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+<title>Robert F. Murray</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Robert F. Murray, by Robert F. Murray</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Robert F. Murray, by Robert F. Murray, Edited
+by Andrew Lang
+
+
+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: Robert F. Murray
+ his poems with a memoir by Andrew Lang
+
+
+Author: Robert F. Murray
+
+Editor: Andrew Lang
+
+Release Date: July 4, 2007 [eBook #1333]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBERT F. MURRAY***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1894 Longmans, Green, and Co. edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>ROBERT F. MURRAY<br />
+(<span class="smcap">author of the scarlet gown</span>)<br />
+HIS POEMS: WITH MEMOIR</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+ANDREW LANG</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">london</span><br />
+LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.<br />
+<span class="smcap">new york</span>: <span class="smcap">15 east
+16th street</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">1894</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">Edinburgh: <span class="smcap">T.
+and A. Constable</span>, Printers to Her Majesty</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the
+volume</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">is dedicated to</span><br />
+J. M. D. MEIKLEJOHN, ESQ.<br />
+<span class="smcap">most indulgent of masters</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">and kindest of</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">friends</span></p>
+<h2>R. F. MURRAY&mdash;1863-1893</h2>
+<p>Much is written about success and failure in the career of
+literature, about the reasons which enable one man to reach the
+front, and another to earn his livelihood, while a third, in
+appearance as likely as either of them, fails and, perhaps,
+faints by the way.&nbsp; Mr. R. F. Murray, the author of <i>The
+Scarlet Gown</i>, was among those who do not attain success, in
+spite of qualities which seem destined to ensure it, and who fall
+out of the ranks.&nbsp; To him, indeed, success and the rewards
+of this world, money, and praise, did by no means seem things to
+be snatched at.&nbsp; To him success meant earning by his pen the
+very modest sum which sufficed for his wants, and the leisure
+necessary for serious essays in poetry.&nbsp; Fate denied him
+even this, in spite of his charming natural endowment of humour,
+of tenderness, of delight in good letters, and in nature.&nbsp;
+He died young; he was one of those whose talent matures slowly,
+and he died before he came into the full possession of his
+intellectual kingdom.&nbsp; He had the ambition to excel,
+&alpha;&#943;&epsilon;&nu;
+&alpha;&rho;&iota;&sigma;&tau;&epsilon;&upsilon;&epsilon;&iota;&nu;,
+as the Homeric motto of his University runs, and he was on the
+way to excellence when his health broke down.&nbsp; He lingered
+for two years and passed away.</p>
+<p>It is a familiar story, the story of lettered youth; of an
+ambition, or rather of an ideal; of poverty; of struggles in the
+&lsquo;dusty and stony ways&rsquo;; of intellectual task-work; of
+a true love consoling the last months of weakness and pain.&nbsp;
+The tale is not repeated here because it is novel, nor even
+because in its hero we have to regret an &lsquo;inheritor of
+unfulfilled renown.&rsquo;&nbsp; It is not the genius so much as
+the character of this St. Andrews student which has won the
+sympathy of his biographer, and may win, he hopes, the sympathy
+of others.&nbsp; In Mr. Murray I feel that I have lost that rare
+thing, a friend; a friend whom the chances of life threw in my
+way, and withdrew again ere we had time and opportunity for
+perfect recognition.&nbsp; Those who read his Letters and Remains
+may also feel this emotion of sympathy and regret.</p>
+<p>He was young in years, and younger in heart, a lover of youth;
+and youth, if it could learn and could be warned, might win a
+lesson from his life.&nbsp; Many of us have trod in his path,
+and, by some kindness of fate, have found from it a sunnier exit
+into longer days and more fortunate conditions.&nbsp; Others have
+followed this well-beaten road to the same early and quiet end as
+his.</p>
+<p>The life and the letters of Murray remind one strongly of
+Thomas Davidson&rsquo;s, as published in that admirable and
+touching biography, <i>A Scottish Probationer</i>.&nbsp; It was
+my own chance to be almost in touch with both these gentle,
+tuneful, and kindly humorists.&nbsp; Davidson was a Borderer,
+born on the skirts of &lsquo;stormy Ruberslaw,&rsquo; in the
+country of James Thomson, of Leyden, of the old Ballad
+minstrels.&nbsp; The son of a Scottish peasant line of the old
+sort, honourable, refined, devout, he was educated in Edinburgh
+for the ministry of the United Presbyterian Church.&nbsp; Some
+beautiful verses of his appeared in the <i>St. Andrews University
+Magazine</i> about 1863, at the time when I first &lsquo;saw
+myself in print&rsquo; in the same periodical.&nbsp;
+Davidson&rsquo;s poem delighted me: another of his,
+&lsquo;Ariadne in Naxos,&rsquo; appeared in the <i>Cornhill
+Magazine</i> about the same time.&nbsp; Mr. Thackeray, who was
+then editor, no doubt remembered Pen&rsquo;s prize poem on the
+same subject.&nbsp; I did not succeed in learning anything about
+the author, did not know that he lived within a drive of my own
+home.&nbsp; When next I heard of him, it was in his
+biography.&nbsp; As a &lsquo;Probationer,&rsquo; or unplaced
+minister, he, somehow, was not successful.&nbsp; A humorist, a
+poet, a delightful companion, he never became &lsquo;a placed
+minister.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was the old story of an imprudence, a
+journey made in damp clothes, of consumption, of the end of his
+earthly life and love.&nbsp; His letters to his betrothed, his
+poems, his career, constantly remind one of Murray&rsquo;s, who
+must often have joined in singing Davidson&rsquo;s song, so
+popular with St. Andrews students, <i>The Banks of the
+Yang-tse-kiang</i>.&nbsp; Love of the Border, love of
+Murray&rsquo;s &lsquo;dear St. Andrews Bay,&rsquo; love of
+letters, make one akin to both of these friends who were lost
+before their friendship was won.&nbsp; Why did not Murray succeed
+to the measure of his most modest desire?&nbsp; If we examine the
+records of literary success, we find it won, in the highest
+fields, by what, for want of a better word, we call genius; in
+the lower paths, by an energy which can take pleasure in all and
+every exercise of pen and ink, and can communicate its pleasure
+to others.&nbsp; Now for Murray one does not venture, in face of
+his still not wholly developed talent, and of his checked career,
+to claim genius.&nbsp; He was not a Keats, a Burns, a Shelley: he
+was not, if one may choose modern examples, a Kipling or a
+Stevenson.&nbsp; On the other hand, his was a high ideal; he
+believed, with Andr&eacute; Ch&eacute;nier, that he had
+&lsquo;something there,&rsquo; something worthy of reverence and
+of careful training within him.&nbsp; Consequently, as we shall
+see, the drudgery of the pressman was excessively repulsive to
+him.&nbsp; He could take no delight in making the best of
+it.&nbsp; We learn that Mr. Kipling&rsquo;s early tales were
+written as part of hard daily journalistic work in India; written
+in torrid newspaper offices, to fill columns.&nbsp; Yet they were
+written with the delight of the artist, and are masterpieces in
+their <i>genre</i>.&nbsp; Murray could not make the best of
+ordinary pen-work in this manner.&nbsp; Again, he was incapable
+of &lsquo;transactions,&rsquo; of compromises; most honourably
+incapable of earning his bread by agreeing, or seeming to agree
+with opinions which were not his.&nbsp; He could not endure (here
+I think he was wrong) to have his pieces of light and mirthful
+verse touched in any way by an editor.&nbsp; Even where no
+opinions were concerned, even where an editor has (to my mind) a
+perfect right to alter anonymous contributions, Murray declined
+to be edited.&nbsp; I ventured to remonstrate with him, to say
+<i>non est tanti</i>, but I spoke too late, or spoke in
+vain.&nbsp; He carried independence too far, or carried it into
+the wrong field, for a piece of humorous verse, say in
+<i>Punch</i>, is not an original masterpiece and immaculate work
+of art, but more or less of a joint-stock product between the
+editor, the author, and the public.&nbsp; Macaulay, and Carlyle,
+and Sir Walter Scott suffered editors gladly or with
+indifference, and who are we that we should complain?&nbsp; This
+extreme sensitiveness would always have stood in Murray&rsquo;s
+way.</p>
+<p>Once more, Murray&rsquo;s interest in letters was much more
+energetic than his zeal in the ordinary industry of a
+student.&nbsp; As a general rule, men of original literary bent
+are not exemplary students at college.&nbsp; &lsquo;The common
+curricoolum,&rsquo; as the Scottish laird called academic studies
+generally, rather repels them.&nbsp; Macaulay took no honours at
+Cambridge; mathematics defied him.&nbsp; Scott was &lsquo;the
+Greek dunce,&rsquo; at Edinburgh.&nbsp; Thackeray, Shelley,
+Gibbon, did not cover themselves with college laurels; they read
+what pleased them, they did not read &lsquo;for the
+schools.&rsquo;&nbsp; In short, this behaviour at college is the
+rule among men who are to be distinguished in literature, not the
+exception.&nbsp; The honours attained at Oxford by Mr. Swinburne,
+whose Greek verses are no less poetical than his English poetry,
+were inconspicuous.&nbsp; At St. Andrews, Murray read only
+&lsquo;for human pleasure,&rsquo; like Scott, Thackeray, Shelley,
+and the rest, at Edinburgh, Oxford, and Cambridge.&nbsp; In this
+matter, I think, he made an error, and one which affected his
+whole career.&nbsp; He was not a man of private fortune, like
+some of those whom we have mentioned.&nbsp; He had not a business
+ready for him to step into.&nbsp; He had to force his own way in
+life, had to make himself &lsquo;self-supporting.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This was all the more essential to a man of his honourable
+independence of character, a man who not only would not ask a
+favour, but who actually shrunk back from such chances as were
+offered to him, if these chances seemed to be connected with the
+least discernible shadow of an obligation.&nbsp; At St. Andrews,
+had he chosen to work hard in certain branches of study, he might
+probably have gained an exhibition, gone to Oxford or elsewhere,
+and, by winning a fellowship, secured the leisure which was
+necessary for the development of his powers.&nbsp; I confess to
+believing in strenuous work at the classics, as offering, apart
+from all material reward, the best and most solid basis,
+especially where there is no exuberant original genius, for the
+career of a man of letters.&nbsp; The mental discipline is
+invaluable, the training in accuracy is invaluable, and
+invaluable is the life led in the society of the greatest minds,
+the noblest poets, the most faultless artists of the world.&nbsp;
+To descend to ordinary truths, scholarship is, at lowest, an
+honourable <i>gagne-pain</i>.&nbsp; But Murray, like the majority
+of students endowed with literary originality, did not share
+these rather old-fashioned ideas.&nbsp; The clever Scottish
+student is apt to work only too hard, and, perhaps, is frequently
+in danger of exhausting his powers before they are mature, and of
+injuring his health before it is confirmed.&nbsp; His ambitions,
+to lookers-on, may seem narrow and school-boyish, as if he were
+merely emulous, and eager for a high place in his
+&lsquo;class,&rsquo; as lectures are called in Scotland.&nbsp;
+This was Murray&rsquo;s own view, and he certainly avoided the
+dangers of academic over-work.&nbsp; He read abundantly, but, as
+Fitzgerald says, he read &lsquo;for human pleasure.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He never was a Greek scholar, he disliked Philosophy, as
+presented to him in class-work; the gods had made him poetical,
+not metaphysical.</p>
+<p>There was one other cause of his lack of even such slender
+commercial success in letters as was really necessary to a man
+who liked &lsquo;plain living and high thinking.&rsquo;&nbsp; He
+fell early in love with a city, with a place&mdash;he lost his
+heart to St. Andrews.&nbsp; Here, at all events, his critic can
+sympathise with him.&nbsp; His &lsquo;dear St. Andrews
+Bay,&rsquo; beautiful alike in winter mists and in the crystal
+days of still winter sunshine; the quiet brown streets brightened
+by the scarlet gowns; the long limitless sands; the dark blue
+distant hills, and far-off snowy peaks of the Grampians; the
+majestic melancholy towers, monuments of old religion overthrown;
+the deep dusky porch of the college chapel, with Kennedy&rsquo;s
+arms in wrought iron on the oaken door; the solid houses with
+their crow steps and gables, all the forlorn memories of civil
+and religious feud, of inhabitants saintly, royal, heroic,
+endeared St. Andrews to Murray.&nbsp; He could not say, like our
+other poet to Oxford, &lsquo;Farewell, dear city of youth and
+dream!&rsquo;&nbsp; His whole nature needed the air, &lsquo;like
+wine.&rsquo;&nbsp; He found, as he remarks, &lsquo;health and
+happiness in the German Ocean,&rsquo; swimming out beyond the
+&lsquo;lake&rsquo; where the witches were dipped; walking to the
+grey little coast-towns, with their wealth of historic documents,
+their ancient kirks and graves; dreaming in the vernal woods of
+Mount Melville or Strathtyrum; rambling (without a fishing-rod)
+in the charmed &lsquo;dens&rsquo; of the Kenley burn, a place
+like Tempe in miniature: these things were Murray&rsquo;s usual
+enjoyments, and they became his indispensable needs.&nbsp; His
+peculiarly shy and, as it were, silvan nature, made it physically
+impossible for him to live in crowded streets and push his way
+through throngs of indifferent men.&nbsp; He could not live even
+in Edinburgh; he made the effort, and his health, at no time
+strong, seems never to have recovered from the effects of a few
+months spent under a roof in a large town.&nbsp; He hurried back
+to St. Andrews: her fascination was too powerful.&nbsp; Hence it
+is that, dying with his work scarcely begun, he will always be
+best remembered as the poet of <i>The Scarlet Gown</i>, the
+Calverley or J. K. S. of Kilrymont; endowed with their humour,
+their skill in parody, their love of youth, but (if I am not
+prejudiced) with more than the tenderness and natural magic of
+these regretted writers.&nbsp; Not to be able to endure crowds
+and towns, (a matter of physical health and constitution, as well
+as of temperament) was, of course, fatal to an ordinary success
+in journalism.&nbsp; On the other hand, Murray&rsquo;s name is
+inseparably connected with the life of youth in the little old
+college, in the University of the Admirable Crichton and
+Claverhouse, of the great Montrose and of Ferguson,&mdash;the
+harmless Villon of Scotland,&mdash;the University of almost all
+the famous Covenanters, and of all the valiant
+poet-Cavaliers.&nbsp; Murray has sung of the life and pleasures
+of its students, of examinations and
+<i>Gaudeamuses</i>&mdash;supper parties&mdash;he has sung of the
+sands, the links, the sea, the towers, and his name and fame are
+for ever blended with the air of his city of youth and
+dream.&nbsp; It is not a wide name or a great fame, but it is
+what he would have desired, and we trust that it may be
+long-lived and enduring.&nbsp; We are not to wax elegiac, and
+adopt a tearful tone over one so gallant and so
+uncomplaining.&nbsp; He failed, but he was undefeated.</p>
+<p>In the following sketch of Murray&rsquo;s life and work use is
+made of his letters, chiefly of letters to his mother.&nbsp; They
+always illustrate his own ideas and attempts; frequently they
+throw the light of an impartial and critical mind on the
+distinguished people whom Murray observed from without.&nbsp; It
+is worth remarking that among many remarks on persons, I have
+found not one of a censorious, cynical, envious, or unfriendly
+nature.&nbsp; Youth is often captious and keenly critical; partly
+because youth generally has an ideal, partly, perhaps chiefly,
+from mere intellectual high spirits and sense of the incongruous;
+occasionally the motive is jealousy or spite.&nbsp;
+Murray&rsquo;s sense of fun was keen, his ideal was lofty; of
+envy, of an injured sense of being neglected, he does not show
+one trace.&nbsp; To make fun of their masters and pastors,
+tutors, professors, is the general and not necessarily unkind
+tendency of pupils.&nbsp; Murray rarely mentions any of the
+professors in St. Andrews except in terms of praise, which is
+often enthusiastic.&nbsp; Now, as he was by no means a prize
+student, or pattern young man for a story-book, this generosity
+is a high proof of an admirable nature.&nbsp; If he chances to
+speak to his mother about a bore, and he did not suffer bores
+gladly, he not only does not name the person, but gives no hint
+by which he might be identified.&nbsp; He had much to embitter
+him, for he had a keen consciousness of &lsquo;the something
+within him,&rsquo; of the powers which never found full
+expression; and he saw others advancing and prospering while he
+seemed to be standing still, or losing ground in all ways.&nbsp;
+But no word of bitterness ever escapes him in the correspondence
+which I have seen.&nbsp; In one case he has to speak of a
+disagreeable and disappointing interview with a man from whom he
+had been led to expect sympathy and encouragement.&nbsp; He told
+me about this affair in conversation; &lsquo;There were tears in
+my eyes as I turned from the house,&rsquo; he said, and he was
+not effusive.&nbsp; In a letter to Mrs. Murray he describes this
+unlucky interview,&mdash;a discouragement caused by a manner
+which was strange to Murray, rather than by real
+unkindness,&mdash;and he describes it with a delicacy, with a
+reserve, with a toleration, beyond all praise.&nbsp; These are
+traits of a character which was greater and more rare than his
+literary talent: a character quite developed, while his talent
+was only beginning to unfold itself, and to justify his belief in
+his powers.</p>
+<p>Robert Murray was the eldest child of John and Emmeline
+Murray: the father a Scot, the mother of American birth.&nbsp; He
+was born at Roxbury, in Massachusetts, on December 26th,
+1863.&nbsp; It may be fancy, but, in his shy reserve, his almost
+<i>farouche</i> independence, one seems to recognise the Scot;
+while in his cast of literary talent, in his natural
+&lsquo;culture,&rsquo; we observe the son of a refined American
+lady.&nbsp; To his mother he could always write about the books
+which were interesting him, with full reliance on her sympathy,
+though indeed, he does not often say very much about
+literature.</p>
+<p>Till 1869 he lived in various parts of New England, his father
+being a Unitarian minister.&nbsp; &lsquo;He was a remarkably
+cheerful and affectionate child, and seldom seemed to find
+anything to trouble him.&rsquo;&nbsp; In 1869 his father carried
+him to England, Mrs. Murray and a child remaining in
+America.&nbsp; For more than a year the boy lived with kinsfolk
+near Kelso, the beautiful old town on the Tweed where Scott
+passed some of his childish days.&nbsp; In 1871 the family were
+reunited at York, where he was fond of attending the services in
+the Cathedral.&nbsp; Mr. Murray then took charge of the small
+Unitarian chapel of Blackfriars, at Canterbury.&nbsp; Thus
+Murray&rsquo;s early youth was passed in the mingled influences
+of Unitarianism at home, and of Cathedral services at York, and
+in the church where Becket suffered martyrdom.&nbsp; A not
+unnatural result was a somewhat eclectic and unconstrained
+religion.&nbsp; He thought but little of the differences of
+creed, believing that all good men held, in essentials, much the
+same faith.&nbsp; His view of essentials was generous, as he
+admitted.&nbsp; He occasionally spoke of himself as
+&lsquo;sceptical,&rsquo; that is, in contrast with those whose
+faith was more definite, more dogmatic, more securely based on
+&lsquo;articles.&rsquo;&nbsp; To illustrate Murray&rsquo;s
+religious attitude, at least as it was in 1887, one may quote
+from a letter of that year (April 17).</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;There was a University sermon, and I
+thought I would go and hear it.&nbsp; So I donned my old cap and
+gown and felt quite proud of them.&nbsp; The preacher was Bishop
+Wordsworth.&nbsp; He goes in for the union of the Presbyterian
+and Episcopalian Churches, and is glad to preach in a
+Presbyterian Church, as he did this morning.&nbsp; How the
+aforesaid Union is to be brought about, I&rsquo;m sure I
+don&rsquo;t know, for I am pretty certain that the Episcopalians
+won&rsquo;t give up their bishops, and the Presbyterians
+won&rsquo;t have them on any account.&nbsp; However, that&rsquo;s
+neither here nor there&mdash;at least it does not affect the fact
+that Wordsworth is a first-rate man, and a fine preacher.&nbsp; I
+dare say you know he is a nephew or grand-nephew of the
+Poet.&nbsp; He is a most venerable old man, and worth looking at,
+merely for his exterior.&nbsp; He is so feeble with age that he
+can with difficulty climb the three short steps that lead into
+the pulpit; but, once in the pulpit, it is another thing.&nbsp;
+There is no feebleness when he begins to preach.&nbsp; He is one
+of the last voices of the old orthodox school, and I wish there
+were hundreds like him.&nbsp; If ever a man believed in his
+message, Wordsworth does.&nbsp; And though I cannot follow him in
+his veneration for the Thirty-nine Articles, the way in which he
+does makes me half wish I could. . . . It was full of wisdom and
+the beauty of holiness, which even I, poor sceptic and outcast,
+could recognise and appreciate.&nbsp; After all, he didn&rsquo;t
+get it from the Articles, but from his own human heart, which, he
+told us, was deceitful and desperately wicked.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Confound it, how stupid we all are!&nbsp;
+Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Unitarians, Agnostics; the whole
+lot of us.&nbsp; We all believe the same things, to a great
+extent; but we must keep wrangling about the data from which we
+infer these beliefs . . . I believe a great deal that he does,
+but I certainly don&rsquo;t act up to my belief as he does to
+his.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The belief &lsquo;up to&rsquo; which Murray lived was, if it
+may be judged by its fruits, that of a Christian man.&nbsp; But,
+in this age, we do find the most exemplary Christian conduct in
+some who have discarded dogma and resigned hope.&nbsp; Probably
+Murray would not the less have regarded these persons as
+Christians.&nbsp; If we must make a choice, it is better to have
+love and charity without belief, than belief of the most intense
+kind, accompanied by such love and charity as John Knox bore to
+all who differed from him about a mass or a chasuble, a priest or
+a presbyter.&nbsp; This letter, illustrative of the effect of
+cathedral services on a young Unitarian, is taken out of its
+proper chronological place.</p>
+<p>From Canterbury Mr. Murray went to Ilminster in
+Somerset.&nbsp; Here Robert attended the Grammar School; in 1879
+he went to the Grammar School of Crewkerne.&nbsp; In 1881 he
+entered at the University of St. Andrews, with a scholarship won
+as an external student of Manchester New College.&nbsp; This he
+resigned not long after, as he had abandoned the idea of becoming
+a Unitarian minister.</p>
+<p>No longer a schoolboy, he was now a <i>Bejant</i> (<i>bec
+jaune</i>?), to use the old Scotch term for
+&lsquo;freshman.&rsquo;&nbsp; He liked the picturesque word, and
+opposed the introduction of &lsquo;freshman.&rsquo;&nbsp; Indeed
+he liked all things old, and, as a senior man, was a supporter of
+ancient customs and of <i>esprit de corps</i> in college.&nbsp;
+He fell in love for life with that old and grey enchantress, the
+city of St. Margaret, of Cardinal Beaton, of Knox and Andrew
+Melville, of Archbishop Sharp, and Samuel Rutherford.&nbsp; The
+nature of life and education in a Scottish university is now,
+probably, better understood in England than it used to be.&nbsp;
+Of the Scottish universities, St. Andrews varies least, though it
+varies much, from Oxford and Cambridge.&nbsp; Unlike the others,
+Aberdeen, Glasgow, and Edinburgh, the United College of St.
+Leonard and St. Salvator is not lost in a large town.&nbsp; The
+College and the Divinity Hall of St. Mary&rsquo;s are a survival
+from the Middle Ages.&nbsp; The University itself arose from a
+voluntary association of the learned in 1410.&nbsp; Privileges
+were conferred on this association by Bishop Wardlaw in
+1411.&nbsp; It was intended as a bulwark against Lollard
+ideas.&nbsp; In 1413 the Antipope Benedict XIII., to whom
+Scotland then adhered, granted six bulls of confirmation to the
+new University.&nbsp; Not till 1430 did Bishop Wardlaw give a
+building in South Street, the P&aelig;dagogium.&nbsp; St.
+Salvator&rsquo;s College was founded by Bishop Kennedy
+(1440-1466): it was confirmed by Pius II. in 1458.&nbsp; Kennedy
+endowed his foundation richly with plate (a silver mace is still
+extant) and with gorgeous furniture and cloth of gold.&nbsp; St.
+Leonard&rsquo;s was founded by Prior Hepburn in 1512.&nbsp; Of
+St. Salvator&rsquo;s the ancient chapel still remains, and is in
+use.&nbsp; St. Leonard&rsquo;s was merged with St.
+Salvator&rsquo;s in the last century: its chapel is now roofless,
+some of the old buildings remain, much modernised, but on the
+south side fronting the gardens they are still picturesque.&nbsp;
+Both Colleges were, originally, places of residence for the
+students, as at Oxford and Cambridge, and the discipline,
+especially at St. Leonard&rsquo;s, was rather monastic.&nbsp; The
+Reformation caused violent changes; all through these troubled
+ages the new doctrines, and then the violent Presbyterian
+pretensions to clerical influence in politics, and the Covenant
+and the Restoration and Revolution, kept busy the dwellers in
+what should have been &lsquo;quiet collegiate
+cloisters.&rsquo;&nbsp; St. Leonard&rsquo;s was more extreme, on
+Knox&rsquo;s side, than St. Salvator&rsquo;s, but was also more
+devoted to King James in 1715.&nbsp; From St. Andrews Simon Lovat
+went to lead his abominable old father&rsquo;s clan, on the
+Prince Regent&rsquo;s side, in 1745.&nbsp; Golf and archery,
+since the Reformation at least, were the chief recreations of the
+students, and the archery medals bear all the noblest names of
+the North, including those of Argyll and the great Marquis of
+Montrose.&nbsp; Early in the present century the old ruinous
+college buildings of St. Salvator&rsquo;s ceased to be habitable,
+except by a ghost!&nbsp; There is another spectre of a noisy sort
+in St. Leonard&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The new buildings are mere sets of
+class-rooms, the students live where they please, generally in
+lodgings, which they modestly call <i>bunks</i>.&nbsp; There is a
+hall for dinners in common; it is part of the buildings of the
+Union, a new hall added to an ancient house.</p>
+<p>It was thus to a university with ancient associations, with a
+<i>religio loci</i>, and with more united and harmonious
+student-life than is customary in Scotland, that Murray came in
+1881.&nbsp; How clearly his biographer remembers coming to the
+same place, twenty years earlier! how vivid is his memory of
+quaint streets, grey towers, and the North Sea breaking in heavy
+rollers on the little pier!</p>
+<p>Though, like a descendant of Archbishop Sharp, and a winner of
+the archery medal, I boast myself <i>Sancti Leonardi alumnus
+addictissimus</i>, I am unable to give a description, at first
+hand, of student life in St. Andrews.&nbsp; In my time, a small
+set of &lsquo;men&rsquo; lived together in what was then St.
+Leonard&rsquo;s Hall.&nbsp; The buildings that remain on the site
+of Prior Hepburn&rsquo;s foundation, or some of them, were turned
+into a hall, where we lived together, not scattered in
+<i>bunks</i>.&nbsp; The existence was mainly like that of pupils
+of a private tutor; seven-eighths of private tutor to one-eighth
+of a college in the English universities.&nbsp; We attended the
+lectures in the University, we distinguished ourselves no more
+than Murray would have approved of, and many of us have remained
+united by friendship through half a lifetime.</p>
+<p>It was a pleasant existence, and the perfume of buds and
+flowers in the old gardens, hard by those where John Knox sat and
+talked with James Melville and our other predecessors at St.
+Leonard&rsquo;s, is fragrant in our memories.&nbsp; It was
+pleasant, but St. Leonard&rsquo;s Hall has ceased to be, and the
+life there was not the life of the free and hardy
+bunk-dwellers.&nbsp; Whoso pined for such dissipated pleasures as
+the chill and dark streets of St. Andrews offer to the gay and
+rousing blade, was not encouraged.&nbsp; We were very strictly
+&lsquo;gated,&rsquo; though the whole society once got out of
+window, and, by way of protest, made a moonlight march into the
+country.&nbsp; We attended &lsquo;gaudeamuses&rsquo; and
+<i>solatia</i>&mdash;University suppers&mdash;but little; indeed,
+he who writes does not remember any such diversions of boys who
+beat the floor, and break the glass.&nbsp; To plant the standard
+of cricket in the remoter gardens of our country, in a region
+devastated by golf, was our ambition, and here we had no
+assistance at all from the University.&nbsp; It was chiefly at
+lecture, at football on the links, and in the debating societies
+that we met our fellow-students; like the celebrated starling,
+&lsquo;we could not get out,&rsquo; except to permitted dinners
+and evening parties.&nbsp; Consequently one could only sketch
+student life with a hand faltering and untrained.&nbsp; It was
+very different with Murray and his friends.&nbsp; They were their
+own masters, could sit up to all hours, smoking, talking, and, I
+dare say, drinking.&nbsp; As I gather from his letters, Murray
+drank nothing stronger than water.&nbsp; There was a certain kind
+of humour in drink, he said, but he thought it was chiefly
+obvious to the sober spectator.&nbsp; As the sober spectator, he
+sang of violent delights which have violent ends.&nbsp; He may
+best be left to illustrate student life for himself.&nbsp; The
+&lsquo;waster&rsquo; of whom he chants is the slang name borne by
+the local fast man.</p>
+<h3>THE WASTER SINGING AT MIDNIGHT.<br />
+AFTER LONGFELLOW.</h3>
+<blockquote><p>Loud he sang the song Ta Phershon<br />
+For his personal diversion,<br />
+Sang the chorus U-pi-dee,<br />
+Sang about the Barley Bree.</p>
+<p>In that hour when all is quiet<br />
+Sang he songs of noise and riot,<br />
+In a voice so loud and queer<br />
+That I wakened up to hear.</p>
+<p>Songs that distantly resembled<br />
+Those one hears from men assembled<br />
+In the old Cross Keys Hotel,<br />
+Only sung not half so well.</p>
+<p>For the time of this ecstatic<br />
+Amateur was most erratic,<br />
+And he only hit the key<br />
+Once in every melody.</p>
+<p>If &ldquo;he wot prigs wot isn&rsquo;t his&rsquo;n<br />
+Ven he&rsquo;s cotched is sent to prison,&rdquo;<br />
+He who murders sleep might well<br />
+Adorn a solitary cell.</p>
+<p>But, if no obliging peeler<br />
+Will arrest this midnight squealer,<br />
+My own peculiar arm of might<br />
+Must undertake the job to-night.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following fragment is but doubtfully
+autobiographical.&nbsp; &lsquo;The swift four-wheeler&rsquo;
+seldom devastates the streets where, of old, the
+Archbishop&rsquo;s jackmen sliced Presbyterian professors with
+the claymore, as James Melville tells us:&mdash;</p>
+<h3>TO NUMBER 27x.</h3>
+<blockquote><p>Beloved Peeler! friend and guide<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And guard of many a midnight reeler,<br />
+None worthier, though the world is wide,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Beloved Peeler.</p>
+<p>Thou from before the swift four-wheeler<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Didst pluck me, and didst thrust aside<br />
+A strongly built provision-dealer</p>
+<p>Who menaced me with blows, and cried<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;Come on! come on!&rsquo;&nbsp; O Paian,
+Healer,<br />
+Then but for thee I must have died,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Beloved Peeler!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The following presentiment, though he was no
+&lsquo;waster,&rsquo; may very well have been his own.&nbsp; He
+was only half Scotch, and not at all metaphysical:&mdash;</p>
+<h3>THE WASTER&rsquo;S PRESENTIMENT</h3>
+<blockquote><p>I shall be spun.&nbsp; There is a voice within<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which tells me plainly I am all undone;<br />
+For though I toil not, neither do I spin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I shall be spun.</p>
+<p>April approaches.&nbsp; I have not begun<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Schwegler or Mackintosh, nor will begin<br />
+Those lucid works till April 21.</p>
+<p>So my degree I do not hope to win,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For not by ways like mine degrees are won;<br />
+And though, to please my uncle, I go in,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I shall be spun.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Here we must quote, from <i>The Scarlet Gown</i>, one of his
+most tender pieces of affectionate praise bestowed on his
+favourite city:&mdash;</p>
+<h3>A DECEMBER DAY</h3>
+<blockquote><p>Blue, blue is the sea to-day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Warmly the light<br />
+Sleeps on St. Andrews Bay&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Blue, fringed with white.</p>
+<p>That&rsquo;s no December sky!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Surely &rsquo;tis June<br />
+Holds now her state on high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Queen of the noon.</p>
+<p>Only the tree-tops bare<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Crowning the hill,<br />
+Clear-cut in perfect air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Warn us that still</p>
+<p>Winter, the aged chief,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mighty in power,<br />
+Exiles the tender leaf,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Exiles the flower.</p>
+<p>Is there a heart to-day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A heart that grieves<br />
+For flowers that fade away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For fallen leaves?</p>
+<p>Oh, not in leaves or flowers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Endures the charm<br />
+That clothes those naked towers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With love-light warm.</p>
+<p>O dear St. Andrews Bay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Winter or Spring<br />
+Gives not nor takes away<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Memories that cling</p>
+<p>All round thy girdling reefs,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That walk thy shore,<br />
+Memories of joys and griefs<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ours evermore.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&lsquo;I have <i>not</i> worked for my classes this
+session,&rsquo; he writes (1884), &lsquo;and shall not take any
+places.&rsquo;&nbsp; The five or six most distinguished pupils
+used, at least in my time, to receive prize-books decorated with
+the University&rsquo;s arms.&nbsp; These prize-men, no doubt,
+held the &lsquo;places&rsquo; alluded to by Murray.&nbsp; If
+<i>he</i> was idle, &lsquo;I speak of him but brotherly,&rsquo;
+having never held any &lsquo;place&rsquo; but that of second to
+Mr. Wallace, now Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford, in the
+Greek Class (Mr. Sellar&rsquo;s).&nbsp; Why was one so idle, in
+Latin (Mr. Shairp), in Morals (Mr. Ferrier), in Logic (Mr.
+Veitch)? but Logic was unintelligible.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I must confess,&rsquo; remarks Murray, in a similar
+spirit of pensive regret, &lsquo;that I have not had any ambition
+to distinguish myself either in Knight&rsquo;s (Moral Philosophy)
+or in Butler&rsquo;s.&rsquo; <a name="citation1"></a><a
+href="#footnote1" class="citation">[1]</a></p>
+<p>Murray then speaks with some acrimony about earnest students,
+whose motive, he thinks, is a small ambition.&nbsp; But surely a
+man may be fond of metaphysics for the sweet sake of Queen
+Entelechy, and, moreover, these students looked forward to days
+in which real work would bear fruit.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You must grind up the opinions of Plato, Aristotle, and
+a lot of other men, concerning things about which they knew
+nothing, and we know nothing, taking these opinions at second or
+third hand, and never looking into the works of these men; for to
+a man who wants to take a place, there is no time for anything of
+that sort.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Why not?&nbsp; The philosophers ought to be read in their own
+language, as they are now read.&nbsp; The remarks on the most
+fairy of philosophers&mdash;Plato; on the greatest of all minds,
+that of Aristotle, are boyish.&nbsp; Again &lsquo;I speak but
+brotherly,&rsquo; remembering an old St. Leonard&rsquo;s essay in
+which Virgil was called &lsquo;the furtive Mantuan,&rsquo; and
+another, devoted to ridicule of Euripides.&nbsp; But Plato and
+Aristotle we never blasphemed.</p>
+<p>Murray adds that he thinks, next year, of taking the highest
+Greek Class, and English Literature.&nbsp; In the latter, under
+Mr. Baynes, he took the first place, which he mentions casually
+to Mrs. Murray about a year after date:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;A sweet life and an idle<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He lives from year to year,<br />
+Unknowing bit or bridle,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There are no Proctors here.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In Greek, despite his enthusiastic admiration of the
+professor, Mr. Campbell, he did not much enjoy
+himself:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lsquo;Thrice happy are those<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who ne&rsquo;er heard of Greek Prose&mdash;<br />
+Or Greek Poetry either, as far as that goes;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For Liddell and Scott<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall cumber them not,<br />
+Nor Sargent nor Sidgwick shall break their repose.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But I, late at night,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By the very bad light<br />
+Of very bad gas, must painfully write<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Some stuff that a Greek<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With his delicate cheek<br />
+Would smile at as &lsquo;barbarous&rsquo;&mdash;faith, he well
+might.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So away with Greek Prose,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The source of my woes!<br />
+(This metre&rsquo;s too tough, I must draw to a close.)<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; May Sargent be drowned<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the ocean profound,<br />
+And Sidgwick be food for the carrion crows!&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Greek prose is a stubborn thing, and the biographer remembers
+being told that his was &lsquo;the best, with the worst
+mistakes&rsquo;; also frequently by Mr. Sellar, that it was
+&lsquo;bald.&rsquo;&nbsp; But Greek prose is splendid practice,
+and no less good practice is Greek and Latin verse.&nbsp; These
+exercises, so much sneered at, are the Dwellers on the Threshold
+of the life of letters.&nbsp; They are haunting forms of fear,
+but they have to be wrestled with, like the Angel (to change the
+figure), till they bless you, and make words become, in your
+hands, like the clay of the modeller.&nbsp; Could we write Greek
+like Mr. Jebb, we would never write anything else.</p>
+<p>Murray had naturally, it seems, certainly not by dint of
+wrestling with Greek prose, the mastery of language.&nbsp; His
+light verse is wonderfully handled, quaint, fluent, right.&nbsp;
+Modest as he was, he was ambitious, as we said, but not ambitious
+of any gain; merely eager, in his own way, to excel.&nbsp; His
+ideal is plainly stated in the following verses:&mdash;</p>
+<h3>&Alpha;&Iota;&Epsilon;&Nu;
+&Alpha;&Rho;&Iota;&Sigma;&Tau;&Epsilon;&Upsilon;&Epsilon;&Iota;&Nu;</h3>
+<blockquote><p>Ever to be the best.&nbsp; To lead<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In whatsoever things are true;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not stand among the halting crew,<br />
+The faint of heart, the feeble-kneed,<br />
+Who tarry for a certain sign<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To make them follow with the rest&mdash;<br />
+Oh, let not their reproach be thine!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But ever be the best.</p>
+<p>For want of this aspiring soul,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Great deeds on earth remain undone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But, sharpened by the sight of one,<br />
+Many shall press toward the goal.<br />
+Thou running foremost of the throng,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The fire of striving in thy breast,<br />
+Shalt win, although the race be long,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ever be the best.</p>
+<p>And wilt thou question of the prize?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis not of silver or of gold,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor in applauses manifold,<br />
+But hidden in the heart it lies:<br />
+To know that but for thee not one<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Had run the race or sought the quest,<br />
+To know that thou hast ever done<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ever been the best.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Murray was never a great athlete: his ambition did not lead
+him to desire a place in the Scottish Fifteen at Football.&nbsp;
+Probably he was more likely to be found matched against
+&lsquo;The Man from Inversnaid.&rsquo;</p>
+<h3>IMITATED FROM WORDSWORTH</h3>
+<blockquote><p>He brought a team from Inversnaid<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To play our Third Fifteen,<br />
+A man whom none of us had played<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And very few had seen.</p>
+<p>He weighed not less than eighteen stone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And to a practised eye<br />
+He seemed as little fit to run<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As he was fit to fly.</p>
+<p>He looked so clumsy and so slow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And made so little fuss;<br />
+But he got in behind&mdash;and oh,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The difference to us!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He was never a golfer; one of his best light pieces, published
+later in the <i>Saturday Review</i>, dealt in kindly ridicule of
+<i>The City of Golf</i>.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Would you like to see a city given over,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Soul and body, to a tyrannising game?<br />
+If you would, there&rsquo;s little need to be a rover,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For St. Andrews is the abject city&rsquo;s
+name.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He was fond, too fond, of long midnight walks, for in these he
+overtasked his strength, and he had all a young man&rsquo;s
+contempt for maxims about not sitting in wet clothes and wet
+boots.&nbsp; Early in his letters he speaks of bad colds, and it
+is matter of tradition that he despised flannel.&nbsp; Most of us
+have been like him, and have found pleasure in wading Tweed, for
+example, when chill with snaw-bree.&nbsp; In brief, while reading
+about Murray&rsquo;s youth most men must feel that they are
+reading, with slight differences, about their own.&nbsp; He
+writes thus of his long darkling tramps, in a rhymed epistle to
+his friend C. C. C.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;And I fear we never again shall go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The cold and weariness scorning,<br />
+For a ten mile walk through the frozen snow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At one o&rsquo;clock in the morning:</p>
+<p>Out by Cameron, in by the Grange,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And to bed as the moon descended . . .<br />
+To you and to me there has come a change,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the days of our youth are ended.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>One fancies him roaming solitary, after midnight, in the dark
+deserted streets.&nbsp; He passes the deep porch of the College
+Church, and the spot where Patrick Hamilton was burned.&nbsp; He
+goes down to the Castle by the sea, where, some say, the murdered
+Cardinal may now and again be seen, in his red hat.&nbsp; In
+South Street he hears the roll and rattle of the viewless
+carriage which sounds in that thoroughfare.&nbsp; He loiters
+under the haunted tower on Hepburn&rsquo;s precinct wall, the
+tower where the lady of the bright locks lies, with white gloves
+on her hands.&nbsp; Might he not share, in the desolate
+Cathedral, <i>La Messe des Morts</i>, when all the lost souls of
+true lovers are allowed to meet once a year.&nbsp; Here be they
+who were too fond when Culdees ruled, or who loved young monks of
+the Priory; here be ladies of Queen Mary&rsquo;s Court, and the
+fair inscrutable Queen herself, with Chastelard, that died at St.
+Andrews for desire of her; and poor lassies and lads who were
+over gay for Andrew Melville and Mr. Blair; and Miss Pett, who
+tended young Montrose, and may have had a tenderness for his
+love-locks.&nbsp; They are <i>a triste</i> good company, tender
+and true, as the lovers of whom M. Anatole France has written
+(<i>La Messe des Morts</i>).&nbsp; Above the witches&rsquo; lake
+come shadows of the women who suffered under Knox and the Bastard
+of Scotland, poor creatures burned to ashes with none to help or
+pity.&nbsp; The shades of Dominicans flit by the Black Friars
+wall&mdash;verily the place is haunted, and among Murray&rsquo;s
+pleasures was this of pacing alone, by night, in that airy press
+and throng of those who lived and loved and suffered so long
+ago&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;The mist hangs round the College tower,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The ghostly street<br />
+Is silent at this midnight hour,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Save for my feet.</p>
+<p>With none to see, with none to hear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Downward I go<br />
+To where, beside the rugged pier,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sea sings low.</p>
+<p>It sings a tune well loved and known<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In days gone by,<br />
+When often here, and not alone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I watched the sky.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But he was not always, nor often, lonely.&nbsp; He was fond of
+making his speech at the Debating Societies, and his speeches are
+remembered as good.&nbsp; If he declined the whisky and water, he
+did not flee the weed.&nbsp; I borrow from <i>College
+Echoes</i>&mdash;</p>
+<h3>A TENNYSONIAN FRAGMENT</h3>
+<blockquote><p>So in the village inn the poet dwelt.<br />
+His honey-dew was gone; only the pouch,<br />
+His cousin&rsquo;s work, her empty labour, left.<br />
+But still he sniffed it, still a fragrance clung<br />
+And lingered all about the broidered flowers.<br />
+Then came his landlord, saying in broad Scotch,<br />
+&lsquo;Smoke plug, mon,&rsquo; whom he looked at doubtfully.<br
+/>
+Then came the grocer saying, &lsquo;Hae some twist<br />
+At tippence,&rsquo; whom he answered with a qualm.<br />
+But when they left him to himself again,<br />
+Twist, like a fiend&rsquo;s breath from a distant room<br />
+Diffusing through the passage, crept; the smell<br />
+Deepening had power upon him, and he mixt<br />
+His fancies with the billow-lifted bay<br />
+Of Biscay, and the rollings of a ship.</p>
+<p>And on that night he made a little song,<br />
+And called his song &lsquo;The Song of Twist and Plug,&rsquo;<br
+/>
+And sang it; scarcely could he make or sing.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Rank is black plug, though smoked in wind and rain;<br
+/>
+And rank is twist, which gives no end of pain;<br />
+I know not which is ranker, no, not I.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Plug, art thou rank? then milder twist must be;<br />
+Plug, thou art milder: rank is twist to me.<br />
+O twist, if plug be milder, let me buy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Rank twist, that seems to make me fade away,<br />
+Rank plug, that navvies smoke in loveless clay,<br />
+I know not which is ranker, no, not I.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I fain would purchase flake, if that could be;<br />
+I needs must purchase plug, ah, woe is me!<br />
+Plug and a cutty, a cutty, let me buy.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>His was the best good thing of the night&rsquo;s talk, and the
+thing that was remembered.&nbsp; He excited himself a good deal
+over Rectorial Elections.&nbsp; The duties of the Lord Rector and
+the mode of his election have varied frequently in near five
+hundred years.&nbsp; In Murray&rsquo;s day, as in my own, the
+students elected their own Rector, and before Lord Bute&rsquo;s
+energetic reign, the Rector had little to do, but to make a
+speech, and give a prize.&nbsp; I vaguely remember proposing the
+author of <i>Tom Brown</i> long ago: he was not, however, in the
+running.</p>
+<p>Politics often inspire the electors; occasionally (I have
+heard) grave seniors use their influence, mainly for reasons of
+academic policy.</p>
+<p>In December 1887 Murray writes about an election in which Mr.
