
+To pay for your seat in the House, squire,
+ And to pay for the feed of your game.
+
+'You made him a poacher yourself, squire,
+ When you'd give neither work nor meat,
+And your barley-fed hares robbed the garden
+ At our starving children's feet;
+
+'When, packed in one reeking chamber,
+ Man, maid, mother, and little ones lay;
+While the rain pattered in on the rotting bride-bed,
+ And the walls let in the day.
+
+'When we lay in the burning fever
+ On the mud of the cold clay floor,
+Till you parted us all for three months, squire,
+ At the dreary workhouse door.
+
+'We quarrelled like brutes, and who wonders?
+ What self-respect could we keep,
+Worse housed than your hacks and your pointers,
+ Worse fed than your hogs and your sheep?
+
+'Our daughters with base-born babies
+ Have wandered away in their shame,
+If your misses had slept, squire, where they did,
+ Your misses might do the same.
+
+'Can your lady patch hearts that are breaking
+ With handfuls of coals and rice,
+Or by dealing out flannel and sheeting
+ A little below cost price?
+
+'You may tire of the jail and the workhouse,
+ And take to allotments and schools,
+But you've run up a debt that will never
+ Be paid us by penny-club rules.
+
+'In the season of shame and sadness,
+ In the dark and dreary day,
+When scrofula, gout, and madness
+ Are eating your race away;
+
+'When to kennels and liveried varlets
+ You have cast your daughter's bread,
+And, worn out with liquor and harlots,
+ Your heir at your feet lies dead;
+
+'When your youngest, the mealy-mouthed rector,
+ Lets your soul rot asleep to the grave,
+You will find in your God the protector
+ Of the freeman you fancied your slave.'
+
+She looked at the tuft of clover,
+ And wept till her heart grew light;
+And at last, when her passion was over,
+ Went wandering into the night.
+
+But the merry brown hares came leaping
+ Over the uplands still,
+Where the clover and corn lay sleeping
+ On the side of the white chalk hill.
+
+Eversley, 1847.
+From Yeast.
+
+
+
+SCOTCH SONG
+
+
+
+Oh, forth she went like a braw, braw bride
+ To meet her winsome groom,
+When she was aware of twa bonny birds
+ Sat biggin' in the broom.
+
+The tane it built with the green, green moss,
+ But and the bents sae fine,
+And the tither wi' a lock o' lady's hair
+ Linked up wi' siller twine.
+
+'O whaur gat ye the green, green moss,
+ O whaur the bents sae fine?
+And whaur gat ye the bonny broun hair
+ That ance was tress o' mine?'
+
+'We gat the moss fra' the elditch aile,
+ The bents fra' the whinny muir,
+And a fause knight threw us the bonny broun hair,
+ To please his braw new fere.'
+
+'Gae pull, gae pull the simmer leaves,
+ And strew them saft o'er me;
+My token's tint, my love is fause,
+ I'll lay me doon and dee.'
+
+1847.
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG KNIGHT: A PARABLE
+
+
+
+A gay young knight in Burley stood,
+Beside him pawed his steed so good,
+His hands he wrung as he were wood
+ With waiting for his love O!
+
+'Oh, will she come, or will she stay,
+Or will she waste the weary day
+With fools who wish her far away,
+ And hate her for her love O?'
+
+But by there came a mighty boar,
+His jowl and tushes red with gore,
+And on his curled snout he bore
+ A bracelet rich and rare O!
+
+The knight he shrieked, he ran, he flew,
+He searched the wild wood through and through,
+But found nought save a mantle blue,
+ Low rolled within the brake O!
+
+He twined the wild briar, red and white,
+Upon his head the garland dight,
+The green leaves withered black as night,
+ And burnt into his brain O!
+
+A fire blazed up within his breast,
+He mounted on an aimless quest,
+He laid his virgin lance in rest,
+ And through the forest drove O!
+
+By Rhinefield and by Osmondsleigh,
+Through leat and furze brake fast drove he,
+Until he saw the homeless sea,
+ That called with all its waves O!
+
+He laughed aloud to hear the roar,
+And rushed his horse adown the shore,
+The deep surge rolled him o'er and o'er,
+ And swept him down the tide O!
+
+New Forest, July 12, 1847.
+
+
+
+A NEW FOREST BALLAD
+
+
+
+Oh she tripped over Ocknell plain,
+ And down by Bradley Water;
+And the fairest maid on the forest side
+ Was Jane, the keeper's daughter.
+
+She went and went through the broad gray lawns
+ As down the red sun sank,
+And chill as the scent of a new-made grave
+ The mist smelt cold and dank.
+
+'A token, a token!' that fair maid cried,
+ 'A token that bodes me sorrow;
+For they that smell the grave by night
+ Will see the corpse to-morrow.
+
+'My own true love in Burley Walk
+ Does hunt to-night, I fear;
+And if he meet my father stern,
+ His game may cost him dear.
+
+'Ah, here's a curse on hare and grouse,
+ A curse on hart and hind;
+And a health to the squire in all England,
+ Leaves never a head behind.'
+
+Her true love shot a mighty hart
+ Among the standing rye,
+When on him leapt that keeper old
+ From the fern where he did lie.
+
+The forest laws were sharp and stern,
+ The forest blood was keen;
+They lashed together for life and death
+ Beneath the hollies green.
+
+The metal good and the walnut wood
+ Did soon in flinders flee;
+They tost the orts to south and north,
+ And grappled knee to knee.
+
+They wrestled up, they wrestled down,
+ They wrestled still and sore;
+Beneath their feet the myrtle sweet
+ Was stamped to mud and gore.
+
+Ah, cold pale moon, thou cruel pale moon,
+ That starest with never a frown
+On all the grim and the ghastly things
+ That are wrought in thorpe and town:
+
+And yet, cold pale moon, thou cruel pale moon,
+ That night hadst never the grace
+To lighten two dying Christian men
+ To see one another's face.
+
+They wrestled up, they wrestled down,
+ They wrestled sore and still,
+The fiend who blinds the eyes of men
+ That night he had his will.
+
+Like stags full spent, among the bent
+ They dropped a while to rest;
+When the young man drove his saying knife
+ Deep in the old man's breast.
+
+The old man drove his gunstock down
+ Upon the young man's head;
+And side by side, by the water brown,
+ Those yeomen twain lay dead.
+
+They dug three graves in Lyndhurst yard;
+ They dug them side by side;
+Two yeomen lie there, and a maiden fair
+ A widow and never a bride.
+
+In the New Forest, 1847.
+
+
+
+THE RED KING
+
+
+
+The King was drinking in Malwood Hall,
+There came in a monk before them all:
+He thrust by squire, he thrust by knight,
+Stood over against the dais aright;
+And, 'The word of the Lord, thou cruel Red King,
+The word of the Lord to thee I bring.
+A grimly sweven I dreamt yestreen;
+I saw thee lie under the hollins green,
+And through thine heart an arrow keen;
+And out of thy body a smoke did rise,
+Which smirched the sunshine out of the skies:
+So if thou God's anointed be
+I rede thee unto thy soul thou see.
+For mitre and pall thou hast y-sold,
+False knight to Christ, for gain and gold;
+And for this thy forest were digged down all,
+Steading and hamlet and churches tall;
+And Christes poor were ousten forth,
+To beg their bread from south to north.
+So tarry at home, and fast and pray,
+Lest fiends hunt thee in the judgment-day.'
+
+ The monk he vanished where he stood;
+King William sterte up wroth and wood;
+Quod he, 'Fools' wits will jump together;
+The Hampshire ale and the thunder weather
+Have turned the brains for us both, I think;
+And monks are curst when they fall to drink.
+A lothly sweven I dreamt last night,
+How there hoved anigh me a griesly knight,
+Did smite me down to the pit of hell;
+I shrieked and woke, so fast I fell.
+There's Tyrrel as sour as I, perdie,
+So he of you all shall hunt with me;
+A grimly brace for a hart to see.'
+
+ The Red King down from Malwood came;
+His heart with wine was all aflame,
+His eyne were shotten, red as blood,
+He rated and swore, wherever he rode.
+They roused a hart, that grimly brace,
+A hart of ten, a hart of grease,
+Fled over against the kinges place.
+The sun it blinded the kinges ee,
+A fathom behind his hocks shot he:
+ 'Shoot thou,' quod he, 'in the fiendes name,
+To lose such a quarry were seven years' shame.'
+And he hove up his hand to mark the game.
+Tyrrel he shot full light, God wot;
+For whether the saints they swerved the shot,
+'Or whether by treason, men knowen not,
+But under the arm, in a secret part,
+The iron fled through the kinges heart.
+The turf it squelched where the Red King fell;
+And the fiends they carried his soul to hell,
+Quod 'His master's name it hath sped him well.'
+
+Tyrrel he smiled full grim that day,
+Quod 'Shooting of kings is no bairns' play;'
+And he smote in the spurs, and fled fast away.
+As he pricked along by Fritham plain,
+The green tufts flew behind like rain;
+The waters were out, and over the sward:
+He swam his horse like a stalwart lord:
+Men clepen that water Tyrrel's ford.
+By Rhinefield and by Osmondsleigh,
+Through glade and furze brake fast drove he,
+Until he heard the roaring sea;
+Quod he, 'Those gay waves they call me.'
+By Mary's grace a seely boat
+On Christchurch bar did lie afloat;
+He gave the shipmen mark and groat,
+To ferry him over to Normandie,
+And there he fell to sanctuarie;
+God send his soul all bliss to see.
+
+And fend our princes every one,
+From foul mishap and trahison;
+But kings that harrow Christian men
+Shall England never bide again.
+
+In the New Forest, 1847,
+
+
+
+THE OUTLAW
+
+
+
+Oh, I wadna be a yeoman, mither, to follow my father's trade,
+To bow my back in miry banks, at pleugh and hoe and spade.
+Stinting wife, and bairns, and kye, to fat some courtier lord,--
+Let them die o' rent wha like, mither, and I'll die by sword.
+
+Nor I wadna be a clerk, mither, to bide aye ben,
+Scrabbling ower the sheets o' parchment with a weary weary pen;
+Looking through the lang stane windows at a narrow strip o' sky,
+Like a laverock in a withy cage, until I pine away and die.
+
+Nor I wadna be a merchant, mither, in his lang furred gown,
+Trailing strings o' footsore horses through the noisy dusty town;
+Louting low to knights and ladies, fumbling o'er his wares,
+Telling lies, and scraping siller, heaping cares on cares.
+
+Nor I wadna be a soldier, mither, to dice wi' ruffian bands,
+Pining weary months in castles, looking over wasted lands.
+Smoking byres, and shrieking women, and the grewsome sights o' war--
+There's blood on my hand eneugh, mither; it's ill to make it mair.
+
+If I had married a wife, mither, I might ha' been douce and still,
+And sat at hame by the ingle side to crack and laugh my fill;
+Sat at hame wi' the woman I looed, and wi' bairnies at my knee:
+But death is bauld, and age is cauld, and luve's no for me.
+
+For when first I stirred in your side, mither, ye ken full well
+How you lay all night up among the deer out on the open fell;
+And so it was that I won the heart to wander far and near,
+Caring neither for land nor lassie, but the bonnie dun deer.
+
+Yet I am not a losel and idle, mither, nor a thief that steals;
+I do but hunt God's cattle, upon God's ain hills;
+For no man buys and sells the deer, and the bonnie fells are free
+To a belted knight with hawk on hand, and a gangrel loon like me.
+
+So I'm aff and away to the muirs, mither, to hunt the deer,
+Ranging far frae frowning faces, and the douce folk here;
+Crawling up through burn and bracken, louping down the screes,
+Looking out frae craig and headland, drinking up the simmer breeze.
+
+Oh, the wafts o' heather honey, and the music o' the brae,
+As I watch the great harts feeding, nearer, nearer a' the day.
+Oh, to hark the eagle screaming, sweeping, ringing round the sky--
+That's a bonnier life than stumbling ower the muck to colt and kye.
+
+And when I'm taen and hangit, mither, a brittling o' my deer,
+Ye'll no leave your bairn to the corbie craws, to dangle in the air;
+But ye'll send up my twa douce brethren, and ye'll steal me frae the tree,
+And bury me up on the brown brown muirs, where I aye looed to be.
+
+Ye'll bury me 'twixt the brae and the burn, in a glen far away,
+Where I may hear the heathcock craw, and the great harts bray;
+And gin my ghaist can walk, mither, I'll go glowering at the sky,
+The livelong night on the black hill sides where the dun deer lie.
+
+In the New Forest, 1847.
+
+
+
+SING HEIGH-HO!
+
+
+
+There sits a bird on every tree;
+ Sing heigh-ho!
+There sits a bird on every tree,
+And courts his love as I do thee;
+ Sing heigh-ho, and heigh-ho!
+ Young maids must marry.
+
+There grows a flower on every bough;
+ Sing heigh-ho!
+There grows a flower on every bough,
+Its petals kiss--I'll show you how:
+ Sing heigh-ho, and heigh-ho!
+ Young maids must marry.
+
+From sea to stream the salmon roam;
+ Sing heigh-ho!
+From sea to stream the salmon roam;
+Each finds a mate, and leads her home;
+ Sing heigh-ho, and heigh-ho!
+ Young maids must marry.
+
+The sun's a bridegroom, earth a bride;
+ Sing heigh-ho!
+They court from morn till eventide:
+The earth shall pass, but love abide.
+ Sing heigh-ho, and heigh-ho!
+ Young maids must marry.
+
+Eversley, 1847.
+
+
+
+A MARCH
+
+
+
+ Dreary East winds howling o'er us;
+ Clay-lands knee-deep spread before us;
+ Mire and ice and snow and sleet;
+ Aching backs and frozen feet;
+ Knees which reel as marches quicken,
+ Ranks which thin as corpses thicken;
+ While with carrion birds we eat,
+ Calling puddle-water sweet,
+As we pledge the health of our general, who fares as rough as we:
+What can daunt us, what can turn us, led to death by such as he?
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+A LAMENT
+
+
+
+The merry merry lark was up and singing,
+ And the hare was out and feeding on the lea;
+And the merry merry bells below were ringing,
+ When my child's laugh rang through me.