+Lowell was a candidate.&nbsp; &lsquo;A pitiful protest was
+entered by an&rsquo; (epithets followed by a proper name)
+&lsquo;against Lowell, on the score of his being an alien.&nbsp;
+Mallock, as you learn, was withdrawn, for which I am truly
+thankful.&rsquo;&nbsp; Unlucky Mr. Mallock!&nbsp; &lsquo;Lowell
+polled 100 and Gibson 92 . . . The intrigues and corruption
+appear to be almost worthy of an American Presidential
+election.&rsquo;&nbsp; Mr. Lowell could not accept a compliment
+which pleased him, because of his official position, and the
+misfortune of his birth!</p>
+<p>Murray was already doing a very little &lsquo;miniature
+journalism,&rsquo; in the form of University Notes for a local
+paper.&nbsp; He complains of the ultra Caledonian frankness with
+which men told him that they were very bad.&nbsp; A needless, if
+friendly, outspokenness was a feature in Scottish character which
+he did not easily endure.&nbsp; He wrote a good deal of verse in
+the little University paper, now called <i>College
+Echoes</i>.</p>
+<p>If Murray ever had any definite idea of being ordained for the
+ministry in any &lsquo;denomination,&rsquo; he abandoned
+it.&nbsp; His &lsquo;bursaries&rsquo; (scholarships or
+exhibitions), on which he had been passing rich, expired, and he
+had to earn a livelihood.&nbsp; It seems plain to myself that he
+might easily have done so with his pen.&nbsp; A young friend of
+my own (who will excuse me for thinking that his bright verses
+are not <i>better</i> than Murray&rsquo;s) promptly made, by
+these alone, an income which to Murray would have been
+affluence.&nbsp; But this could not be done at St. Andrews.&nbsp;
+Again, Murray was not in contact with people in the centre of
+newspapers and magazines.&nbsp; He went very little into general
+society, even at St. Andrews, and thus failed, perhaps, to make
+acquaintances who might have been &lsquo;useful.&rsquo;&nbsp; He
+would have scorned the idea of making useful acquaintances.&nbsp;
+But without seeking them, why should we reject any friendliness
+when it offers itself?&nbsp; We are all members one of
+another.&nbsp; Murray speaks of his experience of human beings,
+as rich in examples of kindness and good-will.&nbsp; His shyness,
+his reserve, his extreme unselfishness,&mdash;carried to the
+point of diffidence,&mdash;made him rather shun than seek older
+people who were dangerously likely to be serviceable.&nbsp; His
+manner, when once he could be induced to meet strangers, was
+extremely frank and pleasant, but from meeting strangers he
+shrunk, in his inveterate modesty.</p>
+<p>In 1886 Murray had the misfortune to lose is father, and it
+became, perhaps, more prominently needful that he should find a
+profession.&nbsp; He now assisted Professor Meiklejohn of St.
+Andrews in various kinds of literary and academic work, and in
+him found a friend, with whom he remained in close intercourse to
+the last.&nbsp; He began the weary path, which all literary
+beginners must tread, of sending contributions to
+magazines.&nbsp; He seldom read magazine articles.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+do not greatly care for &ldquo;Problems&rdquo; and &ldquo;vexed
+questions.&rdquo;&nbsp; I am so much of a problem and a vexed
+question that I have quite enough to do in searching for a
+solution of my own personality.&rsquo;&nbsp; He tried a story,
+based on &lsquo;a midnight experience&rsquo; of his own;
+unluckily he does not tell us what that experience was.&nbsp; Had
+he encountered one of the local ghosts?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My blood-curdling romance I offered to the editor of
+<i>Longman&rsquo;s Magazine</i>, but that misguided person was so
+ill-advised as to return it, accompanied with one of these
+abominable lithographed forms conveying his hypocritical
+regrets.&rsquo;&nbsp; Murray sent a directed envelope with a
+twopenny-halfpenny stamp.&nbsp; The paper came back for
+three-halfpence by book-post.&nbsp; &lsquo;I have serious
+thoughts of sueing him for the odd penny!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Why
+should people be fools enough to read my rot when they have
+twenty volumes of Scott at their command?&rsquo;&nbsp; He
+confesses to &lsquo;a Scott-mania almost as intense as if he were
+the last new sensation.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I was always fond of
+him, but I am fonder than ever now.&rsquo;&nbsp; This plunge into
+the immortal romances seems really to have discouraged Murray; at
+all events he says very little more about attempts in fiction of
+his own.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am a barren rascal,&rsquo; he writes,
+quoting Johnson on Fielding.&nbsp; Like other men, Murray felt
+extreme difficulty in writing articles or tales which have an
+infinitesimal chance of being accepted.&nbsp; It needs a stout
+heart to face this almost fixed certainty of rejection: a man is
+weakened by his apprehensions of a lithographed form, and of his
+old manuscript coming home to roost, like the Graces of
+Theocritus, to pine in the dusty chest where is their chill
+abode.&nbsp; If the Alexandrian poets knew this ill-fortune, so
+do all beginners in letters.&nbsp; There is nothing for it but
+&lsquo;putting a stout heart to a stey brae,&rsquo; as the Scotch
+proverb says.&nbsp; Editors want good work, and on finding a new
+man who is good, they greatly rejoice.&nbsp; But it is so
+difficult to do vigorous and spontaneous work, as it were, in the
+dark.&nbsp; Murray had not, it is probable, the qualities of the
+novelist, the narrator.&nbsp; An excellent critic he might have
+been if he had &lsquo;descended to criticism,&rsquo; but he had,
+at this time, no introductions, and probably did not address
+reviews at random to editors.&nbsp; As to poetry, these
+much-vexed men receive such enormous quantities of poetry that
+they usually reject it at a venture, and obtain the small
+necessary supplies from agreeable young ladies.&nbsp; Had Murray
+been in London, with a few literary friends, he might soon have
+been a thriving writer of light prose and light verse.&nbsp; But
+the enchantress held him; he hated London, he had no literary
+friends, he could write gaily for pleasure, not for gain.&nbsp;
+So, like the Scholar Gypsy, he remained contemplative,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Waiting for the spark from heaven to
+fall.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>About this time the present writer was in St. Andrews as
+Gifford Lecturer in Natural Theology.&nbsp; To say that an
+enthusiasm for totems and taboos, ghosts and gods of savage men,
+was aroused by these lectures, would be to exaggerate
+unpardonably.&nbsp; Efforts to make the students write essays or
+ask questions were so entire a failure that only one question was
+received&mdash;as to the proper pronunciation of
+&lsquo;Myth.&rsquo;&nbsp; Had one been fortunate enough to
+interest Murray, it must have led to some discussion of his
+literary attempts.&nbsp; He mentions having attended a lecture
+given by myself to the Literary Society on &lsquo;Literature as a
+Profession,&rsquo; and he found the lecturer &lsquo;far more at
+home in such a subject than in the Gifford Lectures.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Possibly the hearer was &lsquo;more at home&rsquo; in literature
+than in discussions as to the origin of Huitzilopochtli.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Literature,&rsquo; he says, &lsquo;never was, is not, and
+never will be, in the ordinary sense of the term, a
+profession.&nbsp; You can&rsquo;t teach it as you can the
+professions, you can&rsquo;t succeed in it as you can in the
+professions, by dint of mere diligence and without special
+aptitude . . . I think all this chatter about the technical and
+pecuniary sides of literature is extremely foolish and worse than
+useless.&nbsp; It only serves to glut the idle curiosity of the
+general public about matters with which they have no concern, a
+curiosity which (thanks partly to American methods of journalism)
+has become simply outrageous.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Into chatter about the pecuniary aspect of literature the
+Lecturer need hardly say that he did not meander.&nbsp; It is
+absolutely true that literature cannot be taught.&nbsp;
+Maupassant could have dispensed with the instructions of
+Flaubert.&nbsp; But an &lsquo;aptitude&rsquo; is needed in all
+professions, and in such arts as music, and painting, and
+sculpture, teaching is necessary.&nbsp; In literature, teaching
+can only come from general education in letters, from experience,
+from friendly private criticism.&nbsp; But if you cannot succeed
+in literature &lsquo;by dint of mere diligence,&rsquo; mere
+diligence is absolutely essential.&nbsp; Men must read, must
+observe, must practise.&nbsp; Diligence is as necessary to the
+author as to the grocer, the solicitor, the dentist, the
+barrister, the soldier.&nbsp; Nothing but nature can give the
+aptitude; diligence must improve it, and experience may direct
+it.&nbsp; It is not enough to wait for the spark from heaven to
+fall; the spark must be caught, and tended, and cherished.&nbsp;
+A man must labour till he finds his vein, and himself.&nbsp;
+Again, if literature is an art, it is also a profession.&nbsp; A
+man&rsquo;s very first duty is to support himself and those, if
+any, who are dependent on him.&nbsp; If he cannot do it by epics,
+tragedies, lyrics, he must do it by articles, essays, tales, or
+how he honestly can.&nbsp; He must win his leisure by his labour,
+and give his leisure to his art.&nbsp; Murray, at this time, was
+diligent in helping to compile and correct educational
+works.&nbsp; He might, but for the various conditions of reserve,
+hatred of towns, and the rest, have been earning his leisure by
+work more brilliant and more congenial to most men.&nbsp; But his
+theory of literature was so lofty that he probably found the
+other, the harder, the less remunerative, the less attractive
+work, more congenial to his tastes.</p>
+<p>He describes, to Mrs. Murray, various notable visitors to St.
+Andrews: Professor Butcher, who lectured on Lucian, and is
+&lsquo;very handsome,&rsquo; Mr. Arthur Balfour, the Lord Rector,
+who is &lsquo;rather handsome,&rsquo; and delights the listener
+by his eloquence; Mr. Chamberlain, who pleases him too, though he
+finds Mr. Chamberlain rather acrimonious in his political
+reflections.&nbsp; About Lucian, the subject of Mr.
+Butcher&rsquo;s lecture, Murray says nothing.&nbsp; That
+brilliant man of letters in general, the Alcibiades of
+literature, the wittiest, and, rarely, the most tender, and,
+always, the most graceful, was a model who does not seem to have
+attracted Murray.&nbsp; Lucian amused, and amuses, and lived by
+amusing: the vein of romance and poetry that was his he worked
+but rarely: perhaps the Samosatene did not take himself too
+seriously, yet he lives through the ages, an example, in many
+ways to be followed, of a man who obviously delighted in all that
+he wrought.&nbsp; He was no model to Murray, who only delighted
+in his moments of inspiration, and could not make himself happy
+even in the trifles which are demanded from the professional
+pen.</p>
+<p>He did, at last, endeavour to ply that servile engine of which
+Pendennis conceived so exalted an opinion.&nbsp; Certainly a
+false pride did not stand in his way when, on May 5, 1889, he
+announced that he was about to leave St. Andrews, and attempt to
+get work at proof-correcting and in the humblest sorts of
+journalism in Edinburgh.&nbsp; The chapter is honourable to his
+resolution, but most melancholy.&nbsp; There were competence and
+ease waiting for him, probably, in London, if he would but let
+his pen have its way in bright comment and occasional
+verse.&nbsp; But he chose the other course.&nbsp; With letters of
+introduction from Mr. Meiklejohn, he consulted the houses of
+Messrs. Clark and Messrs. Constable in Edinburgh.&nbsp; He did
+not find that his knowledge of Greek was adequate to the higher
+and more remunerative branches of proof-reading, that weary
+meticulous toil, so fatiguing to the eyesight.&nbsp; The hours,
+too, were very long; he could do more and better work in fewer
+hours.&nbsp; No time, no strength, were left for reading and
+writing.&nbsp; He did, while in Edinburgh, send a few things to
+magazines, but he did not actually &lsquo;bombard&rsquo;
+editors.&nbsp; He is &lsquo;to live in one room, and dine, if not
+on a red herring, on the next cheapest article of
+diet.&rsquo;&nbsp; These months of privation, at which he
+laughed, and some weeks of reading proofs, appear to have quite
+undermined health which was never strong, and which had been
+sorely tried by &lsquo;the wind of a cursed to-day, the curse of
+a windy to-morrow,&rsquo; at St. Andrews.&nbsp; If a reader
+observes in Murray a lack of strenuous diligence, he must
+attribute it less to lack of resolution, than to defect of
+physical force and energy.&nbsp; The many bad colds of which he
+speaks were warnings of the end, which came in the form of
+consumption.&nbsp; This lurking malady it was that made him wait,
+and dally with his talent.&nbsp; He hit on the idea of
+translating some of Bossuet&rsquo;s orations for a Scotch
+theological publisher.&nbsp; Alas! the publisher did not
+anticipate a demand, among Scotch ministers, for the Eagle of
+Meaux.&nbsp; Murray, in his innocence, was startled by the
+caution of the publisher, who certainly would have been a heavy
+loser.&nbsp; &lsquo;I honestly believe that, if Charles Dickens
+were now alive and unknown, and were to offer the MS. of
+<i>Pickwick</i> to an Edinburgh publisher, that sagacious old
+individual would shake his prudent old head, and refuse (with the
+utmost politeness) to publish it!&rsquo;&nbsp; There is a good
+deal of difference between <i>Pickwick</i> and a translation of
+old French sermons about Madame, and Cond&eacute;, and people of
+whom few modern readers ever heard.</p>
+<p>Alone, in Edinburgh, Murray was saddened by the
+&lsquo;unregarding&rsquo; irresponsive faces of the people as
+they passed.&nbsp; In St. Andrews he probably knew every face;
+even in Edinburgh (a visitor from London thinks) there is a
+friendly look among the passers.&nbsp; Murray did not find it
+so.&nbsp; He approached a newspaper office: &lsquo;he [the Editor
+whom he met] was extremely frank, and told me that the tone of my
+article on&mdash;was underbred, while the verses I had sent him
+had nothing in them.&nbsp; Very pleasant for the feelings of a
+young author, was it not? . . . Unfavourable criticism is an
+excellent tonic, but it should be a little diluted . . . I must,
+however, do him the justice to say that he did me a good turn by
+introducing me to ---, . . . who was kind and encouraging in the
+extreme.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Murray now called on the Editor of the <i>Scottish Leader</i>,
+the Gladstonian organ, whom he found very courteous.&nbsp; He was
+asked to write some &lsquo;leader-notes&rsquo; as they are
+called, paragraphs which appear in the same columns as the
+leading articles.&nbsp; These were published, to his
+astonishment, and he was &lsquo;to be taken on at a salary
+of&mdash;a week.&rsquo;&nbsp; Let us avoid pecuniary chatter, and
+merely say that the sum, while he was on trial, was not likely to
+tempt many young men into the career of journalism.&nbsp; Yet
+&lsquo;the work will be very exacting, and almost preclude the
+possibility of my doing anything else.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now, as four
+leader notes, or, say, six, can be written in an hour, it is
+difficult to see the necessity for this fatigue.&nbsp; Probably
+there were many duties more exacting, and less agreeable, than
+the turning out of epigrams.&nbsp; Indeed there was other work of
+some more or less mechanical kind, and the manufacture of
+&lsquo;leader notes&rsquo; was the least part of Murray&rsquo;s
+industry.&nbsp; At the end of two years there was &lsquo;the
+prospect of a very fair salary.&rsquo;&nbsp; But there was
+&lsquo;night-work and everlasting hurry.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+interviewing of a half-bred Town-Councillor on the subject of gas
+and paving&rsquo; did not exhilarate Murray.&nbsp; Again, he had
+to compile a column of Literary News, from the
+<i>Athen&aelig;um</i>, the <i>Academy</i>, and so on, &lsquo;with
+comments and enlargements where possible.&rsquo;&nbsp; This might
+have been made extremely amusing, it sounds like a delightful
+task,&mdash;the making of comments on &lsquo;Mr. --- has finished
+a sonnet:&rsquo; &lsquo;Mr. ---&rsquo;s poems are in their
+fiftieth thousand:&rsquo; &lsquo;Miss --- has gone on a tour of
+health to the banks of the Yang-tse-kiang:&rsquo; &lsquo;Mrs. ---
+is engaged on a novel about the Pilchard Fishery.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+One could make comments (if permitted) on these topics for love,
+and they might not be unpopular.&nbsp; But perhaps Murray was
+shackled a little by human respect, or the prejudices of his
+editor.&nbsp; At all events he calls it &lsquo;not very inspiring
+employment.&rsquo;&nbsp; The bare idea, I confess, inspirits me
+extremely.</p>
+<p>But the literary <i>follet</i>, who delights in mild mischief,
+did not haunt Murray.&nbsp; He found an opportunity to write on
+the Canongate Churchyard, where Fergusson lies, under the
+monument erected by Burns to the boy of genius whom he called his
+master.&nbsp; Of course the part of the article which dealt with
+Fergusson, himself a poet of the Scarlet Gown, was cut out.&nbsp;
+The Scotch do not care to hear about Fergusson, in spite of their
+&lsquo;myriad mutchkined enthusiasm&rsquo; for his more
+illustrious imitator and successor, Burns.</p>
+<p>At this time Edinburgh was honouring itself, and Mr. Parnell,
+by conferring its citizenship on that patriot.&nbsp; Murray was
+actually told off &lsquo;to stand at a given point of the line on
+which the hero marched,&rsquo; and to write some lines of
+&lsquo;picturesque description.&rsquo;&nbsp; This kind of thing
+could not go on.&nbsp; It was at Nelson&rsquo;s Monument that he
+stood: his enthusiasm was more for Nelson than for Mr. Parnell;
+and he caught a severe cold on this noble occasion.&nbsp;
+Murray&rsquo;s opinions clashed with those of the <i>Scottish
+Leader</i>, and he withdrew from its service.</p>
+<p>Just a week passed between the Parnellian triumph and
+Murray&rsquo;s retreat from daily journalism.&nbsp; &lsquo;On a
+newspaper one must have no opinions except those which are
+favourable to the sale of the paper and the filling of its
+advertisement columns.&rsquo;&nbsp; That is not precisely an
+accurate theory.&nbsp; Without knowing anything of the
+circumstances, one may imagine that Murray was rather
+impracticable.&nbsp; Of course he could not write against his own
+opinions, but it is unusual to expect any one to do that, or to
+find any one who will do it.&nbsp; &lsquo;Incompatibility of
+temper&rsquo; probably caused this secession from the
+newspaper.</p>
+<p>After various attempts to find occupation, he did some
+proof-reading for Messrs. Constable.&nbsp; Among other things he
+&lsquo;read&rsquo; the journal of Lady Mary Coke, privately
+printed for Lord Home.&nbsp; Lady Mary, who appears as a lively
+child in <i>The Heart of Midlothian</i>, &lsquo;had a taste for
+loo, gossip, and gardening, but the greatest of these is
+gossip.&rsquo;&nbsp; The best part of the book is Lady Louisa
+Stuart&rsquo;s inimitable introduction.&nbsp; Early in October he
+decided to give up proof-reading: the confinement had already
+told on his health.&nbsp; In the letter which announces this
+determination he describes a sermon of Principal Caird:
+&lsquo;Voice, gesture, language, thought&mdash;all in the highest
+degree,&mdash;combined to make it the most moving and exalted
+speech of a man to men that I ever listened to.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The world is too much with me,&rsquo; he adds, as if he
+and the world were ever friends, or ever likely to be
+friendly.</p>
+<p>October 27th found him dating from St. Andrews again.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;St. Andrews after Edinburgh is Paradise.&rsquo;&nbsp; His
+Dalilah had called him home to her, and he was never again
+unfaithful.&nbsp; He worked for his firm friend, Professor
+Meiklejohn, he undertook some teaching, and he wrote a
+little.&nbsp; It was at this time that his biographer made
+Murray&rsquo;s acquaintance.&nbsp; I had been delighted with his
+verses in <i>College Echoes</i>, and I asked him to bring me some
+of his more serious work.&nbsp; But he never brought them: his
+old enemy, reserve, overcame him.&nbsp; A few of his pieces were
+published &lsquo;At the Sign of the Ship&rsquo; in
+<i>Longman&rsquo;s Magazine</i>, to which he contributed
+occasionally.</p>
+<p>From this point there is little in Murray&rsquo;s life to be
+chronicled.&nbsp; In 1890 his health broke down entirely, and
+consumption declared itself.&nbsp; Very early in 1891 he visited
+Egypt, where it was thought that some educational work might be
+found for him.&nbsp; But he found Egypt cold, wet, and windy; of
+Alexandria and the Mediterranean he says little: indeed he was
+almost too weak and ill to see what is delightful either in
+nature or art.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;To aching eyes each landscape lowers,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To feverish pulse each gale blows chill,<br />
+And Araby&rsquo;s or Eden&rsquo;s bowers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were barren as this moorland hill,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>says the least self-conscious of poets.&nbsp; Even so barren
+were the rich Nile and so bleak the blue Mediterranean
+waters.&nbsp; Though received by the kindest and most hospitable
+friends, Murray was homesick, and pined to be in England, now
+that spring was there.&nbsp; He made the great mistake of coming
+home too early.&nbsp; At Ilminster, in his mother&rsquo;s home,
+he slowly faded out of life.&nbsp; I have not the heart to quote
+his descriptions of brief yet laborious saunters in the coppices,
+from the letters which he wrote to the lady of his heart.&nbsp;
+He was calm, cheerful, even buoyant.&nbsp; His letters to his
+college friends are all concerned with literature, or with happy
+old times, and are full of interest in them and in their
+happiness.</p>
+<p>He was not wholly idle.&nbsp; He wrote a number of short
+pieces of verse in <i>Punch</i>, and two or three in the <i>St.
+James&rsquo;s Gazette</i>.&nbsp; Other work, no doubt, he
+planned, but his strength was gone.&nbsp; In 1891 his book,
+<i>The Scarlet Gown</i>, was published by his friend, Mr. A. M.
+Holden.&nbsp; The little volume, despite its local character, was
+kindly received by the Reviews.&nbsp; Here, it was plain, we had
+a poet who was to St. Andrews what the regretted J. K. S. was to
+Eton and Cambridge.&nbsp; This measure of success was not
+calculated to displease our <i>alumnus addictissimus</i>.</p>
+<p>Friendship and love, he said, made the summer of 1892 very
+happy to him.&nbsp; I last heard from him in the summer of 1893,
+when he sent me some of his most pleasing verses.&nbsp; He was in
+Scotland; he had wandered back, a shadow of himself, to his dear
+St. Andrews.&nbsp; I conceived that he was better; he said
+nothing about his health.&nbsp; It is not easy to quote from his
+letters to his friend, Mr. Wallace, still written in his
+beautiful firm hand.&nbsp; They are too full of affectionate
+banter: they also contain criticisms on living poets: he shows an
+admiration, discriminating and not wholesale, of Mr.
+Kipling&rsquo;s verse: he censures Mr. Swinburne, whose Jacobite
+song (as he wrote to myself) did not precisely strike him as the
+kind of thing that Jacobites used to sing.</p>
+<p>They certainly celebrated</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;The faith our fathers fought for,<br />
+The kings our fathers knew,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>in a different tone in the North.</p>
+<p>The perfect health of mind, in these letters of a dying man,
+is admirable.&nbsp; Reading old letters over, he writes to Miss
+---, &lsquo;I have known a wonderful number of wonderfully
+kind-hearted people.&rsquo;&nbsp; That is his criticism of a
+world which had given him but a scanty welcome, and a life of
+foiled endeavour, of disappointed hope.&nbsp; Even now there was
+a disappointment.&nbsp; His poems did not find a publisher: what
+publisher can take the risk of adding another volume of poetry to
+the enormous stock of verse brought out at the author&rsquo;s
+expense?&nbsp; This did not sour or sadden him: he took
+Montaigne&rsquo;s advice, &lsquo;not to make too much marvel of
+our own fortunes.&rsquo;&nbsp; His biographer, hearing in the
+winter of 1893 that Murray&rsquo;s illness was now considered
+hopeless, though its rapid close was not expected, began, with
+Professor Meiklejohn, to make arrangements for the publication of
+the poems.&nbsp; But the poet did not live to have this poor
+gratification.&nbsp; He died in the early hours of 1894.</p>
+<p>Of the merits of his more serious poetry others must
+speak.&nbsp; To the Editor it seems that he is always at his best
+when he is inspired by the Northern Sea, and the long sands and
+grey sea grasses.&nbsp; Then he is most himself.&nbsp; He was
+improving in his art with every year: his development, indeed,
+was somewhat late.</p>
+<p>It is less of the writer than the man that we prefer to
+think.&nbsp; His letters display, in passages which he would not
+have desired to see quoted, the depth and tenderness and
+thoughtfulness of his affections.&nbsp; He must have been a
+delightful friend: illness could not make him peevish, and his
+correspondence with old college companions could never be taken
+for that of a consciously dying man.&nbsp; He had perfect
+courage, and resolution even in his seeming irresoluteness.&nbsp;
+He was resolved to be, and continued to be, himself.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;He had kept the bird in his bosom.&rsquo;&nbsp; We, who
+regret him, may wish that he had been granted a longer life, and
+a secure success.&nbsp; Happier fortunes might have mellowed him,
+no fortunes could have altered for the worse his admirable
+nature.&nbsp; He lives in the hearts of his friends, and in the
+pride and sympathy of those who, after him, have worn and shall
+wear the scarlet gown.</p>
+<p>The following examples of his poetry were selected by
+Murray&rsquo;s biographer from a considerable mass, and have been
+seen through the press by Professor Meiklejohn, who possesses the
+original manuscript, beautifully written.</p>
+<h2>MOONLIGHT NORTH AND SOUTH</h2>
+<p>Love, we have heard together<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The North Sea sing his tune,<br />
+And felt the wind&rsquo;s wild feather<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Brush past our cheeks at noon,<br />
+And seen the cloudy weather<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Made wondrous with the moon.</p>
+<p>Where loveliness is rarest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis also prized the most:<br />
+The moonlight shone her fairest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Along that level coast<br />
+Where sands and dunes the barest,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of beauty seldom boast,</p>
+<p>Far from that bleak and rude land<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An exile I remain<br />
+Fixed in a fair and good land,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A valley and a plain<br />
+Rich in fat fields and woodland,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And watered well with rain.</p>
+<p>Last night the full moon&rsquo;s splendour<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shone down on Taunton Dene,<br />
+And pasture fresh and tender,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And coppice dusky green,<br />
+The heavenly light did render<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In one enchanted scene,</p>
+<p>One fair unearthly vision.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet soon mine eyes were cloyed,<br />
+And found those fields Elysian<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Too rich to be enjoyed.<br />
+Or was it our division<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Made all my pleasure void?</p>
+<p>Across the window glasses<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The curtain then I drew,<br />
+And, as a sea-bird passes,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In sleep my spirit flew<br />
+To grey and windswept grasses<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And moonlit sands&mdash;and you.</p>
+<h2>WINTER AT ST. ANDREWS</h2>
+<p>The city once again doth wear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her wonted dress of winter&rsquo;s bride,<br />
+Her mantle woven of misty air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With saffron sunlight faintly dyed.<br />
+She sits above the seething tide,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of all her summer robes forlorn&mdash;<br />
+And dead is all her summer pride&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The leaves are off Queen Mary&rsquo;s Thorn.</p>
+<p>All round, the landscape stretches bare,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The bleak fields lying far and wide,<br />
+Monotonous, with here and there<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A lone tree on a lone hillside.<br />
+No more the land is glorified<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With golden gleams of ripening corn,<br />
+Scarce is a cheerful hue descried&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The leaves are off Queen Mary&rsquo;s Thorn.</p>
+<p>For me, I do not greatly care<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though leaves be dead, and mists abide.<br />
+To me the place is thrice as fair<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In winter as in summer-tide:<br />
+With kindlier memories allied<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of pleasure past and pain o&rsquo;erworn.<br />
+What care I, though the earth may hide<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The leaves from off Queen Mary&rsquo;s Thorn?</p>
+<p>Thus I unto my friend replied,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When, on a chill late autumn morn,<br />
+He pointed to the tree, and cried,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;The leaves are off Queen Mary&rsquo;s
+Thorn!&rsquo;</p>
+<h2>PATRIOTISM</h2>
+<p>There was a time when it was counted high<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To be a patriot&mdash;whether by the zeal<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of peaceful labour for the country&rsquo;s weal,<br
+/>
+Or by the courage in her cause to die:</p>
+<p><i>For King and Country</i> was a rallying cry<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That turned men&rsquo;s hearts to fire, their nerves
+to steel;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not to unheeding ears did it appeal,<br />
+A pulpit formula, a platform lie.</p>
+<p>Only a fool will wantonly desire<br />
+That war should come, outpouring blood and fire,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bringing grief and hunger in her train.<br />
+And yet, if there be found no other way,<br />
+God send us war, and with it send the day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When love of country shall be real again!</p>
+<h2>SLEEP FLIES ME</h2>
+<p>Sleep flies me like a lover<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Too eagerly pursued,<br />
+Or like a bird to cover<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within some distant wood,<br />
+Where thickest boughs roof over<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Her secret solitude.</p>
+<p>The nets I spread to snare her,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Although with cunning wrought,<br />
+Have only served to scare her,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And now she&rsquo;ll not be caught.<br />
+To those who best could spare her,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She ever comes unsought.</p>
+<p>She lights upon their pillows;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She gives them pleasant dreams,<br />
+Grey-green with leaves of willows,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And cool with sound of streams,<br />
+Or big with tranquil billows,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On which the starlight gleams.</p>
+<p>No vision fair entrances<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My weary open eye,<br />
+No marvellous romances<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Make night go swiftly by;<br />
+But only feverish fancies<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beset me where I lie.</p>
+<p>The black midnight is steeping<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The hillside and the lawn,<br />
+But still I lie unsleeping,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With curtains backward drawn,<br />
+To catch the earliest peeping<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the desir&egrave;d dawn.</p>
+<p>Perhaps, when day is breaking;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When birds their song begin,<br />
+And, worn with all night waking,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I call their music din,<br />
+Sweet sleep, some pity taking,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At last may enter in.</p>
+<h2>LOVE&rsquo;S PHANTOM</h2>
+<p>Whene&rsquo;er I try to read a book,<br />
+Across the page your face will look,<br />
+And then I neither know nor care<br />
+What sense the printed words may bear.</p>
+<p>At night when I would go to sleep,<br />
+Thinking of you, awake I keep,<br />
+And still repeat the words you said,<br />
+Like sick men murmuring prayers in bed.</p>
+<p>And when, with weariness oppressed,<br />
+I sink in spite of you to rest,<br />
+Your image, like a lovely sprite,<br />
+Haunts me in dreams through half the night.</p>
+<p>I wake upon the autumn morn<br />
+To find the sunrise hardly born,<br />
+And in the sky a soft pale blue,<br />
+And in my heart your image true.</p>
+<p>When out I walk to take the air,<br />
+Your image is for ever there,<br />
+Among the woods that lose their leaves,<br />
+Or where the North Sea sadly heaves.</p>
+<p>By what enchantment shall be laid<br />
+This ghost, which does not make afraid,<br />
+But vexes with dim loveliness<br />
+And many a shadowy caress?</p>
+<p>There is no other way I know<br />
+But unto you forthwith to go,<br />
+That I may look upon the maid<br />
+Whereof that other is the shade.</p>
+<p>As the strong sun puts out the moon,<br />
+Whose borrowed rays are all his own,<br />
+So, in your living presence, dies<br />
+The phantom kindled at your eyes.</p>
+<p>By this most blessed spell, each day<br />
+The vexing ghost awhile I lay.<br />
+Yet am I glad to know that when<br />
+I leave you it will rise again.</p>
+<h2>COME BACK TO ST. ANDREWS</h2>
+<p>Come back to St. Andrews!&nbsp; Before you went away<br />
+You said you would be wretched where you could not see the
+Bay,<br />
+The East sands and the West sands and the castle in the sea<br />
+Come back to St. Andrews&mdash;St. Andrews and me.</p>
+<p>Oh, it&rsquo;s dreary along South Street when the rain is
+coming down,<br />
+And the east wind makes the student draw more close his warm red
+gown,<br />
+As I often saw you do, when I watched you going by<br />
+On the stormy days to College, from my window up on high.</p>
+<p>I wander on the Lade Braes, where I used to walk with you,<br
+/>
+And purple are the woods of Mount Melville, budding new,<br />
+But I cannot bear to look, for the tears keep coming so,<br />
+And the Spring has lost the freshness which it had a year
+ago.</p>
+<p>Yet often I could fancy, where the pathway takes a turn,<br />
+I shall see you in a moment, coming round beside the burn,<br />
+Coming round beside the burn, with your swinging step and
+free,<br />
+And your face lit up with pleasure at the sudden sight of me.</p>
+<p>Beyond the Rock and Spindle, where we watched the water
+clear<br />
+In the happy April sunshine, with a happy sound to hear,<br />
+There I sat this afternoon, but no hand was holding mine,<br />
+And the water sounded eerie, though the April sun did shine.</p>
+<p>Oh, why should I complain of what I know was bound to be?<br
+/>
+For you had your way to make, and you must not think of me.<br />
+But a woman&rsquo;s heart is weak, and a woman&rsquo;s joys are
+few&mdash;<br />
+There are times when I could die for a moment&rsquo;s sight of
+you.</p>
+<p>It may be you will come again, before my hair is grey<br />
+As the sea is in the twilight of a weary winter&rsquo;s day.<br
+/>
+When success is grown a burden, and your heart would fain be
+free,<br />
+Come back to St. Andrews&mdash;St. Andrews and me.</p>
+<h2>THE SOLITARY</h2>
+<p>I have been lonely all my days on earth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Living a life within my secret soul,<br />
+With mine own springs of sorrow and of mirth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Beyond the world&rsquo;s
+control.</p>
+<p>Though sometimes with vain longing I have sought<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To walk the paths where other mortals tread,<br />
+To wear the clothes for other mortals wrought,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And eat the selfsame
+bread&mdash;</p>
+<p>Yet have I ever found, when thus I strove<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To mould my life upon the common plan,<br />
+That I was furthest from all truth and love,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And least a living man.</p>
+<p>Truth frowned upon my poor hypocrisy,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Life left my soul, and dwelt but in my sense;<br />
+No man could love me, for all men could see<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The hollow vain pretence.</p>
+<p>Their clothes sat on me with outlandish air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upon their easy road I tripped and fell,<br />
+And still I sickened of the wholesome fare<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; On which they nourished well.</p>
+<p>I was a stranger in that company,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A Galilean whom his speech bewrayed,<br />
+And when they lifted up their songs of glee,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My voice sad discord made.</p>
+<p>Peace for mine own self I could never find,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And still my presence marred the general peace,<br
+/>
+And when I parted, leaving them behind,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; They felt, and I, release.</p>
+<p>So will I follow now my spirit&rsquo;s bent,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not scorning those who walk the beaten track,<br />
+Yet not despising mine own banishment,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor often looking back.</p>
+<p>Their way is best for them, but mine for me.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And there is comfort for my lonely heart,<br />
+To think perhaps our journeys&rsquo; ends may be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Not very far apart.</p>
+<h2>TO ALFRED TENNYSON&mdash;1883</h2>
+<p>Familiar with thy melody,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We go debating of its power,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As churls, who hear it hour by hour,<br />
+Contemn the skylark&rsquo;s minstrelsy&mdash;</p>
+<p>As shepherds on a Highland lea<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Think lightly of the heather flower<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which makes the moorland&rsquo;s purple dower,<br />
+As far away as eye can see.</p>
+<p>Let churl or shepherd change his sky,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And labour in the city dark,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where there is neither air nor
+room&mdash;<br />
+How often will the exile sigh<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To hear again the unwearied lark,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And see the heather&rsquo;s lavish
+bloom!</p>
+<h2>ICHABOD</h2>
+<p>Gone is the glory from the hills,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The autumn sunshine from the mere,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which mourns for the declining year<br />
+In all her tributary rills.</p>
+<p>A sense of change obscurely chills<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The misty twilight atmosphere,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In which familiar things appear<br />
+Like alien ghosts, foreboding ills.</p>
+<p>The twilight hour a month ago<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was full of pleasant warmth and ease,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The pearl of all the
+twenty-four.<br />
+Erelong the winter gales shall blow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Erelong the winter frosts shall freeze&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And oh, that it were June once
+more!</p>
+<h2>AT A HIGH CEREMONY</h2>
+<p>Not the proudest damsel here<br />
+Looks so well as doth my dear.<br />
+All the borrowed light of dress<br />
+Outshining not her loveliness,</p>
+<p>A loveliness not born of art,<br />
+But growing outwards from her heart,<br />
+Illuminating all her face,<br />
+And filling all her form with grace.</p>
+<p>Said I, of dress the borrowed light<br />
+Could rival not her beauty bright?<br />
+Yet, looking round, &rsquo;tis truth to tell,<br />
+No damsel here is dressed so well.</p>
+<p>Only in them the dress one sees,<br />
+Because more greatly it doth please<br />
+Than any other charm that&rsquo;s theirs,<br />
+Than all their manners, all their airs.</p>
+<p>But dress in her, although indeed<br />
+It perfect be, we do not heed,<br />
+Because the face, the form, the air<br />
+Are all so gentle and so rare.</p>
+<h2>THE WASTED DAY</h2>
+<p>Another day let slip!&nbsp; Its hours have run,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its golden hours, with prodigal excess,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All run to waste.&nbsp; A day of life the less;<br
+/>
+Of many wasted days, alas, but one!</p>
+<p>Through my west window streams the setting sun.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I kneel within my chamber, and confess<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My sin and sorrow, filled with vain distress,<br />
+In place of honest joy for work well done.</p>
+<p>At noon I passed some labourers in a field.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sweat ran down upon each sunburnt face,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Which shone like copper in the
+ardent glow.<br />
+And one looked up, with envy unconcealed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beholding my cool cheeks and listless pace,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet he was happier, though he did
+not know.</p>
+<h2>INDOLENCE</h2>
+<p>Fain would I shake thee off, but weak am I<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thy strong solicitations to withstand.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Plenty of work lies ready to my hand,<br />
+Which rests irresolute, and lets it lie.</p>
+<p>How can I work, when that seductive sky<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Smiles through the window, beautiful and bland,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And seems to half entreat and half command<br />
+My presence out of doors beneath its eye?</p>
+<p>Will not the air be fresh, the water blue,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The smell of beanfields, blowing to the shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Better than these poor drooping
+purchased flowers?<br />
+Good-bye, dull books!&nbsp; Hot room, good-bye to you!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And think it strange if I return before<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The sea grows purple in the
+evening hours.</p>
+<h2>DAWN SONG</h2>
+<p>I hear a twittering of birds,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And now they burst in song.<br />
+How sweet, although it wants the words!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It shall not want them long,<br />
+For I will set some to the note<br />
+Which bubbles from the thrush&rsquo;s throat.</p>
+<p>O jewelled night, that reign&rsquo;st on high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where is thy crescent moon?<br />
+Thy stars have faded from the sky,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sun is coming soon.<br />
+The summer night is passed away,<br />
+Sing welcome to the summer day.</p>
+<h2>CAIRNSMILL DEN&mdash;TUNE: &lsquo;A ROVING&rsquo;</h2>
+<p>As I, with hopeless love o&rsquo;erthrown,<br />
+With love o&rsquo;erthrown, with love o&rsquo;erthrown,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell,<br />
+As I, with hopeless love o&rsquo;erthrown,<br />
+Was sadly walking all alone,</p>
+<p>I met my love one morning<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Cairnsmill Den.<br />
+One morning, one morning,<br />
+One blue and blowy morning,<br />
+I met my love one morning<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Cairnsmill Den.</p>
+<p>A dead bough broke within the wood<br />
+Within the wood, within the wood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell.<br />
+A dead bough broke within the wood,<br />
+And I looked up, and there she stood.</p>
+<p>I asked what was it brought her there,<br />
+What brought her there, what brought her there,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell.<br />
+I asked what was it brought her there.<br />
+Says she, &lsquo;To pull the primrose fair.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Says I, &lsquo;Come, let me pull with you,<br />
+Along with you, along with you,&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell.<br />
+Says I, &lsquo;Come let me pull with you,<br />
+For one is not so good as two.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But when at noon we climbed the hill,<br />
+We climbed the hill, we climbed the hill,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell.<br />
+But when at noon we climbed the hill,<br />
+Her hands and mine were empty still.</p>
+<p>And when we reached the top so high,<br />
+The top so high, the top so high,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell.<br />
+And when we reached the top so high<br />
+Says I, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll kiss you, if I die!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I kissed my love in Cairnsmill Den,<br />
+In Cairnsmill Den, in Cairnsmill Den,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is truth I tell.<br />
+I kissed my love in Cairnsmill Den,<br />
+And my love kissed me back again.</p>
+<p>I met my love one morning<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Cairnsmill Den.<br />
+One morning, one morning,<br />
+One blue and blowy morning,<br />
+I met my love one morning<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Cairnsmill Den.</p>
+<h2>A LOST OPPORTUNITY</h2>
+<p>One dark, dark night&mdash;it was long ago,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The air was heavy and still and warm&mdash;<br />
+It fell to me and a man I know,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To see two girls to their father&rsquo;s farm.</p>
+<p>There was little seeing, that I recall:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We seemed to grope in a cave profound.<br />
+They might have come by a painful fall,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Had we not helped them over the ground.</p>
+<p>The girls were sisters.&nbsp; Both were fair,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But mine was the fairer (so I say).<br />
+The dark soon severed us, pair from pair,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And not long after we lost our way.</p>
+<p>We wandered over the country-side,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And we frightened most of the sheep about,<br />
+And I do not think that we greatly tried,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Having lost our way, to find it out.</p>
+<p>The night being fine, it was not worth while.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We strayed through furrow and corn and grass<br />
+We met with many a fence and stile,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And a quickset hedge, which we failed to pass.</p>
+<p>At last we came on a road she knew;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She said we were near her father&rsquo;s place.<br
+/>
+I heard the steps of the other two,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And my heart stood still for a moment&rsquo;s
+space.</p>
+<p>Then I pleaded, &lsquo;Give me a good-night kiss.&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I have learned, but I did not know in time,<br />
+The fruits that hang on the tree of bliss<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Are not for cravens who will not climb.</p>
+<p>We met all four by the farmyard gate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We parted laughing, with half a sigh,<br />
+And home we went, at a quicker rate,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A shorter journey, my friend and I.</p>
+<p>When we reached the house, it was late enough,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And many impertinent things were said,<br />
+Of time and distance, and such dull stuff,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But we said little, and went to bed.</p>
+<p>We went to bed, but one at least<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Went not to sleep till the black turned grey,<br />
+And the sun rose up, and the light increased,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the birds awoke to a summer day.</p>
+<p>And sometimes now, when the nights are mild,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the moon is away, and no stars shine,<br />
+I wander out, and I go half-wild,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To think of the kiss which was not mine.</p>
+<p>Let great minds laugh at a grief so small,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let small minds laugh at a fool so great.<br />
+Kind maidens, pity me, one and all.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shy youths, take warning by this my fate.</p>
+<h2>THE CAGED THRUSH</h2>
+<p>Alas for the bird who was born to sing!<br />
+They have made him a cage; they have clipped his wing;<br />
+They have shut him up in a dingy street,<br />
+And they praise his singing and call it sweet.<br />
+But his heart and his song are saddened and filled<br />
+With the woods, and the nest he never will build,<br />
+And the wild young dawn coming into the tree,<br />
+And the mate that never his mate will be.<br />
+And day by day, when his notes are heard<br />
+They freshen the street&mdash;but alas for the bird</p>
+<h2>MIDNIGHT</h2>
+<p>The air is dark and fragrant<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With memories of a shower,<br />
+And sanctified with stillness<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By this most holy hour.</p>
+<p>The leaves forget to whisper<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of soft and secret things,<br />
+And every bird is silent,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With folded eyes and wings.</p>
+<p>O blessed hour of midnight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of sleep and of release,<br />
+Thou yieldest to the toiler<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The wages of thy peace.</p>
+<p>And I, who have not laboured,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor borne the heat of noon,<br />
+Receive thy tranquil quiet&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An undeserv&egrave;d boon.</p>
+<p>Yes, truly God is gracious,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who makes His sun to shine<br />
+Upon the good and evil,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And idle lives like mine.</p>
+<p>Upon the just and unjust<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He sends His rain to fall,<br />
+And gives this hour of blessing<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Freely alike to all.</p>
+<h2>WHERE&rsquo;S THE USE</h2>
+<p>Oh, where&rsquo;s the use of having gifts that can&rsquo;t be
+turned to money?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And where&rsquo;s the use of singing, when
+there&rsquo;s no one wants to hear?<br />
+It may be one or two will say your songs are sweet as honey,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But where&rsquo;s the use of honey, when the loaf of
+bread is dear?</p>
+<h2>A MAY-DAY MADRIGAL</h2>
+<p>The sun shines fair on Tweedside, the river flowing bright,<br
+/>
+Your heart is full of pleasure, your eyes are full of light,<br
+/>
+Your cheeks are like the morning, your pearls are like the
+dew,<br />
+Or morning and her dew-drops are like your pearls and you.</p>
+<p>Because you are a princess, a princess of the land,<br />
+You will not turn your lightsome eyes a moment where I stand,<br
+/>
+A poor unnoticed poet, a-making of his rhymes;<br />
+But I have found a mistress, more fair a thousand times.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis May, the elfish maiden, the daughter of the
+Spring,<br />
+Upon whose birthday morning the birds delight to sing.<br />
+They would not sing one note for you, if you should so
+command,<br />
+Although you are a princess, a princess of the land.</p>
+<h2>SONG IS NOT DEAD</h2>
+<p>Song is not dead, although to-day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Men tell us everything is said.<br />
+There yet is something left to say,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Song is not dead.</p>
+<p>While still the evening sky is red,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While still the morning gold and grey,<br />
+While still the autumn leaves are shed,</p>
+<p>While still the heart of youth is gay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And honour crowns the hoary head,<br />
+While men and women love and pray<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Song is not dead.</p>
+<h2>A SONG OF TRUCE</h2>
+<p>Till the tread of marching feet<br />
+Through the quiet grass-grown street<br />
+Of the little town shall come,<br />
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.</p>
+<p>While the banners idly hang,<br />
+While the bugles do not clang,<br />
+While is hushed the clamorous drum,<br />
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.</p>
+<p>In the breathing-time of Death,<br />
+While the sword is in its sheath,<br />
+While the cannon&rsquo;s mouth is dumb,<br />
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.</p>
+<p>Not too long the rest shall be.<br />
+Soon enough, to Death and thee,<br />
+The assembly call shall come.<br />
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.</p>
+<h2>ONE TEAR</h2>
+<p>Last night, when at parting<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Awhile we did stand,<br />
+Suddenly starting,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There fell on my hand</p>
+<p>Something that burned it,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Something that shone<br />
+In the moon as I turned it,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And then it was gone.</p>
+<p>One bright stray jewel&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What made it stray?<br />
+Was I cold or cruel,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; At the close of day?</p>
+<p>Oh, do not cry, lass!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What is crying worth?<br />
+There is no lass like my lass<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In the whole wide earth.</p>
+<h2>A LOVER&rsquo;S CONFESSION</h2>
+<p>When people tell me they have loved<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But once in youth,<br />
+I wonder, are they always moved<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To speak the truth?</p>
+<p>Not that they wilfully deceive:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They fondly cherish<br />
+A constancy which they would grieve<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To think might perish.</p>
+<p>They cherish it until they think<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas always theirs.<br />
+So, if the truth they sometimes blink,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis unawares.</p>
+<p>Yet unawares, I must profess,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They do deceive<br />
+Themselves, and those who questionless<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their tale believe.</p>
+<p>For I have loved, I freely own,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A score of times,<br />
+And woven, out of love alone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A hundred rhymes.</p>
+<p>Boys will be fickle.&nbsp; Yet, when all<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is said and done,<br />
+I was not one whom you could call<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A flirt&mdash;not one</p>
+<p>Of those who into three or four<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their hearts divide.<br />
+My queens came singly to the door,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not side by side.</p>
+<p>Each, while she reigned, possessed alone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My spirit loyal,<br />
+Then left an undisputed throne<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To one more royal,</p>
+<p>To one more fair in form and face<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sweeter and stronger,<br />
+Who filled the throne with truer grace,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And filled it longer.</p>
+<p>So, love by love, they came and passed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; These loves of mine,<br />
+And each one brighter than the last<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their lights did shine.</p>
+<p>Until&mdash;but am I not too free,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Most courteous stranger,<br />
+With secrets which belong to me?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There is a danger.</p>
+<p>Until, I say, the perfect love,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The last, the best,<br />
+Like flame descending from above,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Kindled my breast,</p>
+<p>Kindled my breast like ardent flame,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With quenchless glow.<br />
+I knew not love until it came,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But now I know.</p>
+<p>You smile.&nbsp; The twenty loves before<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were each in turn,<br />
+You say, the final flame that o&rsquo;er<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My soul should burn.</p>
+<p>Smile on, my friend.&nbsp; I will not say<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; You have no reason;<br />
+But if the love I feel to-day<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Depart, &rsquo;tis treason!</p>
+<p>If this depart, not once again<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Will I on paper<br />
+Declare the loves that waste and wane,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like some poor taper.</p>
+<p>No, no!&nbsp; This flame, I cannot doubt,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Despite your laughter,<br />
+Will burn till Death shall put it out,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And may be after.</p>
+<h2>TRAFALGAR SQUARE</h2>
+<p>These verses have I pilfered like a bee<br />
+Out of a letter from my C. C. C.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In London, showing what befell him there,<br />
+With other things, of interest to me.</p>
+<p>One page described a night in open air<br />
+He spent last summer in Trafalgar Square,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With men and women who by want are driven<br />
+Thither for lodging, when the nights are fair.</p>
+<p>No roof there is between their heads and heaven,<br />
+No warmth but what by ragged clothes is given,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No comfort but the company of those<br />
+Who with despair, like them, have vainly striven.</p>
+<p>On benches there uneasily they doze,<br />
+Snatching brief morsels of a poor repose,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And if through weariness they might sleep sound,<br
+/>
+Their eyes must open almost ere they close.</p>
+<p>With even tramp upon the paven ground,<br />
+Twice every hour the night patrol comes round<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To clear these wretches off, who may not keep<br />
+The miserable couches they have found.</p>
+<p>Yet the stern shepherds of the poor black sheep<br />
+Will soften when they see a woman weep.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There was a mother there who strove in vain,<br />
+With sobs, to hush a starving child to sleep.</p>
+<p>And through the night which took so long to wane,<br />
+He saw sad sufferers relieving pain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And daughters of iniquity and scorn<br />
+Performing deeds which God will not disdain.</p>
+<p>There was a girl, forlorn of the forlorn,<br />
+Whose dress was white, but draggled, soiled, and torn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who wandered like a ghost without a home.<br />
+She spoke to him before the day was born.</p>
+<p>She, who all night, when spoken to, was dumb,<br />
+Earning dislike from most, abuse from some,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now asked the hour, and when he told her
+&lsquo;Two,&rsquo;<br />
+Wailed, &lsquo;O my God, will daylight never come?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Yes, it will come, and change the sky anew<br />
+From star-besprinkled black to sunlit blue,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bring sweet thoughts and innocent desires<br />
+To countless girls.&nbsp; What will it bring to you?</p>
+<h2>A SUMMER MORNING</h2>
+<p>Never was sun so bright before,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No matin of the lark so sweet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No grass so green beneath my feet,<br />
+Nor with such dewdrops jewelled o&rsquo;er.</p>
+<p>I stand with thee outside the door,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The air not yet is close with heat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And far across the yellowing wheat<br />
+The waves are breaking on the shore.</p>
+<p>A lovely day!&nbsp; Yet many such,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Each like to each, this month have passed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And none did so supremely
+shine.<br />
+One thing they lacked: the perfect touch<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of thee&mdash;and thou art come at last,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And half this loveliness is
+thine.</p>
+<h2>WELCOME HOME</h2>
+<p>The fire burns bright<br />
+And the hearth is clean swept,<br />
+As she likes it kept,<br />
+And the lamp is alight.<br />
+She is coming to-night.</p>
+<p>The wind&rsquo;s east of late.<br />
+When she comes, she&rsquo;ll be cold,<br />
+So the big chair is rolled<br />
+Close up to the grate,<br />
+And I listen and wait.</p>
+<p>The shutters are fast,<br />
+And the red curtains hide<br />
+Every hint of outside.<br />
+But hark, how the blast<br />
+Whistled then as it passed!</p>
+<p>Or was it the train?<br />
+How long shall I stand,<br />
+With my watch in my hand,<br />
+And listen in vain<br />
+For the wheels in the lane?</p>
+<p>Hark!&nbsp; A rumble I hear<br />
+(Will the wind not be still?),<br />
+And it comes down the hill,<br />
+And it grows on the ear,<br />
+And now it is near.</p>
+<p>Quick, a fresh log to burn!<br />
+Run and open the door,<br />
+Hold a lamp out before<br />
+To light up the turn,<br />
+And bring in the urn.</p>
+<p>You are come, then, at last!<br />
+O my dear, is it you?<br />
+I can scarce think it true<br />
+I am holding you fast,<br />
+And sorrow is past.</p>
+<h2>AN INVITATION</h2>
+<p>Dear Ritchie, I am waiting for the signal word to fly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And tell me that the visit which has suffered such
+belating<br />
+Is to be a thing of now, and no more of by-and-by.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Dear Ritchie, I am waiting.</p>
+<p>The sea is at its bluest, and the Spring is new creating<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The woods and dens we know of, and the fields
+rejoicing lie,<br />
+And the air is soft as summer, and the hedge-birds all are
+mating.</p>
+<p>The Links are full of larks&rsquo; nests, and the larks
+possess the sky,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like a choir of happy spirits, melodiously
+debating,<br />
+All is ready for your coming, dear Ritchie&mdash;yes, and I,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Dear Ritchie, I am waiting.</p>
+<h2>FICKLE SUMMER</h2>
+<p>Fickle Summer&rsquo;s fled away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall we see her face again?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hearken to the weeping rain,<br />
+Never sunbeam greets the day.</p>
+<p>More inconstant than the May,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She cares nothing for our pain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor will hear the birds complain<br />
+In their bowers that once were gay.</p>
+<p>Summer, Summer, come once more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Drive the shadows from the field,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; All thy radiance round thee
+fling,<br />
+Be our lady as of yore;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then the earth her fruits shall yield,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Then the morning stars shall
+sing.</p>
+<h2>SORROW&rsquo;S TREACHERY</h2>
+<p>I made a truce last night with Sorrow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The queen of tears, the foe of sleep,<br />
+To keep her tents until the morrow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor send such dreams to make me weep.</p>
+<p>Before the lusty day was springing,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Before the tired moon was set,<br />
+I dreamed I heard my dead love singing,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And when I woke my eyes were wet.</p>
+<h2>THE CROWN OF YEARS</h2>
+<p>Years grow and gather&mdash;each a gem<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lustrous with laughter and with tears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And cunning Time a crown of years<br />
+Contrives for her who weareth them.</p>
+<p>No chance can snatch this diadem,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It trembles not with hopes or fears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It shines before the rose appears,<br />
+And when the leaves forsake her stem.</p>
+<p>Time sets his jewels one by one.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then wherefore mourn the wreaths that lie<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In attic chambers of the past?<br
+/>
+They withered ere the day was done.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This coronal will never die,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor shall you lose it at the
+last.</p>
+<h2>HOPE DEFERRED</h2>
+<p>When the weary night is fled,<br />
+And the morning sky is red,<br />
+Then my heart doth rise and say,<br />
+&lsquo;Surely she will come to-day.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the golden blaze of noon,<br />
+&lsquo;Surely she is coming soon.&rsquo;<br />
+In the twilight, &lsquo;Will she come?&rsquo;<br />
+Then my heart with fear is dumb.</p>
+<p>When the night wind in the trees<br />
+Plays its mournful melodies,<br />
+Then I know my trust is vain,<br />
+And she will not come again.</p>
+<h2>THE LIFE OF EARTH</h2>
+<p>The life of earth, how full of pain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which greets us on our day of birth,<br />
+Nor leaves us while we yet retain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The life of earth.</p>
+<p>There is a shadow on our mirth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our sun is blotted out with rain,<br />
+And all our joys are little worth.</p>
+<p>Yet oh, when life begins to wane,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And we must sail the doubtful firth,<br />
+How wild the longing to regain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The life of earth!</p>
+<h2>GOLDEN DREAM</h2>
+<p>Golden dream of summer morn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By a well-remembered stream<br />
+In the land where I was born,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Golden dream!</p>
+<p>Ripples, by the glancing beam<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lightly kissed in playful scorn,<br />
+Meadows moist with sunlit steam.</p>
+<p>When I lift my eyelids worn<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like a fair mirage you seem,<br />
+In the winter dawn forlorn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Golden dream!</p>
+<h2>TEARS</h2>
+<p>Mourn that which will not come again,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The joy, the strength of early years.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Bow down thy head, and let thy tears<br />
+Water the grave where hope lies slain.</p>
+<p>For tears are like a summer rain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To murmur in a mourner&rsquo;s ears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To soften all the field of fears,<br />
+To moisten valleys parched with pain.</p>
+<p>And though thy tears will not awake<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What lies beneath of young or fair<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And sleeps so sound it draws no
+breath,<br />
+Yet, watered thus, the sod may break<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In flowers which sweeten all the air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And fill with life the place of
+death.</p>
+<h2>THE HOUSE OF SLEEP</h2>
+<p>When we have laid aside our last endeavour,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And said farewell to one or two that weep,<br />
+And issued from the house of life for ever,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To find a lodging in the house of sleep&mdash;</p>
+<p>With eyes fast shut, in sunless chambers lying,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With folded arms unmoved upon the breast,<br />
+Beyond the noise of sorrow and of crying,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beyond the dread of dreaming, shall we rest?</p>
+<p>Or shall there come at last desire of waking,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To walk again on hillsides that we know,<br />
+When sunrise through the cold white mist is breaking,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or in the stillness of the after-glow?</p>
+<p>Shall there be yearning for the sound of voices,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The sight of faces, and the touch of hands,<br />
+The will that works, the spirit that rejoices,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The heart that feels, the mind that understands?</p>
+<p>Shall dreams and memories crowding from the distance,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Shall ghosts of old ambition or of mirth,<br />
+Create for us a shadow of existence,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A dim reflection of the life of earth?</p>
+<p>And being dead, and powerless to recover<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The substance of the show whereon we gaze,<br />
+Shall we be likened to the hapless lover,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who broods upon the unreturning days?</p>
+<p>Not so: for we have known how swift to perish<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is man&rsquo;s delight when youth and health take
+wing,<br />
+Until the winter leaves him nought to cherish<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But recollections of a vanished spring.</p>
+<p>Dream as we may, desire of life shall never<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Disturb our slumbers in the house of sleep.<br />
+Yet oh, to think we may not greet for ever<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The one or two that, when we leave them, weep!</p>
+<h2>THE OUTCAST&rsquo;S FAREWELL</h2>
+<p>The sun is banished,<br />
+The daylight vanished,<br />
+No rosy traces<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Are left behind.<br />
+Here in the meadow<br />
+I watch the shadow<br />
+Of forms and faces<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Upon your blind.</p>
+<p>Through swift transitions,<br />
+In new positions,<br />
+My eyes still follow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; One shape most fair.<br />
+My heart delaying<br />
+Awhile, is playing<br />
+With pleasures hollow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which mock despair.</p>
+<p>I feel so lonely,<br />
+I long once only<br />
+To pass an hour<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With you, O sweet!<br />
+To touch your fingers,<br />
+Where fragrance lingers<br />
+From some rare flower,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And kiss your feet.</p>
+<p>But not this even<br />
+To me is given.<br />
+Of all sad mortals<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Most sad am I,<br />
+Never to meet you,<br />
+Never to greet you,<br />
+Nor pass your portals<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Before I die.</p>
+<p>All men scorn me,<br />
+Not one will mourn me,<br />
+When from their city<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I pass away.<br />
+Will you to-morrow<br />
+Recall with sorrow<br />
+Him whom with pity<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; You saw to-day?</p>
+<p>Outcast and lonely,<br />
+One thing only<br />
+Beyond misgiving<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I hold for true,<br />
+That, had you known me,<br />
+You would have shown me<br />
+A life worth living&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A life for you.</p>
+<p>Yes: five years younger<br />
+My manhood&rsquo;s hunger<br />
+Had you come filling<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With plenty sweet,<br />
+My life so nourished,<br />
+Had grown and flourished,<br />
+Had God been willing<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That we should meet.</p>
+<p>How vain to fashion<br />
+From dreams and passion<br />
+The rich existence<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which might have been!<br />
+Can God&rsquo;s own power<br />
+Recall the hour,<br />
+Or bridge the distance<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That lies between?</p>
+<p>Before the morning,<br />
+From pain and scorning<br />
+I sail death&rsquo;s river<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To sleep or hell.<br />
+To you is given<br />
+The life of heaven.<br />
+Farewell for ever,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Farewell, farewell!</p>
+<h2>YET A LITTLE SLEEP</h2>
+<p>Beside the drowsy streams that creep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within this island of repose,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh, let us rest from cares and woes,<br />
+Oh, let us fold our hands to sleep!</p>
+<p>Is it ignoble, then, to keep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Awhile from where the rough wind blows,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all is strife, and no man knows<br />
+What end awaits him on the deep?</p>
+<p>The voyager may rest awhile,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When rest invites, and yet may be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Neither a sluggard nor a
+craven.<br />
+With strength renewed he quits the isle,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And putting out again to sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Makes sail for his desir&egrave;d
+haven.</p>
+<h2>LOST LIBERTY</h2>
+<p>Of our own will we are not free,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When freedom lies within our power.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We wait for some decisive hour,<br />
+To rise and take our liberty.</p>
+<p>Still we delay, content to be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Imprisoned in our own high tower.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What is it but a strong-built bower?<br />
+Ours are the warders, ours the key.</p>
+<p>But we through indolence grow weak.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our warders, fed with power so long,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Become at last our lords
+indeed.<br />
+We vainly threaten, vainly seek<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To move their ruth.&nbsp; The bars are strong.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We dash against them till we
+bleed.</p>
+<h2>AN AFTERTHOUGHT</h2>
+<p>You found my life, a poor lame bird<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That had no heart to sing,<br />
+You would not speak the magic word<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To give it voice and wing.</p>
+<p>Yet sometimes, dreaming of that hour,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I think, if you had known<br />
+How much my life was in your power,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It might have sung and flown.</p>
+<h2>TO J. R.</h2>
+<p>Last Sunday night I read the saddening story<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the unanswered love of fair Elaine,<br />
+The &lsquo;faith unfaithful&rsquo; and the joyless glory<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of Lancelot, &lsquo;groaning in remorseful
+pain.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>I thought of all those nights in wintry weather,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Those Sunday nights that seem not long ago,<br />
+When we two read our Poet&rsquo;s words together,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till summer warmth within our hearts did glow.</p>
+<p>Ah, when shall we renew that bygone pleasure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sit down together at our Merlin&rsquo;s feet,<br />
+Drink from one cup the overflowing measure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And find, in sharing it, the draught more sweet?</p>
+<p>That time perchance is far, beyond divining.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Till then we drain the &lsquo;magic cup&rsquo;
+apart;<br />
+Yet not apart, for hope and memory twining<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Smile upon each, uniting heart to heart.</p>
+<h2>THE TEMPTED SOUL</h2>
+<p>Weak soul, by sense still led astray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Why wilt thou parley with the foe?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He seeks to work thine overthrow,<br />
+And thou, poor fool! dost point the way.</p>
+<p>Hast thou forgotten many a day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When thou exulting forth didst go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ere the noon wert lying low,<br />
+A broken and defenceless prey?</p>
+<p>If thou wouldst live, avoid his face;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dwell in the wilderness apart,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And gather force for
+vanquishing,<br />
+Ere thou returnest to his place.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then arm, and with undaunted heart<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Give battle, till he own thee
+king.</p>
+<h2>YOUTH RENEWED</h2>
+<p>When one who has wandered out of the way<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which leads to the hills of joy,<br />
+Whose heart has grown both cold and grey,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though it be but the heart of a boy&mdash;<br />
+When such a one turns back his feet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From the valley of shadow and pain,<br />
+Is not the sunshine passing sweet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When a man grows young again?</p>
+<p>How gladly he mounts up the steep hillside,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With strength that is born anew,<br />
+And in his veins, like a full springtide,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The blood streams through and through.<br />
+And far above is the summit clear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And his heart to be there is fain,<br />
+And all too slowly it comes more near<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When a man grows young again.</p>
+<p>He breathes the pure sweet mountain breath,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And it widens all his heart,<br />
+And life seems no more kin to death,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor death the better part.<br />
+And in tones that are strong and rich and deep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He sings a grand refrain,<br />
+For the soul has awakened from mortal sleep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When a man grows young again.</p>
+<h2>VANITY OF VANITIES</h2>
+<p>Be ye happy, if ye may,<br />
+In the years that pass away.<br />
+Ye shall pass and be forgot,<br />
+And your place shall know you not.</p>
+<p>Other generations rise,<br />
+With the same hope in their eyes<br />
+That in yours is kindled now,<br />
+And the same light on their brow.</p>
+<p>They shall see the selfsame sun<br />
+That your eyes now gaze upon,<br />
+They shall breathe the same sweet air,<br />
+And shall reck not who ye were.</p>
+<p>Yet they too shall fade at last<br />
+In the twilight of the past,<br />
+They and you alike shall be<br />
+Lost from the world&rsquo;s memory.</p>
+<p>Then, while yet ye breathe and live,<br />
+Drink the cup that life can give.<br />
+Be ye happy, if ye may,<br />
+In the years that pass away,</p>
+<p>Ere the golden bowl be broken,<br />
+Ere ye pass and leave no token,<br />
+Ere the silver cord be loosed,<br />
+Ere ye turn again to dust.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And shall this be all,&rsquo; ye cry,<br />
+&lsquo;But to eat and drink and die?<br />
+If no more than this there be,<br />
+Vanity of vanity!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Yea, all things are vanity,<br />
+And what else but vain are ye?<br />
+Ye who boast yourselves the kings<br />
+Over all created things.</p>
+<p>Kings! whence came your right to reign?<br />
+Ye shall be dethroned again.<br />
+Yet for this, your one brief hour,<br />
+Wield your mockery of power.</p>
+<p>Dupes of Fate, that treads you down<br />
+Wear awhile your tinsel crown<br />
+Be ye happy, if ye may,<br />
+In the years that pass away.</p>
+<h2>LOVE&rsquo;S WORSHIP RESTORED</h2>
+<p>O Love, thine empire is not dead,<br />
+Nor will we let thy worship go,<br />
+Although thine early flush be fled,<br />
+Thine ardent eyes more faintly glow,<br />
+And thy light wings be fallen slow<br />
+Since when as novices we came<br />
+Into the temple of thy name.</p>
+<p>Not now with garlands in our hair,<br />
+And singing lips, we come to thee.<br />
+There is a coldness in the air,<br />
+A dulness on the encircling sea,<br />
+Which doth not well with songs agree.<br />
+And we forget the words we sang<br />
+When first to thee our voices rang.</p>
+<p>When we recall that magic prime,<br />
+We needs must weep its early death.<br />
+How pleasant from thy towers the chime<br />
+Of bells, and sweet the incense breath<br />
+That rose while we, who kept thy faith,<br />
+Chanting our creed, and chanting bore<br />
+Our offerings to thine altar store!</p>
+<p>Now are our voices out of tune,<br />
+Our gifts unworthy of thy name.<br />
+December frowns, in place of June.<br />
+Who smiled when to thy house we came,<br />
+We who came leaping, now are lame.<br />
+Dull ears and failing eyes are ours,<br />
+And who shall lead us to thy towers?</p>
+<p>O hark!&nbsp; A sound across the air,<br />
+Which tells not of December&rsquo;s cold,<br />
+A sound most musical and rare.<br />
+Thy bells are ringing as of old,<br />
+With silver throats and tongues of gold.<br />
+Alas! it is too sweet for truth,<br />
+An empty echo of our youth.</p>
+<p>Nay, never echo spake so loud!<br />
+It is indeed thy bells that ring.<br />
+And lo, against the leaden cloud,<br />
+Thy towers!&nbsp; Once more we leap and spring,<br />
+Once more melodiously we sing,<br />
+We sing, and in our song forget<br />
+That winter lies around us yet.</p>
+<p>Oh, what is winter, now we know,<br />
+Full surely, thou canst never fail?<br />
+Forgive our weak untrustful woe,<br />
+Which deemed thy glowing face grown pale.<br />
+We know thee, mighty to prevail.<br />
+Doubt and decrepitude depart,<br />
+And youth comes back into the heart.</p>
+<p>O Love, who turnest frost to flame<br />
+With ardent and immortal eyes,<br />
+Whose spirit sorrow cannot tame,<br />
+Nor time subdue in any wise&mdash;<br />
+While sun and moon for us shall rise,<br />
+Oh, may we in thy service keep<br />
+Till in thy faith we fall asleep!</p>
+<h2>BELOW HER WINDOW</h2>
+<p>Where she sleeps, no moonlight shines<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No pale beam unbidden creeps.<br />
+Darkest shade the place enshrines<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where she sleeps.</p>
+<p>Like a diamond in the deeps<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of the rich unopened mines<br />
+There her lovely rest she keeps.</p>
+<p>Though the jealous dark confines<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All her beauty, Love&rsquo;s heart leaps.<br />
+His unerring thought divines<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where she sleeps.</p>
+<h2>REQUIEM</h2>
+<p>For thee the birds shall never sing again,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor fresh green leaves come out upon the tree,<br />
+The brook shall no more murmur the refrain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For thee.</p>
+<p>Thou liest underneath the windswept lea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou dreamest not of pleasure or of pain,<br />
+Thou dreadest no to-morrow that shall be.</p>
+<p>Deep rest is thine, unbroken by the rain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ay, or the thunder.&nbsp; Brother, canst thou see<br
+/>
+The tears that night and morning fall in vain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For thee?</p>
+<h2>THOU ART QUEEN</h2>
+<p>Thou art queen to every eye,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When the fairest maids convene.<br />
+Envy&rsquo;s self can not deny<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou art queen.</p>
+<p>In thy step thy right is seen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In thy beauty pure and high,<br />
+In thy grace of air and mien.</p>
+<p>Thine unworthy vassal I,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lay my hands thy hands between;<br />
+Kneeling at thy feet I cry<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou art queen!</p>
+<h2>IN TIME OF DOUBT</h2>
+<p>&lsquo;In the shadow of Thy wings, O Lord of Hosts, whom I
+extol,<br />
+I will put my trust for ever,&rsquo; so the kingly David
+sings.<br />
+&lsquo;Thou shalt help me, Thou shalt save me, only<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou shalt keep me whole,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the shadow of Thy
+wings.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In our ears this voice triumphant, like a blowing trumpet,
+rings,<br />
+But our hearts have heard another, as of funeral bells that
+toll,<br />
+&lsquo;God of David where to find Thee?&rsquo;&nbsp; No reply the
+question brings.</p>
+<p>Shadows are there overhead, but they are of the clouds that
+roll,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Blotting out the sun from sight, and overwhelming
+earthly things.<br />
+Oh, that we might feel Thy presence!&nbsp; Surely we could rest
+our soul<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the shadow of Thy wings.</p>
+<h2>THE GARDEN OF SIN</h2>
+<p>I know the garden-close of sin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The cloying fruits, the noxious flowers,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I long have roamed the walks and bowers,<br />
+Desiring what no man shall win:</p>
+<p>A secret place to shelter in,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When soon or late the angry powers<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Come down to seek the wretch who cowers,<br />
+Expecting judgment to begin.</p>
+<p>The pleasure long has passed away<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From flowers and fruit, each hour I dread<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My doom will find me where I
+lie.<br />
+I dare not go, I dare not stay.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Without the walks, my hope is dead,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Within them, I myself must
+die.</p>
+<h2>URSULA</h2>
+<p>There is a village in a southern land,<br />
+By rounded hills closed in on every hand.<br />
+The streets slope steeply to the market-square,<br />
+Long lines of white-washed houses, clean and fair,<br />
+With roofs irregular, and steps of stone<br />
+Ascending to the front of every one.<br />
+The people swarthy, idle, full of mirth,<br />
+Live mostly by the tillage of the earth.</p>
+<p>Upon the northern hill-top, looking down,<br />
+Like some sequestered saint upon the town,<br />
+Stands the great convent.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On a summer night,<br />
+Ten years ago, the moon with rising light<br />
+Made all the convent towers as clear as day,<br />
+While still in deepest shade the village lay.<br />
+Both light and shadow with repose were filled,<br />
+The village sounds, the convent bells were stilled.<br />
+No foot in all the streets was now astir,<br />
+And in the convent none kept watch but her<br />
+Whom they called Ursula.&nbsp; The moonlight fell<br />
+Brightly around her in the lonely cell.<br />
+Her eyes were dark, and full of unshed woe,<br />
+Like mountain tarns which cannot overflow,<br />
+Surcharged with rain, and round about the eyes<br />
+Deep rings recorded sleepless nights, and cries<br />
+Stifled before their birth.&nbsp; Her brow was pale,<br />
+And like a marble temple in a vale<br />
+Of cypress trees, shone shadowed by her hair.<br />
+So still she was, that had you seen her there,<br />
+You might have thought you were beholding death.<br />
+Her lips were parted, but if any breath<br />
+Came from between them, it were hard to know<br />
+By any movement of her breast of snow.</p>
+<p>But when the summer night was now far spent,<br />
+She kneeled upon the floor.&nbsp; Her head she leant<br />
+Down on the cold stone of the window-seat.<br />
+God knows if there were any vital heat<br />
+In those pale brows, or if they chilled the stone.<br />
+And as she knelt, she made a bitter moan,<br />
+With words that issued from a bitter soul,&mdash;<br />
+&lsquo;O Mary, Mother, and is this thy goal,<br />
+Thy peace which waiteth for the world-worn heart?<br />
+Is it for this I live and die apart<br />
+From all that once I knew?&nbsp; O Holy God,<br />
+Is this the blessed chastening of Thy rod,<br />
+Which only wounds to heal?&nbsp; Is this the cross<br />
+That I must carry, counting all for loss<br />
+Which once was precious in the world to me?<br />
+If Thou be God, blot out my memory,<br />
+And let me come, forsaking all, to Thee.<br />
+But here, though that old world beholds me not,<br />
+Here, though I seek Thee through my lonely lot,<br />
+Here, though I fast, do penance day by day,<br />
+Kneel at Thy feet, and ever watch and pray,<br />
+Beloved forms from that forsaken world<br />
+Revisit me.&nbsp; The pale blue smoke is curled<br />
+Up from the dwellings of the sons of men.<br />
+I see it, and all my heart turns back again<br />
+From seeking Thee, to find the forms I love.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou, with Thy saints abiding far above,<br />
+What canst Thou know of this, my earthly pain?<br />
+They said to me, Thou shalt be born again,<br />
+And learn that worldly things are nothing worth,<br />
+In that new state.&nbsp; O God, is this new birth,<br />
+Birth of the spirit dying to the flesh?<br />
+Are these the living waters which refresh<br />
+The thirsty spirit, that it thirst no more?<br />
+Still all my life is thirsting to the core.<br />
+Thou canst not satisfy, if this be Thou.<br />
+And yet I dream, or I remember how,<br />
+Before I came here, while I tarried yet<br />
+Among the friends they tell me to forget,<br />
+I never seemed to seek Thee, but I found<br />
+Thou wert in all the loveliness around,<br />
+And most of all in hearts that loved me well.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And then I came to seek Thee in this cell,<br />
+To crucify my worldliness and pride,<br />
+To lay my heart&rsquo;s affections all aside,<br />
+As carnal hindrances which held my soul<br />
+From hasting unencumbered to her goal.<br />
+And all this have I done, or else have striven<br />
+To do, obeying the behest of Heaven,<br />
+And my reward is bitterness.&nbsp; I seem<br />
+To wander always in a feverish dream<br />
+On plains where there is only sun and sand,<br />
+No rock or tree in all the weary land,<br />
+My thirst unquenchable, my heart burnt dry.<br />
+And still in my parched throat I faintly cry,<br />
+Deliver me, O Lord: bow down Thine ear!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He will not answer me.&nbsp; He does not hear.<br />
+I am alone within the universe.<br />
+Oh for a strength of will to rise and curse<br />
+God, and defy Him here to strike me dead!<br />
+But my heart fails me, and I bow my head,<br />
+And cry to Him for mercy, still in vain.<br />
+Oh for some sudden agony of pain,<br />
+To make such insurrection in my soul<br />
+That I might burst all bondage of control,<br />
+Be for one moment as the beasts that die,<br />
+And pour my life in one blaspheming cry!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The morning came, and all the convent towers<br />
+Were gilt with glory by the golden hours.<br />
+But where was Ursula?&nbsp; The sisters came<br />
+With quiet footsteps, calling her by name,<br />
+But there was none that answered.&nbsp; In her cell,<br />
+The glad, illuminating sunshine fell<br />
+On form and face, and showed that she was dead.<br />
+&lsquo;May Christ receive her soul!&rsquo; the sisters said,<br
+/>
+And spoke in whispers of her holy life,<br />
+And how God&rsquo;s mercy spared her pain and strife,<br />
+And gave this quiet death.&nbsp; The face was still,<br />
+Like a tired child&rsquo;s, that lies and sleeps its fill.</p>
+<h2>UNDESIRED REVENGE</h2>
+<p>Sorrow and sin have worked their will<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For years upon your sovereign face,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And yet it keeps a faded trace<br />
+Of its unequalled beauty still,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As ruined sanctuaries hold<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A crumbled trace of perfect mould<br />
+In shrines which saints no longer fill.</p>
+<p>I knew you in your splendid morn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh, how imperiously sweet!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I bowed and worshipped at your feet,<br />
+And you received my love with scorn.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now I scorn you.&nbsp; It is a change,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When I consider it, how strange<br />
+That you, not I, should be forlorn.</p>
+<p>Do you suppose I have no pain<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To see you play this sorry part,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With faded face and broken heart,<br />
+And life lived utterly in vain?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh would to God that you once more<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Might scorn me as you did of yore,<br />
+And I might worship you again!</p>
+<h2>POETS</h2>
+<p>Children of earth are we,<br />
+Lovers of land and sea,<br />
+Of hill, of brook, of tree,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of all things fair;<br />
+Of all things dark or bright,<br />
+Born of the day and night,<br />
+Red rose and lily white<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And dusky hair.</p>
+<p>Yet not alone from earth<br />
+Do we derive our birth.<br />
+What were our singing worth<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were this the whole?<br />
+Somewhere from heaven afar<br />
+Hath dropped a fiery star,<br />
+Which makes us what we are,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which is our soul.</p>
+<h2>A PRESENTIMENT</h2>
+<p>It seems a little word to say&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>Farewell</i>&mdash;but may it not, when said,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be like the kiss we give the dead,<br />
+Before they pass the doors for aye?</p>
+<p>Who knows if, on some after day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Your lips shall utter in its stead<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A welcome, and the broken thread<br />
+Be joined again, the selfsame way?</p>
+<p>The word is said, I turn to go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But on the threshold seem to hear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A sound as of a passing bell,<br
+/>
+Tolling monotonous and slow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which strikes despair upon my ear,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And says it is a last
+farewell.</p>
+<h2>A BIRTHDAY GIFT</h2>
+<p>No gift I bring but worship, and the love<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which all must bear to lovely souls and pure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Those lights, that, when all else is dark,
+endure;<br />
+Stars in the night, to lift our eyes above;</p>
+<p>To lift our eyes and hearts, and make us move<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Less doubtful, though our journey be obscure,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Less fearful of its ending, being sure<br />
+That they watch over us, where&rsquo;er we rove.</p>
+<p>And though my gift itself have little worth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet worth it gains from her to whom &rsquo;tis
+given,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As a weak flower gets colour from
+the sun.<br />
+Or rather, as when angels walk the earth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All things they look on take the look of
+heaven&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; For of those blessed angels thou
+art one.</p>
+<h2>CYCLAMEN</h2>
+<p>I had a plant which would not thrive,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Although I watered it with care,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I could not save the blossoms fair,<br />
+Nor even keep the leaves alive.</p>
+<p>I strove till it was vain to strive.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I gave it light, I gave it air,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I sought from skill and counsel rare<br />
+The means to make it yet survive.</p>
+<p>A lady sent it me, to prove<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She held my friendship in esteem;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I would not have it as she
+said,<br />
+I wanted it to be for love;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And now not even friends we seem,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And now the cyclamen is dead.</p>
+<h2>LOVE RECALLED IN SLEEP</h2>
+<p>There was a time when in your face<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There dwelt such power, and in your smile<br />
+I know not what of magic grace;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They held me captive for a while.</p>
+<p>Ah, then I listened for your voice!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like music every word did fall,<br />
+Making the hearts of men rejoice,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And mine rejoiced the most of all.</p>
+<p>At sight of you, my soul took flame.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But now, alas! the spell is fled.<br />
+Is it that you are not the same,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or only that my love is dead?</p>
+<p>I know not&mdash;but last night I dreamed<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That you were walking by my side,<br />
+And sweet, as once you were, you seemed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all my heart was glorified.</p>
+<p>Your head against my shoulder lay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And round your waist my arm was pressed,<br />
+And as we walked a well-known way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Love was between us both confessed.</p>
+<p>But when with dawn I woke from sleep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And slow came back the unlovely truth,<br />
+I wept, as an old man might weep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For the lost paradise of youth.</p>
+<h2>FOOTSTEPS IN THE STREET</h2>
+<p>Oh, will the footsteps never be done?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The insolent feet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thronging the street,<br />
+Forsaken now of the only one.</p>
+<p>The only one out of all the throng,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Whose footfall I knew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And could tell it so true,<br />
+That I leapt to see as she passed along,</p>
+<p>As she passed along with her beautiful face,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Which knew full well<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Though it did not tell,<br />
+That I was there in the window-space.</p>
+<p>Now my sense is never so clear.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It cheats my heart,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Making me start<br />
+A thousand times, when she is not near.</p>
+<p>When she is not near, but so far away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I could not come<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To the place of her home,<br />
+Though I travelled and sought for a month and a day.</p>
+<p>Do you wonder then if I wish the street<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Were grown with grass,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And no foot might pass<br />
+Till she treads it again with her sacred feet?</p>
+<h2>FOR A PRESENT OF ROSES</h2>
+<p>Crimson and cream and white&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My room is a garden of roses!<br />
+Centre and left and right,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Three several splendid posies.</p>
+<p>As the sender is, they are sweet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; These lovely gifts of your sending,<br />
+With the stifling summer heat<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Their delicate fragrance blending.</p>
+<p>What more can my heart desire?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Has it lost the power to be grateful?<br />
+Is it only a burnt-out fire,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whose ashes are dull and hateful?</p>
+<p>Yet still to itself it doth say,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;I should have loved far better<br />
+To have found, coming in to-day,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The merest scrap of a letter.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2>IN TIME OF SORROW</h2>
+<p>Despair is in the suns that shine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in the rains that fall,<br />
+This sad forsaken soul of mine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is weary of them all.</p>
+<p>They fall and shine on alien streets<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From those I love and know.<br />
+I cannot hear amid the heats<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The North Sea&rsquo;s freshening flow</p>
+<p>The people hurry up and down,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like ghosts that cannot lie;<br />
+And wandering through the phantom town<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The weariest ghost am I.</p>
+<h2>A NEW SONG TO AN OLD TUNE&mdash;FROM VICTOR HUGO</h2>
+<p>If a pleasant lawn there grow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By the showers caressed,<br />
+Where in all the seasons blow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Flowers gaily dressed,<br />
+Where by handfuls one may win<br />
+Lilies, woodbine, jessamine,<br />
+I will make a path therein<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For thy feet to rest.</p>
+<p>If there live in honour&rsquo;s sway<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An all-loving breast<br />
+Whose devotion cannot stray,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Never gloom-oppressed&mdash;<br />
+If this noble breast still wake<br />
+For a worthy motive&rsquo;s sake,<br />
+There a pillow I will make<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For thy head to rest.</p>
+<p>If there be a dream of love,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dream that God has blest,<br />
+Yielding daily treasure-trove<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of delightful zest,<br />
+With the scent of roses filled,<br />
+With the soul&rsquo;s communion thrilled,<br />
+There, oh! there a nest I&rsquo;ll build<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For thy heart to rest.</p>
+<h2>THE FIDDLER</h2>
+<p>There&rsquo;s a fiddler in the street,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the children all are dancing:<br />
+Two dozen lightsome feet<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Springing and prancing.</p>
+<p>Pleasure he gives to you,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Dance then, and spare not!<br />
+For the poor fiddler&rsquo;s due,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Know not and care not.</p>
+<p>While you are prancing,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let the fiddler play.<br />
+When you&rsquo;re tired of dancing<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He may go away.</p>
+<h2>THE FIRST MEETING</h2>
+<p>Last night for the first time, O Heart&rsquo;s Delight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I held your hand a moment in my own,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The dearest moment which my soul has known,<br />
+Since I beheld and loved you at first sight.</p>
+<p>I left you, and I wandered in the night,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Under the rain, beside the ocean&rsquo;s moan.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All was black dark, but in the north alone<br />
+There was a glimmer of the Northern Light.</p>
+<p>My heart was singing like a happy bird,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Glad of the present, and from forethought free,<br
+/>
+Save for one note amid its music heard:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; God grant, whatever end of this may be,<br />
+That when the tale is told, the final word<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; May be of peace and benison to thee.</p>
+<h2>A CRITICISM OF CRITICS</h2>
+<p>How often have the critics, trained<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To look upon the sky<br />
+Through telescopes securely chained,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Forgot the naked eye.</p>
+<p>Within the compass of their glass<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Each smallest star they knew,<br />
+And not a meteor could pass<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But they were looking through.</p>
+<p>When a new planet shed its rays<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beyond their field of vision,<br />
+And simple folk ran out to gaze,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; They laughed in high derision.</p>
+<p>They railed upon the senseless throng<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who cheered the brave new light.<br />
+And yet the learned men were wrong,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The simple folk were right.</p>
+<h2>MY LADY</h2>
+<p>My Lady of all ladies!&nbsp; Queen by right<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of tender beauty; full of gentle moods;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With eyes that look divine beatitudes,<br />
+Large eyes illumined with her spirit&rsquo;s light;</p>
+<p>Lips that are lovely both by sound and sight,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Breathing such music as the dove, which broods<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Within the dark and silence of the woods,<br />
+Croons to the mate that is her heart&rsquo;s delight.</p>
+<p>Where is a line, in cloud or wave or hill,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To match the curve which rounds her soft-flushed
+cheek?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A colour, in the sky of morn or of
+even,<br />
+To match that flush?&nbsp; Ah, let me now be still!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; If of her spirit I should strive to speak,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I should come short, as earth
+comes short of heaven.</p>
+<h2>PARTNERSHIP IN FAME</h2>
+<p>Love, when the present is become the past,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And dust has covered all that now is new,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When many a fame has faded out of view,<br />
+And many a later fame is fading fast&mdash;</p>
+<p>If then these songs of mine might hope to last,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which sing most sweetly when they sing of you,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though queen and empress wore oblivion&rsquo;s
+hue,<br />
+Your loveliness would not be overcast.</p>
+<p>Now, while the present stays with you and me,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In love&rsquo;s copartnery our hearts combine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Life&rsquo;s loss and gain in
+equal shares to take.<br />
+Partners in fame our memories then would be:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Your name remembered for my songs; and mine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Still unforgotten for your
+sweetness&rsquo; sake.</p>
+<h2>A CHRISTMAS FANCY</h2>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Early on Christmas Day,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Love, as awake I lay,<br />
+And heard the Christmas bells ring sweet and clearly,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My heart stole through the
+gloom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Into your silent room,<br />
+And whispered to your heart, &lsquo;I love you dearly.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, in the dark
+profound,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Your heart was sleeping sound,<br
+/>
+And dreaming some fair dream of summer weather.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; At my heart&rsquo;s word it
+woke,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And, ere the morning broke,<br />
+They sang a Christmas carol both together.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Glory to God on high!<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Stars of the morning sky,<br />
+Sing as ye sang upon the first creation,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When all the Sons of God<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Shouted for joy abroad,<br />
+And earth was laid upon a sure foundation.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Glory to God again!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Peace and goodwill to men,<br />
+And kindly feeling all the wide world over,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Where friends with joy and
+mirth<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Meet round the Christmas
+hearth,<br />
+Or dreams of home the solitary rover.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Glory to God!&nbsp; True