+
+Now the hare is snared and dead beside the snow-yard,
+ And the lark beside the dreary winter sea;
+And the baby in his cradle in the churchyard
+ Sleeps sound till the bell brings me.
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+THE NIGHT BIRD: A MYTH
+
+
+
+A floating, a floating
+Across the sleeping sea,
+All night I heard a singing bird
+Upon the topmost tree.
+
+'Oh came you off the isles of Greece,
+Or off the banks of Seine;
+Or off some tree in forests free,
+Which fringe the western main?'
+
+'I came not off the old world
+Nor yet from off the new--
+But I am one of the birds of God
+Which sing the whole night through.'
+
+'Oh sing, and wake the dawning--
+Oh whistle for the wind;
+The night is long, the current strong,
+My boat it lags behind.'
+
+'The current sweeps the old world,
+The current sweeps the new;
+The wind will blow, the dawn will glow
+Ere thou hast sailed them through.'
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+THE DEAD CHURCH
+
+
+
+Wild wild wind, wilt thou never cease thy sighing?
+ Dark dark night, wilt thou never wear away?
+Cold cold church, in thy death sleep lying,
+ The Lent is past, thy Passion here, but not thine Easter-day.
+
+Peace, faint heart, though the night be dark and sighing;
+ Rest, fair corpse, where thy Lord himself hath lain.
+Weep, dear Lord, above thy bride low lying;
+ Thy tears shall wake her frozen limbs to life and health again.
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+A PARABLE FROM LIEBIG
+
+
+
+The church bells were ringing, the devil sat singing
+ On the stump of a rotting old tree;
+'Oh faith it grows cold, and the creeds they grow old,
+ And the world is nigh ready for me.'
+
+The bells went on ringing, a spirit came singing,
+ And smiled as he crumbled the tree;
+'Yon wood does but perish new seedlings to cherish,
+ And the world is too live yet for thee.'
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+THE STARLINGS
+
+
+
+Early in spring time, on raw and windy mornings,
+Beneath the freezing house-eaves I heard the starlings sing--
+'Ah dreary March month, is this then a time for building wearily?
+ Sad, sad, to think that the year is but begun.'
+
+Late in the autumn, on still and cloudless evenings,
+Among the golden reed-beds I heard the starlings sing--
+'Ah that sweet March month, when we and our mates were courting merrily;
+ Sad, sad, to think that the year is all but done.'
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+OLD AND NEW: A PARABLE
+
+
+
+See how the autumn leaves float by decaying,
+Down the wild swirls of the rain-swollen stream.
+So fleet the works of men, back to their earth again;
+Ancient and holy things fade like a dream.
+
+Nay! see the spring-blossoms steal forth a-maying,
+Clothing with tender hues orchard and glen;
+So, though old forms pass by, ne'er shall their spirit die,
+Look! England's bare boughs show green leaf again.
+
+Eversley, 1848.
+
+
+
+THE WATCHMAN
+
+
+
+'Watchman, what of the night?'
+ 'The stars are out in the sky;
+And the merry round moon will be rising soon,
+ For us to go sailing by.'
+
+'Watchman, what of the night?'
+ 'The tide flows in from the sea;
+There's water to float a little cockboat
+ Will carry such fishers as we.'
+
+'Watchman, what of the night?'
+ 'The night is a fruitful time;
+When to many a pair are born children fair,
+ To be christened at morning chime.'
+
+1849.
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S AGE
+
+
+
+Who will say the world is dying?
+ Who will say our prime is past?
+Sparks from Heaven, within us lying,
+ Flash, and will flash till the last.
+Fools! who fancy Christ mistaken;
+ Man a tool to buy and sell;
+Earth a failure, God-forsaken,
+ Anteroom of Hell.
+
+Still the race of Hero-spirits
+ Pass the lamp from hand to hand;
+Age from age the Words inherits--
+ 'Wife, and Child, and Fatherland.'
+Still the youthful hunter gathers
+ Fiery joy from wold and wood;
+He will dare as dared his fathers
+ Give him cause as good.
+
+While a slave bewails his fetters;
+ While an orphan pleads in vain;
+While an infant lisps his letters,
+ Heir of all the age's gain;
+While a lip grows ripe for kissing;
+ While a moan from man is wrung;
+Know, by every want and blessing,
+ That the world is young.
+
+1849.
+
+
+
+THE SANDS OF DEE
+
+
+
+'O Mary, go and call the cattle home,
+ And call the cattle home,
+ And call the cattle home
+ Across the sands of Dee;'
+The western wind was wild and dank with foam,
+ And all alone went she.
+
+The western tide crept up along the sand,
+ And o'er and o'er the sand,
+ And round and round the sand,
+ As far as eye could see.
+The rolling mist came down and hid the land:
+ And never home came she.
+
+'Oh! is it weed, or fish, or floating hair--
+ A tress of golden hair,
+ A drowned maiden's hair
+ Above the nets at sea?
+Was never salmon yet that shone so fair
+ Among the stakes on Dee.'
+
+They rowed her in across the rolling foam,
+ The cruel crawling foam,
+ The cruel hungry foam,
+ To her grave beside the sea:
+But still the boatmen hear her call the cattle home
+ Across the sands of Dee.
+
+Eversley, 1849.
+
+
+
+THE TIDE ROCK
+
+
+
+How sleeps yon rock, whose half-day's bath is done.
+With broad blight side beneath the broad bright sun,
+Like sea-nymph tired, on cushioned mosses sleeping.
+Yet, nearer drawn, beneath her purple tresses
+From drooping brows we find her slowly weeping.
+ So many a wife for cruel man's caresses
+ Must inly pine and pine, yet outward bear
+ A gallant front to this world's gaudy glare.
+
+Ilfracombe, 1849.
+
+
+
+ELEGIACS
+
+
+
+Wearily stretches the sand to the surge, and the surge to the cloudland;
+Wearily onward I ride, watching the water alone.
+Not as of old, like Homeric Achilles, ??de? ya???,
+Joyous knight-errant of God, thirsting for labour and strife;
+No more on magical steed borne free through the regions of ether,
+But, like the hack which I ride, selling my sinew for gold.
+Fruit-bearing autumn is gone; let the sad quiet winter hang o'er me--
+What were the spring to a soul laden with sorrow and shame?
+Blossoms would fret me with beauty; my heart has no time to bepraise them;
+Gray rock, bough, surge, cloud, waken no yearning within.
+Sing not, thou sky-lark above! even angels pass hushed by the weeper.
+Scream on, ye sea-fowl! my heart echoes your desolate cry.
+Sweep the dry sand on, thou wild wind, to drift o'er the shell and the sea-
+weed;
+Sea-weed and shell, like my dreams, swept down the pitiless tide.
+Just is the wave which uptore us; 'tis Nature's own law which condemns us;
+Woe to the weak who, in pride, build on the faith of the sand!
+Joy to the oak of the mountain: he trusts to the might of the rock-clefts;
+Deeply he mines, and in peace feeds on the wealth of the stone.
+
+Morte Sands, Devonshire,
+February 1849.
+
+
+
+DARTSIDE
+
+
+
+I cannot tell what you say, green leaves,
+ I cannot tell what you say:
+But I know that there is a spirit in you,
+ And a word in you this day.
+
+I cannot tell what you say, rosy rocks,
+ I cannot tell what you say:
+But I know that there is a spirit in you,
+ And a word in you this day.
+
+I cannot tell what you say, brown streams,
+ I cannot tell what you say:
+But I know that in you too a spirit doth live,
+ And a word doth speak this day.
+
+'Oh green is the colour of faith and truth,
+And rose the colour of love and youth,
+ And brown of the fruitful clay.
+ Sweet Earth is faithful, and fruitful, and young,
+ And her bridal day shall come ere long,
+And you shall know what the rocks and the streams
+ And the whispering woodlands say.'
+
+Drew's Teignton, Dartmoor,
+July 31, 1849.
+
+
+
+MY HUNTING SONG
+
+
+
+ Forward! Hark forward's the cry!
+One more fence and we're out on the open,
+So to us at once, if you want to live near us!
+Hark to them, ride to them, beauties! as on they go,
+Leaping and sweeping away in the vale below!
+Cowards and bunglers, whose heart or whose eye is slow,
+ Find themselves staring alone.
+
+ So the great cause flashes by;
+Nearer and clearer its purposes open,
+While louder and prouder the world-echoes cheer us:
+Gentlemen sportsmen, you ought to live up to us,
+Lead us, and lift us, and hallo our game to us--
+We cannot call the hounds off, and no shame to us--
+ Don't be left staring alone!
+
+Eversley, 1849.
+
+
+
+ALTON LOCKE'S SONG
+
+
+
+Weep, weep, weep and weep,
+ For pauper, dolt, and slave!
+Hark! from wasted moor and fen,
+Feverous alley, stifling den,
+Swells the wail of Saxon men--
+ Work! or the grave!
+
+Down, down, down and down,
+ With idler, knave, and tyrant!
+Why for sluggards cark and moil?
+He that will not live by toil
+Has no right on English soil!
+ God's word's our warrant!
+
+Up, up, up and up!
+ Face your game and play it!
+The night is past, behold the sun!
+The idols fall, the lie is done!
+The Judge is set, the doom begun!
+ Who shall stay it?
+
+On Torridge, May 1849.
+
+
+
+THE DAY OF THE LORD
+
+
+
+The Day of the Lord is at hand, at hand:
+ Its storms roll up the sky:
+The nations sleep starving on heaps of gold;
+ All dreamers toss and sigh;
+The night is darkest before the morn;
+When the pain is sorest the child is born,
+ And the Day of the Lord at hand.
+
+Gather you, gather you, angels of God--
+ Freedom, and Mercy, and Truth;
+Come! for the Earth is grown coward and old,
+ Come down, and renew us her youth.
+Wisdom, Self-Sacrifice, Daring, and Love,
+Haste to the battle-field, stoop from above,
+ To the Day of the Lord at hand.
+
+Gather you, gather you, hounds of hell--
+ Famine, and Plague, and War;
+Idleness, Bigotry, Cant, and Misrule,
+ Gather, and fall in the snare!
+Hireling and Mammonite, Bigot and Knave,
+Crawl to the battle-field, sneak to your grave,
+ In the Day of the Lord at hand.
+
+Who would sit down and sigh for a lost age of gold,
+ While the Lord of all ages is here?
+True hearts will leap up at the trumpet of God,
+ And those who can suffer, can dare.
+Each old age of gold was an iron age too,
+And the meekest of saints may find stern work to do,
+ In the Day of the Lord at hand.
+
+On the Torridge, Devonshire,
+September 10, 1849.
+
+
+
+A CHRISTMAS CAROL
+
+
+
+It chanced upon the merry merry Christmas eve,
+ I went sighing past the church across the moorland dreary--
+'Oh! never sin and want and woe this earth will leave,
+ And the bells but mock the wailing round, they sing so cheery.
+How long, O Lord! how long before Thou come again?
+ Still in cellar, and in garret, and on moorland dreary
+The orphans moan, and widows weep, and poor men toil in vain,
+ Till earth is sick of hope deferred, though Christmas bells be cheery.'
+
+Then arose a joyous clamour from the wild-fowl on the mere,
+ Beneath the stars, across the snow, like clear bells ringing,
+And a voice within cried--'Listen!--Christmas carols even here!
+ Though thou be dumb, yet o'er their work the stars and snows are singing.
+Blind! I live, I love, I reign; and all the nations through
+ With the thunder of my judgments even now are ringing.
+Do thou fulfil thy work but as yon wild-fowl do,
+ Thou wilt heed no less the wailing, yet hear through it angels singing.'
+
+Eversley, 1849.
+
+
+
+THE OUBIT {260}
+
+
+
+It was an hairy oubit, sae proud he crept alang,
+A feckless hairy oubit, and merrily he sang--
+'My Minnie bad me bide at hame until I won my wings;
+I show her soon my soul's aboon the warks o' creeping things.'
+
+This feckless hairy oubit cam' hirpling by the linn,
+A swirl o' wind cam' doun the glen, and blew that oubit in:
+Oh when he took the water, the saumon fry they rose,
+And tigg'd him a' to pieces sma', by head and tail and toes.
+
+Tak' warning then, young poets a', by this poor oubit's shame;
+Though Pegasus may nicher loud, keep Pegasus at hame.
+Oh haud your hands frae inkhorns, though a' the Muses woo;
+For critics lie, like saumon fry, to mak' their meals o' you.
+
+Eversley, 1851.
+
+
+
+THE THREE FISHERS
+
+
+
+Three fishers went sailing away to the West,
+ Away to the West as the sun went down;
+Each thought on the woman who loved him the best,
+ And the children stood watching them out of the town;
+ For men must work, and women must weep,
+ And there's little to earn, and many to keep,
+ Though the harbour bar be moaning.
+
+Three wives sat up in the lighthouse tower,
+ And they trimmed the lamps as the sun went down;
+They looked at the squall, and they looked at the shower,
+ And the night-rack came rolling up ragged and brown.
+ But men must work, and women must weep,
+ Though storms be sudden, and waters deep,
+ And the harbour bar be moaning.
+
+Three corpses lay out on the shining sands
+ In the morning gleam as the tide went down,
+And the women are weeping and wringing their hands
+ For those who will never come home to the town;
+ For men must work, and women must weep,
+ And the sooner it's over, the sooner to sleep;
+ And good-bye to the bar and its moaning.
+
+Eversley, June 25, 1851.
+
+
+
+SONNET
+
+
+
+Oh, thou hadst been a wife for Shakspeare's self!
+No head, save some world-genius, ought to rest
+Above the treasures of that perfect breast,
+Or nightly draw fresh light from those keen stars
+Through which thy soul awes ours: yet thou art bound--
+O waste of nature!--to a craven hound;
+To shameless lust, and childish greed of pelf;
+Athene to a Satyr: was that link
+Forged by The Father's hand? Man's reason bars
+The bans which God allowed.--Ay, so we think:
+Forgetting, thou hadst weaker been, full blest,
+ Than thus made strong by suffering; and more great
+ In martyrdom, than throned as Caesar's mate.