+hearts,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Lo, now the dark departs,<br />
+And morning on the snow-clad hills grows grey.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Oh, may love&rsquo;s dawning
+light<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Kindled from loveless night,<br />
+Shine more and more unto the perfect day!</p>
+<h2>THE BURIAL OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR</h2>
+<p>Oh, who may this dead warrior be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That to his grave they bring?<br />
+&rsquo;Tis William, Duke of Normandy,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The conqueror and king.</p>
+<p>Across the sea, with fire and sword,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The English crown he won;<br />
+The lawless Scots they owned him lord,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But now his rule is done.</p>
+<p>A king should die from length of years,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A conqueror in the field,<br />
+A king amid his people&rsquo;s tears,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A conqueror on his shield.</p>
+<p>But he, who ruled by sword and flame,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Who swore to ravage France,<br />
+Like some poor serf without a name,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Has died by mere mischance.</p>
+<p>To Caen now he comes to sleep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The minster bells they toll,<br />
+A solemn sound it is and deep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; May God receive his soul!</p>
+<p>With priests that chant a wailing hymn,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He slowly comes this way,<br />
+To where the painted windows dim<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The lively light of day.</p>
+<p>He enters in.&nbsp; The townsfolk stand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In reverent silence round,<br />
+To see the lord of all the land<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Take house in narrow ground.</p>
+<p>While, in the dwelling-place he seeks,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To lay him they prepare,<br />
+One Asselin FitzArthur speaks,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bids the priests forbear.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The ground whereon this abbey stands<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is mine,&rsquo; he cries, &lsquo;by right.<br />
+&rsquo;Twas wrested from my father&rsquo;s hands<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By lawlessness and might.</p>
+<p>Duke William took the land away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To build this minster high.<br />
+Bury the robber where ye may,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But here he shall not lie.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The holy brethren bid him cease;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But he will not be stilled,<br />
+And soon the house of God&rsquo;s own peace<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With noise and strife is filled.</p>
+<p>And some cry shame on Asselin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Such tumult to excite,<br />
+Some say, it was Duke William&rsquo;s sin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Asselin does right.</p>
+<p>But he round whom their quarrels keep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lies still and takes no heed.<br />
+No strife can mar a dead man&rsquo;s sleep,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And this is rest indeed.</p>
+<p>Now Asselin at length is won<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The land&rsquo;s full price to take,<br />
+And let the burial rites go on,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And so a peace they make.</p>
+<p>When Harold, king of Englishmen,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was killed in Senlac fight,<br />
+Duke William would not yield him then<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A Christian grave or rite.</p>
+<p>Because he fought for keeping free<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His kingdom and his throne,<br />
+No Christian rite nor grave had he<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In land that was his own.</p>
+<p>And just it is, this Duke unkind,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now he has come to die,<br />
+In plundered land should hardly find<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sufficient space to lie.</p>
+<h2>THE DEATH OF WILLIAM RUFUS</h2>
+<p>The Red King&rsquo;s gone a-hunting, in the woods his father
+made<br />
+For the tall red deer to wander through the thicket and the
+glade,<br />
+The King and Walter Tyrrel, Prince Henry and the rest<br />
+Are all gone out upon the sport the Red King loves the best.</p>
+<p>Last night, when they were feasting in the royal
+banquet-hall,<br />
+De Breteuil told a dream he had, that evil would befall<br />
+If the King should go to-morrow to the hunting of the deer,<br />
+And while he spoke, the fiery face grew well-nigh pale to
+hear.</p>
+<p>He drank until the fire came back, and all his heart was
+brave,<br />
+Then bade them keep such woman&rsquo;s tales to tell an English
+slave,<br />
+For he would hunt to-morrow, though a thousand dreams foretold<br
+/>
+All the sorrow and the mischief De Breteuil&rsquo;s brain could
+hold.</p>
+<p>So the Red King&rsquo;s gone a-hunting, for all that they
+could do,<br />
+And an arrow in the greenwood made De Breteuil&rsquo;s dream come
+true.<br />
+They said &rsquo;twas Walter Tyrrel, and so it may have been,<br
+/>
+But there&rsquo;s many walk the forest when the leaves are thick
+and green.</p>
+<p>There&rsquo;s many walk the forest, who would gladly see the
+sport,<br />
+When the King goes out a-hunting with the nobles of his court,<br
+/>
+And when the nobles scatter, and the King is left alone,<br />
+There are thickets where an English slave might string his bow
+unknown.</p>
+<p>The forest laws are cruel, and the time is hard as steel<br />
+To English slaves, trod down and bruised beneath the Norman
+heel.<br />
+Like worms they writhe, but by-and-by the Norman heel may
+learn<br />
+There are worms that carry poison, and that are not slow to
+turn.</p>
+<p>The lords came back, by one and two, from straying far
+apart,<br />
+And they found the Red King lying with an arrow in his heart.<br
+/>
+Who should have done the deed, but him by whom it first was
+seen?<br />
+So they said &rsquo;twas Walter Tyrrel, and so it may have
+been.</p>
+<p>They cried upon Prince Henry, the brother of the King,<br />
+And he came up the greenwood, and rode into the ring.<br />
+He looked upon his brother&rsquo;s face, and then he turned
+away,<br />
+And galloped off to Winchester, where all the treasure lay.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;God strike me,&rsquo; cried De Breteuil, &lsquo;but
+brothers&rsquo; blood is thin!<br />
+And why should ours be thicker that are neither kith nor
+kin?&rsquo;<br />
+They spurred their horses in the flank, and swiftly thence they
+passed,<br />
+But Walter Tyrrel lingered and forsook his liege the last.</p>
+<p>They say it was enchantment, that fixed him to the scene,<br
+/>
+To look upon his traitor&rsquo;s work, and so it may have
+been.<br />
+But presently he got to horse, and took the seaward way,<br />
+And all alone within the glade, in state the Red King lay.</p>
+<p>Then a creaking cart came slowly, which a charcoal-burner
+drove.<br />
+He found the dead man lying, a ghastly treasure-trove;<br />
+He raised the corpse for charity, and on his wagon laid,<br />
+And so the Red King drove in state from out the forest glade.</p>
+<p>His hair was like a yellow flame about the bloated face,<br />
+The blood had stained his tunic from the fatal arrow-place.<br />
+Not good to look upon was he, in life, nor yet when dead.<br />
+The driver of the cart drove on, and never turned his head.</p>
+<p>When next the nobles throng at night the royal
+banquet-hall,<br />
+Another King will rule the feast, the drinking and the brawl,<br
+/>
+While Walter Tyrrel walks alone upon the Norman shore,<br />
+And the Red King in the forest will chase the deer no more.</p>
+<h2>AFTER WATERLOO</h2>
+<p>On the field of Waterloo we made Napoleon rue<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That ever out of Elba he decided for to come,<br />
+For we finished him that day, and he had to run away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And yield himself to Maitland on the
+Billy-ruffium.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twas a stubborn fight, no doubt, and the fortune
+wheeled about,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the brave Mossoos kept coming most uncomfortable
+near,<br />
+And says Wellington the hero, as his hopes went down to zero,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &lsquo;I wish to God that Blooker or the night was
+only here!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But Blooker came at length, and we broke Napoleon&rsquo;s
+strength,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the flower of his army&mdash;that&rsquo;s the
+old Imperial Guard&mdash;<br />
+They made a final sally, but they found they could not rally,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And at last they broke and fled, after fighting
+bitter hard.</p>
+<p>Now Napoleon he had thought, when a British ship he sought,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And gave himself uncalled-for, in a manner, you
+might say,<br />
+He&rsquo;d be treated like a king with the best of every
+thing,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And maybe have a palace for to live in every
+day.</p>
+<p>He was treated very well, as became a noble swell,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But we couldn&rsquo;t leave him loose, not in Europe
+anywhere,<br />
+For we knew he would be making some gigantic undertaking,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While the trustful British lion was reposing in his
+lair.</p>
+<p>We tried him once before near the European shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Having planted him in Elba, where he promised to
+remain,<br />
+But when he saw his chance, why, he bolted off to France,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And he made a lot of trouble&mdash;but it
+wouldn&rsquo;t do again.</p>
+<p>Says the Prince to him, &lsquo;You know, far away you&rsquo;ll
+have to go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To a pleasant little island off the coast of
+Africay,<br />
+Where they tell me that the view of the ocean deep and blue,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is remarkable extensive, and it&rsquo;s there
+you&rsquo;ll have to stay.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So Napoleon wiped his eye, and he wished the Prince
+good-bye,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And being stony-broke, made the best of it he
+could,<br />
+And they kept him snugly pensioned, where his Royal Highness
+mentioned,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Napoleon Boneyparty is provided for for
+good.</p>
+<p>Now of that I don&rsquo;t complain, but I ask and ask in
+vain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Why me, a British soldier, as has lost a useful
+arm<br />
+Through fighting of the foe, when the trumpets ceased to blow,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Should be forced to feed the pigs on a little Surrey
+farm,</p>
+<p>While him as fought with us, and created such a fuss,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And in the whole of Europe did a mighty deal of
+harm,<br />
+Should be kept upon a rock, like a precious fighting cock,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And be found in beer and baccy, which would suit me
+to a charm?</p>
+<h2>DEATH AT THE WINDOW</h2>
+<p>This morning, while we sat in talk<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of spring and apple-bloom,<br />
+Lo!&nbsp; Death stood in the garden walk,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And peered into the room.</p>
+<p>Your back was turned, you did not see<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The shadow that he made.<br />
+He bent his head and looked at me;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It made my soul afraid.</p>
+<p>The words I had begun to speak<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fell broken in the air.<br />
+You saw the pallor of my cheek,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And turned&mdash;but none was there.</p>
+<p>He came as sudden as a thought,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And so departed too.<br />
+What made him leave his task unwrought?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It was the sight of you.</p>
+<p>Though Death but seldom turns aside<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From those he means to take,<br />
+He would not yet our hearts divide,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For love and pity&rsquo;s sake.</p>
+<h2>MAKE-BELIEVES</h2>
+<p>When I was young and well and glad,<br />
+I used to play at being sad;<br />
+Now youth and health are fled away,<br />
+At being glad I sometimes play.</p>
+<h2>A COINCIDENCE</h2>
+<p>Every critic in the town<br />
+Runs the minor poet down;<br />
+Every critic&mdash;don&rsquo;t you know it?<br />
+Is himself a minor poet.</p>
+<h2>ART&rsquo;S DISCIPLINE</h2>
+<p>Long since I came into the school of Art,<br />
+A child in works, but not a child in heart.<br />
+Slowly I learn, by her instruction mild,<br />
+To be in works a man, in heart a child.</p>
+<h2>THE TRUE LIBERAL</h2>
+<p>The truest Liberal is he<br />
+Who sees the man in each degree,<br />
+Who merit in a churl can prize,<br />
+And baseness in an earl despise,<br />
+Yet censures baseness in a churl,<br />
+And dares find merit in an earl.</p>
+<h2>A LATE GOOD NIGHT</h2>
+<p>My lamp is out, my task is done,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And up the stair with lingering feet<br />
+I climb.&nbsp; The staircase clock strikes one.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!</p>
+<p>My solitary room I gain.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A single star makes incomplete<br />
+The blackness of the window pane.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!</p>
+<p>Dim and more dim its sparkle grows,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ere my head the pillows meet,<br />
+My lids are fain themselves to close.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!</p>
+<p>My lips no other words can say,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But still they murmur and repeat<br />
+To you, who slumber far away,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!</p>
+<h2>AN EXILE&rsquo;S SONG</h2>
+<p>My soul is like a prisoned lark,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That sings and dreams of liberty,<br />
+The nights are long, the days are dark,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Away from home, away from thee!</p>
+<p>My only joy is in my dreams,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When I thy loving face can see.<br />
+How dreary the awakening seems,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Away from home, away from thee!</p>
+<p>At dawn I hasten to the shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To gaze across the sparkling sea&mdash;<br />
+The sea is bright to me no more,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which parts me from my home and thee.</p>
+<p>At twilight, when the air grows chill,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And cold and leaden is the sea,<br />
+My tears like bitter dews distil,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Away from home, away from thee.</p>
+<p>I could not live, did I not know<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That thou art ever true to me,<br />
+I could not bear a doubtful woe,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Away from home, away from thee.</p>
+<p>I could not live, did I not hear<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A voice that sings the day to be,<br />
+When hitherward a ship shall steer,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To bear me back to home and thee.</p>
+<p>Oh, when at last that day shall break<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In sunshine on the dancing sea,<br />
+It will be brighter for the sake<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of my return to home and thee!</p>
+<h2>FOR SCOTLAND</h2>
+<p>Beyond the Cheviots and the Tweed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beyond the Firth of Forth,<br />
+My memory returns at speed<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To Scotland and the North.</p>
+<p>For still I keep, and ever shall,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A warm place in my heart for Scotland,<br />
+Scotland, Scotland,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A warm place in my heart for Scotland.</p>
+<p>Oh, cruel off St. Andrew&rsquo;s Bay<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The winds are wont to blow!<br />
+They either rest or gently play,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When there in dreams I go.</p>
+<p>And there I wander, young again,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With limbs that do not tire,<br />
+Along the coast to Kittock&rsquo;s Den,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With whinbloom all afire.</p>
+<p>I climb the Spindle Rock, and lie<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And take my doubtful ease,<br />
+Between the ocean and the sky,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Derided by the breeze.</p>
+<p>Where coloured mushrooms thickly grow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like flowers of brittle stalk,<br />
+To haunted Magus Muir I go,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; By Lady Catherine&rsquo;s Walk.</p>
+<p>In dreams the year I linger through,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In that familiar town,<br />
+Where all the youth I ever knew,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Burned up and flickered down.</p>
+<p>There&rsquo;s not a rock that fronts the sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There&rsquo;s not an inland grove,<br />
+But has a tale to tell to me<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of friendship or of love.</p>
+<p>And so I keep, and ever shall,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The best place in my heart for Scotland,<br />
+Scotland, Scotland,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The best place in my heart for Scotland!</p>
+<h2>THE HAUNTED CHAMBER</h2>
+<p>Life is a house where many chambers be,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all the doors will yield to him who tries,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Save one, whereof men say, behind it lies<br />
+The haunting secret.&nbsp; He who keeps the key,</p>
+<p>Keeps it securely, smiles perchance to see<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The eager hands stretched out to clutch the
+prize,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or looks with pity in the yearning eyes,<br />
+And is half moved to let the secret free.</p>
+<p>And truly some at every hour pass through,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pass through, and tread upon that solemn floor,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Yet come not back to tell what
+they have found.<br />
+We will not importune, as others do,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With tears and cries, the keeper of the door,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But wait till our appointed hour
+comes round.</p>
+<h2>NIGHTFALL</h2>
+<p>Let me sleep.&nbsp; The day is past,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And the folded shadows keep<br />
+Weary mortals safe and fast.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Let me sleep.</p>
+<p>I am all too tired to weep<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For the sunlight of the Past<br />
+Sunk within the drowning deep.</p>
+<p>Treasured vanities I cast<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In an unregarded heap.<br />
+Time has given rest at last.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Let me sleep.</p>
+<h2>IN TIME OF SICKNESS</h2>
+<p>Lost Youth, come back again!<br />
+Laugh at weariness and pain.<br />
+Come not in dreams, but come in truth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Lost Youth.</p>
+<p>Sweetheart of long ago,<br />
+Why do you haunt me so?<br />
+Were you not glad to part,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sweetheart?</p>
+<p>Still Death, that draws so near,<br />
+Is it hope you bring, or fear?<br />
+Is it only ease of breath,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Still Death?</p>
+<h2>Footnotes:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1"
+class="footnote">[1]</a>&nbsp; Mr. Butler lectures on Physics,
+or, as it is called in Scotland, Natural Philosophy.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBERT F. MURRAY***</p>
+<pre>
+
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+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/1333.txt b/1333.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/1333.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Robert F. Murray, by Robert F. Murray, Edited
+by Andrew Lang
+
+
+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: Robert F. Murray
+ his poems with a memoir by Andrew Lang
+
+
+Author: Robert F. Murray
+
+Editor: Andrew Lang
+
+Release Date: July 4, 2007 [eBook #1333]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBERT F. MURRAY***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1894 Longmans, Green, and Co. edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ROBERT F. MURRAY
+(AUTHOR OF THE SCARLET GOWN)
+HIS POEMS: WITH MEMOIR
+
+
+BY
+ANDREW LANG
+
+LONDON
+LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
+NEW YORK: 15 EAST 16TH STREET
+
+1894
+
+Edinburgh: T. AND A. CONSTABLE, Printers to Her Majesty
+
+THE VOLUME
+IS DEDICATED TO
+J. M. D. MEIKLEJOHN, ESQ.
+MOST INDULGENT OF MASTERS
+AND KINDEST OF
+FRIENDS
+
+
+
+
+R. F. MURRAY--1863-1893
+
+
+Much is written about success and failure in the career of literature,
+about the reasons which enable one man to reach the front, and another to
+earn his livelihood, while a third, in appearance as likely as either of
+them, fails and, perhaps, faints by the way. Mr. R. F. Murray, the
+author of _The Scarlet Gown_, was among those who do not attain success,
+in spite of qualities which seem destined to ensure it, and who fall out
+of the ranks. To him, indeed, success and the rewards of this world,
+money, and praise, did by no means seem things to be snatched at. To him
+success meant earning by his pen the very modest sum which sufficed for
+his wants, and the leisure necessary for serious essays in poetry. Fate
+denied him even this, in spite of his charming natural endowment of
+humour, of tenderness, of delight in good letters, and in nature. He
+died young; he was one of those whose talent matures slowly, and he died
+before he came into the full possession of his intellectual kingdom. He
+had the ambition to excel, [Greek text], as the Homeric motto of his
+University runs, and he was on the way to excellence when his health
+broke down. He lingered for two years and passed away.
+
+It is a familiar story, the story of lettered youth; of an ambition, or
+rather of an ideal; of poverty; of struggles in the 'dusty and stony
+ways'; of intellectual task-work; of a true love consoling the last
+months of weakness and pain. The tale is not repeated here because it is
+novel, nor even because in its hero we have to regret an 'inheritor of
+unfulfilled renown.' It is not the genius so much as the character of
+this St. Andrews student which has won the sympathy of his biographer,
+and may win, he hopes, the sympathy of others. In Mr. Murray I feel that
+I have lost that rare thing, a friend; a friend whom the chances of life
+threw in my way, and withdrew again ere we had time and opportunity for
+perfect recognition. Those who read his Letters and Remains may also
+feel this emotion of sympathy and regret.
+
+He was young in years, and younger in heart, a lover of youth; and youth,
+if it could learn and could be warned, might win a lesson from his life.
+Many of us have trod in his path, and, by some kindness of fate, have
+found from it a sunnier exit into longer days and more fortunate
+conditions. Others have followed this well-beaten road to the same early
+and quiet end as his.
+
+The life and the letters of Murray remind one strongly of Thomas
+Davidson's, as published in that admirable and touching biography, _A
+Scottish Probationer_. It was my own chance to be almost in touch with
+both these gentle, tuneful, and kindly humorists. Davidson was a
+Borderer, born on the skirts of 'stormy Ruberslaw,' in the country of
+James Thomson, of Leyden, of the old Ballad minstrels. The son of a
+Scottish peasant line of the old sort, honourable, refined, devout, he
+was educated in Edinburgh for the ministry of the United Presbyterian
+Church. Some beautiful verses of his appeared in the _St. Andrews
+University Magazine_ about 1863, at the time when I first 'saw myself in
+print' in the same periodical. Davidson's poem delighted me: another of
+his, 'Ariadne in Naxos,' appeared in the _Cornhill Magazine_ about the
+same time. Mr. Thackeray, who was then editor, no doubt remembered Pen's
+prize poem on the same subject. I did not succeed in learning anything
+about the author, did not know that he lived within a drive of my own
+home. When next I heard of him, it was in his biography. As a
+'Probationer,' or unplaced minister, he, somehow, was not successful. A
+humorist, a poet, a delightful companion, he never became 'a placed
+minister.' It was the old story of an imprudence, a journey made in damp
+clothes, of consumption, of the end of his earthly life and love. His
+letters to his betrothed, his poems, his career, constantly remind one of
+Murray's, who must often have joined in singing Davidson's song, so
+popular with St. Andrews students, _The Banks of the Yang-tse-kiang_.
+Love of the Border, love of Murray's 'dear St. Andrews Bay,' love of
+letters, make one akin to both of these friends who were lost before
+their friendship was won. Why did not Murray succeed to the measure of
+his most modest desire? If we examine the records of literary success,
+we find it won, in the highest fields, by what, for want of a better
+word, we call genius; in the lower paths, by an energy which can take
+pleasure in all and every exercise of pen and ink, and can communicate
+its pleasure to others. Now for Murray one does not venture, in face of
+his still not wholly developed talent, and of his checked career, to
+claim genius. He was not a Keats, a Burns, a Shelley: he was not, if one
+may choose modern examples, a Kipling or a Stevenson. On the other hand,
+his was a high ideal; he believed, with Andre Chenier, that he had
+'something there,' something worthy of reverence and of careful training
+within him. Consequently, as we shall see, the drudgery of the pressman
+was excessively repulsive to him. He could take no delight in making the
+best of it. We learn that Mr. Kipling's early tales were written as part
+of hard daily journalistic work in India; written in torrid newspaper
+offices, to fill columns. Yet they were written with the delight of the
+artist, and are masterpieces in their _genre_. Murray could not make the
+best of ordinary pen-work in this manner. Again, he was incapable of
+'transactions,' of compromises; most honourably incapable of earning his
+bread by agreeing, or seeming to agree with opinions which were not his.
+He could not endure (here I think he was wrong) to have his pieces of
+light and mirthful verse touched in any way by an editor. Even where no
+opinions were concerned, even where an editor has (to my mind) a perfect
+right to alter anonymous contributions, Murray declined to be edited. I
+ventured to remonstrate with him, to say _non est tanti_, but I spoke too
+late, or spoke in vain. He carried independence too far, or carried it
+into the wrong field, for a piece of humorous verse, say in _Punch_, is
+not an original masterpiece and immaculate work of art, but more or less
+of a joint-stock product between the editor, the author, and the public.
+Macaulay, and Carlyle, and Sir Walter Scott suffered editors gladly or
+with indifference, and who are we that we should complain? This extreme
+sensitiveness would always have stood in Murray's way.
+
+Once more, Murray's interest in letters was much more energetic than his
+zeal in the ordinary industry of a student. As a general rule, men of
+original literary bent are not exemplary students at college. 'The
+common curricoolum,' as the Scottish laird called academic studies
+generally, rather repels them. Macaulay took no honours at Cambridge;
+mathematics defied him. Scott was 'the Greek dunce,' at Edinburgh.
+Thackeray, Shelley, Gibbon, did not cover themselves with college
+laurels; they read what pleased them, they did not read 'for the
+schools.' In short, this behaviour at college is the rule among men who
+are to be distinguished in literature, not the exception. The honours
+attained at Oxford by Mr. Swinburne, whose Greek verses are no less
+poetical than his English poetry, were inconspicuous. At St. Andrews,
+Murray read only 'for human pleasure,' like Scott, Thackeray, Shelley,
+and the rest, at Edinburgh, Oxford, and Cambridge. In this matter, I
+think, he made an error, and one which affected his whole career. He was
+not a man of private fortune, like some of those whom we have mentioned.
+He had not a business ready for him to step into. He had to force his
+own way in life, had to make himself 'self-supporting.' This was all the
+more essential to a man of his honourable independence of character, a
+man who not only would not ask a favour, but who actually shrunk back
+from such chances as were offered to him, if these chances seemed to be
+connected with the least discernible shadow of an obligation. At St.
+Andrews, had he chosen to work hard in certain branches of study, he
+might probably have gained an exhibition, gone to Oxford or elsewhere,
+and, by winning a fellowship, secured the leisure which was necessary for
+the development of his powers. I confess to believing in strenuous work
+at the classics, as offering, apart from all material reward, the best
+and most solid basis, especially where there is no exuberant original
+genius, for the career of a man of letters. The mental discipline is
+invaluable, the training in accuracy is invaluable, and invaluable is the
+life led in the society of the greatest minds, the noblest poets, the
+most faultless artists of the world. To descend to ordinary truths,
+scholarship is, at lowest, an honourable _gagne-pain_. But Murray, like
+the majority of students endowed with literary originality, did not share
+these rather old-fashioned ideas. The clever Scottish student is apt to
+work only too hard, and, perhaps, is frequently in danger of exhausting
+his powers before they are mature, and of injuring his health before it
+is confirmed. His ambitions, to lookers-on, may seem narrow and school-
+boyish, as if he were merely emulous, and eager for a high place in his
+'class,' as lectures are called in Scotland. This was Murray's own view,
+and he certainly avoided the dangers of academic over-work. He read
+abundantly, but, as Fitzgerald says, he read 'for human pleasure.' He
+never was a Greek scholar, he disliked Philosophy, as presented to him in
+class-work; the gods had made him poetical, not metaphysical.
+
+There was one other cause of his lack of even such slender commercial
+success in letters as was really necessary to a man who liked 'plain
+living and high thinking.' He fell early in love with a city, with a
+place--he lost his heart to St. Andrews. Here, at all events, his critic
+can sympathise with him. His 'dear St. Andrews Bay,' beautiful alike in
+winter mists and in the crystal days of still winter sunshine; the quiet
+brown streets brightened by the scarlet gowns; the long limitless sands;
+the dark blue distant hills, and far-off snowy peaks of the Grampians;
+the majestic melancholy towers, monuments of old religion overthrown; the
+deep dusky porch of the college chapel, with Kennedy's arms in wrought
+iron on the oaken door; the solid houses with their crow steps and
+gables, all the forlorn memories of civil and religious feud, of
+inhabitants saintly, royal, heroic, endeared St. Andrews to Murray. He
+could not say, like our other poet to Oxford, 'Farewell, dear city of
+youth and dream!' His whole nature needed the air, 'like wine.' He
+found, as he remarks, 'health and happiness in the German Ocean,'
+swimming out beyond the 'lake' where the witches were dipped; walking to
+the grey little coast-towns, with their wealth of historic documents,
+their ancient kirks and graves; dreaming in the vernal woods of Mount
+Melville or Strathtyrum; rambling (without a fishing-rod) in the charmed
+'dens' of the Kenley burn, a place like Tempe in miniature: these things
+were Murray's usual enjoyments, and they became his indispensable needs.
+His peculiarly shy and, as it were, silvan nature, made it physically
+impossible for him to live in crowded streets and push his way through
+throngs of indifferent men. He could not live even in Edinburgh; he made
+the effort, and his health, at no time strong, seems never to have
+recovered from the effects of a few months spent under a roof in a large
+town. He hurried back to St. Andrews: her fascination was too powerful.
+Hence it is that, dying with his work scarcely begun, he will always be
+best remembered as the poet of _The Scarlet Gown_, the Calverley or J. K.
+S. of Kilrymont; endowed with their humour, their skill in parody, their
+love of youth, but (if I am not prejudiced) with more than the tenderness
+and natural magic of these regretted writers. Not to be able to endure
+crowds and towns, (a matter of physical health and constitution, as well
+as of temperament) was, of course, fatal to an ordinary success in
+journalism. On the other hand, Murray's name is inseparably connected
+with the life of youth in the little old college, in the University of
+the Admirable Crichton and Claverhouse, of the great Montrose and of
+Ferguson,--the harmless Villon of Scotland,--the University of almost all
+the famous Covenanters, and of all the valiant poet-Cavaliers. Murray
+has sung of the life and pleasures of its students, of examinations and
+_Gaudeamuses_--supper parties--he has sung of the sands, the links, the
+sea, the towers, and his name and fame are for ever blended with the air
+of his city of youth and dream. It is not a wide name or a great fame,
+but it is what he would have desired, and we trust that it may be long-
+lived and enduring. We are not to wax elegiac, and adopt a tearful tone
+over one so gallant and so uncomplaining. He failed, but he was
+undefeated.
+
+In the following sketch of Murray's life and work use is made of his
+letters, chiefly of letters to his mother. They always illustrate his
+own ideas and attempts; frequently they throw the light of an impartial
+and critical mind on the distinguished people whom Murray observed from
+without. It is worth remarking that among many remarks on persons, I
+have found not one of a censorious, cynical, envious, or unfriendly
+nature. Youth is often captious and keenly critical; partly because
+youth generally has an ideal, partly, perhaps chiefly, from mere
+intellectual high spirits and sense of the incongruous; occasionally the
+motive is jealousy or spite. Murray's sense of fun was keen, his ideal
+was lofty; of envy, of an injured sense of being neglected, he does not
+show one trace. To make fun of their masters and pastors, tutors,
+professors, is the general and not necessarily unkind tendency of pupils.
+Murray rarely mentions any of the professors in St. Andrews except in
+terms of praise, which is often enthusiastic. Now, as he was by no means
+a prize student, or pattern young man for a story-book, this generosity
+is a high proof of an admirable nature. If he chances to speak to his
+mother about a bore, and he did not suffer bores gladly, he not only does
+not name the person, but gives no hint by which he might be identified.
+He had much to embitter him, for he had a keen consciousness of 'the
+something within him,' of the powers which never found full expression;
+and he saw others advancing and prospering while he seemed to be standing
+still, or losing ground in all ways. But no word of bitterness ever
+escapes him in the correspondence which I have seen. In one case he has
+to speak of a disagreeable and disappointing interview with a man from
+whom he had been led to expect sympathy and encouragement. He told me
+about this affair in conversation; 'There were tears in my eyes as I
+turned from the house,' he said, and he was not effusive. In a letter to
+Mrs. Murray he describes this unlucky interview,--a discouragement caused
+by a manner which was strange to Murray, rather than by real
+unkindness,--and he describes it with a delicacy, with a reserve, with a
+toleration, beyond all praise. These are traits of a character which was
+greater and more rare than his literary talent: a character quite
+developed, while his talent was only beginning to unfold itself, and to
+justify his belief in his powers.
+
+Robert Murray was the eldest child of John and Emmeline Murray: the
+father a Scot, the mother of American birth. He was born at Roxbury, in
+Massachusetts, on December 26th, 1863. It may be fancy, but, in his shy
+reserve, his almost _farouche_ independence, one seems to recognise the
+Scot; while in his cast of literary talent, in his natural 'culture,' we
+observe the son of a refined American lady. To his mother he could
+always write about the books which were interesting him, with full
+reliance on her sympathy, though indeed, he does not often say very much
+about literature.
+
+Till 1869 he lived in various parts of New England, his father being a
+Unitarian minister. 'He was a remarkably cheerful and affectionate
+child, and seldom seemed to find anything to trouble him.' In 1869 his
+father carried him to England, Mrs. Murray and a child remaining in
+America. For more than a year the boy lived with kinsfolk near Kelso,
+the beautiful old town on the Tweed where Scott passed some of his
+childish days. In 1871 the family were reunited at York, where he was
+fond of attending the services in the Cathedral. Mr. Murray then took
+charge of the small Unitarian chapel of Blackfriars, at Canterbury. Thus
+Murray's early youth was passed in the mingled influences of Unitarianism
+at home, and of Cathedral services at York, and in the church where
+Becket suffered martyrdom. A not unnatural result was a somewhat
+eclectic and unconstrained religion. He thought but little of the
+differences of creed, believing that all good men held, in essentials,
+much the same faith. His view of essentials was generous, as he
+admitted. He occasionally spoke of himself as 'sceptical,' that is, in
+contrast with those whose faith was more definite, more dogmatic, more
+securely based on 'articles.' To illustrate Murray's religious attitude,
+at least as it was in 1887, one may quote from a letter of that year
+(April 17).
+
+ 'There was a University sermon, and I thought I would go and hear it.
+ So I donned my old cap and gown and felt quite proud of them. The
+ preacher was Bishop Wordsworth. He goes in for the union of the
+ Presbyterian and Episcopalian Churches, and is glad to preach in a
+ Presbyterian Church, as he did this morning. How the aforesaid Union
+ is to be brought about, I'm sure I don't know, for I am pretty certain
+ that the Episcopalians won't give up their bishops, and the
+ Presbyterians won't have them on any account. However, that's neither
+ here nor there--at least it does not affect the fact that Wordsworth
+ is a first-rate man, and a fine preacher. I dare say you know he is a
+ nephew or grand-nephew of the Poet. He is a most venerable old man,
+ and worth looking at, merely for his exterior. He is so feeble with
+ age that he can with difficulty climb the three short steps that lead
+ into the pulpit; but, once in the pulpit, it is another thing. There
+ is no feebleness when he begins to preach. He is one of the last
+ voices of the old orthodox school, and I wish there were hundreds like
+ him. If ever a man believed in his message, Wordsworth does. And
+ though I cannot follow him in his veneration for the Thirty-nine
+ Articles, the way in which he does makes me half wish I could. . . .
+ It was full of wisdom and the beauty of holiness, which even I, poor
+ sceptic and outcast, could recognise and appreciate. After all, he
+ didn't get it from the Articles, but from his own human heart, which,
+ he told us, was deceitful and desperately wicked.
+
+ 'Confound it, how stupid we all are! Episcopalians, Presbyterians,
+ Unitarians, Agnostics; the whole lot of us. We all believe the same
+ things, to a great extent; but we must keep wrangling about the data
+ from which we infer these beliefs . . . I believe a great deal that he
+ does, but I certainly don't act up to my belief as he does to his.'
+
+The belief 'up to' which Murray lived was, if it may be judged by its
+fruits, that of a Christian man. But, in this age, we do find the most
+exemplary Christian conduct in some who have discarded dogma and resigned
+hope. Probably Murray would not the less have regarded these persons as
+Christians. If we must make a choice, it is better to have love and
+charity without belief, than belief of the most intense kind, accompanied
+by such love and charity as John Knox bore to all who differed from him
+about a mass or a chasuble, a priest or a presbyter. This letter,
+illustrative of the effect of cathedral services on a young Unitarian, is
+taken out of its proper chronological place.
+
+From Canterbury Mr. Murray went to Ilminster in Somerset. Here Robert
+attended the Grammar School; in 1879 he went to the Grammar School of
+Crewkerne. In 1881 he entered at the University of St. Andrews, with a
+scholarship won as an external student of Manchester New College. This
+he resigned not long after, as he had abandoned the idea of becoming a
+Unitarian minister.
+
+No longer a schoolboy, he was now a _Bejant_ (_bec jaune_?), to use the
+old Scotch term for 'freshman.' He liked the picturesque word, and
+opposed the introduction of 'freshman.' Indeed he liked all things old,
+and, as a senior man, was a supporter of ancient customs and of _esprit
+de corps_ in college. He fell in love for life with that old and grey
+enchantress, the city of St. Margaret, of Cardinal Beaton, of Knox and
+Andrew Melville, of Archbishop Sharp, and Samuel Rutherford. The nature
+of life and education in a Scottish university is now, probably, better
+understood in England than it used to be. Of the Scottish universities,
+St. Andrews varies least, though it varies much, from Oxford and
+Cambridge. Unlike the others, Aberdeen, Glasgow, and Edinburgh, the
+United College of St. Leonard and St. Salvator is not lost in a large
+town. The College and the Divinity Hall of St. Mary's are a survival
+from the Middle Ages. The University itself arose from a voluntary
+association of the learned in 1410. Privileges were conferred on this
+association by Bishop Wardlaw in 1411. It was intended as a bulwark
+against Lollard ideas. In 1413 the Antipope Benedict XIII., to whom
+Scotland then adhered, granted six bulls of confirmation to the new
+University. Not till 1430 did Bishop Wardlaw give a building in South
+Street, the Paedagogium. St. Salvator's College was founded by Bishop
+Kennedy (1440-1466): it was confirmed by Pius II. in 1458. Kennedy
+endowed his foundation richly with plate (a silver mace is still extant)
+and with gorgeous furniture and cloth of gold. St. Leonard's was founded
+by Prior Hepburn in 1512. Of St. Salvator's the ancient chapel still
+remains, and is in use. St. Leonard's was merged with St. Salvator's in
+the last century: its chapel is now roofless, some of the old buildings
+remain, much modernised, but on the south side fronting the gardens they
+are still picturesque. Both Colleges were, originally, places of
+residence for the students, as at Oxford and Cambridge, and the
+discipline, especially at St. Leonard's, was rather monastic. The
+Reformation caused violent changes; all through these troubled ages the
+new doctrines, and then the violent Presbyterian pretensions to clerical
+influence in politics, and the Covenant and the Restoration and
+Revolution, kept busy the dwellers in what should have been 'quiet
+collegiate cloisters.' St. Leonard's was more extreme, on Knox's side,
+than St. Salvator's, but was also more devoted to King James in 1715.
+From St. Andrews Simon Lovat went to lead his abominable old father's
+clan, on the Prince Regent's side, in 1745. Golf and archery, since the
+Reformation at least, were the chief recreations of the students, and the
+archery medals bear all the noblest names of the North, including those
+of Argyll and the great Marquis of Montrose. Early in the present
+century the old ruinous college buildings of St. Salvator's ceased to be
+habitable, except by a ghost! There is another spectre of a noisy sort
+in St. Leonard's. The new buildings are mere sets of class-rooms, the
+students live where they please, generally in lodgings, which they
+modestly call _bunks_. There is a hall for dinners in common; it is part
+of the buildings of the Union, a new hall added to an ancient house.
+
+It was thus to a university with ancient associations, with a _religio
+loci_, and with more united and harmonious student-life than is customary
+in Scotland, that Murray came in 1881. How clearly his biographer
+remembers coming to the same place, twenty years earlier! how vivid is
+his memory of quaint streets, grey towers, and the North Sea breaking in
+heavy rollers on the little pier!
+
+Though, like a descendant of Archbishop Sharp, and a winner of the
+archery medal, I boast myself _Sancti Leonardi alumnus addictissimus_, I
+am unable to give a description, at first hand, of student life in St.
+Andrews. In my time, a small set of 'men' lived together in what was
+then St. Leonard's Hall. The buildings that remain on the site of Prior
+Hepburn's foundation, or some of them, were turned into a hall, where we
+lived together, not scattered in _bunks_. The existence was mainly like
+that of pupils of a private tutor; seven-eighths of private tutor to one-
+eighth of a college in the English universities. We attended the
+lectures in the University, we distinguished ourselves no more than
+Murray would have approved of, and many of us have remained united by
+friendship through half a lifetime.
+
+It was a pleasant existence, and the perfume of buds and flowers in the
+old gardens, hard by those where John Knox sat and talked with James
+Melville and our other predecessors at St. Leonard's, is fragrant in our
+memories. It was pleasant, but St. Leonard's Hall has ceased to be, and
+the life there was not the life of the free and hardy bunk-dwellers.
+Whoso pined for such dissipated pleasures as the chill and dark streets
+of St. Andrews offer to the gay and rousing blade, was not encouraged. We
+were very strictly 'gated,' though the whole society once got out of
+window, and, by way of protest, made a moonlight march into the country.
+We attended 'gaudeamuses' and _solatia_--University suppers--but little;
+indeed, he who writes does not remember any such diversions of boys who
+beat the floor, and break the glass. To plant the standard of cricket in
+the remoter gardens of our country, in a region devastated by golf, was
+our ambition, and here we had no assistance at all from the University.
+It was chiefly at lecture, at football on the links, and in the debating
+societies that we met our fellow-students; like the celebrated starling,
+'we could not get out,' except to permitted dinners and evening parties.
+Consequently one could only sketch student life with a hand faltering and
+untrained. It was very different with Murray and his friends. They were
+their own masters, could sit up to all hours, smoking, talking, and, I
+dare say, drinking. As I gather from his letters, Murray drank nothing
+stronger than water. There was a certain kind of humour in drink, he
+said, but he thought it was chiefly obvious to the sober spectator. As
+the sober spectator, he sang of violent delights which have violent ends.
+He may best be left to illustrate student life for himself. The 'waster'
+of whom he chants is the slang name borne by the local fast man.
+
+
+
+THE WASTER SINGING AT MIDNIGHT.
+AFTER LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+ Loud he sang the song Ta Phershon
+ For his personal diversion,
+ Sang the chorus U-pi-dee,
+ Sang about the Barley Bree.
+
+ In that hour when all is quiet
+ Sang he songs of noise and riot,
+ In a voice so loud and queer
+ That I wakened up to hear.
+
+ Songs that distantly resembled
+ Those one hears from men assembled
+ In the old Cross Keys Hotel,
+ Only sung not half so well.
+
+ For the time of this ecstatic
+ Amateur was most erratic,
+ And he only hit the key
+ Once in every melody.
+
+ If "he wot prigs wot isn't his'n
+ Ven he's cotched is sent to prison,"
+ He who murders sleep might well
+ Adorn a solitary cell.
+
+ But, if no obliging peeler
+ Will arrest this midnight squealer,
+ My own peculiar arm of might
+ Must undertake the job to-night.
+
+The following fragment is but doubtfully autobiographical. 'The swift
+four-wheeler' seldom devastates the streets where, of old, the
+Archbishop's jackmen sliced Presbyterian professors with the claymore, as
+James Melville tells us:--
+
+
+
+TO NUMBER 27x.
+
+
+ Beloved Peeler! friend and guide
+ And guard of many a midnight reeler,
+ None worthier, though the world is wide,
+ Beloved Peeler.
+
+ Thou from before the swift four-wheeler
+ Didst pluck me, and didst thrust aside
+ A strongly built provision-dealer
+
+ Who menaced me with blows, and cried
+ 'Come on! come on!' O Paian, Healer,
+ Then but for thee I must have died,
+ Beloved Peeler!
+
+The following presentiment, though he was no 'waster,' may very well have
+been his own. He was only half Scotch, and not at all metaphysical:--
+
+
+
+THE WASTER'S PRESENTIMENT
+
+
+ I shall be spun. There is a voice within
+ Which tells me plainly I am all undone;
+ For though I toil not, neither do I spin,
+ I shall be spun.
+
+ April approaches. I have not begun
+ Schwegler or Mackintosh, nor will begin
+ Those lucid works till April 21.
+
+ So my degree I do not hope to win,
+ For not by ways like mine degrees are won;
+ And though, to please my uncle, I go in,
+ I shall be spun.
+
+Here we must quote, from _The Scarlet Gown_, one of his most tender
+pieces of affectionate praise bestowed on his favourite city:--
+
+
+
+A DECEMBER DAY
+
+
+ Blue, blue is the sea to-day,
+ Warmly the light
+ Sleeps on St. Andrews Bay--
+ Blue, fringed with white.
+
+ That's no December sky!
+ Surely 'tis June
+ Holds now her state on high,
+ Queen of the noon.
+
+ Only the tree-tops bare
+ Crowning the hill,
+ Clear-cut in perfect air,
+ Warn us that still
+
+ Winter, the aged chief,
+ Mighty in power,
+ Exiles the tender leaf,
+ Exiles the flower.
+
+ Is there a heart to-day,
+ A heart that grieves
+ For flowers that fade away,
+ For fallen leaves?
+
+ Oh, not in leaves or flowers
+ Endures the charm
+ That clothes those naked towers
+ With love-light warm.
+
+ O dear St. Andrews Bay,
+ Winter or Spring
+ Gives not nor takes away
+ Memories that cling
+
+ All round thy girdling reefs,
+ That walk thy shore,
+ Memories of joys and griefs
+ Ours evermore.
+
+'I have _not_ worked for my classes this session,' he writes (1884), 'and
+shall not take any places.' The five or six most distinguished pupils
+used, at least in my time, to receive prize-books decorated with the
+University's arms. These prize-men, no doubt, held the 'places' alluded
+to by Murray. If _he_ was idle, 'I speak of him but brotherly,' having
+never held any 'place' but that of second to Mr. Wallace, now Professor
+of Moral Philosophy at Oxford, in the Greek Class (Mr. Sellar's). Why
+was one so idle, in Latin (Mr. Shairp), in Morals (Mr. Ferrier), in Logic
+(Mr. Veitch)? but Logic was unintelligible.
+
+'I must confess,' remarks Murray, in a similar spirit of pensive regret,
+'that I have not had any ambition to distinguish myself either in
+Knight's (Moral Philosophy) or in Butler's.' {1}
+
+Murray then speaks with some acrimony about earnest students, whose
+motive, he thinks, is a small ambition. But surely a man may be fond of
+metaphysics for the sweet sake of Queen Entelechy, and, moreover, these
+students looked forward to days in which real work would bear fruit.
+
+'You must grind up the opinions of Plato, Aristotle, and a lot of other
+men, concerning things about which they knew nothing, and we know
+nothing, taking these opinions at second or third hand, and never looking
+into the works of these men; for to a man who wants to take a place,
+there is no time for anything of that sort.'
+
+Why not? The philosophers ought to be read in their own language, as
+they are now read. The remarks on the most fairy of philosophers--Plato;
+on the greatest of all minds, that of Aristotle, are boyish. Again 'I
+speak but brotherly,' remembering an old St. Leonard's essay in which
+Virgil was called 'the furtive Mantuan,' and another, devoted to ridicule
+of Euripides. But Plato and Aristotle we never blasphemed.
+
+Murray adds that he thinks, next year, of taking the highest Greek Class,
+and English Literature. In the latter, under Mr. Baynes, he took the
+first place, which he mentions casually to Mrs. Murray about a year after
+date:--
+
+ 'A sweet life and an idle
+ He lives from year to year,
+ Unknowing bit or bridle,
+ There are no Proctors here.'
+
+In Greek, despite his enthusiastic admiration of the professor, Mr.
+Campbell, he did not much enjoy himself:--
+
+ 'Thrice happy are those
+ Who ne'er heard of Greek Prose--
+ Or Greek Poetry either, as far as that goes;
+ For Liddell and Scott
+ Shall cumber them not,
+ Nor Sargent nor Sidgwick shall break their repose.
+
+ But I, late at night,
+ By the very bad light
+ Of very bad gas, must painfully write
+ Some stuff that a Greek
+ With his delicate cheek
+ Would smile at as 'barbarous'--faith, he well might.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So away with Greek Prose,
+ The source of my woes!
+ (This metre's too tough, I must draw to a close.)
+ May Sargent be drowned
+ In the ocean profound,
+ And Sidgwick be food for the carrion crows!'
+
+Greek prose is a stubborn thing, and the biographer remembers being told
+that his was 'the best, with the worst mistakes'; also frequently by Mr.
+Sellar, that it was 'bald.' But Greek prose is splendid practice, and no
+less good practice is Greek and Latin verse. These exercises, so much
+sneered at, are the Dwellers on the Threshold of the life of letters.
+They are haunting forms of fear, but they have to be wrestled with, like
+the Angel (to change the figure), till they bless you, and make words
+become, in your hands, like the clay of the modeller. Could we write
+Greek like Mr. Jebb, we would never write anything else.
+
+Murray had naturally, it seems, certainly not by dint of wrestling with
+Greek prose, the mastery of language. His light verse is wonderfully
+handled, quaint, fluent, right. Modest as he was, he was ambitious, as
+we said, but not ambitious of any gain; merely eager, in his own way, to
+excel. His ideal is plainly stated in the following verses:--
+
+
+
+[GREEK TITLE]
+
+
+ Ever to be the best. To lead
+ In whatsoever things are true;
+ Not stand among the halting crew,
+ The faint of heart, the feeble-kneed,
+ Who tarry for a certain sign
+ To make them follow with the rest--
+ Oh, let not their reproach be thine!
+ But ever be the best.
+
+ For want of this aspiring soul,
+ Great deeds on earth remain undone,
+ But, sharpened by the sight of one,
+ Many shall press toward the goal.
+ Thou running foremost of the throng,
+ The fire of striving in thy breast,
+ Shalt win, although the race be long,
+ And ever be the best.
+
+ And wilt thou question of the prize?
+ 'Tis not of silver or of gold,
+ Nor in applauses manifold,
+ But hidden in the heart it lies:
+ To know that but for thee not one
+ Had run the race or sought the quest,
+ To know that thou hast ever done
+ And ever been the best.
+
+Murray was never a great athlete: his ambition did not lead him to desire
+a place in the Scottish Fifteen at Football. Probably he was more likely
+to be found matched against 'The Man from Inversnaid.'