+
+Eversley, 1851.
+
+
+
+MARGARET TO DOLCINO
+
+
+
+Ask if I love thee? Oh, smiles cannot tell
+Plainer what tears are now showing too well.
+Had I not loved thee, my sky had been clear:
+Had I not loved thee, I had not been here,
+ Weeping by thee.
+
+Ask if I love thee? How else could I borrow
+Pride from man's slander, and strength from my sorrow?
+Laugh when they sneer at the fanatic's bride,
+Knowing no bliss, save to toil and abide
+ Weeping by thee.
+
+Andernach on the Rhine,
+August 1851.
+
+
+
+DOLCINO TO MARGARET
+
+
+
+The world goes up and the world goes down,
+ And the sunshine follows the rain;
+And yesterday's sneer and yesterday's frown
+ Can never come over again,
+ Sweet wife:
+ No, never come over again.
+
+For woman is warm though man be cold,
+ And the night will hallow the day;
+Till the heart which at even was weary and old
+ Can rise in the morning gay,
+ Sweet wife;
+ To its work in the morning gay.
+
+Andernach, 1851.
+
+
+
+THE UGLY PRINCESS
+
+
+
+My parents bow, and lead them forth,
+ For all the crowd to see--
+Ah well! the people might not care
+ To cheer a dwarf like me.
+
+They little know how I could love,
+ How I could plan and toil,
+To swell those drudges' scanty gains,
+ Their mites of rye and oil.
+
+They little know what dreams have been
+ My playmates, night and day;
+Of equal kindness, helpful care,
+ A mother's perfect sway.
+
+Now earth to earth in convent walls,
+ To earth in churchyard sod:
+I was not good enough for man,
+ And so am given to God.
+
+Bertrich in the Eifel, 1851.
+
+
+
+SONNET
+
+
+
+The baby sings not on its mother's breast;
+Nor nightingales who nestle side by side;
+Nor I by thine: but let us only part,
+Then lips which should but kiss, and so be still,
+As having uttered all, must speak again--
+O stunted thoughts! O chill and fettered rhyme
+Yet my great bliss, though still entirely blest,
+Losing its proper home, can find no rest:
+ So, like a child who whiles away the time
+With dance and carol till the eventide,
+Watching its mother homeward through the glen;
+Or nightingale, who, sitting far apart,
+Tells to his listening mate within the nest
+The wonder of his star-entranced heart
+Till all the wakened woodlands laugh and thrill--
+ Forth all my being bubbles into song;
+ And rings aloft, not smooth, yet clear and strong.
+
+Bertrich, 1851
+
+
+
+THE SWAN-NECK
+
+
+
+Evil sped the battle play
+On the Pope Calixtus' day;
+Mighty war-smiths, thanes and lords,
+In Senlac slept the sleep of swords.
+Harold Earl, shot over shield,
+Lay along the autumn weald;
+Slaughter such was never none
+Since the Ethelings England won.
+ Thither Lady Githa came,
+Weeping sore for grief and shame;
+How may she her first-born tell?
+Frenchmen stript him where he fell,
+Gashed and marred his comely face;
+Who can know him in his place?
+ Up and spake two brethren wise,
+'Youngest hearts have keenest eyes;
+Bird which leaves its mother's nest,
+Moults its pinions, moults its crest.
+Let us call the Swan-neck here,
+She that was his leman dear;
+She shall know him in this stound;
+Foot of wolf, and scent of hound,
+Eye of hawk, and wing of dove,
+Carry woman to her love.'
+ Up and spake the Swan-neck high,
+'Go! to all your thanes let cry
+How I loved him best of all,
+I whom men his leman call;
+Better knew his body fair
+Than the mother which him bare.
+When ye lived in wealth and glee
+Then ye scorned to look on me;
+God hath brought the proud ones low
+After me afoot to go.'
+ Rousing erne and sallow glede,
+Rousing gray wolf off his feed,
+Over franklin, earl, and thane,
+Heaps of mother-naked slain,
+Round the red field tracing slow,
+Stooped that Swan-neck white as snow;
+Never blushed nor turned away,
+Till she found him where he lay;
+Clipt him in her armes fair,
+Wrapt him in her yellow hair,
+Bore him from the battle-stead,
+Saw him laid in pall of lead,
+Took her to a minster high,
+For Earl Harold's soul to cry.
+
+ Thus fell Harold, bracelet-giver;
+Jesu rest his soul for ever;
+Angles all from thrall deliver;
+ Miserere Domine.
+
+Eversley, 1851.
+
+
+
+A THOUGHT FROM THE RHINE
+
+
+
+I heard an Eagle crying all alone
+Above the vineyards through the summer night,
+Among the skeletons of robber towers:
+Because the ancient eyrie of his race
+Was trenched and walled by busy-handed men;
+And all his forest-chace and woodland wild,
+Wherefrom he fed his young with hare and roe,
+Were trim with grapes which swelled from hour to hour,
+And tossed their golden tendrils to the sun
+For joy at their own riches:--So, I thought,
+The great devourers of the earth shall sit,
+Idle and impotent, they know not why,
+Down-staring from their barren height of state
+On nations grown too wise to slay and slave,
+The puppets of the few; while peaceful lore
+And fellow-help make glad the heart of earth,
+With wonders which they fear and hate, as he,
+The Eagle, hates the vineyard slopes below.
+
+On the Rhine, 1851.
+
+
+
+THE LONGBEARDS' SAGA. A.D. 400
+
+
+
+Over the camp-fires
+Drank I with heroes,
+Under the Donau bank,
+Warm in the snow trench:
+Sagamen heard I there,
+Men of the Longbeards,
+Cunning and ancient,
+Honey-sweet-voiced.
+Scaring the wolf cub,
+Scaring the horn-owl,
+Shaking the snow-wreaths
+Down from the pine-boughs,
+Up to the star roof
+Rang out their song.
+Singing how Winil men,
+Over the ice-floes
+Sledging from Scanland
+Came unto Scoring;
+Singing of Gambara,
+Freya's beloved,
+Mother of Ayo,
+Mother of Ibor.
+Singing of Wendel men,
+Ambri and Assi;
+How to the Winilfolk
+Went they with war-words,--
+'Few are ye, strangers,
+And many are we:
+Pay us now toll and fee,
+Cloth-yarn, and rings, and beeves:
+Else at the raven's meal
+Bide the sharp bill's doom.'
+Clutching the dwarfs work then,
+Clutching the bullock's shell,
+Girding gray iron on,
+Forth fared the Winils all,
+Fared the Alruna's sons,
+Ayo and Ibor.
+Mad at heart stalked they:
+Loud wept the women all,
+Loud the Alruna wife;
+Sore was their need.
+Out of the morning land,
+Over the snow-drifts,
+Beautiful Freya came,
+Tripping to Scoring.
+White were the moorlands,
+And frozen before her:
+Green were the moorlands,
+And blooming behind her.
+Out of her gold locks
+Shaking the spring flowers,
+Out of her garments
+Shaking the south wind,
+Around in the birches
+Awaking the throstles,
+And making chaste housewives all
+Long for their heroes home,
+Loving and love-giving,
+Came she to Scoring.
+Came unto Gambara,
+Wisest of Valas,--
+'Vala, why weepest thou?
+Far in the wide-blue,
+High up in the Elfin-home,
+Heard I thy weeping.'
+'Stop not my weeping,
+Till one can fight seven.
+Sons have I, heroes tall,
+First in the sword-play;
+This day at the Wendels' hands
+Eagles must tear them.
+Their mothers, thrall-weary,
+Must grind for the Wendels.'
+Wept the Alruna wife;
+Kissed her fair Freya:--
+'Far off in the morning land,
+High in Valhalla,
+A window stands open;
+Its sill is the snow-peaks,
+Its posts are the waterspouts,
+Storm-rack its lintel;
+Gold cloud-flakes above
+Are piled for the roofing,
+Far up to the Elfin-home,
+High in the wide-blue.
+Smiles out each morning thence
+Odin Allfather;
+From under the cloud-eaves
+Smiles out on the heroes,
+Smiles on chaste housewives all,
+Smiles on the brood-mares,
+Smiles on the smiths' work:
+And theirs is the sword-luck,
+With them is the glory,--
+So Odin hath sworn it,--
+Who first in the morning
+Shall meet him and greet him.'
+Still the Alruna wept:--
+'Who then shall greet him?
+Women alone are here:
+Far on the moorlands
+Behind the war-lindens,
+In vain for the bill's doom
+Watch Winil heroes all,
+One against seven.'
+Sweetly the Queen laughed:--
+'Hear thou my counsel now;
+Take to thee cunning,
+Beloved of Freya.
+Take thou thy women-folk,
+Maidens and wives:
+Over your ankles
+Lace on the white war-hose;
+Over your bosoms
+Link up the hard mail-nets;
+Over your lips
+Plait long tresses with cunning;--
+So war-beasts full-bearded
+King Odin shall deem you,
+When off the gray sea-beach
+At sunrise ye greet him.'
+
+Night's son was driving
+His golden-haired horses up;
+Over the eastern firths
+High flashed their manes.
+Smiled from the cloud-eaves out
+Allfather Odin,
+Waiting the battle-sport:
+Freya stood by him.
+'Who are these heroes tall,--
+Lusty-limbed Longbeards?
+Over the swans' bath
+Why cry they to me?
+Bones should be crashing fast,
+Wolves should be full-fed,
+Where such, mad-hearted,
+Swing hands in the sword-play.'
+
+Sweetly laughed Freya:--
+'A name thou hast given them,
+Shames neither thee nor them,
+Well can they wear it.
+Give them the victory,
+First have they greeted thee;
+Give them the victory,
+Yokefellow mine!
+Maidens and wives are these,--
+Wives of the Winils;
+Few are their heroes
+And far on the war-road,
+So over the swans' bath
+They cry unto thee.'
+
+Royally laughed he then;
+Dear was that craft to him,
+Odin Allfather,
+Shaking the clouds.
+'Cunning are women all,
+Bold and importunate!
+Longbeards their name shall be,
+Ravens shall thank them:
+Where women are heroes,
+What must the men be?
+Theirs is the victory;
+No need of me!'
+
+Eversley, 1852.
+From Hypatia.
+
+
+
+SAINT MAURA. A.D. 304
+
+
+
+Thank God! Those gazers' eyes are gone at last!
+The guards are crouching underneath the rock;
+The lights are fading in the town below,
+Around the cottage which this morn was ours.
+Kind sun, to set, and leave us here alone;
+Alone upon our crosses with our God;
+While all the angels watch us from the stars.
+Kind moon, to shine so clear and full on him,
+And bathe his limbs in glory, for a sign
+Of what awaits him! Oh look on him, Lord!
+Look, and remember how he saved thy lamb!
+ Oh listen to me, teacher, husband, love,
+Never till now loved utterly! Oh say,
+Say you forgive me! No--you must not speak:
+You said it to me hours ago--long hours!
+Now you must rest, and when to-morrow comes
+Speak to the people, call them home to God,
+A deacon on the Cross, as in the Church;
+And plead from off the tree with outspread arms,
+To show them that the Son of God endured
+For them--and me. Hush! I alone will speak,
+And while away the hours till dawn for you.
+I know you have forgiven me; as I lay
+Beneath your feet, while they were binding me,
+I knew I was forgiven then! When I cried
+'Here am I, husband! The lost lamb returned,
+All re-baptized in blood!' and you said, 'Come!
+Come to thy bride-bed, martyr, wife once more!'
+From that same moment all my pain was gone;
+And ever since those sightless eyes have smiled
+Love--love! Alas, those eyes! They made me fall.
+I could not bear to see them, bleeding, dark,
+Never, no never to look into mine;
+Never to watch me round the little room
+Singing about my work, or flash on me
+Looks bright with counsel.--Then they drove me mad
+With talk of nameless tortures waiting you--
+And I could save you! You would hear your love--
+They knew you loved me, cruel men! And then--
+Then came a dream; to say one little word,
+One easy wicked word, we both might say,
+And no one hear us, but the lictors round;
+One tiny sprinkle of the incense grains,
+And both, both free! And life had just begun--
+Only three months--short months--your wedded wife
+Only three months within the cottage there--
+Hoping I bore your child. . . .
+Ah! husband! Saviour! God! think gently of me!
+I am forgiven! . . .
+ And then another dream;
+A flash--so quick, I could not bear the blaze;
+I could not see the smoke among the light--
+To wander out through unknown lands, and lead
+You by the hand through hamlet, port, and town,
+On, on, until we died; and stand each day
+To glory in you, as you preached and prayed
+From rock and bourne-stone, with that voice, those words,
+Mingled with fire and honey--you would wake,
+Bend, save whole nations! would not that atone
+For one short word?--ay, make it right, to save
+You, you, to fight the battles of the Lord?
+And so--and so--alas! you knew the rest!
+You answered me. . . .
+Ah cruel words! No! Blessed, godlike words.
+You had done nobly had you struck me dead,
+Instead of striking me to life!--the temptress! . . .
+'Traitress! apostate! dead to God and me!'--
+'The smell of death upon me?'--so it was!
+True! true! well spoken, hero! Oh they snapped,
+Those words, my madness, like the angel's voice
+Thrilling the graves to birth-pangs. All was clear.
+There was but one right thing in the world to do;
+And I must do it. . . . Lord, have mercy! Christ!
+Help through my womanhood: or I shall fail
+Yet, as I failed before! . . . I could not speak--
+I could not speak for shame and misery,
+And terror of my sin, and of the things
+I knew were coming: but in heaven, in heaven!
+There we should meet, perhaps--and by that time
+I might be worthy of you once again--
+Of you, and of my God. . . . So I went out.
+. . . . . .
+Will you hear more, and so forget the pain?
+And yet I dread to tell you what comes next;
+Your love will feel it all again for me.
+No! it is over; and the woe that's dead
+Rises next hour a glorious angel. Love!
+Say, shall I tell you? Ah! your lips are dry!
+To-morrow, when they come, we must entreat,
+And they will give you water. One to-day,
+A soldier, gave me water in a sponge
+Upon a reed, and said, 'Too fair! too young!