+
+
+
+IMITATED FROM WORDSWORTH
+
+
+ He brought a team from Inversnaid
+ To play our Third Fifteen,
+ A man whom none of us had played
+ And very few had seen.
+
+ He weighed not less than eighteen stone,
+ And to a practised eye
+ He seemed as little fit to run
+ As he was fit to fly.
+
+ He looked so clumsy and so slow,
+ And made so little fuss;
+ But he got in behind--and oh,
+ The difference to us!
+
+He was never a golfer; one of his best light pieces, published later in
+the _Saturday Review_, dealt in kindly ridicule of _The City of Golf_.
+
+ 'Would you like to see a city given over,
+ Soul and body, to a tyrannising game?
+ If you would, there's little need to be a rover,
+ For St. Andrews is the abject city's name.'
+
+He was fond, too fond, of long midnight walks, for in these he overtasked
+his strength, and he had all a young man's contempt for maxims about not
+sitting in wet clothes and wet boots. Early in his letters he speaks of
+bad colds, and it is matter of tradition that he despised flannel. Most
+of us have been like him, and have found pleasure in wading Tweed, for
+example, when chill with snaw-bree. In brief, while reading about
+Murray's youth most men must feel that they are reading, with slight
+differences, about their own. He writes thus of his long darkling
+tramps, in a rhymed epistle to his friend C. C. C.
+
+ 'And I fear we never again shall go,
+ The cold and weariness scorning,
+ For a ten mile walk through the frozen snow
+ At one o'clock in the morning:
+
+ Out by Cameron, in by the Grange,
+ And to bed as the moon descended . . .
+ To you and to me there has come a change,
+ And the days of our youth are ended.'
+
+One fancies him roaming solitary, after midnight, in the dark deserted
+streets. He passes the deep porch of the College Church, and the spot
+where Patrick Hamilton was burned. He goes down to the Castle by the
+sea, where, some say, the murdered Cardinal may now and again be seen, in
+his red hat. In South Street he hears the roll and rattle of the
+viewless carriage which sounds in that thoroughfare. He loiters under
+the haunted tower on Hepburn's precinct wall, the tower where the lady of
+the bright locks lies, with white gloves on her hands. Might he not
+share, in the desolate Cathedral, _La Messe des Morts_, when all the lost
+souls of true lovers are allowed to meet once a year. Here be they who
+were too fond when Culdees ruled, or who loved young monks of the Priory;
+here be ladies of Queen Mary's Court, and the fair inscrutable Queen
+herself, with Chastelard, that died at St. Andrews for desire of her; and
+poor lassies and lads who were over gay for Andrew Melville and Mr.
+Blair; and Miss Pett, who tended young Montrose, and may have had a
+tenderness for his love-locks. They are _a triste_ good company, tender
+and true, as the lovers of whom M. Anatole France has written (_La Messe
+des Morts_). Above the witches' lake come shadows of the women who
+suffered under Knox and the Bastard of Scotland, poor creatures burned to
+ashes with none to help or pity. The shades of Dominicans flit by the
+Black Friars wall--verily the place is haunted, and among Murray's
+pleasures was this of pacing alone, by night, in that airy press and
+throng of those who lived and loved and suffered so long ago--
+
+ 'The mist hangs round the College tower,
+ The ghostly street
+ Is silent at this midnight hour,
+ Save for my feet.
+
+ With none to see, with none to hear,
+ Downward I go
+ To where, beside the rugged pier,
+ The sea sings low.
+
+ It sings a tune well loved and known
+ In days gone by,
+ When often here, and not alone,
+ I watched the sky.'
+
+But he was not always, nor often, lonely. He was fond of making his
+speech at the Debating Societies, and his speeches are remembered as
+good. If he declined the whisky and water, he did not flee the weed. I
+borrow from _College Echoes_--
+
+
+
+A TENNYSONIAN FRAGMENT
+
+
+ So in the village inn the poet dwelt.
+ His honey-dew was gone; only the pouch,
+ His cousin's work, her empty labour, left.
+ But still he sniffed it, still a fragrance clung
+ And lingered all about the broidered flowers.
+ Then came his landlord, saying in broad Scotch,
+ 'Smoke plug, mon,' whom he looked at doubtfully.
+ Then came the grocer saying, 'Hae some twist
+ At tippence,' whom he answered with a qualm.
+ But when they left him to himself again,
+ Twist, like a fiend's breath from a distant room
+ Diffusing through the passage, crept; the smell
+ Deepening had power upon him, and he mixt
+ His fancies with the billow-lifted bay
+ Of Biscay, and the rollings of a ship.
+
+ And on that night he made a little song,
+ And called his song 'The Song of Twist and Plug,'
+ And sang it; scarcely could he make or sing.
+
+ 'Rank is black plug, though smoked in wind and rain;
+ And rank is twist, which gives no end of pain;
+ I know not which is ranker, no, not I.
+
+ 'Plug, art thou rank? then milder twist must be;
+ Plug, thou art milder: rank is twist to me.
+ O twist, if plug be milder, let me buy.
+
+ 'Rank twist, that seems to make me fade away,
+ Rank plug, that navvies smoke in loveless clay,
+ I know not which is ranker, no, not I.
+
+ 'I fain would purchase flake, if that could be;
+ I needs must purchase plug, ah, woe is me!
+ Plug and a cutty, a cutty, let me buy.
+
+His was the best good thing of the night's talk, and the thing that was
+remembered. He excited himself a good deal over Rectorial Elections. The
+duties of the Lord Rector and the mode of his election have varied
+frequently in near five hundred years. In Murray's day, as in my own,
+the students elected their own Rector, and before Lord Bute's energetic
+reign, the Rector had little to do, but to make a speech, and give a
+prize. I vaguely remember proposing the author of _Tom Brown_ long ago:
+he was not, however, in the running.
+
+Politics often inspire the electors; occasionally (I have heard) grave
+seniors use their influence, mainly for reasons of academic policy.
+
+In December 1887 Murray writes about an election in which Mr. Lowell was
+a candidate. 'A pitiful protest was entered by an' (epithets followed by
+a proper name) 'against Lowell, on the score of his being an alien.
+Mallock, as you learn, was withdrawn, for which I am truly thankful.'
+Unlucky Mr. Mallock! 'Lowell polled 100 and Gibson 92 . . . The
+intrigues and corruption appear to be almost worthy of an American
+Presidential election.' Mr. Lowell could not accept a compliment which
+pleased him, because of his official position, and the misfortune of his
+birth!
+
+Murray was already doing a very little 'miniature journalism,' in the
+form of University Notes for a local paper. He complains of the ultra
+Caledonian frankness with which men told him that they were very bad. A
+needless, if friendly, outspokenness was a feature in Scottish character
+which he did not easily endure. He wrote a good deal of verse in the
+little University paper, now called _College Echoes_.
+
+If Murray ever had any definite idea of being ordained for the ministry
+in any 'denomination,' he abandoned it. His 'bursaries' (scholarships or
+exhibitions), on which he had been passing rich, expired, and he had to
+earn a livelihood. It seems plain to myself that he might easily have
+done so with his pen. A young friend of my own (who will excuse me for
+thinking that his bright verses are not _better_ than Murray's) promptly
+made, by these alone, an income which to Murray would have been
+affluence. But this could not be done at St. Andrews. Again, Murray was
+not in contact with people in the centre of newspapers and magazines. He
+went very little into general society, even at St. Andrews, and thus
+failed, perhaps, to make acquaintances who might have been 'useful.' He
+would have scorned the idea of making useful acquaintances. But without
+seeking them, why should we reject any friendliness when it offers
+itself? We are all members one of another. Murray speaks of his
+experience of human beings, as rich in examples of kindness and
+good-will. His shyness, his reserve, his extreme unselfishness,--carried
+to the point of diffidence,--made him rather shun than seek older people
+who were dangerously likely to be serviceable. His manner, when once he
+could be induced to meet strangers, was extremely frank and pleasant, but
+from meeting strangers he shrunk, in his inveterate modesty.
+
+In 1886 Murray had the misfortune to lose is father, and it became,
+perhaps, more prominently needful that he should find a profession. He
+now assisted Professor Meiklejohn of St. Andrews in various kinds of
+literary and academic work, and in him found a friend, with whom he
+remained in close intercourse to the last. He began the weary path,
+which all literary beginners must tread, of sending contributions to
+magazines. He seldom read magazine articles. 'I do not greatly care for
+"Problems" and "vexed questions." I am so much of a problem and a vexed
+question that I have quite enough to do in searching for a solution of my
+own personality.' He tried a story, based on 'a midnight experience' of
+his own; unluckily he does not tell us what that experience was. Had he
+encountered one of the local ghosts?
+
+'My blood-curdling romance I offered to the editor of _Longman's
+Magazine_, but that misguided person was so ill-advised as to return it,
+accompanied with one of these abominable lithographed forms conveying his
+hypocritical regrets.' Murray sent a directed envelope with a twopenny-
+halfpenny stamp. The paper came back for three-halfpence by book-post.
+'I have serious thoughts of sueing him for the odd penny!' 'Why should
+people be fools enough to read my rot when they have twenty volumes of
+Scott at their command?' He confesses to 'a Scott-mania almost as
+intense as if he were the last new sensation.' 'I was always fond of
+him, but I am fonder than ever now.' This plunge into the immortal
+romances seems really to have discouraged Murray; at all events he says
+very little more about attempts in fiction of his own. 'I am a barren
+rascal,' he writes, quoting Johnson on Fielding. Like other men, Murray
+felt extreme difficulty in writing articles or tales which have an
+infinitesimal chance of being accepted. It needs a stout heart to face
+this almost fixed certainty of rejection: a man is weakened by his
+apprehensions of a lithographed form, and of his old manuscript coming
+home to roost, like the Graces of Theocritus, to pine in the dusty chest
+where is their chill abode. If the Alexandrian poets knew this
+ill-fortune, so do all beginners in letters. There is nothing for it but
+'putting a stout heart to a stey brae,' as the Scotch proverb says.
+Editors want good work, and on finding a new man who is good, they
+greatly rejoice. But it is so difficult to do vigorous and spontaneous
+work, as it were, in the dark. Murray had not, it is probable, the
+qualities of the novelist, the narrator. An excellent critic he might
+have been if he had 'descended to criticism,' but he had, at this time,
+no introductions, and probably did not address reviews at random to
+editors. As to poetry, these much-vexed men receive such enormous
+quantities of poetry that they usually reject it at a venture, and obtain
+the small necessary supplies from agreeable young ladies. Had Murray
+been in London, with a few literary friends, he might soon have been a
+thriving writer of light prose and light verse. But the enchantress held
+him; he hated London, he had no literary friends, he could write gaily
+for pleasure, not for gain. So, like the Scholar Gypsy, he remained
+contemplative,
+
+ 'Waiting for the spark from heaven to fall.'
+
+About this time the present writer was in St. Andrews as Gifford Lecturer
+in Natural Theology. To say that an enthusiasm for totems and taboos,
+ghosts and gods of savage men, was aroused by these lectures, would be to
+exaggerate unpardonably. Efforts to make the students write essays or
+ask questions were so entire a failure that only one question was
+received--as to the proper pronunciation of 'Myth.' Had one been
+fortunate enough to interest Murray, it must have led to some discussion
+of his literary attempts. He mentions having attended a lecture given by
+myself to the Literary Society on 'Literature as a Profession,' and he
+found the lecturer 'far more at home in such a subject than in the
+Gifford Lectures.' Possibly the hearer was 'more at home' in literature
+than in discussions as to the origin of Huitzilopochtli. 'Literature,'
+he says, 'never was, is not, and never will be, in the ordinary sense of
+the term, a profession. You can't teach it as you can the professions,
+you can't succeed in it as you can in the professions, by dint of mere
+diligence and without special aptitude . . . I think all this chatter
+about the technical and pecuniary sides of literature is extremely
+foolish and worse than useless. It only serves to glut the idle
+curiosity of the general public about matters with which they have no
+concern, a curiosity which (thanks partly to American methods of
+journalism) has become simply outrageous.'
+
+Into chatter about the pecuniary aspect of literature the Lecturer need
+hardly say that he did not meander. It is absolutely true that
+literature cannot be taught. Maupassant could have dispensed with the
+instructions of Flaubert. But an 'aptitude' is needed in all
+professions, and in such arts as music, and painting, and sculpture,
+teaching is necessary. In literature, teaching can only come from
+general education in letters, from experience, from friendly private
+criticism. But if you cannot succeed in literature 'by dint of mere
+diligence,' mere diligence is absolutely essential. Men must read, must
+observe, must practise. Diligence is as necessary to the author as to
+the grocer, the solicitor, the dentist, the barrister, the soldier.
+Nothing but nature can give the aptitude; diligence must improve it, and
+experience may direct it. It is not enough to wait for the spark from
+heaven to fall; the spark must be caught, and tended, and cherished. A
+man must labour till he finds his vein, and himself. Again, if
+literature is an art, it is also a profession. A man's very first duty
+is to support himself and those, if any, who are dependent on him. If he
+cannot do it by epics, tragedies, lyrics, he must do it by articles,
+essays, tales, or how he honestly can. He must win his leisure by his
+labour, and give his leisure to his art. Murray, at this time, was
+diligent in helping to compile and correct educational works. He might,
+but for the various conditions of reserve, hatred of towns, and the rest,
+have been earning his leisure by work more brilliant and more congenial
+to most men. But his theory of literature was so lofty that he probably
+found the other, the harder, the less remunerative, the less attractive
+work, more congenial to his tastes.
+
+He describes, to Mrs. Murray, various notable visitors to St. Andrews:
+Professor Butcher, who lectured on Lucian, and is 'very handsome,' Mr.
+Arthur Balfour, the Lord Rector, who is 'rather handsome,' and delights
+the listener by his eloquence; Mr. Chamberlain, who pleases him too,
+though he finds Mr. Chamberlain rather acrimonious in his political
+reflections. About Lucian, the subject of Mr. Butcher's lecture, Murray
+says nothing. That brilliant man of letters in general, the Alcibiades
+of literature, the wittiest, and, rarely, the most tender, and, always,
+the most graceful, was a model who does not seem to have attracted
+Murray. Lucian amused, and amuses, and lived by amusing: the vein of
+romance and poetry that was his he worked but rarely: perhaps the
+Samosatene did not take himself too seriously, yet he lives through the
+ages, an example, in many ways to be followed, of a man who obviously
+delighted in all that he wrought. He was no model to Murray, who only
+delighted in his moments of inspiration, and could not make himself happy
+even in the trifles which are demanded from the professional pen.
+
+He did, at last, endeavour to ply that servile engine of which Pendennis
+conceived so exalted an opinion. Certainly a false pride did not stand
+in his way when, on May 5, 1889, he announced that he was about to leave
+St. Andrews, and attempt to get work at proof-correcting and in the
+humblest sorts of journalism in Edinburgh. The chapter is honourable to
+his resolution, but most melancholy. There were competence and ease
+waiting for him, probably, in London, if he would but let his pen have
+its way in bright comment and occasional verse. But he chose the other
+course. With letters of introduction from Mr. Meiklejohn, he consulted
+the houses of Messrs. Clark and Messrs. Constable in Edinburgh. He did
+not find that his knowledge of Greek was adequate to the higher and more
+remunerative branches of proof-reading, that weary meticulous toil, so
+fatiguing to the eyesight. The hours, too, were very long; he could do
+more and better work in fewer hours. No time, no strength, were left for
+reading and writing. He did, while in Edinburgh, send a few things to
+magazines, but he did not actually 'bombard' editors. He is 'to live in
+one room, and dine, if not on a red herring, on the next cheapest article
+of diet.' These months of privation, at which he laughed, and some weeks
+of reading proofs, appear to have quite undermined health which was never
+strong, and which had been sorely tried by 'the wind of a cursed to-day,
+the curse of a windy to-morrow,' at St. Andrews. If a reader observes in
+Murray a lack of strenuous diligence, he must attribute it less to lack
+of resolution, than to defect of physical force and energy. The many bad
+colds of which he speaks were warnings of the end, which came in the form
+of consumption. This lurking malady it was that made him wait, and dally
+with his talent. He hit on the idea of translating some of Bossuet's
+orations for a Scotch theological publisher. Alas! the publisher did not
+anticipate a demand, among Scotch ministers, for the Eagle of Meaux.
+Murray, in his innocence, was startled by the caution of the publisher,
+who certainly would have been a heavy loser. 'I honestly believe that,
+if Charles Dickens were now alive and unknown, and were to offer the MS.
+of _Pickwick_ to an Edinburgh publisher, that sagacious old individual
+would shake his prudent old head, and refuse (with the utmost politeness)
+to publish it!' There is a good deal of difference between _Pickwick_
+and a translation of old French sermons about Madame, and Conde, and
+people of whom few modern readers ever heard.
+
+Alone, in Edinburgh, Murray was saddened by the 'unregarding'
+irresponsive faces of the people as they passed. In St. Andrews he
+probably knew every face; even in Edinburgh (a visitor from London
+thinks) there is a friendly look among the passers. Murray did not find
+it so. He approached a newspaper office: 'he [the Editor whom he met]
+was extremely frank, and told me that the tone of my article on--was
+underbred, while the verses I had sent him had nothing in them. Very
+pleasant for the feelings of a young author, was it not? . . .
+Unfavourable criticism is an excellent tonic, but it should be a little
+diluted . . . I must, however, do him the justice to say that he did me a
+good turn by introducing me to ---, . . . who was kind and encouraging in
+the extreme.'
+
+Murray now called on the Editor of the _Scottish Leader_, the Gladstonian
+organ, whom he found very courteous. He was asked to write some 'leader-
+notes' as they are called, paragraphs which appear in the same columns as
+the leading articles. These were published, to his astonishment, and he
+was 'to be taken on at a salary of--a week.' Let us avoid pecuniary
+chatter, and merely say that the sum, while he was on trial, was not
+likely to tempt many young men into the career of journalism. Yet 'the
+work will be very exacting, and almost preclude the possibility of my
+doing anything else.' Now, as four leader notes, or, say, six, can be
+written in an hour, it is difficult to see the necessity for this
+fatigue. Probably there were many duties more exacting, and less
+agreeable, than the turning out of epigrams. Indeed there was other work
+of some more or less mechanical kind, and the manufacture of 'leader
+notes' was the least part of Murray's industry. At the end of two years
+there was 'the prospect of a very fair salary.' But there was 'night-
+work and everlasting hurry.' 'The interviewing of a half-bred
+Town-Councillor on the subject of gas and paving' did not exhilarate
+Murray. Again, he had to compile a column of Literary News, from the
+_Athenaeum_, the _Academy_, and so on, 'with comments and enlargements
+where possible.' This might have been made extremely amusing, it sounds
+like a delightful task,--the making of comments on 'Mr. --- has finished
+a sonnet:' 'Mr. ---'s poems are in their fiftieth thousand:' 'Miss ---
+has gone on a tour of health to the banks of the Yang-tse-kiang:' 'Mrs.
+--- is engaged on a novel about the Pilchard Fishery.' One could make
+comments (if permitted) on these topics for love, and they might not be
+unpopular. But perhaps Murray was shackled a little by human respect, or
+the prejudices of his editor. At all events he calls it 'not very
+inspiring employment.' The bare idea, I confess, inspirits me extremely.
+
+But the literary _follet_, who delights in mild mischief, did not haunt
+Murray. He found an opportunity to write on the Canongate Churchyard,
+where Fergusson lies, under the monument erected by Burns to the boy of
+genius whom he called his master. Of course the part of the article
+which dealt with Fergusson, himself a poet of the Scarlet Gown, was cut
+out. The Scotch do not care to hear about Fergusson, in spite of their
+'myriad mutchkined enthusiasm' for his more illustrious imitator and
+successor, Burns.
+
+At this time Edinburgh was honouring itself, and Mr. Parnell, by
+conferring its citizenship on that patriot. Murray was actually told off
+'to stand at a given point of the line on which the hero marched,' and to
+write some lines of 'picturesque description.' This kind of thing could
+not go on. It was at Nelson's Monument that he stood: his enthusiasm was
+more for Nelson than for Mr. Parnell; and he caught a severe cold on this
+noble occasion. Murray's opinions clashed with those of the _Scottish
+Leader_, and he withdrew from its service.
+
+Just a week passed between the Parnellian triumph and Murray's retreat
+from daily journalism. 'On a newspaper one must have no opinions except
+those which are favourable to the sale of the paper and the filling of
+its advertisement columns.' That is not precisely an accurate theory.
+Without knowing anything of the circumstances, one may imagine that
+Murray was rather impracticable. Of course he could not write against
+his own opinions, but it is unusual to expect any one to do that, or to
+find any one who will do it. 'Incompatibility of temper' probably caused
+this secession from the newspaper.
+
+After various attempts to find occupation, he did some proof-reading for
+Messrs. Constable. Among other things he 'read' the journal of Lady Mary
+Coke, privately printed for Lord Home. Lady Mary, who appears as a
+lively child in _The Heart of Midlothian_, 'had a taste for loo, gossip,
+and gardening, but the greatest of these is gossip.' The best part of
+the book is Lady Louisa Stuart's inimitable introduction. Early in
+October he decided to give up proof-reading: the confinement had already
+told on his health. In the letter which announces this determination he
+describes a sermon of Principal Caird: 'Voice, gesture, language,
+thought--all in the highest degree,--combined to make it the most moving
+and exalted speech of a man to men that I ever listened to.' 'The world
+is too much with me,' he adds, as if he and the world were ever friends,
+or ever likely to be friendly.
+
+October 27th found him dating from St. Andrews again. 'St. Andrews after
+Edinburgh is Paradise.' His Dalilah had called him home to her, and he
+was never again unfaithful. He worked for his firm friend, Professor
+Meiklejohn, he undertook some teaching, and he wrote a little. It was at
+this time that his biographer made Murray's acquaintance. I had been
+delighted with his verses in _College Echoes_, and I asked him to bring
+me some of his more serious work. But he never brought them: his old
+enemy, reserve, overcame him. A few of his pieces were published 'At the
+Sign of the Ship' in _Longman's Magazine_, to which he contributed
+occasionally.
+
+From this point there is little in Murray's life to be chronicled. In
+1890 his health broke down entirely, and consumption declared itself.
+Very early in 1891 he visited Egypt, where it was thought that some
+educational work might be found for him. But he found Egypt cold, wet,
+and windy; of Alexandria and the Mediterranean he says little: indeed he
+was almost too weak and ill to see what is delightful either in nature or
+art.
+
+ 'To aching eyes each landscape lowers,
+ To feverish pulse each gale blows chill,
+ And Araby's or Eden's bowers
+ Were barren as this moorland hill,'
+
+says the least self-conscious of poets. Even so barren were the rich
+Nile and so bleak the blue Mediterranean waters. Though received by the
+kindest and most hospitable friends, Murray was homesick, and pined to be
+in England, now that spring was there. He made the great mistake of
+coming home too early. At Ilminster, in his mother's home, he slowly
+faded out of life. I have not the heart to quote his descriptions of
+brief yet laborious saunters in the coppices, from the letters which he
+wrote to the lady of his heart. He was calm, cheerful, even buoyant. His
+letters to his college friends are all concerned with literature, or with
+happy old times, and are full of interest in them and in their happiness.
+
+He was not wholly idle. He wrote a number of short pieces of verse in
+_Punch_, and two or three in the _St. James's Gazette_. Other work, no
+doubt, he planned, but his strength was gone. In 1891 his book, _The
+Scarlet Gown_, was published by his friend, Mr. A. M. Holden. The little
+volume, despite its local character, was kindly received by the Reviews.
+Here, it was plain, we had a poet who was to St. Andrews what the
+regretted J. K. S. was to Eton and Cambridge. This measure of success
+was not calculated to displease our _alumnus addictissimus_.
+
+Friendship and love, he said, made the summer of 1892 very happy to him.
+I last heard from him in the summer of 1893, when he sent me some of his
+most pleasing verses. He was in Scotland; he had wandered back, a shadow
+of himself, to his dear St. Andrews. I conceived that he was better; he
+said nothing about his health. It is not easy to quote from his letters
+to his friend, Mr. Wallace, still written in his beautiful firm hand.
+They are too full of affectionate banter: they also contain criticisms on
+living poets: he shows an admiration, discriminating and not wholesale,
+of Mr. Kipling's verse: he censures Mr. Swinburne, whose Jacobite song
+(as he wrote to myself) did not precisely strike him as the kind of thing
+that Jacobites used to sing.
+
+They certainly celebrated
+
+ 'The faith our fathers fought for,
+ The kings our fathers knew,'
+
+in a different tone in the North.
+
+The perfect health of mind, in these letters of a dying man, is
+admirable. Reading old letters over, he writes to Miss ---, 'I have
+known a wonderful number of wonderfully kind-hearted people.' That is
+his criticism of a world which had given him but a scanty welcome, and a
+life of foiled endeavour, of disappointed hope. Even now there was a
+disappointment. His poems did not find a publisher: what publisher can
+take the risk of adding another volume of poetry to the enormous stock of
+verse brought out at the author's expense? This did not sour or sadden
+him: he took Montaigne's advice, 'not to make too much marvel of our own
+fortunes.' His biographer, hearing in the winter of 1893 that Murray's
+illness was now considered hopeless, though its rapid close was not
+expected, began, with Professor Meiklejohn, to make arrangements for the
+publication of the poems. But the poet did not live to have this poor
+gratification. He died in the early hours of 1894.
+
+Of the merits of his more serious poetry others must speak. To the
+Editor it seems that he is always at his best when he is inspired by the
+Northern Sea, and the long sands and grey sea grasses. Then he is most
+himself. He was improving in his art with every year: his development,
+indeed, was somewhat late.
+
+It is less of the writer than the man that we prefer to think. His
+letters display, in passages which he would not have desired to see
+quoted, the depth and tenderness and thoughtfulness of his affections. He
+must have been a delightful friend: illness could not make him peevish,
+and his correspondence with old college companions could never be taken
+for that of a consciously dying man. He had perfect courage, and
+resolution even in his seeming irresoluteness. He was resolved to be,
+and continued to be, himself. 'He had kept the bird in his bosom.' We,
+who regret him, may wish that he had been granted a longer life, and a
+secure success. Happier fortunes might have mellowed him, no fortunes
+could have altered for the worse his admirable nature. He lives in the
+hearts of his friends, and in the pride and sympathy of those who, after
+him, have worn and shall wear the scarlet gown.
+
+The following examples of his poetry were selected by Murray's biographer
+from a considerable mass, and have been seen through the press by
+Professor Meiklejohn, who possesses the original manuscript, beautifully
+written.
+
+
+
+
+MOONLIGHT NORTH AND SOUTH
+
+
+Love, we have heard together
+ The North Sea sing his tune,
+And felt the wind's wild feather
+ Brush past our cheeks at noon,
+And seen the cloudy weather
+ Made wondrous with the moon.
+
+Where loveliness is rarest,
+ 'Tis also prized the most:
+The moonlight shone her fairest
+ Along that level coast
+Where sands and dunes the barest,
+ Of beauty seldom boast,
+
+Far from that bleak and rude land
+ An exile I remain
+Fixed in a fair and good land,
+ A valley and a plain
+Rich in fat fields and woodland,
+ And watered well with rain.
+
+Last night the full moon's splendour
+ Shone down on Taunton Dene,
+And pasture fresh and tender,
+ And coppice dusky green,
+The heavenly light did render
+ In one enchanted scene,
+
+One fair unearthly vision.
+ Yet soon mine eyes were cloyed,
+And found those fields Elysian
+ Too rich to be enjoyed.
+Or was it our division
+ Made all my pleasure void?
+
+Across the window glasses
+ The curtain then I drew,
+And, as a sea-bird passes,
+ In sleep my spirit flew
+To grey and windswept grasses
+ And moonlit sands--and you.
+
+
+
+
+WINTER AT ST. ANDREWS
+
+
+The city once again doth wear
+ Her wonted dress of winter's bride,
+Her mantle woven of misty air,
+ With saffron sunlight faintly dyed.
+She sits above the seething tide,
+ Of all her summer robes forlorn--
+And dead is all her summer pride--
+ The leaves are off Queen Mary's Thorn.
+
+All round, the landscape stretches bare,
+ The bleak fields lying far and wide,
+Monotonous, with here and there
+ A lone tree on a lone hillside.
+No more the land is glorified
+ With golden gleams of ripening corn,
+Scarce is a cheerful hue descried--
+ The leaves are off Queen Mary's Thorn.
+
+For me, I do not greatly care
+ Though leaves be dead, and mists abide.
+To me the place is thrice as fair
+ In winter as in summer-tide:
+With kindlier memories allied
+ Of pleasure past and pain o'erworn.
+What care I, though the earth may hide
+ The leaves from off Queen Mary's Thorn?
+
+Thus I unto my friend replied,
+ When, on a chill late autumn morn,
+He pointed to the tree, and cried,
+ 'The leaves are off Queen Mary's Thorn!'
+
+
+
+
+PATRIOTISM
+
+
+There was a time when it was counted high
+ To be a patriot--whether by the zeal
+ Of peaceful labour for the country's weal,
+Or by the courage in her cause to die:
+
+_For King and Country_ was a rallying cry
+ That turned men's hearts to fire, their nerves to steel;
+ Not to unheeding ears did it appeal,
+A pulpit formula, a platform lie.
+
+Only a fool will wantonly desire
+That war should come, outpouring blood and fire,
+ And bringing grief and hunger in her train.
+And yet, if there be found no other way,
+God send us war, and with it send the day
+ When love of country shall be real again!
+
+
+
+
+SLEEP FLIES ME
+
+
+Sleep flies me like a lover
+ Too eagerly pursued,
+Or like a bird to cover
+ Within some distant wood,
+Where thickest boughs roof over
+ Her secret solitude.
+
+The nets I spread to snare her,
+ Although with cunning wrought,
+Have only served to scare her,
+ And now she'll not be caught.
+To those who best could spare her,
+ She ever comes unsought.
+
+She lights upon their pillows;
+ She gives them pleasant dreams,
+Grey-green with leaves of willows,
+ And cool with sound of streams,
+Or big with tranquil billows,
+ On which the starlight gleams.
+
+No vision fair entrances
+ My weary open eye,
+No marvellous romances
+ Make night go swiftly by;
+But only feverish fancies
+ Beset me where I lie.
+
+The black midnight is steeping
+ The hillside and the lawn,
+But still I lie unsleeping,
+ With curtains backward drawn,
+To catch the earliest peeping
+ Of the desired dawn.
+
+Perhaps, when day is breaking;
+ When birds their song begin,
+And, worn with all night waking,
+ I call their music din,
+Sweet sleep, some pity taking,
+ At last may enter in.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE'S PHANTOM
+
+
+Whene'er I try to read a book,
+Across the page your face will look,
+And then I neither know nor care
+What sense the printed words may bear.
+
+At night when I would go to sleep,
+Thinking of you, awake I keep,
+And still repeat the words you said,
+Like sick men murmuring prayers in bed.
+
+And when, with weariness oppressed,
+I sink in spite of you to rest,
+Your image, like a lovely sprite,
+Haunts me in dreams through half the night.
+
+I wake upon the autumn morn
+To find the sunrise hardly born,
+And in the sky a soft pale blue,
+And in my heart your image true.
+
+When out I walk to take the air,
+Your image is for ever there,
+Among the woods that lose their leaves,
+Or where the North Sea sadly heaves.
+
+By what enchantment shall be laid
+This ghost, which does not make afraid,
+But vexes with dim loveliness
+And many a shadowy caress?
+
+There is no other way I know
+But unto you forthwith to go,
+That I may look upon the maid
+Whereof that other is the shade.
+
+As the strong sun puts out the moon,
+Whose borrowed rays are all his own,
+So, in your living presence, dies
+The phantom kindled at your eyes.
+
+By this most blessed spell, each day
+The vexing ghost awhile I lay.
+Yet am I glad to know that when
+I leave you it will rise again.
+
+
+
+
+COME BACK TO ST. ANDREWS
+
+
+Come back to St. Andrews! Before you went away
+You said you would be wretched where you could not see the Bay,
+The East sands and the West sands and the castle in the sea
+Come back to St. Andrews--St. Andrews and me.
+
+Oh, it's dreary along South Street when the rain is coming down,
+And the east wind makes the student draw more close his warm red gown,
+As I often saw you do, when I watched you going by
+On the stormy days to College, from my window up on high.
+
+I wander on the Lade Braes, where I used to walk with you,
+And purple are the woods of Mount Melville, budding new,
+But I cannot bear to look, for the tears keep coming so,
+And the Spring has lost the freshness which it had a year ago.
+
+Yet often I could fancy, where the pathway takes a turn,
+I shall see you in a moment, coming round beside the burn,
+Coming round beside the burn, with your swinging step and free,
+And your face lit up with pleasure at the sudden sight of me.
+
+Beyond the Rock and Spindle, where we watched the water clear
+In the happy April sunshine, with a happy sound to hear,
+There I sat this afternoon, but no hand was holding mine,
+And the water sounded eerie, though the April sun did shine.
+
+Oh, why should I complain of what I know was bound to be?
+For you had your way to make, and you must not think of me.
+But a woman's heart is weak, and a woman's joys are few--
+There are times when I could die for a moment's sight of you.
+
+It may be you will come again, before my hair is grey
+As the sea is in the twilight of a weary winter's day.
+When success is grown a burden, and your heart would fain be free,
+Come back to St. Andrews--St. Andrews and me.
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY
+
+
+I have been lonely all my days on earth,
+ Living a life within my secret soul,
+With mine own springs of sorrow and of mirth,
+ Beyond the world's control.
+
+Though sometimes with vain longing I have sought
+ To walk the paths where other mortals tread,
+To wear the clothes for other mortals wrought,
+ And eat the selfsame bread--
+
+Yet have I ever found, when thus I strove
+ To mould my life upon the common plan,
+That I was furthest from all truth and love,
+ And least a living man.
+
+Truth frowned upon my poor hypocrisy,
+ Life left my soul, and dwelt but in my sense;
+No man could love me, for all men could see
+ The hollow vain pretence.
+
+Their clothes sat on me with outlandish air,
+ Upon their easy road I tripped and fell,
+And still I sickened of the wholesome fare
+ On which they nourished well.
+
+I was a stranger in that company,
+ A Galilean whom his speech bewrayed,
+And when they lifted up their songs of glee,
+ My voice sad discord made.
+
+Peace for mine own self I could never find,
+ And still my presence marred the general peace,
+And when I parted, leaving them behind,
+ They felt, and I, release.
+
+So will I follow now my spirit's bent,
+ Not scorning those who walk the beaten track,
+Yet not despising mine own banishment,
+ Nor often looking back.
+
+Their way is best for them, but mine for me.
+ And there is comfort for my lonely heart,
+To think perhaps our journeys' ends may be
+ Not very far apart.
+
+
+
+
+TO ALFRED TENNYSON--1883
+
+
+Familiar with thy melody,
+ We go debating of its power,
+ As churls, who hear it hour by hour,
+Contemn the skylark's minstrelsy--
+
+As shepherds on a Highland lea
+ Think lightly of the heather flower
+ Which makes the moorland's purple dower,
+As far away as eye can see.
+
+Let churl or shepherd change his sky,
+ And labour in the city dark,
+ Where there is neither air nor room--
+How often will the exile sigh
+ To hear again the unwearied lark,
+ And see the heather's lavish bloom!
+
+
+
+
+ICHABOD
+
+
+Gone is the glory from the hills,
+ The autumn sunshine from the mere,
+ Which mourns for the declining year
+In all her tributary rills.
+
+A sense of change obscurely chills
+ The misty twilight atmosphere,
+ In which familiar things appear
+Like alien ghosts, foreboding ills.
+
+The twilight hour a month ago
+ Was full of pleasant warmth and ease,
+ The pearl of all the twenty-four.
+Erelong the winter gales shall blow,
+ Erelong the winter frosts shall freeze--
+ And oh, that it were June once more!
+
+
+
+
+AT A HIGH CEREMONY
+
+
+Not the proudest damsel here
+Looks so well as doth my dear.
+All the borrowed light of dress
+Outshining not her loveliness,
+
+A loveliness not born of art,
+But growing outwards from her heart,
+Illuminating all her face,
+And filling all her form with grace.
+
+Said I, of dress the borrowed light
+Could rival not her beauty bright?
+Yet, looking round, 'tis truth to tell,
+No damsel here is dressed so well.
+
+Only in them the dress one sees,
+Because more greatly it doth please
+Than any other charm that's theirs,
+Than all their manners, all their airs.
+
+But dress in her, although indeed
+It perfect be, we do not heed,
+Because the face, the form, the air
+Are all so gentle and so rare.
+
+
+
+
+THE WASTED DAY
+
+
+Another day let slip! Its hours have run,
+ Its golden hours, with prodigal excess,
+ All run to waste. A day of life the less;
+Of many wasted days, alas, but one!
+
+Through my west window streams the setting sun.
+ I kneel within my chamber, and confess
+ My sin and sorrow, filled with vain distress,
+In place of honest joy for work well done.
+
+At noon I passed some labourers in a field.
+ The sweat ran down upon each sunburnt face,
+ Which shone like copper in the ardent glow.
+And one looked up, with envy unconcealed,
+ Beholding my cool cheeks and listless pace,
+ Yet he was happier, though he did not know.
+
+
+
+
+INDOLENCE
+
+
+Fain would I shake thee off, but weak am I
+ Thy strong solicitations to withstand.
+ Plenty of work lies ready to my hand,
+Which rests irresolute, and lets it lie.
+
+How can I work, when that seductive sky
+ Smiles through the window, beautiful and bland,
+ And seems to half entreat and half command
+My presence out of doors beneath its eye?
+
+Will not the air be fresh, the water blue,
+ The smell of beanfields, blowing to the shore,
+ Better than these poor drooping purchased flowers?
+Good-bye, dull books! Hot room, good-bye to you!
+ And think it strange if I return before
+ The sea grows purple in the evening hours.
+
+
+
+
+DAWN SONG
+
+
+I hear a twittering of birds,
+ And now they burst in song.
+How sweet, although it wants the words!
+ It shall not want them long,
+For I will set some to the note
+Which bubbles from the thrush's throat.
+
+O jewelled night, that reign'st on high,
+ Where is thy crescent moon?
+Thy stars have faded from the sky,
+ The sun is coming soon.
+The summer night is passed away,
+Sing welcome to the summer day.
+
+
+
+
+CAIRNSMILL DEN--TUNE: 'A ROVING'
+
+
+As I, with hopeless love o'erthrown,
+With love o'erthrown, with love o'erthrown,
+ And this is truth I tell,
+As I, with hopeless love o'erthrown,
+Was sadly walking all alone,
+
+I met my love one morning
+ In Cairnsmill Den.
+One morning, one morning,
+One blue and blowy morning,
+I met my love one morning
+ In Cairnsmill Den.
+
+A dead bough broke within the wood
+Within the wood, within the wood,
+ And this is truth I tell.
+A dead bough broke within the wood,
+And I looked up, and there she stood.
+
+I asked what was it brought her there,
+What brought her there, what brought her there,
+ And this is truth I tell.
+I asked what was it brought her there.
+Says she, 'To pull the primrose fair.'
+
+Says I, 'Come, let me pull with you,
+Along with you, along with you,'
+ And this is truth I tell.
+Says I, 'Come let me pull with you,
+For one is not so good as two.'
+
+But when at noon we climbed the hill,
+We climbed the hill, we climbed the hill,
+ And this is truth I tell.
+But when at noon we climbed the hill,
+Her hands and mine were empty still.
+
+And when we reached the top so high,
+The top so high, the top so high,
+ And this is truth I tell.
+And when we reached the top so high
+Says I, 'I'll kiss you, if I die!'
+
+I kissed my love in Cairnsmill Den,
+In Cairnsmill Den, in Cairnsmill Den,
+ And this is truth I tell.
+I kissed my love in Cairnsmill Den,
+And my love kissed me back again.
+
+I met my love one morning
+ In Cairnsmill Den.
+One morning, one morning,
+One blue and blowy morning,
+I met my love one morning
+ In Cairnsmill Den.
+
+
+
+
+A LOST OPPORTUNITY
+
+
+One dark, dark night--it was long ago,
+ The air was heavy and still and warm--
+It fell to me and a man I know,
+ To see two girls to their father's farm.
+
+There was little seeing, that I recall:
+ We seemed to grope in a cave profound.
+They might have come by a painful fall,
+ Had we not helped them over the ground.
+
+The girls were sisters. Both were fair,
+ But mine was the fairer (so I say).
+The dark soon severed us, pair from pair,
+ And not long after we lost our way.
+
+We wandered over the country-side,
+ And we frightened most of the sheep about,
+And I do not think that we greatly tried,
+ Having lost our way, to find it out.
+
+The night being fine, it was not worth while.
+ We strayed through furrow and corn and grass
+We met with many a fence and stile,
+ And a quickset hedge, which we failed to pass.
+
+At last we came on a road she knew;
+ She said we were near her father's place.
+I heard the steps of the other two,
+ And my heart stood still for a moment's space.
+
+Then I pleaded, 'Give me a good-night kiss.'
+ I have learned, but I did not know in time,
+The fruits that hang on the tree of bliss
+ Are not for cravens who will not climb.
+
+We met all four by the farmyard gate,
+ We parted laughing, with half a sigh,
+And home we went, at a quicker rate,
+ A shorter journey, my friend and I.
+
+When we reached the house, it was late enough,
+ And many impertinent things were said,
+Of time and distance, and such dull stuff,
+ But we said little, and went to bed.
+
+We went to bed, but one at least
+ Went not to sleep till the black turned grey,
+And the sun rose up, and the light increased,
+ And the birds awoke to a summer day.
+
+And sometimes now, when the nights are mild,
+ And the moon is away, and no stars shine,
+I wander out, and I go half-wild,
+ To think of the kiss which was not mine.
+
+Let great minds laugh at a grief so small,
+ Let small minds laugh at a fool so great.
+Kind maidens, pity me, one and all.
+ Shy youths, take warning by this my fate.
+
+
+
+
+THE CAGED THRUSH
+
+
+Alas for the bird who was born to sing!
+They have made him a cage; they have clipped his wing;
+They have shut him up in a dingy street,
+And they praise his singing and call it sweet.
+But his heart and his song are saddened and filled
+With the woods, and the nest he never will build,
+And the wild young dawn coming into the tree,
+And the mate that never his mate will be.
+And day by day, when his notes are heard
+They freshen the street--but alas for the bird
+
+
+
+
+MIDNIGHT
+
+
+The air is dark and fragrant
+ With memories of a shower,
+And sanctified with stillness
+ By this most holy hour.
+
+The leaves forget to whisper
+ Of soft and secret things,
+And every bird is silent,
+ With folded eyes and wings.
+
+O blessed hour of midnight,
+ Of sleep and of release,
+Thou yieldest to the toiler
+ The wages of thy peace.
+
+And I, who have not laboured,
+ Nor borne the heat of noon,
+Receive thy tranquil quiet--
+ An undeserved boon.
+
+Yes, truly God is gracious,
+ Who makes His sun to shine
+Upon the good and evil,
+ And idle lives like mine.
+
+Upon the just and unjust
+ He sends His rain to fall,
+And gives this hour of blessing
+ Freely alike to all.
+
+
+
+
+WHERE'S THE USE
+
+
+Oh, where's the use of having gifts that can't be turned to money?
+ And where's the use of singing, when there's no one wants to hear?
+It may be one or two will say your songs are sweet as honey,
+ But where's the use of honey, when the loaf of bread is dear?
+
+
+
+
+A MAY-DAY MADRIGAL
+
+
+The sun shines fair on Tweedside, the river flowing bright,
+Your heart is full of pleasure, your eyes are full of light,
+Your cheeks are like the morning, your pearls are like the dew,
+Or morning and her dew-drops are like your pearls and you.
+
+Because you are a princess, a princess of the land,
+You will not turn your lightsome eyes a moment where I stand,
+A poor unnoticed poet, a-making of his rhymes;
+But I have found a mistress, more fair a thousand times.
+
+'Tis May, the elfish maiden, the daughter of the Spring,
+Upon whose birthday morning the birds delight to sing.
+They would not sing one note for you, if you should so command,
+Although you are a princess, a princess of the land.
+
+
+
+
+SONG IS NOT DEAD
+
+
+Song is not dead, although to-day
+ Men tell us everything is said.
+There yet is something left to say,
+ Song is not dead.
+
+While still the evening sky is red,
+ While still the morning gold and grey,
+While still the autumn leaves are shed,
+
+While still the heart of youth is gay,
+ And honour crowns the hoary head,
+While men and women love and pray
+ Song is not dead.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF TRUCE
+
+
+Till the tread of marching feet
+Through the quiet grass-grown street
+Of the little town shall come,
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+While the banners idly hang,
+While the bugles do not clang,
+While is hushed the clamorous drum,
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+In the breathing-time of Death,
+While the sword is in its sheath,
+While the cannon's mouth is dumb,
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+Not too long the rest shall be.
+Soon enough, to Death and thee,
+The assembly call shall come.
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+
+
+
+ONE TEAR
+
+
+Last night, when at parting
+ Awhile we did stand,
+Suddenly starting,
+ There fell on my hand
+
+Something that burned it,
+ Something that shone
+In the moon as I turned it,
+ And then it was gone.
+
+One bright stray jewel--
+ What made it stray?
+Was I cold or cruel,
+ At the close of day?
+
+Oh, do not cry, lass!
+ What is crying worth?
+There is no lass like my lass
+ In the whole wide earth.
+
+
+
+
+A LOVER'S CONFESSION
+
+
+When people tell me they have loved
+ But once in youth,
+I wonder, are they always moved
+ To speak the truth?
+
+Not that they wilfully deceive:
+ They fondly cherish
+A constancy which they would grieve
+ To think might perish.
+
+They cherish it until they think
+ 'Twas always theirs.
+So, if the truth they sometimes blink,
+ 'Tis unawares.
+
+Yet unawares, I must profess,
+ They do deceive
+Themselves, and those who questionless
+ Their tale believe.
+
+For I have loved, I freely own,
+ A score of times,
+And woven, out of love alone,
+ A hundred rhymes.
+
+Boys will be fickle. Yet, when all
+ Is said and done,
+I was not one whom you could call
+ A flirt--not one
+
+Of those who into three or four
+ Their hearts divide.
+My queens came singly to the door,
+ Not side by side.
+
+Each, while she reigned, possessed alone
+ My spirit loyal,
+Then left an undisputed throne
+ To one more royal,
+
+To one more fair in form and face
+ Sweeter and stronger,
+Who filled the throne with truer grace,
+ And filled it longer.
+
+So, love by love, they came and passed,
+ These loves of mine,
+And each one brighter than the last
+ Their lights did shine.
+
+Until--but am I not too free,
+ Most courteous stranger,
+With secrets which belong to me?
+ There is a danger.
+
+Until, I say, the perfect love,
+ The last, the best,
+Like flame descending from above,
+ Kindled my breast,
+
+Kindled my breast like ardent flame,
+ With quenchless glow.
+I knew not love until it came,
+ But now I know.
+
+You smile. The twenty loves before
+ Were each in turn,
+You say, the final flame that o'er
+ My soul should burn.
+
+Smile on, my friend. I will not say
+ You have no reason;
+But if the love I feel to-day
+ Depart, 'tis treason!
+
+If this depart, not once again
+ Will I on paper
+Declare the loves that waste and wane,
+ Like some poor taper.
+
+No, no! This flame, I cannot doubt,
+ Despite your laughter,
+Will burn till Death shall put it out,
+ And may be after.
+
+
+
+
+TRAFALGAR SQUARE
+
+
+These verses have I pilfered like a bee
+Out of a letter from my C. C. C.
+ In London, showing what befell him there,
+With other things, of interest to me.
+
+One page described a night in open air
+He spent last summer in Trafalgar Square,
+ With men and women who by want are driven
+Thither for lodging, when the nights are fair.
+
+No roof there is between their heads and heaven,
+No warmth but what by ragged clothes is given,
+ No comfort but the company of those
+Who with despair, like them, have vainly striven.
+
+On benches there uneasily they doze,
+Snatching brief morsels of a poor repose,
+ And if through weariness they might sleep sound,
+Their eyes must open almost ere they close.
+
+With even tramp upon the paven ground,
+Twice every hour the night patrol comes round
+ To clear these wretches off, who may not keep
+The miserable couches they have found.
+
+Yet the stern shepherds of the poor black sheep
+Will soften when they see a woman weep.
+ There was a mother there who strove in vain,
+With sobs, to hush a starving child to sleep.
+
+And through the night which took so long to wane,
+He saw sad sufferers relieving pain,
+ And daughters of iniquity and scorn
+Performing deeds which God will not disdain.
+
+There was a girl, forlorn of the forlorn,
+Whose dress was white, but draggled, soiled, and torn,
+ Who wandered like a ghost without a home.
+She spoke to him before the day was born.
+
+She, who all night, when spoken to, was dumb,
+Earning dislike from most, abuse from some,
+ Now asked the hour, and when he told her 'Two,'
+Wailed, 'O my God, will daylight never come?'
+
+Yes, it will come, and change the sky anew
+From star-besprinkled black to sunlit blue,
+ And bring sweet thoughts and innocent desires
+To countless girls. What will it bring to you?
+
+
+
+
+A SUMMER MORNING
+
+
+Never was sun so bright before,
+ No matin of the lark so sweet,
+ No grass so green beneath my feet,
+Nor with such dewdrops jewelled o'er.
+
+I stand with thee outside the door,
+ The air not yet is close with heat,
+ And far across the yellowing wheat
+The waves are breaking on the shore.
+
+A lovely day! Yet many such,
+ Each like to each, this month have passed,
+ And none did so supremely shine.
+One thing they lacked: the perfect touch
+ Of thee--and thou art come at last,
+ And half this loveliness is thine.
+
+
+
+
+WELCOME HOME
+
+
+The fire burns bright
+And the hearth is clean swept,
+As she likes it kept,
+And the lamp is alight.
+She is coming to-night.
+
+The wind's east of late.
+When she comes, she'll be cold,
+So the big chair is rolled
+Close up to the grate,
+And I listen and wait.
+
+The shutters are fast,
+And the red curtains hide
+Every hint of outside.
+But hark, how the blast
+Whistled then as it passed!
+
+Or was it the train?
+How long shall I stand,
+With my watch in my hand,
+And listen in vain
+For the wheels in the lane?
+
+Hark! A rumble I hear
+(Will the wind not be still?),
+And it comes down the hill,
+And it grows on the ear,
+And now it is near.
+
+Quick, a fresh log to burn!
+Run and open the door,
+Hold a lamp out before
+To light up the turn,
+And bring in the urn.
+
+You are come, then, at last!
+O my dear, is it you?
+I can scarce think it true
+I am holding you fast,
+And sorrow is past.
+
+
+
+
+AN INVITATION
+
+
+Dear Ritchie, I am waiting for the signal word to fly,
+ And tell me that the visit which has suffered such belating
+Is to be a thing of now, and no more of by-and-by.
+ Dear Ritchie, I am waiting.
+
+The sea is at its bluest, and the Spring is new creating
+ The woods and dens we know of, and the fields rejoicing lie,
+And the air is soft as summer, and the hedge-birds all are mating.
+
+The Links are full of larks' nests, and the larks possess the sky,
+ Like a choir of happy spirits, melodiously debating,
+All is ready for your coming, dear Ritchie--yes, and I,
+ Dear Ritchie, I am waiting.
+
+
+
+
+FICKLE SUMMER
+
+
+Fickle Summer's fled away,
+ Shall we see her face again?
+ Hearken to the weeping rain,
+Never sunbeam greets the day.
+
+More inconstant than the May,
+ She cares nothing for our pain,
+ Nor will hear the birds complain
+In their bowers that once were gay.
+
+Summer, Summer, come once more,
+ Drive the shadows from the field,
+ All thy radiance round thee fling,
+Be our lady as of yore;
+ Then the earth her fruits shall yield,
+ Then the morning stars shall sing.
+
+
+
+
+SORROW'S TREACHERY
+
+
+I made a truce last night with Sorrow,
+ The queen of tears, the foe of sleep,
+To keep her tents until the morrow,
+ Nor send such dreams to make me weep.
+
+Before the lusty day was springing,
+ Before the tired moon was set,
+I dreamed I heard my dead love singing,
+ And when I woke my eyes were wet.
+
+
+
+
+THE CROWN OF YEARS
+
+
+Years grow and gather--each a gem
+ Lustrous with laughter and with tears,
+ And cunning Time a crown of years
+Contrives for her who weareth them.
+
+No chance can snatch this diadem,
+ It trembles not with hopes or fears,
+ It shines before the rose appears,
+And when the leaves forsake her stem.
+
+Time sets his jewels one by one.
+ Then wherefore mourn the wreaths that lie
+ In attic chambers of the past?
+They withered ere the day was done.
+ This coronal will never die,
+ Nor shall you lose it at the last.
+
+
+
+
+HOPE DEFERRED
+
+
+When the weary night is fled,
+And the morning sky is red,
+Then my heart doth rise and say,
+'Surely she will come to-day.'
+
+In the golden blaze of noon,
+'Surely she is coming soon.'
+In the twilight, 'Will she come?'
+Then my heart with fear is dumb.
+
+When the night wind in the trees
+Plays its mournful melodies,
+Then I know my trust is vain,
+And she will not come again.
+
+
+
+
+THE LIFE OF EARTH
+
+
+The life of earth, how full of pain,
+ Which greets us on our day of birth,
+Nor leaves us while we yet retain
+ The life of earth.
+
+There is a shadow on our mirth,
+ Our sun is blotted out with rain,
+And all our joys are little worth.
+
+Yet oh, when life begins to wane,
+ And we must sail the doubtful firth,
+How wild the longing to regain
+ The life of earth!
+
+
+
+
+GOLDEN DREAM
+
+
+Golden dream of summer morn,
+ By a well-remembered stream
+In the land where I was born,
+ Golden dream!
+
+Ripples, by the glancing beam
+ Lightly kissed in playful scorn,
+Meadows moist with sunlit steam.
+
+When I lift my eyelids worn
+ Like a fair mirage you seem,
+In the winter dawn forlorn,
+ Golden dream!
+
+
+
+
+TEARS
+
+
+Mourn that which will not come again,
+ The joy, the strength of early years.
+ Bow down thy head, and let thy tears
+Water the grave where hope lies slain.
+
+For tears are like a summer rain,
+ To murmur in a mourner's ears,
+ To soften all the field of fears,
+To moisten valleys parched with pain.
+
+And though thy tears will not awake
+ What lies beneath of young or fair
+ And sleeps so sound it draws no breath,
+Yet, watered thus, the sod may break
+ In flowers which sweeten all the air,
+ And fill with life the place of death.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF SLEEP
+
+
+When we have laid aside our last endeavour,
+ And said farewell to one or two that weep,
+And issued from the house of life for ever,
+ To find a lodging in the house of sleep--
+
+With eyes fast shut, in sunless chambers lying,
+ With folded arms unmoved upon the breast,
+Beyond the noise of sorrow and of crying,
+ Beyond the dread of dreaming, shall we rest?
+
+Or shall there come at last desire of waking,
+ To walk again on hillsides that we know,
+When sunrise through the cold white mist is breaking,
+ Or in the stillness of the after-glow?
+
+Shall there be yearning for the sound of voices,
+ The sight of faces, and the touch of hands,
+The will that works, the spirit that rejoices,
+ The heart that feels, the mind that understands?
+
+Shall dreams and memories crowding from the distance,
+ Shall ghosts of old ambition or of mirth,
+Create for us a shadow of existence,
+ A dim reflection of the life of earth?
+
+And being dead, and powerless to recover
+ The substance of the show whereon we gaze,
+Shall we be likened to the hapless lover,
+ Who broods upon the unreturning days?
+
+Not so: for we have known how swift to perish
+ Is man's delight when youth and health take wing,
+Until the winter leaves him nought to cherish
+ But recollections of a vanished spring.
+
+Dream as we may, desire of life shall never
+ Disturb our slumbers in the house of sleep.
+Yet oh, to think we may not greet for ever
+ The one or two that, when we leave them, weep!
+
+
+
+
+THE OUTCAST'S FAREWELL
+
+
+The sun is banished,
+The daylight vanished,
+No rosy traces
+ Are left behind.
+Here in the meadow
+I watch the shadow
+Of forms and faces
+ Upon your blind.
+
+Through swift transitions,
+In new positions,
+My eyes still follow
+ One shape most fair.
+My heart delaying
+Awhile, is playing
+With pleasures hollow,
+ Which mock despair.
+
+I feel so lonely,
+I long once only
+To pass an hour
+ With you, O sweet!
+To touch your fingers,
+Where fragrance lingers
+From some rare flower,
+ And kiss your feet.
+
+But not this even
+To me is given.
+Of all sad mortals
+ Most sad am I,
+Never to meet you,
+Never to greet you,
+Nor pass your portals
+ Before I die.
+
+All men scorn me,
+Not one will mourn me,
+When from their city
+ I pass away.
+Will you to-morrow
+Recall with sorrow
+Him whom with pity
+ You saw to-day?
+
+Outcast and lonely,
+One thing only
+Beyond misgiving
+ I hold for true,
+That, had you known me,
+You would have shown me
+A life worth living--
+ A life for you.
+
+Yes: five years younger
+My manhood's hunger
+Had you come filling
+ With plenty sweet,
+My life so nourished,
+Had grown and flourished,
+Had God been willing
+ That we should meet.
+
+How vain to fashion
+From dreams and passion
+The rich existence
+ Which might have been!
+Can God's own power
+Recall the hour,
+Or bridge the distance
+ That lies between?
+
+Before the morning,
+From pain and scorning
+I sail death's river
+ To sleep or hell.
+To you is given
+The life of heaven.
+Farewell for ever,
+ Farewell, farewell!
+
+
+
+
+YET A LITTLE SLEEP
+
+
+Beside the drowsy streams that creep
+ Within this island of repose,
+ Oh, let us rest from cares and woes,
+Oh, let us fold our hands to sleep!
+
+Is it ignoble, then, to keep
+ Awhile from where the rough wind blows,
+ And all is strife, and no man knows
+What end awaits him on the deep?
+
+The voyager may rest awhile,
+ When rest invites, and yet may be
+ Neither a sluggard nor a craven.
+With strength renewed he quits the isle,
+ And putting out again to sea,
+ Makes sail for his desired haven.
+
+
+
+
+LOST LIBERTY
+
+
+Of our own will we are not free,
+ When freedom lies within our power.
+ We wait for some decisive hour,
+To rise and take our liberty.
+
+Still we delay, content to be
+ Imprisoned in our own high tower.
+ What is it but a strong-built bower?
+Ours are the warders, ours the key.
+
+But we through indolence grow weak.
+ Our warders, fed with power so long,
+ Become at last our lords indeed.
+We vainly threaten, vainly seek
+ To move their ruth. The bars are strong.
+ We dash against them till we bleed.
+
+
+
+
+AN AFTERTHOUGHT
+
+
+You found my life, a poor lame bird
+ That had no heart to sing,
+You would not speak the magic word
+ To give it voice and wing.
+
+Yet sometimes, dreaming of that hour,
+ I think, if you had known
+How much my life was in your power,
+ It might have sung and flown.
+
+
+
+
+TO J. R.
+
+
+Last Sunday night I read the saddening story
+ Of the unanswered love of fair Elaine,
+The 'faith unfaithful' and the joyless glory
+ Of Lancelot, 'groaning in remorseful pain.'
+
+I thought of all those nights in wintry weather,
+ Those Sunday nights that seem not long ago,
+When we two read our Poet's words together,
+ Till summer warmth within our hearts did glow.
+
+Ah, when shall we renew that bygone pleasure,
+ Sit down together at our Merlin's feet,
+Drink from one cup the overflowing measure,
+ And find, in sharing it, the draught more sweet?
+
+That time perchance is far, beyond divining.
+ Till then we drain the 'magic cup' apart;
+Yet not apart, for hope and memory twining
+ Smile upon each, uniting heart to heart.
+
+
+
+
+THE TEMPTED SOUL
+
+
+Weak soul, by sense still led astray,
+ Why wilt thou parley with the foe?
+ He seeks to work thine overthrow,
+And thou, poor fool! dost point the way.
+
+Hast thou forgotten many a day,
+ When thou exulting forth didst go,
+ And ere the noon wert lying low,
+A broken and defenceless prey?
+
+If thou wouldst live, avoid his face;
+ Dwell in the wilderness apart,
+ And gather force for vanquishing,
+Ere thou returnest to his place.
+ Then arm, and with undaunted heart
+ Give battle, till he own thee king.
+
+
+
+
+YOUTH RENEWED
+
+
+When one who has wandered out of the way
+ Which leads to the hills of joy,
+Whose heart has grown both cold and grey,
+ Though it be but the heart of a boy--
+When such a one turns back his feet
+ From the valley of shadow and pain,
+Is not the sunshine passing sweet,
+ When a man grows young again?
+
+How gladly he mounts up the steep hillside,
+ With strength that is born anew,
+And in his veins, like a full springtide,
+ The blood streams through and through.
+And far above is the summit clear,
+ And his heart to be there is fain,
+And all too slowly it comes more near
+ When a man grows young again.
+
+He breathes the pure sweet mountain breath,
+ And it widens all his heart,
+And life seems no more kin to death,
+ Nor death the better part.
+And in tones that are strong and rich and deep
+ He sings a grand refrain,
+For the soul has awakened from mortal sleep,
+ When a man grows young again.
+
+
+
+
+VANITY OF VANITIES
+
+
+Be ye happy, if ye may,
+In the years that pass away.
+Ye shall pass and be forgot,
+And your place shall know you not.
+
+Other generations rise,
+With the same hope in their eyes
+That in yours is kindled now,
+And the same light on their brow.
+
+They shall see the selfsame sun
+That your eyes now gaze upon,
+They shall breathe the same sweet air,
+And shall reck not who ye were.
+
+Yet they too shall fade at last
+In the twilight of the past,
+They and you alike shall be
+Lost from the world's memory.
+
+Then, while yet ye breathe and live,
+Drink the cup that life can give.
+Be ye happy, if ye may,
+In the years that pass away,
+
+Ere the golden bowl be broken,
+Ere ye pass and leave no token,
+Ere the silver cord be loosed,
+Ere ye turn again to dust.
+
+'And shall this be all,' ye cry,
+'But to eat and drink and die?
+If no more than this there be,
+Vanity of vanity!'
+
+Yea, all things are vanity,
+And what else but vain are ye?
+Ye who boast yourselves the kings
+Over all created things.
+
+Kings! whence came your right to reign?
+Ye shall be dethroned again.
+Yet for this, your one brief hour,
+Wield your mockery of power.
+
+Dupes of Fate, that treads you down
+Wear awhile your tinsel crown
+Be ye happy, if ye may,
+In the years that pass away.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE'S WORSHIP RESTORED
+
+
+O Love, thine empire is not dead,
+Nor will we let thy worship go,
+Although thine early flush be fled,
+Thine ardent eyes more faintly glow,
+And thy light wings be fallen slow
+Since when as novices we came
+Into the temple of thy name.
+
+Not now with garlands in our hair,
+And singing lips, we come to thee.
+There is a coldness in the air,
+A dulness on the encircling sea,
+Which doth not well with songs agree.
+And we forget the words we sang
+When first to thee our voices rang.
+
+When we recall that magic prime,
+We needs must weep its early death.
+How pleasant from thy towers the chime
+Of bells, and sweet the incense breath
+That rose while we, who kept thy faith,
+Chanting our creed, and chanting bore
+Our offerings to thine altar store!
+
+Now are our voices out of tune,
+Our gifts unworthy of thy name.
+December frowns, in place of June.
+Who smiled when to thy house we came,
+We who came leaping, now are lame.
+Dull ears and failing eyes are ours,
+And who shall lead us to thy towers?
+
+O hark! A sound across the air,
+Which tells not of December's cold,
+A sound most musical and rare.
+Thy bells are ringing as of old,
+With silver throats and tongues of gold.
+Alas! it is too sweet for truth,
+An empty echo of our youth.
+
+Nay, never echo spake so loud!
+It is indeed thy bells that ring.
+And lo, against the leaden cloud,
+Thy towers! Once more we leap and spring,
+Once more melodiously we sing,
+We sing, and in our song forget
+That winter lies around us yet.
+
+Oh, what is winter, now we know,
+Full surely, thou canst never fail?
+Forgive our weak untrustful woe,
+Which deemed thy glowing face grown pale.
+We know thee, mighty to prevail.
+Doubt and decrepitude depart,
+And youth comes back into the heart.
+
+O Love, who turnest frost to flame
+With ardent and immortal eyes,
+Whose spirit sorrow cannot tame,
+Nor time subdue in any wise--
+While sun and moon for us shall rise,
+Oh, may we in thy service keep
+Till in thy faith we fall asleep!
+
+
+
+
+BELOW HER WINDOW
+
+
+Where she sleeps, no moonlight shines
+ No pale beam unbidden creeps.
+Darkest shade the place enshrines
+ Where she sleeps.
+
+Like a diamond in the deeps
+ Of the rich unopened mines
+There her lovely rest she keeps.
+
+Though the jealous dark confines
+ All her beauty, Love's heart leaps.
+His unerring thought divines
+ Where she sleeps.
+
+
+
+
+REQUIEM
+
+
+For thee the birds shall never sing again,
+ Nor fresh green leaves come out upon the tree,
+The brook shall no more murmur the refrain
+ For thee.
+
+Thou liest underneath the windswept lea,
+ Thou dreamest not of pleasure or of pain,
+Thou dreadest no to-morrow that shall be.
+
+Deep rest is thine, unbroken by the rain,
+ Ay, or the thunder. Brother, canst thou see
+The tears that night and morning fall in vain
+ For thee?
+
+
+
+
+THOU ART QUEEN
+
+
+Thou art queen to every eye,
+ When the fairest maids convene.
+Envy's self can not deny
+ Thou art queen.
+
+In thy step thy right is seen,
+ In thy beauty pure and high,
+In thy grace of air and mien.
+
+Thine unworthy vassal I,
+ Lay my hands thy hands between;
+Kneeling at thy feet I cry
+ Thou art queen!
+
+
+
+
+IN TIME OF DOUBT
+
+
+'In the shadow of Thy wings, O Lord of Hosts, whom I extol,
+I will put my trust for ever,' so the kingly David sings.
+'Thou shalt help me, Thou shalt save me, only
+ Thou shalt keep me whole,
+ In the shadow of Thy wings.'
+
+In our ears this voice triumphant, like a blowing trumpet, rings,
+But our hearts have heard another, as of funeral bells that toll,
+'God of David where to find Thee?' No reply the question brings.
+
+Shadows are there overhead, but they are of the clouds that roll,
+ Blotting out the sun from sight, and overwhelming earthly things.
+Oh, that we might feel Thy presence! Surely we could rest our soul
+ In the shadow of Thy wings.
+
+
+
+
+THE GARDEN OF SIN
+
+
+I know the garden-close of sin,
+ The cloying fruits, the noxious flowers,
+ I long have roamed the walks and bowers,
+Desiring what no man shall win:
+
+A secret place to shelter in,
+ When soon or late the angry powers
+ Come down to seek the wretch who cowers,
+Expecting judgment to begin.
+
+The pleasure long has passed away
+ From flowers and fruit, each hour I dread
+ My doom will find me where I lie.
+I dare not go, I dare not stay.
+ Without the walks, my hope is dead,
+ Within them, I myself must die.
+
+
+
+
+URSULA
+
+
+There is a village in a southern land,
+By rounded hills closed in on every hand.
+The streets slope steeply to the market-square,
+Long lines of white-washed houses, clean and fair,
+With roofs irregular, and steps of stone
+Ascending to the front of every one.
+The people swarthy, idle, full of mirth,
+Live mostly by the tillage of the earth.
+
+Upon the northern hill-top, looking down,
+Like some sequestered saint upon the town,
+Stands the great convent.
+
+ On a summer night,
+Ten years ago, the moon with rising light
+Made all the convent towers as clear as day,
+While still in deepest shade the village lay.
+Both light and shadow with repose were filled,
+The village sounds, the convent bells were stilled.
+No foot in all the streets was now astir,
+And in the convent none kept watch but her
+Whom they called Ursula. The moonlight fell
+Brightly around her in the lonely cell.
+Her eyes were dark, and full of unshed woe,
+Like mountain tarns which cannot overflow,
+Surcharged with rain, and round about the eyes
+Deep rings recorded sleepless nights, and cries
+Stifled before their birth. Her brow was pale,
+And like a marble temple in a vale
+Of cypress trees, shone shadowed by her hair.
+So still she was, that had you seen her there,
+You might have thought you were beholding death.
+Her lips were parted, but if any breath
+Came from between them, it were hard to know
+By any movement of her breast of snow.
+
+But when the summer night was now far spent,
+She kneeled upon the floor. Her head she leant
+Down on the cold stone of the window-seat.
+God knows if there were any vital heat
+In those pale brows, or if they chilled the stone.
+And as she knelt, she made a bitter moan,
+With words that issued from a bitter soul,--
+'O Mary, Mother, and is this thy goal,
+Thy peace which waiteth for the world-worn heart?
+Is it for this I live and die apart
+From all that once I knew? O Holy God,
+Is this the blessed chastening of Thy rod,
+Which only wounds to heal? Is this the cross
+That I must carry, counting all for loss
+Which once was precious in the world to me?
+If Thou be God, blot out my memory,
+And let me come, forsaking all, to Thee.
+But here, though that old world beholds me not,
+Here, though I seek Thee through my lonely lot,
+Here, though I fast, do penance day by day,
+Kneel at Thy feet, and ever watch and pray,
+Beloved forms from that forsaken world
+Revisit me. The pale blue smoke is curled
+Up from the dwellings of the sons of men.
+I see it, and all my heart turns back again
+From seeking Thee, to find the forms I love.
+
+'Thou, with Thy saints abiding far above,
+What canst Thou know of this, my earthly pain?
+They said to me, Thou shalt be born again,
+And learn that worldly things are nothing worth,
+In that new state. O God, is this new birth,
+Birth of the spirit dying to the flesh?
+Are these the living waters which refresh
+The thirsty spirit, that it thirst no more?
+Still all my life is thirsting to the core.
+Thou canst not satisfy, if this be Thou.
+And yet I dream, or I remember how,
+Before I came here, while I tarried yet
+Among the friends they tell me to forget,
+I never seemed to seek Thee, but I found
+Thou wert in all the loveliness around,
+And most of all in hearts that loved me well.
+
+'And then I came to seek Thee in this cell,
+To crucify my worldliness and pride,
+To lay my heart's affections all aside,
+As carnal hindrances which held my soul
+From hasting unencumbered to her goal.
+And all this have I done, or else have striven
+To do, obeying the behest of Heaven,
+And my reward is bitterness. I seem
+To wander always in a feverish dream
+On plains where there is only sun and sand,
+No rock or tree in all the weary land,
+My thirst unquenchable, my heart burnt dry.
+And still in my parched throat I faintly cry,
+Deliver me, O Lord: bow down Thine ear!
+
+'He will not answer me. He does not hear.
+I am alone within the universe.
+Oh for a strength of will to rise and curse
+God, and defy Him here to strike me dead!
+But my heart fails me, and I bow my head,
+And cry to Him for mercy, still in vain.
+Oh for some sudden agony of pain,
+To make such insurrection in my soul
+That I might burst all bondage of control,
+Be for one moment as the beasts that die,
+And pour my life in one blaspheming cry!'
+
+The morning came, and all the convent towers
+Were gilt with glory by the golden hours.
+But where was Ursula? The sisters came
+With quiet footsteps, calling her by name,
+But there was none that answered. In her cell,
+The glad, illuminating sunshine fell
+On form and face, and showed that she was dead.
+'May Christ receive her soul!' the sisters said,
+And spoke in whispers of her holy life,
+And how God's mercy spared her pain and strife,
+And gave this quiet death. The face was still,
+Like a tired child's, that lies and sleeps its fill.
+
+
+
+
+UNDESIRED REVENGE
+
+
+Sorrow and sin have worked their will
+ For years upon your sovereign face,
+ And yet it keeps a faded trace
+Of its unequalled beauty still,
+ As ruined sanctuaries hold
+ A crumbled trace of perfect mould
+In shrines which saints no longer fill.
+
+I knew you in your splendid morn,
+ Oh, how imperiously sweet!
+ I bowed and worshipped at your feet,
+And you received my love with scorn.
+ Now I scorn you. It is a change,
+ When I consider it, how strange
+That you, not I, should be forlorn.
+
+Do you suppose I have no pain
+ To see you play this sorry part,
+ With faded face and broken heart,
+And life lived utterly in vain?
+ Oh would to God that you once more
+ Might scorn me as you did of yore,
+And I might worship you again!
+
+
+
+
+POETS
+
+
+Children of earth are we,
+Lovers of land and sea,
+Of hill, of brook, of tree,
+ Of all things fair;
+Of all things dark or bright,
+Born of the day and night,
+Red rose and lily white
+ And dusky hair.
+
+Yet not alone from earth
+Do we derive our birth.
+What were our singing worth
+ Were this the whole?
+Somewhere from heaven afar
+Hath dropped a fiery star,
+Which makes us what we are,
+ Which is our soul.
+
+
+
+
+A PRESENTIMENT
+
+
+It seems a little word to say--
+ _Farewell_--but may it not, when said,
+ Be like the kiss we give the dead,
+Before they pass the doors for aye?
+
+Who knows if, on some after day,
+ Your lips shall utter in its stead
+ A welcome, and the broken thread
+Be joined again, the selfsame way?
+
+The word is said, I turn to go,
+ But on the threshold seem to hear
+ A sound as of a passing bell,
+Tolling monotonous and slow,
+ Which strikes despair upon my ear,
+ And says it is a last farewell.
+
+
+
+
+A BIRTHDAY GIFT
+
+
+No gift I bring but worship, and the love
+ Which all must bear to lovely souls and pure,
+ Those lights, that, when all else is dark, endure;
+Stars in the night, to lift our eyes above;
+
+To lift our eyes and hearts, and make us move
+ Less doubtful, though our journey be obscure,
+ Less fearful of its ending, being sure
+That they watch over us, where'er we rove.
+
+And though my gift itself have little worth,
+ Yet worth it gains from her to whom 'tis given,
+ As a weak flower gets colour from the sun.
+Or rather, as when angels walk the earth,
+ All things they look on take the look of heaven--
+ For of those blessed angels thou art one.
+
+
+
+
+CYCLAMEN
+
+
+I had a plant which would not thrive,
+ Although I watered it with care,
+ I could not save the blossoms fair,
+Nor even keep the leaves alive.
+
+I strove till it was vain to strive.
+ I gave it light, I gave it air,
+ I sought from skill and counsel rare
+The means to make it yet survive.
+
+A lady sent it me, to prove
+ She held my friendship in esteem;
+ I would not have it as she said,
+I wanted it to be for love;
+ And now not even friends we seem,
+ And now the cyclamen is dead.
+
+
+
+
+LOVE RECALLED IN SLEEP
+
+
+There was a time when in your face
+ There dwelt such power, and in your smile
+I know not what of magic grace;
+ They held me captive for a while.
+
+Ah, then I listened for your voice!
+ Like music every word did fall,
+Making the hearts of men rejoice,
+ And mine rejoiced the most of all.
+
+At sight of you, my soul took flame.
+ But now, alas! the spell is fled.
+Is it that you are not the same,
+ Or only that my love is dead?
+
+I know not--but last night I dreamed
+ That you were walking by my side,
+And sweet, as once you were, you seemed,
+ And all my heart was glorified.
+
+Your head against my shoulder lay,
+ And round your waist my arm was pressed,
+And as we walked a well-known way,
+ Love was between us both confessed.
+
+But when with dawn I woke from sleep,
+ And slow came back the unlovely truth,
+I wept, as an old man might weep
+ For the lost paradise of youth.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTSTEPS IN THE STREET
+
+
+Oh, will the footsteps never be done?
+ The insolent feet
+ Thronging the street,
+Forsaken now of the only one.
+
+The only one out of all the throng,
+ Whose footfall I knew,
+ And could tell it so true,
+That I leapt to see as she passed along,
+
+As she passed along with her beautiful face,
+ Which knew full well
+ Though it did not tell,
+That I was there in the window-space.
+
+Now my sense is never so clear.
+ It cheats my heart,
+ Making me start
+A thousand times, when she is not near.
+
+When she is not near, but so far away,
+ I could not come
+ To the place of her home,
+Though I travelled and sought for a month and a day.
+
+Do you wonder then if I wish the street
+ Were grown with grass,
+ And no foot might pass
+Till she treads it again with her sacred feet?
+
+
+
+
+FOR A PRESENT OF ROSES
+
+
+Crimson and cream and white--
+ My room is a garden of roses!
+Centre and left and right,
+ Three several splendid posies.
+
+As the sender is, they are sweet,
+ These lovely gifts of your sending,
+With the stifling summer heat
+ Their delicate fragrance blending.
+
+What more can my heart desire?
+ Has it lost the power to be grateful?
+Is it only a burnt-out fire,
+ Whose ashes are dull and hateful?
+
+Yet still to itself it doth say,
+ 'I should have loved far better
+To have found, coming in to-day,
+ The merest scrap of a letter.'
+
+
+
+
+IN TIME OF SORROW
+
+
+Despair is in the suns that shine,
+ And in the rains that fall,
+This sad forsaken soul of mine
+ Is weary of them all.
+
+They fall and shine on alien streets
+ From those I love and know.
+I cannot hear amid the heats
+ The North Sea's freshening flow
+
+The people hurry up and down,
+ Like ghosts that cannot lie;
+And wandering through the phantom town
+ The weariest ghost am I.
+
+
+
+
+A NEW SONG TO AN OLD TUNE--FROM VICTOR HUGO
+
+
+If a pleasant lawn there grow
+ By the showers caressed,
+Where in all the seasons blow
+ Flowers gaily dressed,
+Where by handfuls one may win
+Lilies, woodbine, jessamine,
+I will make a path therein
+ For thy feet to rest.
+
+If there live in honour's sway
+ An all-loving breast
+Whose devotion cannot stray,
+ Never gloom-oppressed--
+If this noble breast still wake
+For a worthy motive's sake,
+There a pillow I will make
+ For thy head to rest.
+
+If there be a dream of love,
+ Dream that God has blest,
+Yielding daily treasure-trove
+ Of delightful zest,
+With the scent of roses filled,
+With the soul's communion thrilled,
+There, oh! there a nest I'll build
+ For thy heart to rest.
+
+
+
+
+THE FIDDLER
+
+
+There's a fiddler in the street,
+ And the children all are dancing:
+Two dozen lightsome feet
+ Springing and prancing.
+
+Pleasure he gives to you,
+ Dance then, and spare not!
+For the poor fiddler's due,
+ Know not and care not.
+
+While you are prancing,
+ Let the fiddler play.
+When you're tired of dancing
+ He may go away.
+
+
+
+
+THE FIRST MEETING
+
+
+Last night for the first time, O Heart's Delight,
+ I held your hand a moment in my own,
+ The dearest moment which my soul has known,
+Since I beheld and loved you at first sight.
+
+I left you, and I wandered in the night,
+ Under the rain, beside the ocean's moan.
+ All was black dark, but in the north alone
+There was a glimmer of the Northern Light.
+
+My heart was singing like a happy bird,
+ Glad of the present, and from forethought free,
+Save for one note amid its music heard:
+ God grant, whatever end of this may be,
+That when the tale is told, the final word
+ May be of peace and benison to thee.
+
+
+
+
+A CRITICISM OF CRITICS
+
+
+How often have the critics, trained
+ To look upon the sky
+Through telescopes securely chained,
+ Forgot the naked eye.
+
+Within the compass of their glass
+ Each smallest star they knew,
+And not a meteor could pass
+ But they were looking through.
+
+When a new planet shed its rays
+ Beyond their field of vision,
+And simple folk ran out to gaze,
+ They laughed in high derision.
+
+They railed upon the senseless throng
+ Who cheered the brave new light.
+And yet the learned men were wrong,
+ The simple folk were right.
+
+
+
+
+MY LADY
+
+
+My Lady of all ladies! Queen by right
+ Of tender beauty; full of gentle moods;
+ With eyes that look divine beatitudes,
+Large eyes illumined with her spirit's light;
+
+Lips that are lovely both by sound and sight,
+ Breathing such music as the dove, which broods
+ Within the dark and silence of the woods,
+Croons to the mate that is her heart's delight.
+
+Where is a line, in cloud or wave or hill,
+ To match the curve which rounds her soft-flushed cheek?
+ A colour, in the sky of morn or of even,
+To match that flush? Ah, let me now be still!
+ If of her spirit I should strive to speak,
+ I should come short, as earth comes short of heaven.
+
+
+
+
+PARTNERSHIP IN FAME
+
+
+Love, when the present is become the past,
+ And dust has covered all that now is new,
+ When many a fame has faded out of view,
+And many a later fame is fading fast--
+
+If then these songs of mine might hope to last,
+ Which sing most sweetly when they sing of you,
+ Though queen and empress wore oblivion's hue,
+Your loveliness would not be overcast.
+
+Now, while the present stays with you and me,
+ In love's copartnery our hearts combine,
+ Life's loss and gain in equal shares to take.
+Partners in fame our memories then would be:
+ Your name remembered for my songs; and mine
+ Still unforgotten for your sweetness' sake.
+
+
+
+
+A CHRISTMAS FANCY
+
+
+ Early on Christmas Day,
+ Love, as awake I lay,
+And heard the Christmas bells ring sweet and clearly,
+ My heart stole through the gloom
+ Into your silent room,
+And whispered to your heart, 'I love you dearly.'
+
+ There, in the dark profound,
+ Your heart was sleeping sound,
+And dreaming some fair dream of summer weather.
+ At my heart's word it woke,
+ And, ere the morning broke,
+They sang a Christmas carol both together.
+
+ Glory to God on high!
+ Stars of the morning sky,
+Sing as ye sang upon the first creation,
+ When all the Sons of God
+ Shouted for joy abroad,
+And earth was laid upon a sure foundation.
+
+ Glory to God again!
+ Peace and goodwill to men,
+And kindly feeling all the wide world over,
+ Where friends with joy and mirth
+ Meet round the Christmas hearth,
+Or dreams of home the solitary rover.
+
+ Glory to God! True hearts,
+ Lo, now the dark departs,
+And morning on the snow-clad hills grows grey.
+ Oh, may love's dawning light
+ Kindled from loveless night,
+Shine more and more unto the perfect day!
+
+
+
+
+THE BURIAL OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR
+
+
+Oh, who may this dead warrior be
+ That to his grave they bring?
+'Tis William, Duke of Normandy,
+ The conqueror and king.
+
+Across the sea, with fire and sword,
+ The English crown he won;
+The lawless Scots they owned him lord,
+ But now his rule is done.
+
+A king should die from length of years,
+ A conqueror in the field,
+A king amid his people's tears,
+ A conqueror on his shield.
+
+But he, who ruled by sword and flame,
+ Who swore to ravage France,
+Like some poor serf without a name,
+ Has died by mere mischance.
+
+To Caen now he comes to sleep,
+ The minster bells they toll,
+A solemn sound it is and deep,
+ May God receive his soul!
+
+With priests that chant a wailing hymn,
+ He slowly comes this way,
+To where the painted windows dim
+ The lively light of day.
+
+He enters in. The townsfolk stand
+ In reverent silence round,
+To see the lord of all the land
+ Take house in narrow ground.
+
+While, in the dwelling-place he seeks,
+ To lay him they prepare,
+One Asselin FitzArthur speaks,
+ And bids the priests forbear.
+
+'The ground whereon this abbey stands
+ Is mine,' he cries, 'by right.
+'Twas wrested from my father's hands
+ By lawlessness and might.
+
+Duke William took the land away,
+ To build this minster high.
+Bury the robber where ye may,
+ But here he shall not lie.'
+
+The holy brethren bid him cease;
+ But he will not be stilled,
+And soon the house of God's own peace
+ With noise and strife is filled.
+
+And some cry shame on Asselin,
+ Such tumult to excite,
+Some say, it was Duke William's sin,
+ And Asselin does right.
+
+But he round whom their quarrels keep,
+ Lies still and takes no heed.
+No strife can mar a dead man's sleep,
+ And this is rest indeed.
+
+Now Asselin at length is won
+ The land's full price to take,
+And let the burial rites go on,
+ And so a peace they make.
+
+When Harold, king of Englishmen,
+ Was killed in Senlac fight,
+Duke William would not yield him then
+ A Christian grave or rite.
+
+Because he fought for keeping free
+ His kingdom and his throne,
+No Christian rite nor grave had he
+ In land that was his own.
+
+And just it is, this Duke unkind,
+ Now he has come to die,
+In plundered land should hardly find
+ Sufficient space to lie.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEATH OF WILLIAM RUFUS
+
+
+The Red King's gone a-hunting, in the woods his father made
+For the tall red deer to wander through the thicket and the glade,
+The King and Walter Tyrrel, Prince Henry and the rest
+Are all gone out upon the sport the Red King loves the best.
+
+Last night, when they were feasting in the royal banquet-hall,
+De Breteuil told a dream he had, that evil would befall
+If the King should go to-morrow to the hunting of the deer,
+And while he spoke, the fiery face grew well-nigh pale to hear.
+
+He drank until the fire came back, and all his heart was brave,
+Then bade them keep such woman's tales to tell an English slave,
+For he would hunt to-morrow, though a thousand dreams foretold
+All the sorrow and the mischief De Breteuil's brain could hold.
+
+So the Red King's gone a-hunting, for all that they could do,
+And an arrow in the greenwood made De Breteuil's dream come true.
+They said 'twas Walter Tyrrel, and so it may have been,
+But there's many walk the forest when the leaves are thick and green.
+
+There's many walk the forest, who would gladly see the sport,
+When the King goes out a-hunting with the nobles of his court,
+And when the nobles scatter, and the King is left alone,
+There are thickets where an English slave might string his bow unknown.
+
+The forest laws are cruel, and the time is hard as steel
+To English slaves, trod down and bruised beneath the Norman heel.
+Like worms they writhe, but by-and-by the Norman heel may learn
+There are worms that carry poison, and that are not slow to turn.
+
+The lords came back, by one and two, from straying far apart,
+And they found the Red King lying with an arrow in his heart.
+Who should have done the deed, but him by whom it first was seen?
+So they said 'twas Walter Tyrrel, and so it may have been.
+
+They cried upon Prince Henry, the brother of the King,
+And he came up the greenwood, and rode into the ring.
+He looked upon his brother's face, and then he turned away,
+And galloped off to Winchester, where all the treasure lay.
+
+'God strike me,' cried De Breteuil, 'but brothers' blood is thin!
+And why should ours be thicker that are neither kith nor kin?'
+They spurred their horses in the flank, and swiftly thence they passed,
+But Walter Tyrrel lingered and forsook his liege the last.
+
+They say it was enchantment, that fixed him to the scene,
+To look upon his traitor's work, and so it may have been.
+But presently he got to horse, and took the seaward way,
+And all alone within the glade, in state the Red King lay.
+
+Then a creaking cart came slowly, which a charcoal-burner drove.
+He found the dead man lying, a ghastly treasure-trove;
+He raised the corpse for charity, and on his wagon laid,
+And so the Red King drove in state from out the forest glade.
+
+His hair was like a yellow flame about the bloated face,
+The blood had stained his tunic from the fatal arrow-place.
+Not good to look upon was he, in life, nor yet when dead.
+The driver of the cart drove on, and never turned his head.
+
+When next the nobles throng at night the royal banquet-hall,
+Another King will rule the feast, the drinking and the brawl,
+While Walter Tyrrel walks alone upon the Norman shore,
+And the Red King in the forest will chase the deer no more.
+
+
+
+
+AFTER WATERLOO
+
+
+On the field of Waterloo we made Napoleon rue
+ That ever out of Elba he decided for to come,
+For we finished him that day, and he had to run away,
+ And yield himself to Maitland on the Billy-ruffium.
+
+'Twas a stubborn fight, no doubt, and the fortune wheeled about,
+ And the brave Mossoos kept coming most uncomfortable near,
+And says Wellington the hero, as his hopes went down to zero,
+ 'I wish to God that Blooker or the night was only here!'
+
+But Blooker came at length, and we broke Napoleon's strength,
+ And the flower of his army--that's the old Imperial Guard--
+They made a final sally, but they found they could not rally,
+ And at last they broke and fled, after fighting bitter hard.
+
+Now Napoleon he had thought, when a British ship he sought,
+ And gave himself uncalled-for, in a manner, you might say,
+He'd be treated like a king with the best of every thing,
+ And maybe have a palace for to live in every day.
+
+He was treated very well, as became a noble swell,
+ But we couldn't leave him loose, not in Europe anywhere,
+For we knew he would be making some gigantic undertaking,
+ While the trustful British lion was reposing in his lair.
+
+We tried him once before near the European shore,
+ Having planted him in Elba, where he promised to remain,
+But when he saw his chance, why, he bolted off to France,
+ And he made a lot of trouble--but it wouldn't do again.
+
+Says the Prince to him, 'You know, far away you'll have to go,
+ To a pleasant little island off the coast of Africay,
+Where they tell me that the view of the ocean deep and blue,
+ Is remarkable extensive, and it's there you'll have to stay.'
+
+So Napoleon wiped his eye, and he wished the Prince good-bye,
+ And being stony-broke, made the best of it he could,
+And they kept him snugly pensioned, where his Royal Highness mentioned,
+ And Napoleon Boneyparty is provided for for good.
+
+Now of that I don't complain, but I ask and ask in vain,
+ Why me, a British soldier, as has lost a useful arm
+Through fighting of the foe, when the trumpets ceased to blow,
+ Should be forced to feed the pigs on a little Surrey farm,
+
+While him as fought with us, and created such a fuss,
+ And in the whole of Europe did a mighty deal of harm,
+Should be kept upon a rock, like a precious fighting cock,
+ And be found in beer and baccy, which would suit me to a charm?
+
+
+
+
+DEATH AT THE WINDOW
+
+
+This morning, while we sat in talk
+ Of spring and apple-bloom,
+Lo! Death stood in the garden walk,
+ And peered into the room.
+
+Your back was turned, you did not see
+ The shadow that he made.
+He bent his head and looked at me;
+ It made my soul afraid.
+
+The words I had begun to speak
+ Fell broken in the air.
+You saw the pallor of my cheek,
+ And turned--but none was there.
+
+He came as sudden as a thought,
+ And so departed too.
+What made him leave his task unwrought?
+ It was the sight of you.
+
+Though Death but seldom turns aside
+ From those he means to take,
+He would not yet our hearts divide,
+ For love and pity's sake.
+
+
+
+
+MAKE-BELIEVES
+
+
+When I was young and well and glad,
+I used to play at being sad;
+Now youth and health are fled away,
+At being glad I sometimes play.