+She might have been a gallant soldier's wife!'
+And then I cried, 'I am a soldier's wife!
+A hero's!' And he smiled, but let me drink.
+God bless him for it!
+ So they led me back:
+And as I went, a voice was in my ears
+Which rang through all the sunlight, and the breath
+And blaze of all the garden slopes below,
+And through the harvest-voices, and the moan
+Of cedar-forests on the cliffs above,
+And round the shining rivers, and the peaks
+Which hung beyond the cloud-bed of the west,
+And round the ancient stones about my feet.
+Out of all heaven and earth it rang, and cried,
+'My hand hath made all these. Am I too weak
+To give thee strength to say so?' Then my soul
+Spread like a clear blue sky within my breast,
+While all the people made a ring around,
+And in the midst the judge spoke smilingly--
+'Well! hast thou brought him to a better mind?'
+'No! He has brought me to a better mind!'--
+I cried, and said beside--I know not what--
+Words which I learnt from thee--I trust in God
+Nought fierce or rude--for was I not a girl
+Three months ago beneath my mother's roof?
+I thought of that. She might be there! I looked--
+She was not there! I hid my face and wept.
+And when I looked again, the judge's eye
+Was on me, cold and steady, deep in thought--
+'She knows what shame is still; so strip her.' 'Ah!'
+I shrieked, 'Not that, Sir! Any pain! So young
+I am--a wife too--I am not my own,
+But his--my husband's!' But they took my shawl,
+And tore my tunic off, and there I stood
+Before them all. . . . Husband! you love me still?
+Indeed I pleaded! Oh, shine out, kind moon,
+And let me see him smile! Oh! how I prayed,
+While some cried 'Shame!' and some, 'She is too young!'
+And some mocked--ugly words: God shut my ears.
+And yet no earthquake came to swallow me.
+While all the court around, and walls, and roofs,
+And all the earth and air were full of eyes,
+Eyes, eyes, which scorched my limbs like burning flame,
+Until my brain seemed bursting from my brow:
+And yet no earthquake came! And then I knew
+This body was not yours alone, but God's--
+His loan--He needed it: and after that
+The worst was come, and any torture more
+A change--a lightening; and I did not shriek--
+Once only--once, when first I felt the whip--
+It coiled so keen around my side, and sent
+A fire-flash through my heart which choked me--then
+I shrieked--that once. The foolish echo rang
+So far and long--I prayed you might not hear.
+And then a mist, which hid the ring of eyes,
+Swam by me, and a murmur in my ears
+Of humming bees around the limes at home;
+And I was all alone with you and God.
+And what they did to me I hardly know;
+I felt, and did not feel. Now I look back,
+It was not after all so very sharp:
+So do not pity me. It made me pray;
+Forget my shame in pain, and pain in you,
+And you in God: and once, when I looked down,
+And saw an ugly sight--so many wounds!
+'What matter?' thought I. 'His dear eyes are dark;
+For them alone I kept these limbs so white--
+A foolish pride! As God wills now. 'Tis just.'
+ But then the judge spoke out in haste: 'She is mad,
+Or fenced by magic arts! She feels no pain!'
+He did not know I was on fire within:
+Better he should not; so his sin was less.
+Then he cried fiercely, 'Take the slave away,
+And crucify her by her husband's side!'
+And at those words a film came on my face--
+A sickening rush of joy--was that the end?
+That my reward? I rose, and tried to go--
+But all the eyes had vanished, and the judge;
+And all the buildings melted into mist:
+So how they brought me here I cannot tell--
+Here, here, by you, until the judgment-day,
+And after that for ever and for ever!
+Ah! If I could but reach that hand! One touch!
+One finger tip, to send the thrill through me
+I felt but yesterday!--No! I can wait:--
+Another body!--Oh, new limbs are ready,
+Free, pure, instinct with soul through every nerve,
+Kept for us in the treasuries of God.
+They will not mar the love they try to speak,
+They will not fail my soul, as these have done!
+. . . . .
+Will you hear more? Nay--you know all the rest:
+Yet those poor eyes--alas! they could not see
+My waking, when you hung above me there
+With hands outstretched to bless the penitent--
+Your penitent--even like The Lord Himself--
+I gloried in you!--like The Lord Himself!
+Sharing His very sufferings, to the crown
+Of thorns which they had put on that dear brow
+To make you like Him--show you as you were!
+I told them so! I bid them look on you,
+And see there what was the highest throne on earth--
+The throne of suffering, where the Son of God
+Endured and triumphed for them. But they laughed;
+All but one soldier, gray, with many scars;
+And he stood silent. Then I crawled to you,
+And kissed your bleeding feet, and called aloud--
+You heard me! You know all! I am at peace.
+Peace, peace, as still and bright as is the moon
+Upon your limbs, came on me at your smile,
+And kept me happy, when they dragged me back
+From that last kiss, and spread me on the cross,
+And bound my wrists and ankles--Do not sigh:
+I prayed, and bore it: and since they raised me up
+My eyes have never left your face, my own, my own,
+Nor will, till death comes! . . .
+ Do I feel much pain?
+Not much. Not maddening. None I cannot bear.
+It has become like part of my own life,
+Or part of God's life in me--honour--bliss!
+I dreaded madness, and instead comes rest;
+Rest deep and smiling, like a summer's night.
+I should be easy, now, if I could move . . .
+I cannot stir. Ah God! these shoots of fire
+Through all my limbs! Hush, selfish girl! He hears you!
+Who ever found the cross a pleasant bed?
+Yes; I can bear it, love. Pain is no evil
+Unless it conquers us. These little wrists, now--
+You said, one blessed night, they were too slender,
+Too soft and slender for a deacon's wife--
+Perhaps a martyr's:--You forgot the strength
+Which God can give. The cord has cut them through;
+And yet my voice has never faltered yet.
+Oh! do not groan, or I shall long and pray
+That you may die: and you must not die yet.
+Not yet--they told us we might live three days . . .
+Two days for you to preach! Two days to speak
+Words which may wake the dead!
+. . . . .
+ Hush! is he sleeping?
+They say that men have slept upon the cross;
+So why not he? . . . Thanks, Lord! I hear him breathe:
+And he will preach Thy word to-morrow!--save
+Souls, crowds, for Thee! And they will know his worth
+Years hence--poor things, they know not what they do!--
+And crown him martyr; and his name will ring
+Through all the shores of earth, and all the stars
+Whose eyes are sparkling through their tears to see
+His triumph--Preacher! Martyr!--Ah--and me?--
+If they must couple my poor name with his,
+Let them tell all the truth--say how I loved him,
+And tried to damn him by that love! O Lord!
+Returning good for evil! and was this
+The payment I deserved for such a sin?
+To hang here on my cross, and look at him
+Until we kneel before Thy throne in heaven!
+
+Eversley, 1852.
+
+
+
+ON THE DEATH OF A CERTAIN JOURNAL {282}
+
+
+
+So die, thou child of stormy dawn,
+Thou winter flower, forlorn of nurse;
+Chilled early by the bigot's curse,
+The pedant's frown, the worldling's yawn.
+
+Fair death, to fall in teeming June,
+When every seed which drops to earth
+Takes root, and wins a second birth
+From steaming shower and gleaming moon.
+
+Fall warm, fall fast, thou mellow rain;
+Thou rain of God, make fat the land;
+That roots which parch in burning sand
+May bud to flower and fruit again.
+
+To grace, perchance, a fairer morn
+In mightier lands beyond the sea,
+While honour falls to such as we
+From hearts of heroes yet unborn,
+
+Who in the light of fuller day,
+Of purer science, holier laws,
+Bless us, faint heralds of their cause,
+Dim beacons of their glorious way.
+
+Failure? While tide-floods rise and boil
+Round cape and isle, in port and cove,
+Resistless, star-led from above:
+What though our tiny wave recoil?
+
+Eversley, 1852.
+
+
+
+DOWN TO THE MOTHERS
+
+
+
+Linger no more, my beloved, by abbey and cell and cathedral;
+Mourn not for holy ones mourning of old them who knew not the Father,
+Weeping with fast and scourge, when the bridegroom was taken from them.
+Drop back awhile through the years, to the warm rich youth of the nations,
+Childlike in virtue and faith, though childlike in passion and pleasure,
+Childlike still, and still near to their God, while the day-spring of Eden
+Lingered in rose-red rays on the peaks of Ionian mountains.
+Down to the mothers, as Faust went, I go, to the roots of our manhood,
+Mothers of us in our cradles; of us once more in our glory.
+New-born, body and soul, in the great pure world which shall be
+In the renewing of all things, when man shall return to his Eden
+Conquering evil, and death, and shame, and the slander of conscience--
+Free in the sunshine of Godhead--and fearlessly smile on his Father.
+Down to the mothers I go--yet with thee still!--be with me, thou purest!
+Lead me, thy hand in my hand; and the dayspring of God go before us.
+
+Eversley, 1852.
+
+
+
+TO MISS MITFORD: AUTHORESS OF 'OUR VILLAGE'
+
+
+
+The single eye, the daughter of the light;
+Well pleased to recognise in lowliest shade
+Some glimmer of its parent beam, and made
+By daily draughts of brightness, inly bright.
+The taste severe, yet graceful, trained aright
+In classic depth and clearness, and repaid
+By thanks and honour from the wise and staid--
+By pleasant skill to blame, and yet delight,
+And high communion with the eloquent throng
+Of those who purified our speech and song--
+All these are yours. The same examples lure,
+You in each woodland, me on breezy moor--
+With kindred aim the same sweet path along,
+To knit in loving knowledge rich and poor.
+
+Eversley, 1853.
+
+
+
+BALLAD OF EARL HALDAN'S DAUGHTER
+
+
+
+ It was Earl Haldan's daughter,
+ She looked across the sea;
+ She looked across the water;
+ And long and loud laughed she:
+ 'The locks of six princesses
+ Must be my marriage fee,
+So hey bonny boat, and ho bonny boat!
+ Who comes a wooing me?'
+
+ It was Earl Haldan's daughter,
+ She walked along the sand;
+ When she was aware of a knight so fair,
+ Came sailing to the land.
+ His sails were all of velvet,
+ His mast of beaten gold,
+And 'Hey bonny boat, and ho bonny boat!
+ Who saileth here so bold?'
+
+ 'The locks of five princesses
+ I won beyond the sea;
+ I clipt their golden tresses,
+ To fringe a cloak for thee.
+ One handful yet is wanting,
+ But one of all the tale;
+So hey bonny boat, and ho bonny boat!
+ Furl up thy velvet sail!'
+
+ He leapt into the water,
+ That rover young and bold;
+ He gript Earl Haldan's daughter,
+ He clipt her locks of gold:
+ 'Go weep, go weep, proud maiden,
+ The tale is full to-day.
+Now hey bonny boat, and ho bonny boat!
+ Sail Westward ho! away!'
+
+Devonshire, 1854
+ From Westward Ho!
+
+
+
+FRANK LEIGH'S SONG. A.D. 1586
+
+
+
+Ah tyrant Love, Megaera's serpents bearing,
+ Why thus requite my sighs with venom'd smart?
+Ah ruthless dove, the vulture's talons wearing,
+ Why flesh them, traitress, in this faithful heart?
+Is this my meed? Must dragons' teeth alone
+In Venus' lawns by lovers' hands be sown?
+
+Nay, gentlest Cupid; 'twas my pride undid me;
+ Nay, guiltless dove; by mine own wound I fell.
+To worship, not to wed, Celestials bid me:
+ I dreamt to mate in heaven, and wake in hell;
+For ever doom'd, Ixion-like, to reel
+On mine own passions' ever-burning wheel.
+
+Devonshire, 1854.
+ From Westward Ho!
+
+
+
+ODE TO THE NORTH-EAST WIND
+
+
+
+Welcome, wild North-easter.
+ Shame it is to see
+Odes to every zephyr;
+ Ne'er a verse to thee.
+Welcome, black North-easter!
+ O'er the German foam;
+O'er the Danish moorlands,
+ From thy frozen home.
+Tired we are of summer,
+ Tired of gaudy glare,
+Showers soft and steaming,
+ Hot and breathless air.
+Tired of listless dreaming,
+ Through the lazy day:
+Jovial wind of winter
+ Turns us out to play!
+Sweep the golden reed-beds;
+ Crisp the lazy dyke;
+Hunger into madness
+ Every plunging pike.
+Fill the lake with wild-fowl;
+ Fill the marsh with snipe;
+While on dreary moorlands
+ Lonely curlew pipe.
+Through the black fir-forest
+ Thunder harsh and dry,
+Shattering down the snow-flakes
+ Off the curdled sky.
+Hark! The brave North-easter!
+ Breast-high lies the scent,
+On by holt and headland,
+ Over heath and bent.
+Chime, ye dappled darlings,
+ Through the sleet and snow.
+Who can over-ride you?
+ Let the horses go!
+Chime, ye dappled darlings,
+ Down the roaring blast;
+You shall see a fox die
+ Ere an hour be past.
+Go! and rest to-morrow,
+ Hunting in your dreams,
+While our skates are ringing
+ O'er the frozen streams.
+Let the luscious South-wind
+ Breathe in lovers' sighs,
+While the lazy gallants
+ Bask in ladies' eyes.
+What does he but soften
+ Heart alike and pen?
+'Tis the hard gray weather
+ Breeds hard English men.
+What's the soft South-wester?
+ 'Tis the ladies' breeze,
+Bringing home their true-loves
+ Out of all the seas:
+But the black North-easter,
+ Through the snowstorm hurled,
+Drives our English hearts of oak
+ Seaward round the world.
+Come, as came our fathers,
+ Heralded by thee,
+Conquering from the eastward,
+ Lords by land and sea.
+Come; and strong within us
+ Stir the Vikings' blood;
+Bracing brain and sinew;
+ Blow, thou wind of God!
+
+1854.
+
+
+
+A FAREWELL: TO C. E. G.
+
+
+
+My fairest child, I have no song to give you;
+ No lark could pipe in skies so dull and gray;
+Yet, if you will, one quiet hint I'll leave you,
+ For every day.
+
+I'll tell you how to sing a clearer carol
+ Than lark who hails the dawn or breezy down
+To earn yourself a purer poet's laurel
+ Than Shakespeare's crown.
+
+Be good, sweet maid, and let who can be clever;
+ Do lovely things, not dream them, all day long;
+And so make Life, and Death, and that For Ever,
+ One grand sweet song.
+
+February 1, 1856.
+
+
+
+TO G. A. G.
+
+
+
+A hasty jest I once let fall--
+ As jests are wont to be, untrue--
+ As if the sum of joy to you
+Were hunt and picnic, rout and ball.
+
+Your eyes met mine: I did not blame;
+ You saw it: but I touched too near
+ Some noble nerve; a silent tear
+Spoke soft reproach, and lofty shame.
+
+I do not wish those words unsaid.
+ Unspoilt by praise and pleasure, you
+ In that one look to woman grew,
+While with a child, I thought, I played.
+
+Next to mine own beloved so long!
+ I have not spent my heart in vain.
+ I watched the blade; I see the grain;
+A woman's soul, most soft, yet strong.
+
+Eversley, 1856.
+
+
+
+THE SOUTH WIND: A FISHERMAN'S BLESSINGS
+
+
+
+O blessed drums of Aldershot!
+ O blessed South-west train!
+O blessed, blessed Speaker's clock,
+ All prophesying rain!
+
+O blessed yaffil, laughing loud!
+ O blessed falling glass!
+O blessed fan of cold gray cloud!
+ O blessed smelling grass!
+
+O bless'd South wind that toots his horn
+ Through every hole and crack!
+I'm off at eight to-morrow morn,
+ To bring _such_ fishes back!
+
+Eversley, April 1, 1856.
+
+
+
+THE INVITATION: TO TOM HUGHES
+
+
+
+Come away with me, Tom,
+Term and talk are done;
+My poor lads are reaping,
+Busy every one.
+Curates mind the parish,
+Sweepers mind the court;
+We'll away to Snowdon
+For our ten days' sport;
+Fish the August evening
+Till the eve is past,
+Whoop like boys, at pounders
+Fairly played and grassed.
+When they cease to dimple,
+Lunge, and swerve, and leap,
+Then up over Siabod,
+Choose our nest, and sleep.
+Up a thousand feet, Tom,
+Round the lion's head,
+Find soft stones to leeward
+And make up our bed.
+Eat our bread and bacon,
+Smoke the pipe of peace,
+And, ere we be drowsy,
+Give our boots a grease.
+Homer's heroes did so,
+Why not such as we?
+What are sheets and servants?
+Superfluity!
+Pray for wives and children
+Safe in slumber curled,
+Then to chat till midnight
+O'er this babbling world--
+Of the workmen's college,
+Of the price of grain,
+Of the tree of knowledge,
+Of the chance of rain;
+If Sir A. goes Romeward,
+If Miss B. sings true,
+If the fleet comes homeward,
+If the mare will do,--
+Anything and everything--
+Up there in the sky
+Angels understand us,
+And no 'saints' are by.
+Down, and bathe at day-dawn,
+Tramp from lake to lake,
+Washing brain and heart clean
+Every step we take.
+Leave to Robert Browning
+Beggars, fleas, and vines;
+Leave to mournful Ruskin
+Popish Apennines,
+Dirty Stones of Venice
+And his Gas-lamps Seven--
+We've the stones of Snowdon
+And the lamps of heaven.
+Where's the mighty credit
+In admiring Alps?
+Any goose sees 'glory'
+In their 'snowy scalps.'
+Leave such signs and wonders
+For the dullard brain,
+As aesthetic brandy,
+Opium and cayenne.
+Give me Bramshill common
+(St. John's harriers by),
+Or the vale of Windsor,
+England's golden eye.
+Show me life and progress,
+Beauty, health, and man;
+Houses fair, trim gardens,
+Turn where'er I can.
+Or, if bored with 'High Art,'
+And such popish stuff,
+One's poor ear need airing,
+Snowdon's high enough.
+While we find God's signet
+Fresh on English ground,
+Why go gallivanting
+With the nations round?
+Though we try no ventures
+Desperate or strange;
+Feed on commonplaces
+In a narrow range;
+Never sought for Franklin
+Round the frozen Capes;
+Even, with Macdougall, {295}
+Bagged our brace of apes;
+Never had our chance, Tom,
+In that black Redan;
+Can't avenge poor Brereton
+Out in Sakarran;
+Tho' we earn our bread, Tom,
+By the dirty pen,
+What we can we will be,
+Honest Englishmen.
+Do the work that's nearest,
+Though it's dull at whiles,
+Helping, when we meet them,
+Lame dogs over stiles;
+See in every hedgerow
+Marks of angels' feet,
+Epics in each pebble
+Underneath our feet;
+Once a year, like schoolboys,
+Robin-Hooding go,
+Leaving fops and fogies
+A thousand feet below.
+
+Eversley, August 1856.
+
+
+
+THE FIND
+
+
+
+ Yon sound's neither sheep-bell nor bark,
+ They're running--they're running, Go hark!
+ The sport may be lost by a moment's delay;
+ So whip up the puppies and scurry away.
+Dash down through the cover by dingle and dell,
+There's a gate at the bottom--I know it full well;
+And they're running--they're running,
+ Go hark!
+
+ They're running--they're running, Go hark!
+ One fence and we're out of the park;
+ Sit down in your saddles and race at the brook,
+ Then smash at the bullfinch; no time for a look;
+Leave cravens and skirters to dangle behind;
+He's away for the moors in the teeth of the wind,
+And they're running--they're running,
+ Go hark!
+
+ They're running--they're running, Go hark!
+ Let them run on and run till it's dark!
+ Well with them we are, and well with them we'll be,
+ While there's wind in our horses and daylight to see:
+Then shog along homeward, chat over the fight,
+And hear in our dreams the sweet music all night
+Of--They're running--they're running,
+ Go hark!
+
+Eversley, 1856.
+
+
+
+FISHING SONG: TO J. A. FROUDE AND TOM HUGHES
+
+
+
+ Oh, Mr. Froude, how wise and good,
+ To point us out this way to glory--
+ They're no great shakes, those Snowdon Lakes,
+ And all their pounders myth and story.
+Blow Snowdon! What's Lake Gwynant to Killarney,
+Or spluttering Welsh to tender blarney, blarney, blarney?
+
+ So Thomas Hughes, sir, if you choose,
+ I'll tell you where we think of going,
+ To swate and far o'er cliff and scar,
+ Hear horns of Elfland faintly blowing;
+Blow Snowdon! There's a hundred lakes to try in,
+And fresh caught salmon daily, frying, frying, frying.
+
+ Geology and botany
+ A hundred wonders shall diskiver,
+ We'll flog and troll in strid and hole,
+ And skim the cream of lake and river,
+Blow Snowdon! give me Ireland for my pennies,
+Hurrah! for salmon, grilse, and--Dennis, Dennis, Dennis!
+
+Eversley, 1856
+
+
+
+THE LAST BUCCANEER
+
+
+
+Oh England is a pleasant place for them that's rich and high,
+But England is a cruel place for such poor folks as I;
+And such a port for mariners I ne'er shall see again
+As the pleasant Isle of Aves, beside the Spanish main.
+
+There were forty craft in Aves that were both swift and stout,
+All furnished well with small arms and cannons round about;
+And a thousand men in Aves made laws so fair and free
+To choose their valiant captains and obey them loyally.
+
+Thence we sailed against the Spaniard with his hoards of plate and gold,
+Which he wrung with cruel tortures from Indian folk of old;
+Likewise the merchant captains, with hearts as hard as stone,
+Who flog men and keel-haul them, and starve them to the bone.
+
+Oh the palms grew high in Aves, and fruits that shone like gold,
+And the colibris and parrots they were gorgeous to behold;
+And the negro maids to Aves from bondage fast did flee,
+To welcome gallant sailors, a-sweeping in from sea.
+
+Oh sweet it was in Aves to hear the landward breeze,
+A-swing with good tobacco in a net between the trees,
+With a negro lass to fan you, while you listened to the roar
+Of the breakers on the reef outside, that never touched the shore.
+
+But Scripture saith, an ending to all fine things must be;
+So the King's ships sailed on Aves, and quite put down were we.
+All day we fought like bulldogs, but they burst the booms at night;
+And I fled in a piragua, sore wounded, from the fight.
+
+Nine days I floated starving, and a negro lass beside,
+Till for all I tried to cheer her, the poor young thing she died;
+But as I lay a gasping, a Bristol sail came by,
+And brought me home to England here, to beg until I die.
+
+And now I'm old and going--I'm sure I can't tell where;
+One comfort is, this world's so hard, I can't be worse off there:
+If I might but be a sea-dove, I'd fly across the main,
+To the pleasant Isle of Aves, to look at it once again.
+
+Eversley, 1857,
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT'S RETURN
+
+
+
+Hark! hark! hark!
+The lark sings high in the dark.
+The were wolves mutter, the night hawks moan,
+The raven croaks from the Raven-stone;
+What care I for his boding groan,
+Riding the moorland to come to mine own?
+Hark! hark! hark!
+The lark sings high in the dark.
+
+Hark! hark! hark!
+The lark sings high in the dark.
+Long have I wander'd by land and by sea,
+Long have I ridden by moorland and lea;
+Yonder she sits with my babe on her knee,
+Sits at the window and watches for me!
+Hark! hark! hark!
+The lark sings high in the dark.
+
+Written for music, 1857.
+
+
+
+PEN-Y-GWRYDD: TO TOM HUGHES, ESQ.
+
+
+
+There is no inn in Snowdon which is not awful dear,
+Excepting Pen-y-gwrydd (you can't pronounce it, dear),
+Which standeth in the meeting of noble valleys three--
+One is the vale of Gwynant, so well beloved by me,
+One goes to Capel-Curig, and I can't mind its name,
+And one it is Llanberris Pass, which all men knows the same;
+Between which radiations vast mountains does arise,
+As full of tarns as sieves of holes, in which big fish will rise,
+That is, just one day in the year, if you be there, my boy,
+Just about ten o'clock at night; and then I wish you joy.
+Now to this Pen-y-gwrydd inn I purposeth to write,
+(Axing the post town out of Froude, for I can't mind it quite),
+And to engage a room or two, for let us say a week,
+For fear of gents, and Manichees, and reading parties meek,
+And there to live like fighting-cocks at almost a bob a day,
+And arterwards toward the sea make tracks and cut away,
+All for to catch the salmon bold in Aberglaslyn pool,
+And work the flats in Traeth-Mawr, and will, or I'm a fool.
+And that's my game, which if you like, respond to me by post;
+But I fear it will not last, my son, a thirteen days at most.
+Flies is no object; I can tell some three or four will do,
+And John Jones, Clerk, he knows the rest, and ties and sells 'em too.
+Besides of which I have no more to say, leastwise just now,
+And so, goes to my children's school and 'umbly makes my bow.
+
+Eversley, 1857.
+
+
+
+ODE ON THE INSTALLATION OF THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE, CHANCELLOR OF THE
+UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, 1862 {303}
+
+
+
+Hence a while, severer Muses;
+Spare your slaves till drear October.
+Hence; for Alma Mater chooses
+Not to be for ever sober:
+But, like stately matron gray,
+Calling child and grandchild round her,
+Will for them at least be gay;
+Share for once their holiday;
+And, knowing she will sleep the sounder,
+Cheerier-hearted on the morrow
+Rise to grapple care and sorrow,
+Grandly leads the dance adown, and joins the children's play.
+ So go, for in your places
+ Already, as you see,
+(Her tears for some deep sorrow scarcely dried),
+Venus holds court among her sinless graces,
+With many a nymph from many a park and lea.
+She, pensive, waits the merrier faces
+Of those your wittier sisters three,
+O'er jest and dance and song who still preside,
+To cheer her in this merry-mournful tide;
+ And bids us, as she smiles or sighs,
+ Tune our fancies by her eyes.
+
+ Then let the young be glad,
+ Fair girl and gallant lad,
+ And sun themselves to-day
+ By lawn and garden gay;
+ 'Tis play befits the noon
+ Of rosy-girdled June:
+ Who dare frown if heaven shall smile?
+ Blest, who can forget a while;
+ The world before them, and above
+ The light of universal love.
+Go, then, let the young be gay;
+From their heart as from their dress
+Let darkness and let mourning pass away,
+While we the staid and worn look on and bless.
+
+ Health to courage firm and high!
+ Health to Granta's chivalry!
+ Wisely finding, day by day,
+ Play in toil, and toil in play.
+ Granta greets them, gliding down
+ On by park and spire and town;
+ Humming mills and golden meadows,
+ Barred with elm and poplar shadows;
+ Giant groves, and learned halls;
+ Holy fanes and pictured walls.
+ Yet she bides not here; around
+ Lies the Muses' sacred ground.
+ Most she lingers, where below
+ Gliding wherries come and go;
+ Stalwart footsteps shake the shores;
+ Rolls the pulse of stalwart oars;
+ Rings aloft the exultant cry
+ For the bloodless victory.
+ There she greets the sports, which breed
+ Valiant lads for England's need;
+ Wisely finding, day by day,
+ Play in toil, and toil in play.
+ Health to courage, firm and high!
+ Health to Granta's chivalry!
+
+Yet stay a while, severer Muses, stay,
+For you, too, have your rightful parts to-day.
+Known long to you, and known through you to fame,
+Are Chatsworth's halls, and Cavendish's name.
+You too, then, Alma Mater calls to greet
+A worthy patron for your ancient seat;
+And bid her sons from him example take,
+Of learning purely sought for learning's sake,
+Of worth unboastful, power in duty spent;
+And see, fulfilled in him, her high intent.
+
+ Come, Euterpe, wake thy choir;
+ Fit thy notes to our desire.