+
+
+
+
+A COINCIDENCE
+
+
+Every critic in the town
+Runs the minor poet down;
+Every critic--don't you know it?
+Is himself a minor poet.
+
+
+
+
+ART'S DISCIPLINE
+
+
+Long since I came into the school of Art,
+A child in works, but not a child in heart.
+Slowly I learn, by her instruction mild,
+To be in works a man, in heart a child.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRUE LIBERAL
+
+
+The truest Liberal is he
+Who sees the man in each degree,
+Who merit in a churl can prize,
+And baseness in an earl despise,
+Yet censures baseness in a churl,
+And dares find merit in an earl.
+
+
+
+
+A LATE GOOD NIGHT
+
+
+My lamp is out, my task is done,
+ And up the stair with lingering feet
+I climb. The staircase clock strikes one.
+ Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+My solitary room I gain.
+ A single star makes incomplete
+The blackness of the window pane.
+ Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+Dim and more dim its sparkle grows,
+ And ere my head the pillows meet,
+My lids are fain themselves to close.
+ Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+My lips no other words can say,
+ But still they murmur and repeat
+To you, who slumber far away,
+ Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+
+
+
+AN EXILE'S SONG
+
+
+My soul is like a prisoned lark,
+ That sings and dreams of liberty,
+The nights are long, the days are dark,
+ Away from home, away from thee!
+
+My only joy is in my dreams,
+ When I thy loving face can see.
+How dreary the awakening seems,
+ Away from home, away from thee!
+
+At dawn I hasten to the shore,
+ To gaze across the sparkling sea--
+The sea is bright to me no more,
+ Which parts me from my home and thee.
+
+At twilight, when the air grows chill,
+ And cold and leaden is the sea,
+My tears like bitter dews distil,
+ Away from home, away from thee.
+
+I could not live, did I not know
+ That thou art ever true to me,
+I could not bear a doubtful woe,
+ Away from home, away from thee.
+
+I could not live, did I not hear
+ A voice that sings the day to be,
+When hitherward a ship shall steer,
+ To bear me back to home and thee.
+
+Oh, when at last that day shall break
+ In sunshine on the dancing sea,
+It will be brighter for the sake
+ Of my return to home and thee!
+
+
+
+
+FOR SCOTLAND
+
+
+Beyond the Cheviots and the Tweed,
+ Beyond the Firth of Forth,
+My memory returns at speed
+ To Scotland and the North.
+
+For still I keep, and ever shall,
+ A warm place in my heart for Scotland,
+Scotland, Scotland,
+ A warm place in my heart for Scotland.
+
+Oh, cruel off St. Andrew's Bay
+ The winds are wont to blow!
+They either rest or gently play,
+ When there in dreams I go.
+
+And there I wander, young again,
+ With limbs that do not tire,
+Along the coast to Kittock's Den,
+ With whinbloom all afire.
+
+I climb the Spindle Rock, and lie
+ And take my doubtful ease,
+Between the ocean and the sky,
+ Derided by the breeze.
+
+Where coloured mushrooms thickly grow,
+ Like flowers of brittle stalk,
+To haunted Magus Muir I go,
+ By Lady Catherine's Walk.
+
+In dreams the year I linger through,
+ In that familiar town,
+Where all the youth I ever knew,
+ Burned up and flickered down.
+
+There's not a rock that fronts the sea,
+ There's not an inland grove,
+But has a tale to tell to me
+ Of friendship or of love.
+
+And so I keep, and ever shall,
+ The best place in my heart for Scotland,
+Scotland, Scotland,
+ The best place in my heart for Scotland!
+
+
+
+
+THE HAUNTED CHAMBER
+
+
+Life is a house where many chambers be,
+ And all the doors will yield to him who tries,
+ Save one, whereof men say, behind it lies
+The haunting secret. He who keeps the key,
+
+Keeps it securely, smiles perchance to see
+ The eager hands stretched out to clutch the prize,
+ Or looks with pity in the yearning eyes,
+And is half moved to let the secret free.
+
+And truly some at every hour pass through,
+ Pass through, and tread upon that solemn floor,
+ Yet come not back to tell what they have found.
+We will not importune, as others do,
+ With tears and cries, the keeper of the door,
+ But wait till our appointed hour comes round.
+
+
+
+
+NIGHTFALL
+
+
+Let me sleep. The day is past,
+ And the folded shadows keep
+Weary mortals safe and fast.
+ Let me sleep.
+
+I am all too tired to weep
+ For the sunlight of the Past
+Sunk within the drowning deep.
+
+Treasured vanities I cast
+ In an unregarded heap.
+Time has given rest at last.
+ Let me sleep.
+
+
+
+
+IN TIME OF SICKNESS
+
+
+Lost Youth, come back again!
+Laugh at weariness and pain.
+Come not in dreams, but come in truth,
+ Lost Youth.
+
+Sweetheart of long ago,
+Why do you haunt me so?
+Were you not glad to part,
+ Sweetheart?
+
+Still Death, that draws so near,
+Is it hope you bring, or fear?
+Is it only ease of breath,
+ Still Death?
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+
+{1} Mr. Butler lectures on Physics, or, as it is called in Scotland,
+Natural Philosophy.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBERT F. MURRAY***
+
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+Project Gutenberg Etext of R. F. Murray: His Poems with a Memoir
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+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+R. F. MURRAY: HIS POEMS WITH MEMOIR BY ANDREW LANG
+
+
+
+
+R. F. MURRAY--1863-1893
+
+
+
+Much is written about success and failure in the career of
+literature, about the reasons which enable one man to reach the
+front, and another to earn his livelihood, while a third, in
+appearance as likely as either of them, fails and, perhaps, faints
+by the way. Mr. R. F. Murray, the author of The Scarlet Gown, was
+among those who do not attain success, in spite of qualities which
+seem destined to ensure it, and who fall out of the ranks. To him,
+indeed, success and the rewards of this world, money, and praise,
+did by no means seem things to be snatched at. To him success meant
+earning by his pen the very modest sum which sufficed for his wants,
+and the leisure necessary for serious essays in poetry. Fate denied
+him even this, in spite of his charming natural endowment of humour,
+of tenderness, of delight in good letters, and in nature. He died
+young; he was one of those whose talent matures slowly, and he died
+before he came into the full possession of his intellectual kingdom.
+He had the ambition to excel, [Greek text], as the Homeric motto of
+his University runs, and he was on the way to excellence when his
+health broke down. He lingered for two years and passed away.
+
+It is a familiar story, the story of lettered youth; of an ambition,
+or rather of an ideal; of poverty; of struggles in the `dusty and
+stony ways'; of intellectual task-work; of a true love consoling the
+last months of weakness and pain. The tale is not repeated here
+because it is novel, nor even because in its hero we have to regret
+an `inheritor of unfulfilled renown.' It is not the genius so much
+as the character of this St. Andrews student which has won the
+sympathy of his biographer, and may win, he hopes, the sympathy of
+others. In Mr. Murray I feel that I have lost that rare thing, a
+friend; a friend whom the chances of life threw in my way, and
+withdrew again ere we had time and opportunity for perfect
+recognition. Those who read his Letters and Remains may also feel
+this emotion of sympathy and regret.
+
+He was young in years, and younger in heart, a lover of youth; and
+youth, if it could learn and could be warned, might win a lesson
+from his life. Many of us have trod in his path, and, by some
+kindness of fate, have found from it a sunnier exit into longer days
+and more fortunate conditions. Others have followed this well-
+beaten road to the same early and quiet end as his.
+
+The life and the letters of Murray remind one strongly of Thomas
+Davidson's, as published in that admirable and touching biography, A
+Scottish Probationer. It was my own chance to be almost in touch
+with both these gentle, tuneful, and kindly humorists. Davidson was
+a Borderer, born on the skirts of `stormy Ruberslaw,' in the country
+of James Thomson, of Leyden, of the old Ballad minstrels. The son
+of a Scottish peasant line of the old sort, honourable, refined,
+devout, he was educated in Edinburgh for the ministry of the United
+Presbyterian Church. Some beautiful verses of his appeared in the
+St. Andrews University Magazine about 1863, at the time when I first
+`saw myself in print' in the same periodical. Davidson's poem
+delighted me: another of his, `Ariadne in Naxos,' appeared in the
+Cornhill Magazine about the same time. Mr. Thackeray, who was then
+editor, no doubt remembered Pen's prize poem on the same subject. I
+did not succeed in learning anything about the author, did not know
+that he lived within a drive of my own home. When next I heard of
+him, it was in his biography. As a `Probationer,' or unplaced
+minister, he, somehow, was not successful. A humorist, a poet, a
+delightful companion, he never became `a placed minister.' It was
+the old story of an imprudence, a journey made in damp clothes, of
+consumption, of the end of his earthly life and love. His letters
+to his betrothed, his poems, his career, constantly remind one of
+Murray's, who must often have joined in singing Davidson's song, so
+popular with St. Andrews students, The Banks of the Yang-tse-kiang.
+Love of the Border, love of Murray's `dear St. Andrews Bay,' love of
+letters, make one akin to both of these friends who were lost before
+their friendship was won. Why did not Murray succeed to the measure
+of his most modest desire? If we examine the records of literary
+success, we find it won, in the highest fields, by what, for want of
+a better word, we call genius; in the lower paths, by an energy
+which can take pleasure in all and every exercise of pen and ink,
+and can communicate its pleasure to others. Now for Murray one does
+not venture, in face of his still not wholly developed talent, and
+of his checked career, to claim genius. He was not a Keats, a
+Burns, a Shelley: he was not, if one may choose modern examples, a
+Kipling or a Stevenson. On the other hand, his was a high ideal; he
+believed, with Andre Chenier, that he had `something there,'
+something worthy of reverence and of careful training within him.
+Consequently, as we shall see, the drudgery of the pressman was
+excessively repulsive to him. He could take no delight in making
+the best of it. We learn that Mr. Kipling's early tales were
+written as part of hard daily journalistic work in India; written in
+torrid newspaper offices, to fill columns. Yet they were written
+with the delight of the artist, and are masterpieces in their genre.
+Murray could not make the best of ordinary pen-work in this manner.
+Again, he was incapable of `transactions,' of compromises; most
+honourably incapable of earning his bread by agreeing, or seeming to
+agree with opinions which were not his. He could not endure (here I
+think he was wrong) to have his pieces of light and mirthful verse
+touched in any way by an editor. Even where no opinions were
+concerned, even where an editor has (to my mind) a perfect right to
+alter anonymous contributions, Murray declined to be edited. I
+ventured to remonstrate with him, to say non est tanti, but I spoke
+too late, or spoke in vain. He carried independence too far, or
+carried it into the wrong field, for a piece of humorous verse, say
+in Punch, is not an original masterpiece and immaculate work of art,
+but more or less of a joint-stock product between the editor, the
+author, and the public. Macaulay, and Carlyle, and Sir Walter Scott
+suffered editors gladly or with indifference, and who are we that we
+should complain? This extreme sensitiveness would always have stood
+in Murray's way.
+
+Once more, Murray's interest in letters was much more energetic than
+his zeal in the ordinary industry of a student. As a general rule,
+men of original literary bent are not exemplary students at college.
+`The common curricoolum,' as the Scottish laird called academic
+studies generally, rather repels them. Macaulay took no honours at
+Cambridge; mathematics defied him. Scott was `the Greek dunce,' at
+Edinburgh. Thackeray, Shelley, Gibbon, did not cover themselves
+with college laurels; they read what pleased them, they did not read
+`for the schools.' In short, this behaviour at college is the rule
+among men who are to be distinguished in literature, not the
+exception. The honours attained at Oxford by Mr. Swinburne, whose
+Greek verses are no less poetical than his English poetry, were
+inconspicuous. At St. Andrews, Murray read only `for human
+pleasure,' like Scott, Thackeray, Shelley, and the rest, at
+Edinburgh, Oxford, and Cambridge. In this matter, I think, he made
+an error, and one which affected his whole career. He was not a man
+of private fortune, like some of those whom we have mentioned. He
+had not a business ready for him to step into. He had to force his
+own way in life, had to make himself `self-supporting.' This was
+all the more essential to a man of his honourable independence of
+character, a man who not only would not ask a favour, but who
+actually shrunk back from such chances as were offered to him, if
+these chances seemed to be connected with the least discernible
+shadow of an obligation. At St. Andrews, had he chosen to work hard
+in certain branches of study, he might probably have gained an
+exhibition, gone to Oxford or elsewhere, and, by winning a
+fellowship, secured the leisure which was necessary for the
+development of his powers. I confess to believing in strenuous work
+at the classics, as offering, apart from all material reward, the
+best and most solid basis, especially where there is no exuberant
+original genius, for the career of a man of letters. The mental
+discipline is invaluable, the training in accuracy is invaluable,
+and invaluable is the life led in the society of the greatest minds,
+the noblest poets, the most faultless artists of the world. To
+descend to ordinary truths, scholarship is, at lowest, an honourable
+gagne-pain. But Murray, like the majority of students endowed with
+literary originality, did not share these rather old-fashioned
+ideas. The clever Scottish student is apt to work only too hard,
+and, perhaps, is frequently in danger of exhausting his powers
+before they are mature, and of injuring his health before it is
+confirmed. His ambitions, to lookers-on, may seem narrow and
+school-boyish, as if he were merely emulous, and eager for a high
+place in his `class,' as lectures are called in Scotland. This was
+Murray's own view, and he certainly avoided the dangers of academic
+over-work. He read abundantly, but, as Fitzgerald says, he read
+`for human pleasure.' He never was a Greek scholar, he disliked
+Philosophy, as presented to him in class-work; the gods had made him
+poetical, not metaphysical.
+
+There was one other cause of his lack of even such slender
+commercial success in letters as was really necessary to a man who
+liked `plain living and high thinking.' He fell early in love with
+a city, with a place--he lost his heart to St. Andrews. Here, at
+all events, his critic can sympathise with him. His `dear St.
+Andrews Bay,' beautiful alike in winter mists and in the crystal
+days of still winter sunshine; the quiet brown streets brightened by
+the scarlet gowns; the long limitless sands; the dark blue distant
+hills, and far-off snowy peaks of the Grampians; the majestic
+melancholy towers, monuments of old religion overthrown; the deep
+dusky porch of the college chapel, with Kennedy's arms in wrought
+iron on the oaken door; the solid houses with their crow steps and
+gables, all the forlorn memories of civil and religious feud, of
+inhabitants saintly, royal, heroic, endeared St. Andrews to Murray.
+He could not say, like our other poet to Oxford, `Farewell, dear
+city of youth and dream!' His whole nature needed the air, `like
+wine.' He found, as he remarks, `health and happiness in the German
+Ocean,' swimming out beyond the `lake' where the witches were
+dipped; walking to the grey little coast-towns, with their wealth of
+historic documents, their ancient kirks and graves; dreaming in the
+vernal woods of Mount Melville or Strathtyrum; rambling (without a
+fishing-rod) in the charmed `dens' of the Kenley burn, a place like
+Tempe in miniature: these things were Murray's usual enjoyments,
+and they became his indispensable needs. His peculiarly shy and, as
+it were, silvan nature, made it physically impossible for him to
+live in crowded streets and push his way through throngs of
+indifferent men. He could not live even in Edinburgh; he made the
+effort, and his health, at no time strong, seems never to have
+recovered from the effects of a few months spent under a roof in a
+large town. He hurried back to St. Andrews: her fascination was
+too powerful. Hence it is that, dying with his work scarcely begun,
+he will always be best remembered as the poet of The Scarlet Gown,
+the Calverley or J. K. S. of Kilrymont; endowed with their humour,
+their skill in parody, their love of youth, but (if I am not
+prejudiced) with more than the tenderness and natural magic of these
+regretted writers. Not to be able to endure crowds and towns, (a
+matter of physical health and constitution, as well as of
+temperament) was, of course, fatal to an ordinary success in
+journalism. On the other hand, Murray's name is inseparably
+connected with the life of youth in the little old college, in the
+University of the Admirable Crichton and Claverhouse, of the great
+Montrose and of Ferguson,--the harmless Villon of Scotland,--the
+University of almost all the famous Covenanters, and of all the
+valiant poet-Cavaliers. Murray has sung of the life and pleasures
+of its students, of examinations and Gaudeamuses--supper parties--he
+has sung of the sands, the links, the sea, the towers, and his name
+and fame are for ever blended with the air of his city of youth and
+dream. It is not a wide name or a great fame, but it is what he
+would have desired, and we trust that it may be long-lived and
+enduring. We are not to wax elegiac, and adopt a tearful tone over
+one so gallant and so uncomplaining. He failed, but he was
+undefeated.
+
+In the following sketch of Murray's life and work use is made of his
+letters, chiefly of letters to his mother. They always illustrate
+his own ideas and attempts; frequently they throw the light of an
+impartial and critical mind on the distinguished people whom Murray
+observed from without. It is worth remarking that among many
+remarks on persons, I have found not one of a censorious, cynical,
+envious, or unfriendly nature. Youth is often captious and keenly
+critical; partly because youth generally has an ideal, partly,
+perhaps chiefly, from mere intellectual high spirits and sense of
+the incongruous; occasionally the motive is jealousy or spite.
+Murray's sense of fun was keen, his ideal was lofty; of envy, of an
+injured sense of being neglected, he does not show one trace. To
+make fun of their masters and pastors, tutors, professors, is the
+general and not necessarily unkind tendency of pupils. Murray
+rarely mentions any of the professors in St. Andrews except in terms
+of praise, which is often enthusiastic. Now, as he was by no means
+a prize student, or pattern young man for a story-book, this
+generosity is a high proof of an admirable nature. If he chances to
+speak to his mother about a bore, and he did not suffer bores
+gladly, he not only does not name the person, but gives no hint by
+which he might be identified. He had much to embitter him, for he
+had a keen consciousness of `the something within him,' of the
+powers which never found full expression; and he saw others
+advancing and prospering while he seemed to be standing still, or
+losing ground in all ways. But no word of bitterness ever escapes
+him in the correspondence which I have seen. In one case he has to
+speak of a disagreeable and disappointing interview with a man from
+whom he had been led to expect sympathy and encouragement. He told
+me about this affair in conversation; `There were tears in my eyes
+as I turned from the house,' he said, and he was not effusive. In a
+letter to Mrs. Murray he describes this unlucky interview,--a
+discouragement caused by a manner which was strange to Murray,
+rather than by real unkindness,--and he describes it with a
+delicacy, with a reserve, with a toleration, beyond all praise.
+These are traits of a character which was greater and more rare than
+his literary talent: a character quite developed, while his talent
+was only beginning to unfold itself, and to justify his belief in
+his powers.
+
+Robert Murray was the eldest child of John and Emmeline Murray: the
+father a Scot, the mother of American birth. He was born at
+Roxbury, in Massachusetts, on December 26th, 1863. It may be fancy,
+but, in his shy reserve, his almost farouche independence, one seems
+to recognise the Scot; while in his cast of literary talent, in his
+natural `culture,' we observe the son of a refined American lady.
+To his mother he could always write about the books which were
+interesting him, with full reliance on her sympathy, though indeed,
+he does not often say very much about literature.
+
+Till 1869 he lived in various parts of New England, his father being
+a Unitarian minister. `He was a remarkably cheerful and
+affectionate child, and seldom seemed to find anything to trouble
+him.' In 1869 his father carried him to England, Mrs. Murray and a
+child remaining in America. For more than a year the boy lived with
+kinsfolk near Kelso, the beautiful old town on the Tweed where Scott
+passed some of his childish days. In 1871 the family were reunited
+at York, where he was fond of attending the services in the
+Cathedral. Mr. Murray then took charge of the small Unitarian
+chapel of Blackfriars, at Canterbury. Thus Murray's early youth was
+passed in the mingled influences of Unitarianism at home, and of
+Cathedral services at York, and in the church where Becket suffered
+martyrdom. A not unnatural result was a somewhat eclectic and
+unconstrained religion. He thought but little of the differences of
+creed, believing that all good men held, in essentials, much the
+same faith. His view of essentials was generous, as he admitted.
+He occasionally spoke of himself as `sceptical,' that is, in
+contrast with those whose faith was more definite, more dogmatic,
+more securely based on `articles.' To illustrate Murray's religious
+attitude, at least as it was in 1887, one may quote from a letter of
+that year (April 17).
+
+
+`There was a University sermon, and I thought I would go and hear
+it. So I donned my old cap and gown and felt quite proud of them.
+The preacher was Bishop Wordsworth. He goes in for the union of the
+Presbyterian and Episcopalian Churches, and is glad to preach in a
+Presbyterian Church, as he did this morning. How the aforesaid
+Union is to be brought about, I'm sure I don't know, for I am pretty
+certain that the Episcopalians won't give up their bishops, and the
+Presbyterians won't have them on any account. However, that's
+neither here nor there--at least it does not affect the fact that
+Wordsworth is a first-rate man, and a fine preacher. I dare say you
+know he is a nephew or grand-nephew of the Poet. He is a most
+venerable old man, and worth looking at, merely for his exterior.
+He is so feeble with age that he can with difficulty climb the three
+short steps that lead into the pulpit; but, once in the pulpit, it
+is another thing. There is no feebleness when he begins to preach.
+He is one of the last voices of the old orthodox school, and I wish
+there were hundreds like him. If ever a man believed in his
+message, Wordsworth does. And though I cannot follow him in his
+veneration for the Thirty-nine Articles, the way in which he does
+makes me half wish I could. . . . It was full of wisdom and the
+beauty of holiness, which even I, poor sceptic and outcast, could
+recognise and appreciate. After all, he didn't get it from the
+Articles, but from his own human heart, which, he told us, was
+deceitful and desperately wicked.
+
+`Confound it, how stupid we all are! Episcopalians, Presbyterians,
+Unitarians, Agnostics; the whole lot of us. We all believe the same
+things, to a great extent; but we must keep wrangling about the data
+from which we infer these beliefs . . . I believe a great deal that
+he does, but I certainly don't act up to my belief as he does to
+his.'
+
+
+The belief `up to' which Murray lived was, if it may be judged by
+its fruits, that of a Christian man. But, in this age, we do find
+the most exemplary Christian conduct in some who have discarded
+dogma and resigned hope. Probably Murray would not the less have
+regarded these persons as Christians. If we must make a choice, it
+is better to have love and charity without belief, than belief of
+the most intense kind, accompanied by such love and charity as John
+Knox bore to all who differed from him about a mass or a chasuble, a
+priest or a presbyter. This letter, illustrative of the effect of
+cathedral services on a young Unitarian, is taken out of its proper
+chronological place.
+
+From Canterbury Mr. Murray went to Ilminster in Somerset. Here
+Robert attended the Grammar School; in 1879 he went to the Grammar
+School of Crewkerne. In 1881 he entered at the University of St.
+Andrews, with a scholarship won as an external student of Manchester
+New College. This he resigned not long after, as he had abandoned
+the idea of becoming a Unitarian minister.
+
+No longer a schoolboy, he was now a Bejant (bec jaune?), to use the
+old Scotch term for `freshman.' He liked the picturesque word, and
+opposed the introduction of `freshman.' Indeed he liked all things
+old, and, as a senior man, was a supporter of ancient customs and of
+esprit de corps in college. He fell in love for life with that old
+and grey enchantress, the city of St. Margaret, of Cardinal Beaton,
+of Knox and Andrew Melville, of Archbishop Sharp, and Samuel
+Rutherford. The nature of life and education in a Scottish
+university is now, probably, better understood in England than it
+used to be. Of the Scottish universities, St. Andrews varies least,
+though it varies much, from Oxford and Cambridge. Unlike the
+others, Aberdeen, Glasgow, and Edinburgh, the United College of St.
+Leonard and St. Salvator is not lost in a large town. The College
+and the Divinity Hall of St. Mary's are a survival from the Middle
+Ages. The University itself arose from a voluntary association of
+the learned in 1410. Privileges were conferred on this association
+by Bishop Wardlaw in 1411. It was intended as a bulwark against
+Lollard ideas. In 1413 the Antipope Benedict XIII., to whom
+Scotland then adhered, granted six bulls of confirmation to the new
+University. Not till 1430 did Bishop Wardlaw give a building in
+South Street, the Paedagogium. St. Salvator's College was founded
+by Bishop Kennedy (1440-1466): it was confirmed by Pius II. in
+1458. Kennedy endowed his foundation richly with plate (a silver
+mace is still extant) and with gorgeous furniture and cloth of gold.
+St. Leonard's was founded by Prior Hepburn in 1512. Of St.
+Salvator's the ancient chapel still remains, and is in use. St.
+Leonard's was merged with St. Salvator's in the last century: its
+chapel is now roofless, some of the old buildings remain, much
+modernised, but on the south side fronting the gardens they are
+still picturesque. Both Colleges were, originally, places of
+residence for the students, as at Oxford and Cambridge, and the
+discipline, especially at St. Leonard's, was rather monastic. The
+Reformation caused violent changes; all through these troubled ages
+the new doctrines, and then the violent Presbyterian pretensions to
+clerical influence in politics, and the Covenant and the Restoration
+and Revolution, kept busy the dwellers in what should have been
+`quiet collegiate cloisters.' St. Leonard's was more extreme, on
+Knox's side, than St. Salvator's, but was also more devoted to King
+James in 1715. From St. Andrews Simon Lovat went to lead his
+abominable old father's clan, on the Prince Regent's side, in 1745.
+Golf and archery, since the Reformation at least, were the chief
+recreations of the students, and the archery medals bear all the
+noblest names of the North, including those of Argyll and the great
+Marquis of Montrose. Early in the present century the old ruinous
+college buildings of St. Salvator's ceased to be habitable, except
+by a ghost! There is another spectre of a noisy sort in St.
+Leonard's. The new buildings are mere sets of class-rooms, the
+students live where they please, generally in lodgings, which they
+modestly call bunks. There is a hall for dinners in common; it is
+part of the buildings of the Union, a new hall added to an ancient
+house.
+
+It was thus to a university with ancient associations, with a
+religio loci, and with more united and harmonious student-life than
+is customary in Scotland, that Murray came in 1881. How clearly his
+biographer remembers coming to the same place, twenty years earlier!
+how vivid is his memory of quaint streets, grey towers, and the
+North Sea breaking in heavy rollers on the little pier!
+
+Though, like a descendant of Archbishop Sharp, and a winner of the
+archery medal, I boast myself Sancti Leonardi alumnus addictissimus,
+I am unable to give a description, at first hand, of student life in
+St. Andrews. In my time, a small set of `men' lived together in
+what was then St. Leonard's Hall. The buildings that remain on the
+site of Prior Hepburn's foundation, or some of them, were turned
+into a hall, where we lived together, not scattered in bunks. The
+existence was mainly like that of pupils of a private tutor; seven-
+eighths of private tutor to one-eighth of a college in the English
+universities. We attended the lectures in the University, we
+distinguished ourselves no more than Murray would have approved of,
+and many of us have remained united by friendship through half a
+lifetime.
+
+It was a pleasant existence, and the perfume of buds and flowers in
+the old gardens, hard by those where John Knox sat and talked with
+James Melville and our other predecessors at St. Leonard's, is
+fragrant in our memories. It was pleasant, but St. Leonard's Hall
+has ceased to be, and the life there was not the life of the free
+and hardy bunk-dwellers. Whoso pined for such dissipated pleasures
+as the chill and dark streets of St. Andrews offer to the gay and
+rousing blade, was not encouraged. We were very strictly `gated,'
+though the whole society once got out of window, and, by way of
+protest, made a moonlight march into the country. We attended
+`gaudeamuses' and solatia--University suppers--but little; indeed,
+he who writes does not remember any such diversions of boys who beat
+the floor, and break the glass. To plant the standard of cricket in
+the remoter gardens of our country, in a region devastated by golf,
+was our ambition, and here we had no assistance at all from the
+University. It was chiefly at lecture, at football on the links,
+and in the debating societies that we met our fellow-students; like
+the celebrated starling, `we could not get out,' except to permitted
+dinners and evening parties. Consequently one could only sketch
+student life with a hand faltering and untrained. It was very
+different with Murray and his friends. They were their own masters,
+could sit up to all hours, smoking, talking, and, I dare say,
+drinking. As I gather from his letters, Murray drank nothing
+stronger than water. There was a certain kind of humour in drink,
+he said, but he thought it was chiefly obvious to the sober
+spectator. As the sober spectator, he sang of violent delights
+which have violent ends. He may best be left to illustrate student
+life for himself. The `waster' of whom he chants is the slang name
+borne by the local fast man.
+
+
+THE WASTER SINGING AT MIDNIGHT.
+AFTER LONGFELLOW.
+
+Loud he sang the song Ta Phershon
+For his personal diversion,
+Sang the chorus U-pi-dee,
+Sang about the Barley Bree.
+
+In that hour when all is quiet
+Sang he songs of noise and riot,
+In a voice so loud and queer
+That I wakened up to hear.
+
+Songs that distantly resembled
+Those one hears from men assembled
+In the old Cross Keys Hotel,
+Only sung not half so well.
+
+For the time of this ecstatic
+Amateur was most erratic,
+And he only hit the key
+Once in every melody.
+
+If "he wot prigs wot isn't his'n
+Ven he's cotched is sent to prison,"
+He who murders sleep might well
+Adorn a solitary cell.
+
+But, if no obliging peeler
+Will arrest this midnight squealer,
+My own peculiar arm of might
+Must undertake the job to-night.
+
+
+The following fragment is but doubtfully autobiographical. `The
+swift four-wheeler' seldom devastates the streets where, of old, the
+Archbishop's jackmen sliced Presbyterian professors with the
+claymore, as James Melville tells us:-
+
+
+TO NUMBER 27x.
+
+Beloved Peeler! friend and guide
+And guard of many a midnight reeler,
+None worthier, though the world is wide,
+Beloved Peeler.
+
+Thou from before the swift four-wheeler
+Didst pluck me, and didst thrust aside
+A strongly built provision-dealer
+
+Who menaced me with blows, and cried
+`Come on! come on!' O Paian, Healer,
+Then but for thee I must have died,
+Beloved Peeler!
+
+
+The following presentiment, though he was no `waster,' may very well
+have been his own. He was only half Scotch, and not at all
+metaphysical:-
+
+
+THE WASTER'S PRESENTIMENT
+
+I shall be spun. There is a voice within
+Which tells me plainly I am all undone;
+For though I toil not, neither do I spin,
+I shall be spun.
+
+April approaches. I have not begun
+Schwegler or Mackintosh, nor will begin
+Those lucid works till April 21.
+
+So my degree I do not hope to win,
+For not by ways like mine degrees are won;
+And though, to please my uncle, I go in,
+I shall be spun.
+
+
+Here we must quote, from The Scarlet Gown, one of his most tender
+pieces of affectionate praise bestowed on his favourite city:-
+
+
+A DECEMBER DAY
+
+Blue, blue is the sea to-day,
+Warmly the light
+Sleeps on St. Andrews Bay -
+Blue, fringed with white.
+
+That's no December sky!
+Surely `tis June
+Holds now her state on high,
+Queen of the noon.
+
+Only the tree-tops bare
+Crowning the hill,
+Clear-cut in perfect air,
+Warn us that still
+
+Winter, the aged chief,
+Mighty in power,
+Exiles the tender leaf,
+Exiles the flower.
+
+Is there a heart to-day,
+A heart that grieves
+For flowers that fade away,
+For fallen leaves?
+
+Oh, not in leaves or flowers
+Endures the charm
+That clothes those naked towers
+With love-light warm.
+
+O dear St. Andrews Bay,
+Winter or Spring
+Gives not nor takes away
+Memories that cling
+
+All round thy girdling reefs,
+That walk thy shore,
+Memories of joys and griefs
+Ours evermore.
+
+`I have NOT worked for my classes this session,' he writes (1884),
+`and shall not take any places.' The five or six most distinguished
+pupils used, at least in my time, to receive prize-books decorated
+with the University's arms. These prize-men, no doubt, held the
+`places' alluded to by Murray. If HE was idle, `I speak of him but
+brotherly,' having never held any `place' but that of second to Mr.
+Wallace, now Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford, in the Greek
+Class (Mr. Sellar's). Why was one so idle, in Latin (Mr. Shairp),
+in Morals (Mr. Ferrier), in Logic (Mr. Veitch)? but Logic was
+unintelligible.
+
+`I must confess,' remarks Murray, in a similar spirit of pensive
+regret, `that I have not had any ambition to distinguish myself
+either in Knight's (Moral Philosophy) or in Butler's.' {1}
+
+Murray then speaks with some acrimony about earnest students, whose
+motive, he thinks, is a small ambition. But surely a man may be
+fond of metaphysics for the sweet sake of Queen Entelechy, and,
+moreover, these students looked forward to days in which real work
+would bear fruit.
+
+`You must grind up the opinions of Plato, Aristotle, and a lot of
+other men, concerning things about which they knew nothing, and we
+know nothing, taking these opinions at second or third hand, and
+never looking into the works of these men; for to a man who wants to
+take a place, there is no time for anything of that sort.'
+
+Why not? The philosophers ought to be read in their own language,
+as they are now read. The remarks on the most fairy of
+philosophers--Plato; on the greatest of all minds, that of
+Aristotle, are boyish. Again `I speak but brotherly,' remembering
+an old St. Leonard's essay in which Virgil was called `the furtive
+Mantuan,' and another, devoted to ridicule of Euripides. But Plato
+and Aristotle we never blasphemed.
+
+Murray adds that he thinks, next year, of taking the highest Greek
+Class, and English Literature. In the latter, under Mr. Baynes, he
+took the first place, which he mentions casually to Mrs. Murray
+about a year after date:-
+
+
+`A sweet life and an idle
+He lives from year to year,
+Unknowing bit or bridle,
+There are no Proctors here.'
+
+
+In Greek, despite his enthusiastic admiration of the professor, Mr.
+Campbell, he did not much enjoy himself:-
+
+
+`Thrice happy are those
+Who ne'er heard of Greek Prose -
+Or Greek Poetry either, as far as that goes;
+For Liddell and Scott
+Shall cumber them not,
+Nor Sargent nor Sidgwick shall break their repose.
+
+But I, late at night,
+By the very bad light
+Of very bad gas, must painfully write
+Some stuff that a Greek
+With his delicate cheek
+Would smile at as `barbarous'--faith, he well might.
+
+* * * * *
+
+So away with Greek Prose,
+The source of my woes!
+(This metre's too tough, I must draw to a close.)
+May Sargent be drowned
+In the ocean profound,
+And Sidgwick be food for the carrion crows!'
+
+
+Greek prose is a stubborn thing, and the biographer remembers being
+told that his was `the best, with the worst mistakes'; also
+frequently by Mr. Sellar, that it was `bald.' But Greek prose is
+splendid practice, and no less good practice is Greek and Latin
+verse. These exercises, so much sneered at, are the Dwellers on the
+Threshold of the life of letters. They are haunting forms of fear,
+but they have to be wrestled with, like the Angel (to change the
+figure), till they bless you, and make words become, in your hands,
+like the clay of the modeller. Could we write Greek like Mr. Jebb,
+we would never write anything else.
+
+Murray had naturally, it seems, certainly not by dint of wrestling
+with Greek prose, the mastery of language. His light verse is
+wonderfully handled, quaint, fluent, right. Modest as he was, he
+was ambitious, as we said, but not ambitious of any gain; merely
+eager, in his own way, to excel. His ideal is plainly stated in the
+following verses:-
+
+
+[Greek text]
+
+Ever to be the best. To lead
+In whatsoever things are true;
+Not stand among the halting crew,
+The faint of heart, the feeble-kneed,
+Who tarry for a certain sign
+To make them follow with the rest -
+Oh, let not their reproach be thine!
+But ever be the best.
+
+For want of this aspiring soul,
+Great deeds on earth remain undone,
+But, sharpened by the sight of one,
+Many shall press toward the goal.
+Thou running foremost of the throng,
+The fire of striving in thy breast,
+Shalt win, although the race be long,
+And ever be the best.
+
+And wilt thou question of the prize?
+`Tis not of silver or of gold,
+Nor in applauses manifold,
+But hidden in the heart it lies:
+To know that but for thee not one
+Had run the race or sought the quest,
+To know that thou hast ever done
+And ever been the best.
+
+
+Murray was never a great athlete: his ambition did not lead him to
+desire a place in the Scottish Fifteen at Football. Probably he was
+more likely to be found matched against `The Man from Inversnaid.'
+
+
+IMITATED FROM WORDSWORTH
+
+He brought a team from Inversnaid
+To play our Third Fifteen,
+A man whom none of us had played
+And very few had seen.
+
+He weighed not less than eighteen stone,
+And to a practised eye
+He seemed as little fit to run
+As he was fit to fly.
+
+He looked so clumsy and so slow,
+And made so little fuss;
+But he got in behind--and oh,
+The difference to us!
+
+
+He was never a golfer; one of his best light pieces, published later
+in the Saturday Review, dealt in kindly ridicule of The City of
+Golf.
+
+
+`Would you like to see a city given over,
+Soul and body, to a tyrannising game?
+If you would, there's little need to be a rover,
+For St. Andrews is the abject city's name.'
+
+
+He was fond, too fond, of long midnight walks, for in these he
+overtasked his strength, and he had all a young man's contempt for
+maxims about not sitting in wet clothes and wet boots. Early in his
+letters he speaks of bad colds, and it is matter of tradition that
+he despised flannel. Most of us have been like him, and have found
+pleasure in wading Tweed, for example, when chill with snaw-bree.
+In brief, while reading about Murray's youth most men must feel that
+they are reading, with slight differences, about their own. He
+writes thus of his long darkling tramps, in a rhymed epistle to his
+friend C. C. C.
+
+
+`And I fear we never again shall go,
+The cold and weariness scorning,
+For a ten mile walk through the frozen snow
+At one o'clock in the morning:
+
+Out by Cameron, in by the Grange,
+And to bed as the moon descended . . .
+To you and to me there has come a change,
+And the days of our youth are ended.'
+
+
+One fancies him roaming solitary, after midnight, in the dark
+deserted streets. He passes the deep porch of the College Church,
+and the spot where Patrick Hamilton was burned. He goes down to the
+Castle by the sea, where, some say, the murdered Cardinal may now
+and again be seen, in his red hat. In South Street he hears the
+roll and rattle of the viewless carriage which sounds in that
+thoroughfare. He loiters under the haunted tower on Hepburn's
+precinct wall, the tower where the lady of the bright locks lies,
+with white gloves on her hands. Might he not share, in the desolate
+Cathedral, La Messe des Morts, when all the lost souls of true
+lovers are allowed to meet once a year. Here be they who were too
+fond when Culdees ruled, or who loved young monks of the Priory;
+here be ladies of Queen Mary's Court, and the fair inscrutable Queen
+herself, with Chastelard, that died at St. Andrews for desire of
+her; and poor lassies and lads who were over gay for Andrew Melville
+and Mr. Blair; and Miss Pett, who tended young Montrose, and may
+have had a tenderness for his love-locks. They are a triste good
+company, tender and true, as the lovers of whom M. Anatole France
+has written (La Messe des Morts). Above the witches' lake come
+shadows of the women who suffered under Knox and the Bastard of
+Scotland, poor creatures burned to ashes with none to help or pity.
+The shades of Dominicans flit by the Black Friars wall--verily the
+place is haunted, and among Murray's pleasures was this of pacing
+alone, by night, in that airy press and throng of those who lived
+and loved and suffered so long ago -
+
+
+`The mist hangs round the College tower,
+The ghostly street
+Is silent at this midnight hour,
+Save for my feet.
+
+With none to see, with none to hear,
+Downward I go
+To where, beside the rugged pier,
+The sea sings low.
+
+It sings a tune well loved and known
+In days gone by,
+When often here, and not alone,
+I watched the sky.'
+
+
+But he was not always, nor often, lonely. He was fond of making his
+speech at the Debating Societies, and his speeches are remembered as
+good. If he declined the whisky and water, he did not flee the
+weed. I borrow from College Echoes -
+
+
+A TENNYSONIAN FRAGMENT
+
+So in the village inn the poet dwelt.
+His honey-dew was gone; only the pouch,
+His cousin's work, her empty labour, left.
+But still he sniffed it, still a fragrance clung
+And lingered all about the broidered flowers.
+Then came his landlord, saying in broad Scotch,
+`Smoke plug, mon,' whom he looked at doubtfully.
+Then came the grocer saying, `Hae some twist
+At tippence,' whom he answered with a qualm.
+But when they left him to himself again,
+Twist, like a fiend's breath from a distant room
+Diffusing through the passage, crept; the smell
+Deepening had power upon him, and he mixt
+His fancies with the billow-lifted bay
+Of Biscay, and the rollings of a ship.
+
+And on that night he made a little song,
+And called his song `The Song of Twist and Plug,'
+And sang it; scarcely could he make or sing.
+
+`Rank is black plug, though smoked in wind and rain;
+And rank is twist, which gives no end of pain;
+I know not which is ranker, no, not I.
+
+`Plug, art thou rank? then milder twist must be;
+Plug, thou art milder: rank is twist to me.
+O twist, if plug be milder, let me buy.
+
+`Rank twist, that seems to make me fade away,
+Rank plug, that navvies smoke in loveless clay,
+I know not which is ranker, no, not I.
+
+`I fain would purchase flake, if that could be;
+I needs must purchase plug, ah, woe is me!
+Plug and a cutty, a cutty, let me buy.
+
+
+His was the best good thing of the night's talk, and the thing that
+was remembered. He excited himself a good deal over Rectorial
+Elections. The duties of the Lord Rector and the mode of his
+election have varied frequently in near five hundred years. In
+Murray's day, as in my own, the students elected their own Rector,
+and before Lord Bute's energetic reign, the Rector had little to do,
+but to make a speech, and give a prize. I vaguely remember
+proposing the author of Tom Brown long ago: he was not, however, in
+the running.
+
+Politics often inspire the electors; occasionally (I have heard)
+grave seniors use their influence, mainly for reasons of academic
+policy.
+
+In December 1887 Murray writes about an election in which Mr. Lowell
+was a candidate. `A pitiful protest was entered by an' (epithets
+followed by a proper name) `against Lowell, on the score of his
+being an alien. Mallock, as you learn, was withdrawn, for which I
+am truly thankful.' Unlucky Mr. Mallock! `Lowell polled 100 and
+Gibson 92 . . . The intrigues and corruption appear to be almost
+worthy of an American Presidential election.' Mr. Lowell could not
+accept a compliment which pleased him, because of his official
+position, and the misfortune of his birth!
+
+Murray was already doing a very little `miniature journalism,' in
+the form of University Notes for a local paper. He complains of the
+ultra Caledonian frankness with which men told him that they were
+very bad. A needless, if friendly, outspokenness was a feature in
+Scottish character which he did not easily endure. He wrote a good
+deal of verse in the little University paper, now called College
+Echoes.
+
+If Murray ever had any definite idea of being ordained for the
+ministry in any `denomination,' he abandoned it. His `bursaries'
+(scholarships or exhibitions), on which he had been passing rich,
+expired, and he had to earn a livelihood. It seems plain to myself
+that he might easily have done so with his pen. A young friend of
+my own (who will excuse me for thinking that his bright verses are
+not BETTER than Murray's) promptly made, by these alone, an income
+which to Murray would have been affluence. But this could not be
+done at St. Andrews. Again, Murray was not in contact with people
+in the centre of newspapers and magazines. He went very little into
+general society, even at St. Andrews, and thus failed, perhaps, to
+make acquaintances who might have been `useful.' He would have
+scorned the idea of making useful acquaintances. But without
+seeking them, why should we reject any friendliness when it offers
+itself? We are all members one of another. Murray speaks of his
+experience of human beings, as rich in examples of kindness and
+good-will. His shyness, his reserve, his extreme unselfishness,--
+carried to the point of diffidence,--made him rather shun than seek
+older people who were dangerously likely to be serviceable. His
+manner, when once he could be induced to meet strangers, was
+extremely frank and pleasant, but from meeting strangers he shrunk,
+in his inveterate modesty.
+
+In 1886 Murray had the misfortune to lose is father, and it became,
+perhaps, more prominently needful that he should find a profession.
+He now assisted Professor Meiklejohn of St. Andrews in various kinds
+of literary and academic work, and in him found a friend, with whom
+he remained in close intercourse to the last. He began the weary
+path, which all literary beginners must tread, of sending
+contributions to magazines. He seldom read magazine articles. `I
+do not greatly care for "Problems" and "vexed questions." I am so
+much of a problem and a vexed question that I have quite enough to
+do in searching for a solution of my own personality.' He tried a
+story, based on `a midnight experience' of his own; unluckily he
+does not tell us what that experience was. Had he encountered one
+of the local ghosts?
+
+`My blood-curdling romance I offered to the editor of Longman's
+Magazine, but that misguided person was so ill-advised as to return
+it, accompanied with one of these abominable lithographed forms
+conveying his hypocritical regrets.' Murray sent a directed
+envelope with a twopenny-halfpenny stamp. The paper came back for
+three-halfpence by book-post. `I have serious thoughts of sueing
+him for the odd penny!' `Why should people be fools enough to read
+my rot when they have twenty volumes of Scott at their command?' He
+confesses to `a Scott-mania almost as intense as if he were the last
+new sensation.' `I was always fond of him, but I am fonder than
+ever now.' This plunge into the immortal romances seems really to
+have discouraged Murray; at all events he says very little more
+about attempts in fiction of his own. `I am a barren rascal,' he
+writes, quoting Johnson on Fielding. Like other men, Murray felt
+extreme difficulty in writing articles or tales which have an
+infinitesimal chance of being accepted. It needs a stout heart to
+face this almost fixed certainty of rejection: a man is weakened by
+his apprehensions of a lithographed form, and of his old manuscript
+coming home to roost, like the Graces of Theocritus, to pine in the
+dusty chest where is their chill abode. If the Alexandrian poets
+knew this ill-fortune, so do all beginners in letters. There is
+nothing for it but `putting a stout heart to a stey brae,' as the
+Scotch proverb says. Editors want good work, and on finding a new
+man who is good, they greatly rejoice. But it is so difficult to do
+vigorous and spontaneous work, as it were, in the dark. Murray had
+not, it is probable, the qualities of the novelist, the narrator.