+ Long may he sit the chiefest here,
+ Meet us and greet us, year by year;
+ Long inherit, sire and son,
+ All that their race has wrought and won,
+ Since that great Cavendish came again,
+ Round the world and over the main,
+ Breasting the Thames with his mariners bold,
+ Past good Queen Bess's palace of old;
+ With jewel and ingot packed in his hold,
+ And sails of damask and cloth of gold;
+ While never a sailor-boy on board
+ But was decked as brave as a Spanish lord,
+ With the spoils he had won
+ In the Isles of the Sun,
+ And the shores of Fairy-land,
+ And yet held for the crown of the goodly show,
+ That queenly smile from the Palace window,
+ And that wave of a queenly hand.
+ Yes, let the young be gay,
+ And sun themselves to-day;--
+ And from their hearts, as from their dress,
+ Let mourning pass away.
+But not from us, who watch our years fast fleeing,
+And snatching as they flee, fresh fragments of our being.
+ Can we forget one friend,
+ Can we forget one face,
+ Which cheered us toward our end,
+ Which nerved us for our race?
+ Oh sad to toil, and yet forego
+ One presence which has made us know
+ To Godlike souls how deep our debt!
+ We would not, if we could, forget.
+
+ Severer Muses, linger yet;
+ Speak out for us one pure and rich regret.
+ Thou, Clio, who, with awful pen,
+ Gravest great names upon the hearts of men,
+ Speak of a fate beyond our ken;
+ A gem late found and lost too soon; {306}
+ A sun gone down at highest noon;
+ A tree from Odin's ancient root,
+ Which bore for men the ancient fruit,
+ Counsel, and faith and scorn of wrong,
+ And cunning lore, and soothing song,
+ Snapt in mid-growth, and leaving unaware
+ The flock unsheltered and the pasture bare
+ Nay, let us take what God shall send,
+ Trusting bounty without end.
+ God ever lives; and Nature,
+ Beneath His high dictature,
+ Hale and teeming, can replace
+ Strength by strength, and grace by grace,
+ Hope by hope, and friend by friend:
+ Trust; and take what God shall send.
+ So shall Alma Mater see
+ Daughters fair and wise
+ Train new lands of liberty
+ Under stranger skies;
+ Spreading round the teeming earth
+ English science, manhood, worth.
+
+1862.
+
+
+
+SONGS FROM 'THE WATER-BABIES'
+
+
+
+THE TIDE RIVER
+
+ Clear and cool, clear and cool,
+By laughing shallow, and dreaming pool;
+ Cool and clear, cool and clear,
+By shining shingle, and foaming wear;
+Under the crag where the ouzel sings,
+And the ivied wall where the church-bell rings,
+ Undefiled, for the undefiled;
+ Play by me, bathe in me, mother and child.
+
+ Dank and foul, dank and foul,
+ By the smoky town in its murky cowl;
+ Foul and dank, foul and dank,
+ By wharf and sewer and slimy bank;
+Darker and darker the farther I go,
+Baser and baser the richer I grow;
+ Who dare sport with the sin-defiled?
+ Shrink from me, turn from me, mother and child.
+
+ Strong and free, strong and free,
+ The floodgates are open, away to the sea.
+ Free and strong, free and strong,
+ Cleansing my streams as I hurry along
+To the golden sands, and the leaping bar,
+And the taintless tide that awaits me afar,
+As I lose myself in the infinite main,
+Like a soul that has sinned and is pardoned again.
+ Undefiled, for the undefiled;
+ Play by me, bathe in me, mother and child.
+
+From The Water-Babies.
+Eversley, 1862.
+
+
+YOUNG AND OLD
+
+
+When all the world is young, lad,
+ And all the trees are green;
+And every goose a swan, lad,
+ And every lass a queen;
+Then hey for boot and horse, lad,
+ And round the world away;
+Young blood must have its course, lad,
+ And every dog his day.
+
+When all the world is old, lad,
+ And all the trees are brown;
+And all the sport is stale, lad,
+ And all the wheels run down;
+Creep home, and take your place there,
+ The spent and maimed among:
+God grant you find one face there,
+ You loved when all was young.
+
+From The Water-Babies. 1862
+
+
+THE SUMMER SEA
+
+
+ Soft soft wind, from out the sweet south sliding,
+Waft thy silver cloud webs athwart the summer sea;
+ Thin thin threads of mist on dewy fingers twining
+Weave a veil of dappled gauze to shade my babe and me.
+
+ Deep deep Love, within thine own abyss abiding,
+Pour Thyself abroad, O Lord, on earth and air and sea;
+ Worn weary hearts within Thy holy temple hiding,
+Shield from sorrow, sin, and shame my helpless babe and me.
+
+From The Water-Babies. 1862
+
+
+MY LITTLE DOLL
+
+
+I once had a sweet little doll, dears,
+ The prettiest doll in the world;
+Her cheeks were so red and so white, dears,
+ And her hair was so charmingly curled.
+But I lost my poor little doll, dears,
+ As I played in the heath one day;
+And I cried for more than a week, dears,
+ But I never could find where she lay.
+
+I found my poor little doll, dears,
+ As I played in the heath one day:
+Folks say she is terribly changed, dears,
+ For her paint is all washed away,
+And her arms trodden off by the cows, dears
+ And her hair not the least bit curled:
+Yet for old sakes' sake she is still, dears,
+ The prettiest doll in the world.
+
+From The Water-Babies.
+Eversley, 1862.
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT'S LEAP: A LEGEND OF ALTENAHR
+
+
+
+'So the foemen have fired the gate, men of mine;
+ And the water is spent and gone?
+Then bring me a cup of the red Ahr-wine:
+ I never shall drink but this one.
+
+'And reach me my harness, and saddle my horse,
+ And lead him me round to the door:
+He must take such a leap to-night perforce,
+ As horse never took before.
+
+'I have fought my fight, I have lived my life,
+ I have drunk my share of wine;
+From Trier to Coln there was never a knight
+ Led a merrier life than mine.
+
+'I have lived by the saddle for years two score;
+ And if I must die on tree,
+Then the old saddle tree, which has borne me of yore,
+ Is the properest timber for me.
+
+'So now to show bishop, and burgher, and priest,
+ How the Altenahr hawk can die:
+If they smoke the old falcon out of his nest,
+ He must take to his wings and fly.'
+
+He harnessed himself by the clear moonshine,
+ And he mounted his horse at the door;
+And he drained such a cup of the red Ahr-wine,
+ As man never drained before.
+
+He spurred the old horse, and he held him tight,
+ And he leapt him out over the wall;
+Out over the cliff, out into the night,
+ Three hundred feet of fall.
+
+They found him next morning below in the glen,
+ With never a bone in him whole--
+A mass or a prayer, now, good gentlemen,
+ For such a bold rider's soul.
+
+Eversley, 1864.
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF THE LITTLE BALTUNG. A.D. 395
+
+
+
+A harper came over the Danube so wide,
+ And he came into Alaric's hall,
+And he sang the song of the little Baltung
+ To him and his heroes all.
+
+How the old old Balt and the young young Balt
+ Rode out of Caucaland,
+With the royal elephant's trunk on helm
+ And the royal lance in hand.
+
+Thuringer heroes, counts and knights,
+ Pricked proud in their meinie;
+For they were away to the great Kaiser,
+ In Byzant beside the sea.
+
+And when they came to the Danube so wide
+ They shouted from off the shore,
+'Come over, come over, ye Roman slaves,
+ And ferry your masters o'er.'
+
+And when they came to Adrian's burgh,
+ With its towers so smooth and high,
+'Come out, come out, ye Roman knaves,
+ And see your lords ride by.'
+
+But when they came lo the long long walls
+ That stretch from sea to sea,
+That old old Balt let down his chin,
+ And a thoughtful man grew he.
+
+'Oh oft have I scoffed at brave Fridigern,
+ But never will I scoff more,
+If these be the walls which kept him out
+ From the Micklegard there on the shore.'
+
+Then out there came the great Kaiser,
+ With twice ten thousand men;
+But never a Thuring was coward enough
+ To wish himself home again.
+
+'Bow down, thou rebel, old Athanarich,
+ And beg thy life this day;
+The Kaiser is lord of all the world,
+ And who dare say him nay?'
+
+'I never came out of Caucaland
+ To beg for less nor more;
+But to see the pride of the great Kaiser,
+ In his Micklegard here by the shore.
+
+'I never came out of Caucaland
+ To bow to mortal wight,
+But to shake the hand of the great Kaiser,
+ And God defend my right.'
+
+He shook his hand, that cunning Kaiser,
+ And he kissed him courteouslie,
+And he has ridden with Athanarich
+ That wonder-town to see.
+
+He showed him his walls of marble white--
+ A mile o'erhead they shone;
+Quoth the Balt, 'Who would leap into that garden,
+ King Siegfried's boots must own.'
+
+He showed him his engines of arsmetrick
+ And his wells of quenchless flame,
+And his flying rocks, that guarded his walls
+ From all that against him came.
+
+He showed him his temples and pillared halls,
+ And his streets of houses high;
+And his watch-towers tall, where his star-gazers
+ Sit reading the signs of the sky.
+
+He showed him his ships with their hundred oars,
+ And their sides like a castle wall,
+That fetch home the plunder of all the world,
+ At the Kaiser's beck and call.
+
+He showed him all nations of every tongue
+ That are bred beneath the sun,
+How they flowed together in Micklegard street
+ As the brooks flow all into one.
+
+He showed him the shops of the china ware,
+ And of silk and sendal also,
+And he showed him the baths and the waterpipes
+ On arches aloft that go.
+
+He showed him ostrich and unicorn,
+ Ape, lion, and tiger keen;
+And elephants wise roared 'Hail Kaiser!'
+ As though they had Christians been.
+
+He showed him the hoards of the dragons and trolls,
+ Rare jewels and heaps of gold--
+'Hast thou seen, in all thy hundred years,
+ Such as these, thou king so old?'
+
+Now that cunning Kaiser was a scholar wise,
+ And could of gramarye,
+And he cast a spell on that old old Balt,
+ Till lowly and meek spake he.
+
+'Oh oft have I heard of the Micklegard,
+ What I held for chapmen's lies;
+But now do I know of the Micklegard,
+ By the sight of mine own eyes.
+
+'Woden in Valhalla,
+ But thou on earth art God;
+And he that dare withstand thee, Kaiser,
+ On his own head lies his blood.'
+
+Then out and spake that little Baltung,
+ Rode at the king's right knee,
+Quoth 'Fridigern slew false Kaiser Valens,
+ And he died like you or me.'
+
+'And who art thou, thou pretty bold boy,
+ Rides at the king's right knee?'
+'Oh I am the Baltung, boy Alaric,
+ And as good a man as thee.'
+
+'As good as me, thou pretty bold boy,
+ With down upon thy chin?'
+'Oh a spae-wife laid a doom on me,
+ The best of thy realm to win.'
+
+'If thou be so fierce, thou little wolf cub
+ Or ever thy teeth be grown;
+Then I must guard my two young sons
+ Lest they should lose their own.'
+
+'Oh, it's I will guard your two lither lads,
+ In their burgh beside the sea,
+And it's I will prove true man to them
+ If they will prove true to me.
+
+'But it's you must warn your two lither lads,
+ And warn them bitterly,
+That if I shall find them two false Kaisers,
+ High hanged they both shall be.'
+
+Now they are gone into the Kaiser's palace
+ To eat the peacock fine,
+And they are gone into the Kaiser's palace
+ To drink the good Greek wine.
+
+The Kaiser alone, and the old old Balt,
+ They sat at the cedar board;
+And round them served on the bended knee
+ Full many a Roman lord.
+
+'What ails thee, what ails thee, friend Athanarich?
+ What makes thee look so pale?'
+'I fear I am poisoned, thou cunning Kaiser,
+ For I feel my heart-strings fail.
+
+'Oh would I had kept that great great oath
+ I swore by the horse's head,
+I would never set foot on Roman ground
+ Till the day that I lay dead.
+
+'Oh would I were home in Caucaland,
+ To hear my harpers play,
+And to drink my last of the nut-brown ale,
+ While I gave the gold rings away.
+
+'Oh would I were home in Caucaland,
+ To hear the Gothmen's horn,
+And watch the waggons, and brown brood mares
+ And the tents where I was born.
+
+'But now I must die between four stone walls
+ In Byzant beside the sea:
+And as thou shalt deal with my little Baltung,
+ So God shall deal with thee.'
+
+The Kaiser he purged himself with oaths,
+ And he buried him royally,
+And he set on his barrow an idol of gold,
+ Where all Romans must bow the knee.
+
+And now the Goths are the Kaiser's men,
+ And guard him with lance and sword,
+And the little Baltung is his sworn son-at-arms,
+ And eats at the Kaiser's board,
+
+And the Kaiser's two sons are two false white lads
+ That a clerk may beat with cane.
+The clerk that should beat that little Baltung
+ Would never sing mass again.
+
+Oh the gates of Rome they are steel without,
+ And beaten gold within:
+But they shall fly wide to the little Baltung
+ With the down upon his chin.
+
+Oh the fairest flower in the Kaiser's garden
+ Is Rome and Italian land:
+But it all shall fall to the little Baltung
+ When he shall take lance in hand.
+
+And when he is parting the plunder of Rome,
+ He shall pay for this song of mine,
+Neither maiden nor land, neither jewel nor gold,
+ But one cup of Italian wine.
+
+Eversley, 1864.
+
+
+
+ON THE DEATH OF LEOPOLD, KING OF THE BELGIANS {319}
+
+
+
+A King is dead! Another master mind
+ Is summoned from the world-wide council hall.
+Ah, for some seer, to say what links behind--
+ To read the mystic writing on the wall!
+
+Be still, fond man: nor ask thy fate to know.
+ Face bravely what each God-sent moment brings.
+Above thee rules in love, through weal and woe,
+ Guiding thy kings and thee, the King of kings.
+
+Windsor Castle,
+ November 10, 1865.
+
+
+
+EASTER WEEK
+
+
+
+(Written for music to be sung at a parish industrial exhibition)
+
+See the land, her Easter keeping,
+ Rises as her Maker rose.
+Seeds, so long in darkness sleeping,
+ Burst at last from winter snows.
+Earth with heaven above rejoices;
+ Fields and gardens hail the spring;
+Shaughs and woodlands ring with voices,
+ While the wild birds build and sing.
+
+You, to whom your Maker granted
+ Powers to those sweet birds unknown,
+Use the craft by God implanted;
+ Use the reason not your own.
+Here, while heaven and earth rejoices,
+ Each his Easter tribute bring--
+Work of fingers, chant of voices,
+ Like the birds who build and sing.
+
+Eversley, 1867.
+
+
+
+DRIFTING AWAY: A FRAGMENT
+
+
+
+They drift away. Ah, God! they drift for ever.
+I watch the stream sweep onward to the sea,
+Like some old battered buoy upon a roaring river,
+Round whom the tide-waifs hang--then drift to sea.
+
+I watch them drift--the old familiar faces,
+Who fished and rode with me, by stream and wold,
+Till ghosts, not men, fill old beloved places,
+And, ah! the land is rank with churchyard mold.
+
+I watch them drift--the youthful aspirations,
+Shores, landmarks, beacons, drift alike.
+. . . . .
+I watch them drift--the poets and the statesmen;
+The very streams run upward from the sea.
+ . . . . . .
+ Yet overhead the boundless arch of heaven
+ Still fades to night, still blazes into day.
+ . . . . .
+ Ah, God! My God! Thou wilt not drift away
+
+November 1867.
+
+
+
+CHRISTMAS DAY
+
+
+
+How will it dawn, the coming Christmas Day?
+A northern Christmas, such as painters love,
+And kinsfolk, shaking hands but once a year,
+And dames who tell old legends by the fire?
+Red sun, blue sky, white snow, and pearled ice,
+Keen ringing air, which sets the blood on fire,
+And makes the old man merry with the young,
+Through the short sunshine, through the longer night?
+ Or southern Christmas, dark and dank with mist,
+And heavy with the scent of steaming leaves,
+And rosebuds mouldering on the dripping porch;
+One twilight, without rise or set of sun,
+Till beetles drone along the hollow lane,
+And round the leafless hawthorns, flitting bats
+Hawk the pale moths of winter? Welcome then
+At best, the flying gleam, the flying shower,
+The rain-pools glittering on the long white roads,
+And shadows sweeping on from down to down
+Before the salt Atlantic gale: yet come
+In whatsoever garb, or gay, or sad,
+Come fair, come foul, 'twill still be Christmas Day.
+ How will it dawn, the coming Christmas Day?
+To sailors lounging on the lonely deck
+Beneath the rushing trade-wind? Or to him,
+Who by some noisome harbour of the East,
+Watches swart arms roll down the precious bales,
+Spoils of the tropic forests; year by year
+Amid the din of heathen voices, groaning
+Himself half heathen? How to those--brave hearts!
+Who toil with laden loins and sinking stride
+Beside the bitter wells of treeless sands
+Toward the peaks which flood the ancient Nile,
+To free a tyrant's captives? How to those--
+New patriarchs of the new-found underworld--
+Who stand, like Jacob, on the virgin lawns,
+And count their flocks' increase? To them that day
+Shall dawn in glory, and solstitial blaze
+Of full midsummer sun: to them that morn,
+Gay flowers beneath their feet, gay birds aloft,
+Shall tell of nought but summer: but to them,
+Ere yet, unwarned by carol or by chime,
+They spring into the saddle, thrills may come
+From that great heart of Christendom which beats
+Round all the worlds; and gracious thoughts of youth;
+Of steadfast folk, who worship God at home;
+Of wise words, learnt beside their mothers' knee;
+Of innocent faces upturned once again
+In awe and joy to listen to the tale
+Of God made man, and in a manger laid--
+May soften, purify, and raise the soul
+From selfish cares, and growing lust of gain,
+And phantoms of this dream which some call life,
+Toward the eternal facts; for here or there,
+Summer or winter, 'twill be Christmas Day.
+
+ Blest day, which aye reminds us, year by year,
+What 'tis to be a man: to curb and spurn
+The tyrant in us; that ignobler self
+Which boasts, not loathes, its likeness to the brute,
+And owns no good save ease, no ill save pain,
+No purpose, save its share in that wild war
+In which, through countless ages, living things
+Compete in internecine greed.--Ah God!
+Are we as creeping things, which have no Lord?
+That we are brutes, great God, we know too well;
+Apes daintier-featured; silly birds who flaunt
+Their plumes unheeding of the fowler's step;
+Spiders, who catch with paper, not with webs;
+Tigers, who slay with cannon and sharp steel,
+Instead of teeth and claws;--all these we are.
+Are we no more than these, save in degree?
+No more than these; and born but to compete--
+To envy and devour, like beast or herb;
+Mere fools of nature; puppets of strong lusts,
+Taking the sword, to perish with the sword
+Upon the universal battle-field,
+Even as the things upon the moor outside?
+ The heath eats up green grass and delicate flowers,
+The pine eats up the heath, the grub the pine,
+The finch the grub, the hawk the silly finch;
+And man, the mightiest of all beasts of prey,
+Eats what he lists; the strong eat up the weak,
+The many eat the few; great nations, small;
+And he who cometh in the name of all--
+He, greediest, triumphs by the greed of all;
+And, armed by his own victims, eats up all:
+While ever out of the eternal heavens
+Looks patient down the great magnanimous God,
+Who, Maker of all worlds, did sacrifice
+All to Himself? Nay, but Himself to one;
+Who taught mankind on that first Christmas Day,
+What 'twas to be a man; to give, not take;
+To serve, not rule; to nourish, not devour;
+To help, not crush; if need, to die, not live.
+ O blessed day, which givest the eternal lie
+To self, and sense, and all the brute within;
+Oh, come to us, amid this war of life;
+To hall and hovel, come; to all who toil
+In senate, shop, or study; and to those
+Who, sundered by the wastes of half a world,
+Ill-warned, and sorely tempted, ever face
+Nature's brute powers, and men unmanned to brutes--
+Come to them, blest and blessing, Christmas Day.
+Tell them once more the tale of Bethlehem;
+The kneeling shepherds, and the Babe Divine:
+And keep them men indeed, fair Christmas Day.
+
+Eversley, 1868.
+
+
+
+SEPTEMBER 21, 1870 {325}
+
+
+
+Speak low, speak little; who may sing
+ While yonder cannon-thunders boom?
+Watch, shuddering, what each day may bring:
+ Nor 'pipe amid the crack of doom.'
+
+And yet--the pines sing overhead,
+ The robins by the alder-pool,
+The bees about the garden-bed,
+ The children dancing home from school.
+
+And ever at the loom of Birth
+ The mighty Mother weaves and sings:
+She weaves--fresh robes for mangled earth;
+ She sings--fresh hopes for desperate things.
+
+And thou, too: if through Nature's calm
+ Some strain of music touch thine ears,
+Accept and share that soothing balm,
+ And sing, though choked with pitying tears.
+
+Eversley, 1870.
+
+
+
+THE MANGO-TREE
+
+
+
+He wiled me through the furzy croft;
+ He wiled me down the sandy lane.
+He told his boy's love, soft and oft,
+ Until I told him mine again.
+
+We married, and we sailed the main;
+ A soldier, and a soldier's wife.
+We marched through many a burning plain;
+ We sighed for many a gallant life.
+
+But his--God kept it safe from harm.
+ He toiled, and dared, and earned command;
+And those three stripes upon his arm
+ Were more to me than gold or land.
+
+Sure he would win some great renown:
+ Our lives were strong, our hearts were high.
+One night the fever struck him down.
+ I sat, and stared, and saw him die.
+
+I had his children--one, two, three.
+ One week I had them, blithe and sound.
+The next--beneath this mango-tree,
+ By him in barrack burying-ground.
+
+I sit beneath the mango-shade;
+ I live my five years' life all o'er--
+Round yonder stems his children played;
+ He mounted guard at yonder door.
+
+'Tis I, not they, am gone and dead.
+ They live; they know; they feel; they see.
+Their spirits light the golden shade
+ Beneath the giant mango-tree.
+
+All things, save I, are full of life:
+ The minas, pluming velvet breasts;
+The monkeys, in their foolish strife;
+ The swooping hawks, the swinging nests;
+
+The lizards basking on the soil,
+ The butterflies who sun their wings;
+The bees about their household toil,
+ They live, they love, the blissful things.
+
+Each tender purple mango-shoot,
+ That folds and droops so bashful down;
+It lives; it sucks some hidden root;
+ It rears at last a broad green crown.
+
+It blossoms; and the children cry--
+ 'Watch when the mango-apples fall.'
+It lives: but rootless, fruitless, I--
+ I breathe and dream;--and that is all.
+
+Thus am I dead: yet cannot die:
+ But still within my foolish brain
+There hangs a pale blue evening sky;
+ A furzy croft; a sandy lane.
+
+1870.
+
+
+
+THE PRIEST'S HEART
+
+
+
+It was Sir John, the fair young Priest,
+ He strode up off the strand;
+But seven fisher maidens he left behind
+ All dancing hand in hand.
+
+He came unto the wise wife's house:
+ 'Now, Mother, to prove your art;
+To charm May Carleton's merry blue eyes
+ Out of a young man's heart.'
+
+'My son, you went for a holy man,
+ Whose heart was set on high;
+Go sing in your psalter, and read in your books;
+ Man's love fleets lightly by.'
+
+'I had liever to talk with May Carleton,
+ Than with all the saints in Heaven;
+I had liever to sit by May Carleton
+ Than climb the spheres seven.
+
+'I have watched and fasted, early and late,
+ I have prayed to all above;
+But I find no cure save churchyard mould
+ For the pain which men call love.'
+
+'Now Heaven forefend that ill grow worse:
+ Enough that ill be ill.
+I know of a spell to draw May Carleton,
+ And bend her to your will.'
+
+'If thou didst that which thou canst not do,
+ Wise woman though thou be,
+I would run and run till I buried myself
+ In the surge of yonder sea.
+
+'Scathless for me are maid and wife,
+ And scathless shall they bide.
+Yet charm me May Carleton's eyes from the heart
+ That aches in my left side.'
+
+She charmed him with the white witchcraft,
+ She charmed him with the black,
+But he turned his fair young face to the wall,
+ Till she heard his heart-strings crack.
+
+1870
+
+
+
+'QU'EST QU'IL DIT' {330}
+
+
+
+Espion aile de la jeune amante
+De l'ombre des palmiers pourquoi ce cri?
+Laisse en paix le beau garcon plaider et vaincre--
+Pourquoi, pourquoi demander 'Qu'est qu'il dit?'
+
+'Qu'est qu'il dit?' Ce que tu dis toi-meme
+Chaque mois de ce printemps eternel;
+Ce que disent les papillons qui s'entre-baisent,
+Ce que dit tout bel jeun etre a toute belle.
+
+Importun! Attende quelques lustres:
+Quand les souvenirs 1'emmeneront ici--
+Mere, grand'mere, pale, lasse, et fidele,
+Demande mais doucement--'Et le vieillard,
+ Qu'est qu'il dit?'
+
+Trinidad, January 10, 1870
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF LA BREA {331a}
+
+
+
+Down beside the loathly Pitch Lake,
+ In the stately Morichal, {331b}
+Sat an ancient Spanish Indian,
+ Peering through the columns tall.
+
+Watching vainly for the flashing
+ Of the jewelled colibris; {331c}
+Listening vainly for their humming
+ Round the honey-blossomed trees.
+
+'Few,' he sighed, 'they come, and fewer,
+ To the cocorite {331d} bowers;
+Murdered, madly, through the forests
+ Which of yore were theirs--and ours
+
+By there came a negro hunter,
+ Lithe and lusty, sleek and strong,
+Rolling round his sparkling eyeballs,
+ As he loped and lounged along.
+
+Rusty firelock on his shoulder;
+ Rusty cutlass on his thigh;
+Never jollier British subject
+ Rollicked underneath the sky.
+
+British law to give him safety,
+ British fleets to guard his shore,
+And a square of British freehold--
+ He had all we have, and more.
+
+Fattening through the endless summer,
+ Like his own provision ground,
+He had reached the summum bonum
+ Which our latest wits have found.
+
+So he thought; and in his hammock
+ Gnawed his junk of sugar-cane,
+Toasted plantains at the fire-stick,
+ Gnawed, and dozed, and gnawed again.
+
+Had a wife in his ajoupa {332}--
+ Or, at least, what did instead;
+Children, too, who died so early,
+ He'd no need to earn their bread.
+
+Never stole, save what he needed,
+ From the Crown woods round about;
+Never lied, except when summoned--
+ Let the warden find him out.
+
+Never drank, except at market;
+ Never beat his sturdy mate;
+She could hit as hard as he could,
+ And had just as hard a pate.
+
+Had no care for priest nor parson,
+ Hope of heaven nor fear of hell;
+And in all his views of nature
+ Held with Comte and Peter Bell.
+
+Healthy, happy, silly, kindly,
+ Neither care nor toil had he,
+Save to work an hour at sunrise,
+ And then hunt the colibri.
+
+Not a bad man; not a good man:
+ Scarce a man at all, one fears,
+If the Man be that within us
+ Which is born of fire and tears.
+
+Round the palm-stems, round the creepers,
+ Flashed a feathered jewel past,
+Ruby-crested, topaz-throated,
+ Plucked the cocorite bast,
+
+Plucked the fallen ceiba-cotton, {333}
+ Whirred away to build his nest,
+Hung at last, with happy humming,
+ Round some flower he fancied best.
+
+Up then went the rusty muzzle,
+ 'Dat de tenth I shot to-day:'
+But out sprang the Indian shouting,
+ Balked the negro of his prey.
+
+'Eh, you Senor Trinidada!
+ What dis new ondacent plan?
+Spoil a genl'man's chance ob shooting?
+ I as good as any man.
+
+'Dese not your woods; dese de Queen's woods:
+ You seem not know whar you ar,
+Gibbin' yuself dese buckra airs here,
+ You black Indian Papist! Dar!'
+
+Stately, courteous, stood the Indian;
+ Pointed through the palm-tree shade:
+'Does the gentleman of colour
+ Know how yon Pitch Lake was made?'
+
+Grinned the negro, grinned and trembled--
+ Through his nerves a shudder ran--
+Saw a snake-like eye that held him;
+ Saw--he'd met an Obeah man.
+
+Saw a fetish--such a bottle--
+ Buried at his cottage door;
+Toad and spider, dirty water,
+ Rusty nails, and nine charms more.
+
+Saw in vision such a cock's head
+ In the path--and it was white!
+Saw Brinvilliers {334} in his pottage:
+ Faltered, cold and damp with fright.
+
+Fearful is the chance of poison:
+ Fearful, too, the great unknown:
+Magic brings some positivists
+ Humbly on their marrow-bone.
+
+Like the wedding-guest enchanted,
+ There he stood, a trembling cur;
+While the Indian told his story,
+ Like the Ancient Mariner.
+
+Told how--'Once that loathly Pitch Lake
+ Was a garden bright and fair;
+How the Chaymas off the mainland
+ Built their palm ajoupas there.
+
+'How they throve, and how they fattened,
+ Hale and happy, safe and strong;
+Passed the livelong days in feasting;
+ Passed the nights in dance and song.
+
+'Till they cruel grew, and wanton:
+ Till they killed the colibris.
+Then outspake the great Good Spirit,
+ Who can see through all the trees,
+
+'Said--"And what have I not sent you,
+ Wanton Chaymas, many a year?
+Lapp, {335a} agouti, {335b} cachicame, {335c}
+ Quenc {335d} and guazu-pita deer.
+
+'"Fish I sent you, sent you turtle,
+ Chip-chip, {335e} conch, flamingo red,
+Woodland paui, {335f} horned screamer, {335g}
+ And blue ramier {335h} overhead.
+
+'"Plums from balata {335i} and mombin, {335j}
+ Tania, {335k} manioc, {335l} water-vine; {335m}
+Let you fell my slim manacques, {335n}
+ Tap my sweet moriche wine. {335o}
+
+'"Sent rich plantains, {336a} food of angels;
+ Rich ananas, {336b} food of kings;
+Grudged you none of all my treasures:
+ Save these lovely useless things."
+
+'But the Chaymas' ears were deafened;
+ Blind their eyes, and could not see
+How a blissful Indian's spirit
+ Lived in every colibri.
+
+'Lived, forgetting toil and sorrow,
+ Ever fair and ever new;
+Whirring round the dear old woodland,
+ Feeding on the honey-dew.
+
+'Till one evening roared the earthquake:
+ Monkeys howled, and parrots screamed:
+And the Guaraons at morning
+ Gathered here, as men who dreamed.
+
+'Sunk were gardens, sunk ajoupas;
+ Hut and hammock, man and hound:
+And above the Chayma village
+ Boiled with pitch the cursed ground.
+
+'Full, and too full; safe, and too safe;
+ Negro man, take care, take care.
+He that wantons with God's bounties
+ Of God's wrath had best beware.
+
+'For the saucy, reckless, heartless,
+ Evil days are sure in store.
+You may see the Negro sinking
+ As the Chayma sank of yore.'
+
+Loudly laughed that stalwart hunter--
+ 'Eh, what superstitious talk!
+Nyam {337} am nyam, an' maney maney;
+ Birds am birds, like park am park;
+An' dere's twenty thousand birdskins
+ Ardered jes' now fram New Yark.'
+
+Eversley, 1870.
+
+
+
+HYMN {338}
+
+
+
+Accept this building, gracious Lord,
+ No temple though it be;
+We raised it for our suffering kin,
+ And so, Good Lord, for Thee.
+
+Accept our little gift, and give
+ To all who here may dwell,
+The will and power to do their work,
+ Or bear their sorrows well.
+
+From Thee all skill and science flow;
+ All pity, care, and love,
+All calm and courage, faith and hope,
+ Oh! pour them from above.
+
+And part them, Lord, to each and all,
+ As each and all shall need,
+To rise like incense, each to Thee,
+ In noble thought and deed.
+
+And hasten, Lord, that perfect day,
+ When pain and death shall cease;
+And Thy just rule shall fill the earth
+ With health, and light, and peace.
+
+When ever blue the sky shall gleam,
+ And ever green the sod;
+And man's rude work deface no more
+ The Paradise of God.
+
+Eversley, 1870.
+
+
+
+THE DELECTABLE DAY
+
+
+
+The boy on the famous gray pony,
+ Just bidding good-bye at the door,
+Plucking up maiden heart for the fences
+ Where his brother won honour of yore.
+
+The walk to 'the Meet' with fair children,
+ And women as gentle as gay,--
+Ah! how do we male hogs in armour
+ Deserve such companions as they?
+
+The afternoon's wander to windward,
+ To meet the dear boy coming back;
+And to catch, down the turns of the valley,
+ The last weary chime of the pack.
+
+The climb homeward by park and by moorland,
+ And through the fir forests again,
+While the south-west wind roars in the gloaming,
+ Like an ocean of seething champagne.
+
+And at night the septette of Beethoven,
+ And the grandmother by in her chair,
+And the foot of all feet on the sofa
+ Beating delicate time to the air.
+
+Ah, God! a poor soul can but thank Thee
+ For such a delectable day!
+Though the fury, the fool, and the swindler,
+ To-morrow again have their way!
+
+Eversley, 6th November 1872.
+
+
+
+JUVENTUS MUNDI
+
+
+
+List a tale a fairy sent us
+Fresh from dear Mundi Juventus.
+When Love and all the world was young,
+And birds conversed as well as sung;
+And men still faced this fair creation
+With humour, heart, imagination.
+Who come hither from Morocco
+Every spring on the sirocco?
+In russet she, and he in yellow,
+Singing ever clear and mellow,
+'Sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet you, sweet you,
+Did he beat you? Did he beat you?'
+Phyllopneustes wise folk call them,
+But don't know what did befall them,
+Why they ever thought of coming
+All that way to hear gnats humming,
+Why they built not nests but houses,
+Like the bumble-bees and mousies.
+Nor how little birds got wings,
+Nor what 'tis the small cock sings--
+How should they know--stupid fogies?
+They daren't even believe in bogies.
+Once they were a girl and boy,
+Each the other's life and joy.
+He a Daphnis, she a Chloe,
+Only they were brown, not snowy,
+Till an Arab found them playing
+Far beyond the Atlas straying,
+Tied the helpless things together,
+Drove them in the burning weather,
+In his slave-gang many a league,
+Till they dropped from wild fatigue.
+Up he caught his whip of hide,
+Lashed each soft brown back and side
+Till their little brains were burst
+With sharp pain, and heat, and thirst,
+Over her the poor boy lay,
+Tried to keep the blows away,
+Till they stiffened into clay,
+And the ruffian rode away:
+Swooping o'er the tainted ground,
+Carrion vultures gathered round,
+And the gaunt hyenas ran
+Tracking up the caravan.
+But--ah, wonder! that was gone
+Which they meant to feast upon.
+And, for each, a yellow wren,
+One a cock, and one a hen,
+Sweetly warbling, flitted forth
+O'er the desert toward the north.
+But a shade of bygone sorrow,
+Like a dream upon the morrow,
+Round his tiny brainlet clinging,
+Sets the wee cock ever singing,
+'Sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet, sweet you, sweet you,
+Did he beat you? Did he beat you?'
+Vultures croaked, and hopped, and flopped,
+But their evening meal was stopped.
+And the gaunt hyenas foul
+Sat down on their tails to howl.
+Northward towards the cool spring weather,
+Those two wrens fled on together,
+On to England o'er the sea,
+Where all folks alike are free.
+There they built a cabin, wattled
+Like the huts where first they prattled,
+Hatched and fed, as safe as may be,
+Many a tiny feathered baby.
+But in autumn south they go
+Past the Straits and Atlas' snow,
+Over desert, over mountain,
+To the palms beside the fountain,
+Where, when once they lived before, he
+Told her first the old, old story.
+'What do the doves say? Curuck Coo,
+You love me and I love you.'
+
+1872.
+
+
+
+VALENTINE'S DAY
+
+
+
+Oh! I wish I were a tiny browny bird from out the south,
+ Settled among the alder-holts, and twittering by the stream;
+I would put my tiny tail down, and put up my tiny mouth,
+ And sing my tiny life away in one melodious dream.
+
+I would sing about the blossoms, and the sunshine and the sky,
+ And the tiny wife I mean to have in such a cosy nest;
+And if some one came and shot me dead, why then I could but die,
+ With my tiny life and tiny song just ended at their best.
+
+Eversley, 1873
+
+
+
+BALLAD: LORRAINE, LORRAINE, LORREE
+
+
+
+1
+
+'Are you ready for your steeple-chase, Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree?
+ Barum, Barum, Barum, Barum, Barum, Barum, Baree,
+You're booked to ride your capping race to-day at Coulterlee,
+You're booked to ride Vindictive, for all the world to see,
+To keep him straight, to keep him first, and win the run for me.
+ Barum, Barum,' etc.
+
+2
+
+She clasped her new-born baby, poor Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree,
+'I cannot ride Vindictive, as any man might see,
+And I will not ride Vindictive, with this baby on my knee;
+He's killed a boy, he's killed a man, and why must he kill me?'
+
+3
+
+'Unless you ride Vindictive, Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree,
+Unless you ride Vindictive to-day at Coulterlee,
+And land him safe across the brook, and win the blank for me,
+It's you may keep your baby, for you'll get no keep from me.'
+
+4
+
+'That husbands could be cruel,' said Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree,
+'That husbands could be cruel, I have known for seasons three;
+But oh! to ride Vindictive while a baby cries for me,
+And be killed across a fence at last for all the world to see!'
+
+5
+
+She mastered young Vindictive--Oh! the gallant lass was she,
+And kept him straight and won the race as near as near could be;
+But he killed her at the brook against a pollard willow-tree,
+Oh! he killed her at the brook, the brute, for all the world to see,
+And no one but the baby cried for poor Lorraine, Lorree.
+
+Last poem written in illness.
+Colorado, U.S.A.
+June 1874.
+
+
+
+MARTIN LIGHTFOOT'S SONG {346}
+
+
+
+Come hearken, hearken, gentles all,
+ Come hearken unto me,
+And I'll sing you a song of a Wood-Lyon
+ Came swimming out over the sea.
+
+He ranged west, he ranged east,
+ And far and wide ranged he;
+He took his bite out of every beast
+ Lives under the greenwood tree.
+
+Then by there came a silly old wolf,
+ 'And I'll serve you,' quoth he;
+Quoth the Lyon, 'My paw is heavy enough,
+ So what wilt thou do for me?'
+
+Then by there came a cunning old fox,
+ 'And I'll serve you,' quoth he;
+Quoth the Lyon, 'My wits are sharp enough
+ So what wilt thou do for me?'
+
+Then by there came a white, white dove,
+ Flew off Our Lady's knee;
+Sang 'It's I will be your true, true love,
+ If you'll be true to me.'
+
+'And what will you do, you bonny white dove?
+ And what will you do for me?'
+'Oh, it's I'll bring you to Our Lady's love,
+ In the ways of chivalrie.'
+
+He followed the dove that Wood-Lyon
+ By mere and wood and wold,
+Till he is come to a perfect knight,
+ Like the Paladin of old.
+
+He ranged east, he ranged west,
+ And far and wide ranged he--
+And ever the dove won him honour and fame
+ In the ways of chivalrie.
+
+Then by there came a foul old sow,
+ Came rookling under the tree;
+And 'It's I will be true love to you,
+ If you'll be true to me.'
+
+'And what wilt thou do, thou foul old sow?
+ And what wilt thou do for me?'
+'Oh, there hangs in my snout a jewel of gold,
+ And that will I give to thee.'
+
+He took to the sow that Wood-Lyon;
+ To the rookling sow took he;
+And the dove flew up to Our Lady's bosom;
+ And never again throve he.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{211} This and the following poem were written at school in early boy-hood.
+
+{216} Lines supposed to be found written in an illuminated missal.
+
+{260} Found among Sandy Mackaye's papers, of a hairy oubit who would not
+mind his mother.
+
+{282} The Christian Socialist, started by the Council of Associates for
+promotion of Co-operation.
+
+{295} Bishop of Labuan, in Borneo.
+
+{303} This Ode was set to Professor Sterndale Bennet's music, and sung in
+the Senate House, Cambridge, on the Day of Installation.
+
+{306} His Royal Highness the Prince Consort, Chancellor of Cambridge
+University.
+
+{319} Impromptu lines written in the album of the Crown Princess of Germany.
+
+{325} Time of the Franco-Prussian War.
+
+{330} The Qu'est qu'il dit is a Tropical bird.
+
+{331a} This myth about the famous Pitch Lake of Trinidad was told almost
+word for word to a M. Joseph by an aged half-caste Indian who went by the
+name of Senor Trinidada. The manners and customs which the ballad described,
+and the cruel and dangerous destruction of the beautiful birds of Trinidad,
+are facts which may be easily verified by any one who will take the trouble
+to visit the West Indies.
+
+{331b} A magnificent wood of the Mauritia Fanpalm, on the south shore of the
+Pitch Lake.
+
+{331c} Humming-birds.
+
+{331d} Maximiliana palms.
+
+{332} Hut of timber and palm-leaves.
+
+{333} From the Eriodendron, or giant silk-cotton.
+
+{334} Spigelia anthelmia, a too-well-known poison-plant.
+
+{335a} Coelogenys Paca.
+
+{335b} Wild cavy.
+
+{335c} Armadillo.
+
+{335d} Peccary hog.
+
+{335e} Trigonia.
+
+{335f} Penelope.
+
+{335g} Palamedea.
+
+{335h} Dove.
+
+{335i} Mimusops.
+
+{335j} Spondias.
+
+{335k} An esculent Arum.
+
+{335l} Jatropha manihot, 'Cassava.'
+
+{335m} Vitis Caribaea.
+
+{335n} Euterpe, 'mountain cabbage' palm.
+
+{335o} Mauritia palm.
+
+{336a} Musa.
+
+{336b} Pine-apple.
+
+{337} Food.
+
+{338} Sung by 1000 School Children at the Opening of the New Wing of the
+Children's Hospital, Birmingham.
+
+{346} Supposed to be sung at Crowland Minster to Leofric, the Wake's Mass
+Priest, when news was received of Hereward's second marriage to Alftruda.
+
+
+
+
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