+An excellent critic he might have been if he had `descended to
+criticism,' but he had, at this time, no introductions, and probably
+did not address reviews at random to editors. As to poetry, these
+much-vexed men receive such enormous quantities of poetry that they
+usually reject it at a venture, and obtain the small necessary
+supplies from agreeable young ladies. Had Murray been in London,
+with a few literary friends, he might soon have been a thriving
+writer of light prose and light verse. But the enchantress held
+him; he hated London, he had no literary friends, he could write
+gaily for pleasure, not for gain. So, like the Scholar Gypsy, he
+remained contemplative,
+
+
+`Waiting for the spark from heaven to fall.'
+
+
+About this time the present writer was in St. Andrews as Gifford
+Lecturer in Natural Theology. To say that an enthusiasm for totems
+and taboos, ghosts and gods of savage men, was aroused by these
+lectures, would be to exaggerate unpardonably. Efforts to make the
+students write essays or ask questions were so entire a failure that
+only one question was received--as to the proper pronunciation of
+`Myth.' Had one been fortunate enough to interest Murray, it must
+have led to some discussion of his literary attempts. He mentions
+having attended a lecture given by myself to the Literary Society on
+`Literature as a Profession,' and he found the lecturer `far more at
+home in such a subject than in the Gifford Lectures.' Possibly the
+hearer was `more at home' in literature than in discussions as to
+the origin of Huitzilopochtli. `Literature,' he says, `never was,
+is not, and never will be, in the ordinary sense of the term, a
+profession. You can't teach it as you can the professions, you
+can't succeed in it as you can in the professions, by dint of mere
+diligence and without special aptitude . . . I think all this
+chatter about the technical and pecuniary sides of literature is
+extremely foolish and worse than useless. It only serves to glut
+the idle curiosity of the general public about matters with which
+they have no concern, a curiosity which (thanks partly to American
+methods of journalism) has become simply outrageous.'
+
+Into chatter about the pecuniary aspect of literature the Lecturer
+need hardly say that he did not meander. It is absolutely true that
+literature cannot be taught. Maupassant could have dispensed with
+the instructions of Flaubert. But an `aptitude' is needed in all
+professions, and in such arts as music, and painting, and sculpture,
+teaching is necessary. In literature, teaching can only come from
+general education in letters, from experience, from friendly private
+criticism. But if you cannot succeed in literature `by dint of mere
+diligence,' mere diligence is absolutely essential. Men must read,
+must observe, must practise. Diligence is as necessary to the
+author as to the grocer, the solicitor, the dentist, the barrister,
+the soldier. Nothing but nature can give the aptitude; diligence
+must improve it, and experience may direct it. It is not enough to
+wait for the spark from heaven to fall; the spark must be caught,
+and tended, and cherished. A man must labour till he finds his
+vein, and himself. Again, if literature is an art, it is also a
+profession. A man's very first duty is to support himself and
+those, if any, who are dependent on him. If he cannot do it by
+epics, tragedies, lyrics, he must do it by articles, essays, tales,
+or how he honestly can. He must win his leisure by his labour, and
+give his leisure to his art. Murray, at this time, was diligent in
+helping to compile and correct educational works. He might, but for
+the various conditions of reserve, hatred of towns, and the rest,
+have been earning his leisure by work more brilliant and more
+congenial to most men. But his theory of literature was so lofty
+that he probably found the other, the harder, the less remunerative,
+the less attractive work, more congenial to his tastes.
+
+He describes, to Mrs. Murray, various notable visitors to St.
+Andrews: Professor Butcher, who lectured on Lucian, and is `very
+handsome,' Mr. Arthur Balfour, the Lord Rector, who is `rather
+handsome,' and delights the listener by his eloquence; Mr.
+Chamberlain, who pleases him too, though he finds Mr. Chamberlain
+rather acrimonious in his political reflections. About Lucian, the
+subject of Mr. Butcher's lecture, Murray says nothing. That
+brilliant man of letters in general, the Alcibiades of literature,
+the wittiest, and, rarely, the most tender, and, always, the most
+graceful, was a model who does not seem to have attracted Murray.
+Lucian amused, and amuses, and lived by amusing: the vein of
+romance and poetry that was his he worked but rarely: perhaps the
+Samosatene did not take himself too seriously, yet he lives through
+the ages, an example, in many ways to be followed, of a man who
+obviously delighted in all that he wrought. He was no model to
+Murray, who only delighted in his moments of inspiration, and could
+not make himself happy even in the trifles which are demanded from
+the professional pen.
+
+He did, at last, endeavour to ply that servile engine of which
+Pendennis conceived so exalted an opinion. Certainly a false pride
+did not stand in his way when, on May 5, 1889, he announced that he
+was about to leave St. Andrews, and attempt to get work at proof-
+correcting and in the humblest sorts of journalism in Edinburgh.
+The chapter is honourable to his resolution, but most melancholy.
+There were competence and ease waiting for him, probably, in London,
+if he would but let his pen have its way in bright comment and
+occasional verse. But he chose the other course. With letters of
+introduction from Mr. Meiklejohn, he consulted the houses of Messrs.
+Clark and Messrs. Constable in Edinburgh. He did not find that his
+knowledge of Greek was adequate to the higher and more remunerative
+branches of proof-reading, that weary meticulous toil, so fatiguing
+to the eyesight. The hours, too, were very long; he could do more
+and better work in fewer hours. No time, no strength, were left for
+reading and writing. He did, while in Edinburgh, send a few things
+to magazines, but he did not actually `bombard' editors. He is `to
+live in one room, and dine, if not on a red herring, on the next
+cheapest article of diet.' These months of privation, at which he
+laughed, and some weeks of reading proofs, appear to have quite
+undermined health which was never strong, and which had been sorely
+tried by `the wind of a cursed to-day, the curse of a windy to-
+morrow,' at St. Andrews. If a reader observes in Murray a lack of
+strenuous diligence, he must attribute it less to lack of
+resolution, than to defect of physical force and energy. The many
+bad colds of which he speaks were warnings of the end, which came in
+the form of consumption. This lurking malady it was that made him
+wait, and dally with his talent. He hit on the idea of translating
+some of Bossuet's orations for a Scotch theological publisher.
+Alas! the publisher did not anticipate a demand, among Scotch
+ministers, for the Eagle of Meaux. Murray, in his innocence, was
+startled by the caution of the publisher, who certainly would have
+been a heavy loser. `I honestly believe that, if Charles Dickens
+were now alive and unknown, and were to offer the MS. of Pickwick to
+an Edinburgh publisher, that sagacious old individual would shake
+his prudent old head, and refuse (with the utmost politeness) to
+publish it!' There is a good deal of difference between Pickwick
+and a translation of old French sermons about Madame, and Conde, and
+people of whom few modern readers ever heard.
+
+Alone, in Edinburgh, Murray was saddened by the `unregarding'
+irresponsive faces of the people as they passed. In St. Andrews he
+probably knew every face; even in Edinburgh (a visitor from London
+thinks) there is a friendly look among the passers. Murray did not
+find it so. He approached a newspaper office: `he [the Editor whom
+he met] was extremely frank, and told me that the tone of my article
+on--was underbred, while the verses I had sent him had nothing in
+them. Very pleasant for the feelings of a young author, was it not?
+. . . Unfavourable criticism is an excellent tonic, but it should be
+a little diluted . . . I must, however, do him the justice to say
+that he did me a good turn by introducing me to -, . . . who was
+kind and encouraging in the extreme.'
+
+Murray now called on the Editor of the Scottish Leader, the
+Gladstonian organ, whom he found very courteous. He was asked to
+write some `leader-notes' as they are called, paragraphs which
+appear in the same columns as the leading articles. These were
+published, to his astonishment, and he was `to be taken on at a
+salary of--a week.' Let us avoid pecuniary chatter, and merely say
+that the sum, while he was on trial, was not likely to tempt many
+young men into the career of journalism. Yet `the work will be very
+exacting, and almost preclude the possibility of my doing anything
+else.' Now, as four leader notes, or, say, six, can be written in
+an hour, it is difficult to see the necessity for this fatigue.
+Probably there were many duties more exacting, and less agreeable,
+than the turning out of epigrams. Indeed there was other work of
+some more or less mechanical kind, and the manufacture of `leader
+notes' was the least part of Murray's industry. At the end of two
+years there was `the prospect of a very fair salary.' But there was
+`night-work and everlasting hurry.' `The interviewing of a half-
+bred Town-Councillor on the subject of gas and paving' did not
+exhilarate Murray. Again, he had to compile a column of Literary
+News, from the Athenaeum, the Academy, and so on, `with comments and
+enlargements where possible.' This might have been made extremely
+amusing, it sounds like a delightful task,--the making of comments
+on `Mr. - has finished a sonnet:' `Mr. -`s poems are in their
+fiftieth thousand:' `Miss - has gone on a tour of health to the
+banks of the Yang-tse-kiang:' `Mrs. - is engaged on a novel about
+the Pilchard Fishery.' One could make comments (if permitted) on
+these topics for love, and they might not be unpopular. But perhaps
+Murray was shackled a little by human respect, or the prejudices of
+his editor. At all events he calls it `not very inspiring
+employment.' The bare idea, I confess, inspirits me extremely.
+
+But the literary follet, who delights in mild mischief, did not
+haunt Murray. He found an opportunity to write on the Canongate
+Churchyard, where Fergusson lies, under the monument erected by
+Burns to the boy of genius whom he called his master. Of course the
+part of the article which dealt with Fergusson, himself a poet of
+the Scarlet Gown, was cut out. The Scotch do not care to hear about
+Fergusson, in spite of their `myriad mutchkined enthusiasm' for his
+more illustrious imitator and successor, Burns.
+
+At this time Edinburgh was honouring itself, and Mr. Parnell, by
+conferring its citizenship on that patriot. Murray was actually
+told off `to stand at a given point of the line on which the hero
+marched,' and to write some lines of `picturesque description.'
+This kind of thing could not go on. It was at Nelson's Monument
+that he stood: his enthusiasm was more for Nelson than for Mr.
+Parnell; and he caught a severe cold on this noble occasion.
+Murray's opinions clashed with those of the Scottish Leader, and he
+withdrew from its service.
+
+Just a week passed between the Parnellian triumph and Murray's
+retreat from daily journalism. `On a newspaper one must have no
+opinions except those which are favourable to the sale of the paper
+and the filling of its advertisement columns.' That is not
+precisely an accurate theory. Without knowing anything of the
+circumstances, one may imagine that Murray was rather impracticable.
+Of course he could not write against his own opinions, but it is
+unusual to expect any one to do that, or to find any one who will do
+it. `Incompatibility of temper' probably caused this secession from
+the newspaper.
+
+After various attempts to find occupation, he did some proof-reading
+for Messrs. Constable. Among other things he `read' the journal of
+Lady Mary Coke, privately printed for Lord Home. Lady Mary, who
+appears as a lively child in The Heart of Midlothian, `had a taste
+for loo, gossip, and gardening, but the greatest of these is
+gossip.' The best part of the book is Lady Louisa Stuart's
+inimitable introduction. Early in October he decided to give up
+proof-reading: the confinement had already told on his health. In
+the letter which announces this determination he describes a sermon
+of Principal Caird: `Voice, gesture, language, thought--all in the
+highest degree,--combined to make it the most moving and exalted
+speech of a man to men that I ever listened to.' `The world is too
+much with me,' he adds, as if he and the world were ever friends, or
+ever likely to be friendly.
+
+October 27th found him dating from St. Andrews again. `St. Andrews
+after Edinburgh is Paradise.' His Dalilah had called him home to
+her, and he was never again unfaithful. He worked for his firm
+friend, Professor Meiklejohn, he undertook some teaching, and he
+wrote a little. It was at this time that his biographer made
+Murray's acquaintance. I had been delighted with his verses in
+College Echoes, and I asked him to bring me some of his more serious
+work. But he never brought them: his old enemy, reserve, overcame
+him. A few of his pieces were published `At the Sign of the Ship'
+in Longman's Magazine, to which he contributed occasionally.
+
+From this point there is little in Murray's life to be chronicled.
+In 1890 his health broke down entirely, and consumption declared
+itself. Very early in 1891 he visited Egypt, where it was thought
+that some educational work might be found for him. But he found
+Egypt cold, wet, and windy; of Alexandria and the Mediterranean he
+says little: indeed he was almost too weak and ill to see what is
+delightful either in nature or art.
+
+
+`To aching eyes each landscape lowers,
+To feverish pulse each gale blows chill,
+And Araby's or Eden's bowers
+Were barren as this moorland hill,'
+
+
+says the least self-conscious of poets. Even so barren were the
+rich Nile and so bleak the blue Mediterranean waters. Though
+received by the kindest and most hospitable friends, Murray was
+homesick, and pined to be in England, now that spring was there. He
+made the great mistake of coming home too early. At Ilminster, in
+his mother's home, he slowly faded out of life. I have not the
+heart to quote his descriptions of brief yet laborious saunters in
+the coppices, from the letters which he wrote to the lady of his
+heart. He was calm, cheerful, even buoyant. His letters to his
+college friends are all concerned with literature, or with happy old
+times, and are full of interest in them and in their happiness.
+
+He was not wholly idle. He wrote a number of short pieces of verse
+in Punch, and two or three in the St. James's Gazette. Other work,
+no doubt, he planned, but his strength was gone. In 1891 his book,
+The Scarlet Gown, was published by his friend, Mr. A. M. Holden.
+The little volume, despite its local character, was kindly received
+by the Reviews. Here, it was plain, we had a poet who was to St.
+Andrews what the regretted J. K. S. was to Eton and Cambridge. This
+measure of success was not calculated to displease our alumnus
+addictissimus.
+
+Friendship and love, he said, made the summer of 1892 very happy to
+him. I last heard from him in the summer of 1893, when he sent me
+some of his most pleasing verses. He was in Scotland; he had
+wandered back, a shadow of himself, to his dear St. Andrews. I
+conceived that he was better; he said nothing about his health. It
+is not easy to quote from his letters to his friend, Mr. Wallace,
+still written in his beautiful firm hand. They are too full of
+affectionate banter: they also contain criticisms on living poets:
+he shows an admiration, discriminating and not wholesale, of Mr.
+Kipling's verse: he censures Mr. Swinburne, whose Jacobite song (as
+he wrote to myself) did not precisely strike him as the kind of
+thing that Jacobites used to sing.
+
+They certainly celebrated
+
+
+`The faith our fathers fought for,
+The kings our fathers knew,'
+
+
+in a different tone in the North.
+
+The perfect health of mind, in these letters of a dying man, is
+admirable. Reading old letters over, he writes to Miss -, `I have
+known a wonderful number of wonderfully kind-hearted people.' That
+is his criticism of a world which had given him but a scanty
+welcome, and a life of foiled endeavour, of disappointed hope. Even
+now there was a disappointment. His poems did not find a publisher:
+what publisher can take the risk of adding another volume of poetry
+to the enormous stock of verse brought out at the author's expense?
+This did not sour or sadden him: he took Montaigne's advice, `not
+to make too much marvel of our own fortunes.' His biographer,
+hearing in the winter of 1893 that Murray's illness was now
+considered hopeless, though its rapid close was not expected, began,
+with Professor Meiklejohn, to make arrangements for the publication
+of the poems. But the poet did not live to have this poor
+gratification. He died in the early hours of 1894.
+
+Of the merits of his more serious poetry others must speak. To the
+Editor it seems that he is always at his best when he is inspired by
+the Northern Sea, and the long sands and grey sea grasses. Then he
+is most himself. He was improving in his art with every year: his
+development, indeed, was somewhat late.
+
+It is less of the writer than the man that we prefer to think. His
+letters display, in passages which he would not have desired to see
+quoted, the depth and tenderness and thoughtfulness of his
+affections. He must have been a delightful friend: illness could
+not make him peevish, and his correspondence with old college
+companions could never be taken for that of a consciously dying man.
+He had perfect courage, and resolution even in his seeming
+irresoluteness. He was resolved to be, and continued to be,
+himself. `He had kept the bird in his bosom.' We, who regret him,
+may wish that he had been granted a longer life, and a secure
+success. Happier fortunes might have mellowed him, no fortunes
+could have altered for the worse his admirable nature. He lives in
+the hearts of his friends, and in the pride and sympathy of those
+who, after him, have worn and shall wear the scarlet gown.
+
+The following examples of his poetry were selected by Murray's
+biographer from a considerable mass, and have been seen through the
+press by Professor Meiklejohn, who possesses the original
+manuscript, beautifully written.
+
+
+
+MOONLIGHT NORTH AND SOUTH
+
+
+
+Love, we have heard together
+The North Sea sing his tune,
+And felt the wind's wild feather
+Brush past our cheeks at noon,
+And seen the cloudy weather
+Made wondrous with the moon.
+
+Where loveliness is rarest,
+`Tis also prized the most:
+The moonlight shone her fairest
+Along that level coast
+Where sands and dunes the barest,
+Of beauty seldom boast,
+
+Far from that bleak and rude land
+An exile I remain
+Fixed in a fair and good land,
+A valley and a plain
+Rich in fat fields and woodland,
+And watered well with rain.
+
+Last night the full moon's splendour
+Shone down on Taunton Dene,
+And pasture fresh and tender,
+And coppice dusky green,
+The heavenly light did render
+In one enchanted scene,
+
+One fair unearthly vision.
+Yet soon mine eyes were cloyed,
+And found those fields Elysian
+Too rich to be enjoyed.
+Or was it our division
+Made all my pleasure void?
+
+Across the window glasses
+The curtain then I drew,
+And, as a sea-bird passes,
+In sleep my spirit flew
+To grey and windswept grasses
+And moonlit sands--and you.
+
+
+
+WINTER AT ST. ANDREWS
+
+
+
+The city once again doth wear
+Her wonted dress of winter's bride,
+Her mantle woven of misty air,
+With saffron sunlight faintly dyed.
+She sits above the seething tide,
+Of all her summer robes forlorn -
+And dead is all her summer pride -
+The leaves are off Queen Mary's Thorn.
+
+All round, the landscape stretches bare,
+The bleak fields lying far and wide,
+Monotonous, with here and there
+A lone tree on a lone hillside.
+No more the land is glorified
+With golden gleams of ripening corn,
+Scarce is a cheerful hue descried -
+The leaves are off Queen Mary's Thorn.
+
+For me, I do not greatly care
+Though leaves be dead, and mists abide.
+To me the place is thrice as fair
+In winter as in summer-tide:
+With kindlier memories allied
+Of pleasure past and pain o'erworn.
+What care I, though the earth may hide
+The leaves from off Queen Mary's Thorn?
+
+Thus I unto my friend replied,
+When, on a chill late autumn morn,
+He pointed to the tree, and cried,
+`The leaves are off Queen Mary's Thorn!'
+
+
+
+PATRIOTISM
+
+
+
+There was a time when it was counted high
+To be a patriot--whether by the zeal
+Of peaceful labour for the country's weal,
+Or by the courage in her cause to die:
+
+FOR KING AND COUNTRY was a rallying cry
+That turned men's hearts to fire, their nerves to steel;
+Not to unheeding ears did it appeal,
+A pulpit formula, a platform lie.
+
+Only a fool will wantonly desire
+That war should come, outpouring blood and fire,
+And bringing grief and hunger in her train.
+And yet, if there be found no other way,
+God send us war, and with it send the day
+When love of country shall be real again!
+
+
+
+SLEEP FLIES ME
+
+
+
+Sleep flies me like a lover
+Too eagerly pursued,
+Or like a bird to cover
+Within some distant wood,
+Where thickest boughs roof over
+Her secret solitude.
+
+The nets I spread to snare her,
+Although with cunning wrought,
+Have only served to scare her,
+And now she'll not be caught.
+To those who best could spare her,
+She ever comes unsought.
+
+She lights upon their pillows;
+She gives them pleasant dreams,
+Grey-green with leaves of willows,
+And cool with sound of streams,
+Or big with tranquil billows,
+On which the starlight gleams.
+
+No vision fair entrances
+My weary open eye,
+No marvellous romances
+Make night go swiftly by;
+But only feverish fancies
+Beset me where I lie.
+
+The black midnight is steeping
+The hillside and the lawn,
+But still I lie unsleeping,
+With curtains backward drawn,
+To catch the earliest peeping
+Of the desired dawn.
+
+Perhaps, when day is breaking;
+When birds their song begin,
+And, worn with all night waking,
+I call their music din,
+Sweet sleep, some pity taking,
+At last may enter in.
+
+
+
+LOVE'S PHANTOM
+
+
+
+Whene'er I try to read a book,
+Across the page your face will look,
+And then I neither know nor care
+What sense the printed words may bear.
+
+At night when I would go to sleep,
+Thinking of you, awake I keep,
+And still repeat the words you said,
+Like sick men murmuring prayers in bed.
+
+And when, with weariness oppressed,
+I sink in spite of you to rest,
+Your image, like a lovely sprite,
+Haunts me in dreams through half the night.
+
+I wake upon the autumn morn
+To find the sunrise hardly born,
+And in the sky a soft pale blue,
+And in my heart your image true.
+
+When out I walk to take the air,
+Your image is for ever there,
+Among the woods that lose their leaves,
+Or where the North Sea sadly heaves.
+
+By what enchantment shall be laid
+This ghost, which does not make afraid,
+But vexes with dim loveliness
+And many a shadowy caress?
+
+There is no other way I know
+But unto you forthwith to go,
+That I may look upon the maid
+Whereof that other is the shade.
+
+As the strong sun puts out the moon,
+Whose borrowed rays are all his own,
+So, in your living presence, dies
+The phantom kindled at your eyes.
+
+By this most blessed spell, each day
+The vexing ghost awhile I lay.
+Yet am I glad to know that when
+I leave you it will rise again.
+
+
+
+COME BACK TO ST. ANDREWS
+
+
+
+Come back to St. Andrews! Before you went away
+You said you would be wretched where you could not see the Bay,
+The East sands and the West sands and the castle in the sea
+Come back to St. Andrews--St. Andrews and me.
+
+Oh, it's dreary along South Street when the rain is coming down,
+And the east wind makes the student draw more close his warm red
+gown,
+As I often saw you do, when I watched you going by
+On the stormy days to College, from my window up on high.
+
+I wander on the Lade Braes, where I used to walk with you,
+And purple are the woods of Mount Melville, budding new,
+But I cannot bear to look, for the tears keep coming so,
+And the Spring has lost the freshness which it had a year ago.
+
+Yet often I could fancy, where the pathway takes a turn,
+I shall see you in a moment, coming round beside the burn,
+Coming round beside the burn, with your swinging step and free,
+And your face lit up with pleasure at the sudden sight of me.
+
+Beyond the Rock and Spindle, where we watched the water clear
+In the happy April sunshine, with a happy sound to hear,
+There I sat this afternoon, but no hand was holding mine,
+And the water sounded eerie, though the April sun did shine.
+
+Oh, why should I complain of what I know was bound to be?
+For you had your way to make, and you must not think of me.
+But a woman's heart is weak, and a woman's joys are few -
+There are times when I could die for a moment's sight of you.
+
+It may be you will come again, before my hair is grey
+As the sea is in the twilight of a weary winter's day.
+When success is grown a burden, and your heart would fain be free,
+Come back to St. Andrews--St. Andrews and me.
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY
+
+
+
+I have been lonely all my days on earth,
+Living a life within my secret soul,
+With mine own springs of sorrow and of mirth,
+Beyond the world's control.
+
+Though sometimes with vain longing I have sought
+To walk the paths where other mortals tread,
+To wear the clothes for other mortals wrought,
+And eat the selfsame bread -
+
+Yet have I ever found, when thus I strove
+To mould my life upon the common plan,
+That I was furthest from all truth and love,
+And least a living man.
+
+Truth frowned upon my poor hypocrisy,
+Life left my soul, and dwelt but in my sense;
+No man could love me, for all men could see
+The hollow vain pretence.
+
+Their clothes sat on me with outlandish air,
+Upon their easy road I tripped and fell,
+And still I sickened of the wholesome fare
+On which they nourished well.
+
+I was a stranger in that company,
+A Galilean whom his speech bewrayed,
+And when they lifted up their songs of glee,
+My voice sad discord made.
+
+Peace for mine own self I could never find,
+And still my presence marred the general peace,
+And when I parted, leaving them behind,
+They felt, and I, release.
+
+So will I follow now my spirit's bent,
+Not scorning those who walk the beaten track,
+Yet not despising mine own banishment,
+Nor often looking back.
+
+Their way is best for them, but mine for me.
+And there is comfort for my lonely heart,
+To think perhaps our journeys' ends may be
+Not very far apart.
+
+
+
+TO ALFRED TENNYSON--1883
+
+
+
+Familiar with thy melody,
+We go debating of its power,
+As churls, who hear it hour by hour,
+Contemn the skylark's minstrelsy -
+
+As shepherds on a Highland lea
+Think lightly of the heather flower
+Which makes the moorland's purple dower,
+As far away as eye can see.
+
+Let churl or shepherd change his sky,
+And labour in the city dark,
+Where there is neither air nor room -
+How often will the exile sigh
+To hear again the unwearied lark,
+And see the heather's lavish bloom!
+
+
+
+ICHABOD
+
+
+
+Gone is the glory from the hills,
+The autumn sunshine from the mere,
+Which mourns for the declining year
+In all her tributary rills.
+
+A sense of change obscurely chills
+The misty twilight atmosphere,
+In which familiar things appear
+Like alien ghosts, foreboding ills.
+
+The twilight hour a month ago
+Was full of pleasant warmth and ease,
+The pearl of all the twenty-four.
+Erelong the winter gales shall blow,
+Erelong the winter frosts shall freeze -
+And oh, that it were June once more!
+
+
+
+AT A HIGH CEREMONY
+
+
+
+Not the proudest damsel here
+Looks so well as doth my dear.
+All the borrowed light of dress
+Outshining not her loveliness,
+
+A loveliness not born of art,
+But growing outwards from her heart,
+Illuminating all her face,
+And filling all her form with grace.
+
+Said I, of dress the borrowed light
+Could rival not her beauty bright?
+Yet, looking round, `tis truth to tell,
+No damsel here is dressed so well.
+
+Only in them the dress one sees,
+Because more greatly it doth please
+Than any other charm that's theirs,
+Than all their manners, all their airs.
+
+But dress in her, although indeed
+It perfect be, we do not heed,
+Because the face, the form, the air
+Are all so gentle and so rare.
+
+
+
+THE WASTED DAY
+
+
+
+Another day let slip! Its hours have run,
+Its golden hours, with prodigal excess,
+All run to waste. A day of life the less;
+Of many wasted days, alas, but one!
+
+Through my west window streams the setting sun.
+I kneel within my chamber, and confess
+My sin and sorrow, filled with vain distress,
+In place of honest joy for work well done.
+
+At noon I passed some labourers in a field.
+The sweat ran down upon each sunburnt face,
+Which shone like copper in the ardent glow.
+And one looked up, with envy unconcealed,
+Beholding my cool cheeks and listless pace,
+Yet he was happier, though he did not know.
+
+
+
+INDOLENCE
+
+
+
+Fain would I shake thee off, but weak am I
+Thy strong solicitations to withstand.
+Plenty of work lies ready to my hand,
+Which rests irresolute, and lets it lie.
+
+How can I work, when that seductive sky
+Smiles through the window, beautiful and bland,
+And seems to half entreat and half command
+My presence out of doors beneath its eye?
+
+Will not the air be fresh, the water blue,
+The smell of beanfields, blowing to the shore,
+Better than these poor drooping purchased flowers?
+Good-bye, dull books! Hot room, good-bye to you!
+And think it strange if I return before
+The sea grows purple in the evening hours.
+
+
+
+DAWN SONG
+
+
+
+I hear a twittering of birds,
+And now they burst in song.
+How sweet, although it wants the words!
+It shall not want them long,
+For I will set some to the note
+Which bubbles from the thrush's throat.
+
+O jewelled night, that reign'st on high,
+Where is thy crescent moon?
+Thy stars have faded from the sky,
+The sun is coming soon.
+The summer night is passed away,
+Sing welcome to the summer day.
+
+
+
+CAIRNSMILL DEN--TUNE: `A ROVING'
+
+
+
+As I, with hopeless love o'erthrown,
+With love o'erthrown, with love o'erthrown,
+And this is truth I tell,
+As I, with hopeless love o'erthrown,
+Was sadly walking all alone,
+
+I met my love one morning
+In Cairnsmill Den.
+One morning, one morning,
+One blue and blowy morning,
+I met my love one morning
+In Cairnsmill Den.
+
+A dead bough broke within the wood
+Within the wood, within the wood,
+And this is truth I tell.
+A dead bough broke within the wood,
+And I looked up, and there she stood.
+
+I asked what was it brought her there,
+What brought her there, what brought her there,
+And this is truth I tell.
+I asked what was it brought her there.
+Says she, `To pull the primrose fair.'
+
+Says I, `Come, let me pull with you,
+Along with you, along with you,'
+And this is truth I tell.
+Says I, `Come let me pull with you,
+For one is not so good as two.'
+
+But when at noon we climbed the hill,
+We climbed the hill, we climbed the hill,
+And this is truth I tell.
+But when at noon we climbed the hill,
+Her hands and mine were empty still.
+
+And when we reached the top so high,
+The top so high, the top so high,
+And this is truth I tell.
+And when we reached the top so high
+Says I, `I'll kiss you, if I die!'
+
+I kissed my love in Cairnsmill Den,
+In Cairnsmill Den, in Cairnsmill Den,
+And this is truth I tell.
+I kissed my love in Cairnsmill Den,
+And my love kissed me back again.
+
+I met my love one morning
+In Cairnsmill Den.
+One morning, one morning,
+One blue and blowy morning,
+I met my love one morning
+In Cairnsmill Den.
+
+
+
+A LOST OPPORTUNITY
+
+
+
+One dark, dark night--it was long ago,
+The air was heavy and still and warm -
+It fell to me and a man I know,
+To see two girls to their father's farm.
+
+There was little seeing, that I recall:
+We seemed to grope in a cave profound.
+They might have come by a painful fall,
+Had we not helped them over the ground.
+
+The girls were sisters. Both were fair,
+But mine was the fairer (so I say).
+The dark soon severed us, pair from pair,
+And not long after we lost our way.
+
+We wandered over the country-side,
+And we frightened most of the sheep about,
+And I do not think that we greatly tried,
+Having lost our way, to find it out.
+
+The night being fine, it was not worth while.
+We strayed through furrow and corn and grass
+We met with many a fence and stile,
+And a quickset hedge, which we failed to pass.
+
+At last we came on a road she knew;
+She said we were near her father's place.
+I heard the steps of the other two,
+And my heart stood still for a moment's space.
+
+Then I pleaded, `Give me a good-night kiss.'
+I have learned, but I did not know in time,
+The fruits that hang on the tree of bliss
+Are not for cravens who will not climb.
+
+We met all four by the farmyard gate,
+We parted laughing, with half a sigh,
+And home we went, at a quicker rate,
+A shorter journey, my friend and I.
+
+When we reached the house, it was late enough,
+And many impertinent things were said,
+Of time and distance, and such dull stuff,
+But we said little, and went to bed.
+
+We went to bed, but one at least
+Went not to sleep till the black turned grey,
+And the sun rose up, and the light increased,
+And the birds awoke to a summer day.
+
+And sometimes now, when the nights are mild,
+And the moon is away, and no stars shine,
+I wander out, and I go half-wild,
+To think of the kiss which was not mine.
+
+Let great minds laugh at a grief so small,
+Let small minds laugh at a fool so great.
+Kind maidens, pity me, one and all.
+Shy youths, take warning by this my fate.
+
+
+
+THE CAGED THRUSH
+
+
+
+Alas for the bird who was born to sing!
+They have made him a cage; they have clipped his wing;
+They have shut him up in a dingy street,
+And they praise his singing and call it sweet.
+But his heart and his song are saddened and filled
+With the woods, and the nest he never will build,
+And the wild young dawn coming into the tree,
+And the mate that never his mate will be.
+And day by day, when his notes are heard
+They freshen the street--but alas for the bird
+
+
+
+MIDNIGHT
+
+
+
+The air is dark and fragrant
+With memories of a shower,
+And sanctified with stillness
+By this most holy hour.
+
+The leaves forget to whisper
+Of soft and secret things,
+And every bird is silent,
+With folded eyes and wings.
+
+O blessed hour of midnight,
+Of sleep and of release,
+Thou yieldest to the toiler
+The wages of thy peace.
+
+And I, who have not laboured,
+Nor borne the heat of noon,
+Receive thy tranquil quiet -
+An undeserved boon.
+
+Yes, truly God is gracious,
+Who makes His sun to shine
+Upon the good and evil,
+And idle lives like mine.
+
+Upon the just and unjust
+He sends His rain to fall,
+And gives this hour of blessing
+Freely alike to all.
+
+
+
+WHERE'S THE USE
+
+
+
+Oh, where's the use of having gifts that can't be turned to money?
+And where's the use of singing, when there's no one wants to hear?
+It may be one or two will say your songs are sweet as honey,
+But where's the use of honey, when the loaf of bread is dear?
+
+
+
+A MAY-DAY MADRIGAL
+
+
+
+The sun shines fair on Tweedside, the river flowing bright,
+Your heart is full of pleasure, your eyes are full of light,
+Your cheeks are like the morning, your pearls are like the dew,
+Or morning and her dew-drops are like your pearls and you.
+
+Because you are a princess, a princess of the land,
+You will not turn your lightsome eyes a moment where I stand,
+A poor unnoticed poet, a-making of his rhymes;
+But I have found a mistress, more fair a thousand times.
+
+`Tis May, the elfish maiden, the daughter of the Spring,
+Upon whose birthday morning the birds delight to sing.
+They would not sing one note for you, if you should so command,
+Although you are a princess, a princess of the land.
+
+
+
+SONG IS NOT DEAD
+
+
+
+Song is not dead, although to-day
+Men tell us everything is said.
+There yet is something left to say,
+Song is not dead.
+
+While still the evening sky is red,
+While still the morning gold and grey,
+While still the autumn leaves are shed,
+
+While still the heart of youth is gay,
+And honour crowns the hoary head,
+While men and women love and pray
+Song is not dead.
+
+
+
+A SONG OF TRUCE
+
+
+
+Till the tread of marching feet
+Through the quiet grass-grown street
+Of the little town shall come,
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+While the banners idly hang,
+While the bugles do not clang,
+While is hushed the clamorous drum,
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+In the breathing-time of Death,
+While the sword is in its sheath,
+While the cannon's mouth is dumb,
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+Not too long the rest shall be.
+Soon enough, to Death and thee,
+The assembly call shall come.
+Soldier, rest awhile at home.
+
+
+
+ONE TEAR
+
+
+
+Last night, when at parting
+Awhile we did stand,
+Suddenly starting,
+There fell on my hand
+
+Something that burned it,
+Something that shone
+In the moon as I turned it,
+And then it was gone.
+
+One bright stray jewel -
+What made it stray?
+Was I cold or cruel,
+At the close of day?
+
+Oh, do not cry, lass!
+What is crying worth?
+There is no lass like my lass
+In the whole wide earth.
+
+
+
+A LOVER'S CONFESSION
+
+
+
+When people tell me they have loved
+But once in youth,
+I wonder, are they always moved
+To speak the truth?
+
+Not that they wilfully deceive:
+They fondly cherish
+A constancy which they would grieve
+To think might perish.
+
+They cherish it until they think
+`Twas always theirs.
+So, if the truth they sometimes blink,
+`Tis unawares.
+
+Yet unawares, I must profess,
+They do deceive
+Themselves, and those who questionless
+Their tale believe.
+
+For I have loved, I freely own,
+A score of times,
+And woven, out of love alone,
+A hundred rhymes.
+
+Boys will be fickle. Yet, when all
+Is said and done,
+I was not one whom you could call
+A flirt--not one
+
+Of those who into three or four
+Their hearts divide.
+My queens came singly to the door,
+Not side by side.
+
+Each, while she reigned, possessed alone
+My spirit loyal,
+Then left an undisputed throne
+To one more royal,
+
+To one more fair in form and face
+Sweeter and stronger,
+Who filled the throne with truer grace,
+And filled it longer.
+
+So, love by love, they came and passed,
+These loves of mine,
+And each one brighter than the last
+Their lights did shine.
+
+Until--but am I not too free,
+Most courteous stranger,
+With secrets which belong to me?
+There is a danger.
+
+Until, I say, the perfect love,
+The last, the best,
+Like flame descending from above,
+Kindled my breast,
+
+Kindled my breast like ardent flame,
+With quenchless glow.
+I knew not love until it came,
+But now I know.
+
+You smile. The twenty loves before
+Were each in turn,
+You say, the final flame that o'er
+My soul should burn.
+
+Smile on, my friend. I will not say
+You have no reason;
+But if the love I feel to-day
+Depart, `tis treason!
+
+If this depart, not once again
+Will I on paper
+Declare the loves that waste and wane,
+Like some poor taper.
+
+No, no! This flame, I cannot doubt,
+Despite your laughter,
+Will burn till Death shall put it out,
+And may be after.
+
+
+
+TRAFALGAR SQUARE
+
+
+
+These verses have I pilfered like a bee
+Out of a letter from my C. C. C.
+In London, showing what befell him there,
+With other things, of interest to me.
+
+One page described a night in open air
+He spent last summer in Trafalgar Square,
+With men and women who by want are driven
+Thither for lodging, when the nights are fair.
+
+No roof there is between their heads and heaven,
+No warmth but what by ragged clothes is given,
+No comfort but the company of those
+Who with despair, like them, have vainly striven.
+
+On benches there uneasily they doze,
+Snatching brief morsels of a poor repose,
+And if through weariness they might sleep sound,
+Their eyes must open almost ere they close.
+
+With even tramp upon the paven ground,
+Twice every hour the night patrol comes round
+To clear these wretches off, who may not keep
+The miserable couches they have found.
+
+Yet the stern shepherds of the poor black sheep
+Will soften when they see a woman weep.
+There was a mother there who strove in vain,
+With sobs, to hush a starving child to sleep.
+
+And through the night which took so long to wane,
+He saw sad sufferers relieving pain,
+And daughters of iniquity and scorn
+Performing deeds which God will not disdain.
+
+There was a girl, forlorn of the forlorn,
+Whose dress was white, but draggled, soiled, and torn,
+Who wandered like a ghost without a home.
+She spoke to him before the day was born.
+
+She, who all night, when spoken to, was dumb,
+Earning dislike from most, abuse from some,
+Now asked the hour, and when he told her `Two,'
+Wailed, `O my God, will daylight never come?'
+
+Yes, it will come, and change the sky anew
+From star-besprinkled black to sunlit blue,
+And bring sweet thoughts and innocent desires
+To countless girls. What will it bring to you?
+
+
+
+A SUMMER MORNING
+
+
+
+Never was sun so bright before,
+No matin of the lark so sweet,
+No grass so green beneath my feet,
+Nor with such dewdrops jewelled o'er.
+
+I stand with thee outside the door,
+The air not yet is close with heat,
+And far across the yellowing wheat
+The waves are breaking on the shore.
+
+A lovely day! Yet many such,
+Each like to each, this month have passed,
+And none did so supremely shine.
+One thing they lacked: the perfect touch
+Of thee--and thou art come at last,
+And half this loveliness is thine.
+
+
+
+WELCOME HOME
+
+
+
+The fire burns bright
+And the hearth is clean swept,
+As she likes it kept,
+And the lamp is alight.
+She is coming to-night.
+
+The wind's east of late.
+When she comes, she'll be cold,
+So the big chair is rolled
+Close up to the grate,
+And I listen and wait.
+
+The shutters are fast,
+And the red curtains hide
+Every hint of outside.
+But hark, how the blast
+Whistled then as it passed!
+
+Or was it the train?
+How long shall I stand,
+With my watch in my hand,
+And listen in vain
+For the wheels in the lane?
+
+Hark! A rumble I hear
+(Will the wind not be still?),
+And it comes down the hill,
+And it grows on the ear,
+And now it is near.
+
+Quick, a fresh log to burn!
+Run and open the door,
+Hold a lamp out before
+To light up the turn,
+And bring in the urn.
+
+You are come, then, at last!
+O my dear, is it you?
+I can scarce think it true
+I am holding you fast,
+And sorrow is past.
+
+
+
+AN INVITATION
+
+
+
+Dear Ritchie, I am waiting for the signal word to fly,
+And tell me that the visit which has suffered such belating
+Is to be a thing of now, and no more of by-and-by.
+Dear Ritchie, I am waiting.
+
+The sea is at its bluest, and the Spring is new creating
+The woods and dens we know of, and the fields rejoicing lie,
+And the air is soft as summer, and the hedge-birds all are mating.
+
+The Links are full of larks' nests, and the larks possess the sky,
+Like a choir of happy spirits, melodiously debating,
+All is ready for your coming, dear Ritchie--yes, and I,
+Dear Ritchie, I am waiting.
+
+
+
+FICKLE SUMMER
+
+
+
+Fickle Summer's fled away,
+Shall we see her face again?
+Hearken to the weeping rain,
+Never sunbeam greets the day.
+
+More inconstant than the May,
+She cares nothing for our pain,
+Nor will hear the birds complain
+In their bowers that once were gay.
+
+Summer, Summer, come once more,
+Drive the shadows from the field,
+All thy radiance round thee fling,
+Be our lady as of yore;
+Then the earth her fruits shall yield,
+Then the morning stars shall sing.
+
+
+
+SORROW'S TREACHERY
+
+
+
+I made a truce last night with Sorrow,
+The queen of tears, the foe of sleep,
+To keep her tents until the morrow,
+Nor send such dreams to make me weep.
+
+Before the lusty day was springing,
+Before the tired moon was set,
+I dreamed I heard my dead love singing,
+And when I woke my eyes were wet.
+
+
+
+THE CROWN OF YEARS
+
+
+
+Years grow and gather--each a gem
+Lustrous with laughter and with tears,
+And cunning Time a crown of years
+Contrives for her who weareth them.
+
+No chance can snatch this diadem,
+It trembles not with hopes or fears,
+It shines before the rose appears,
+And when the leaves forsake her stem.
+
+Time sets his jewels one by one.
+Then wherefore mourn the wreaths that lie
+In attic chambers of the past?
+They withered ere the day was done.
+This coronal will never die,
+Nor shall you lose it at the last.
+
+
+
+HOPE DEFERRED
+
+
+
+When the weary night is fled,
+And the morning sky is red,
+Then my heart doth rise and say,
+`Surely she will come to-day.'
+
+In the golden blaze of noon,
+`Surely she is coming soon.'
+In the twilight, `Will she come?'
+Then my heart with fear is dumb.
+
+When the night wind in the trees
+Plays its mournful melodies,
+Then I know my trust is vain,
+And she will not come again.
+
+
+
+THE LIFE OF EARTH
+
+
+
+The life of earth, how full of pain,
+Which greets us on our day of birth,
+Nor leaves us while we yet retain
+The life of earth.
+
+There is a shadow on our mirth,
+Our sun is blotted out with rain,
+And all our joys are little worth.
+
+Yet oh, when life begins to wane,
+And we must sail the doubtful firth,
+How wild the longing to regain
+The life of earth!
+
+
+
+GOLDEN DREAM
+
+
+
+Golden dream of summer morn,
+By a well-remembered stream
+In the land where I was born,
+Golden dream!
+
+Ripples, by the glancing beam
+Lightly kissed in playful scorn,
+Meadows moist with sunlit steam.
+
+When I lift my eyelids worn
+Like a fair mirage you seem,
+In the winter dawn forlorn,
+Golden dream!
+
+
+
+TEARS
+
+
+
+Mourn that which will not come again,
+The joy, the strength of early years.
+Bow down thy head, and let thy tears
+Water the grave where hope lies slain.
+
+For tears are like a summer rain,
+To murmur in a mourner's ears,
+To soften all the field of fears,
+To moisten valleys parched with pain.
+
+And though thy tears will not awake
+What lies beneath of young or fair
+And sleeps so sound it draws no breath,
+Yet, watered thus, the sod may break
+In flowers which sweeten all the air,
+And fill with life the place of death.
+
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF SLEEP
+
+
+
+When we have laid aside our last endeavour,
+And said farewell to one or two that weep,
+And issued from the house of life for ever,
+To find a lodging in the house of sleep -
+
+With eyes fast shut, in sunless chambers lying,
+With folded arms unmoved upon the breast,
+Beyond the noise of sorrow and of crying,
+Beyond the dread of dreaming, shall we rest?
+
+Or shall there come at last desire of waking,
+To walk again on hillsides that we know,
+When sunrise through the cold white mist is breaking,
+Or in the stillness of the after-glow?
+
+Shall there be yearning for the sound of voices,
+The sight of faces, and the touch of hands,
+The will that works, the spirit that rejoices,
+The heart that feels, the mind that understands?
+
+Shall dreams and memories crowding from the distance,
+Shall ghosts of old ambition or of mirth,
+Create for us a shadow of existence,
+A dim reflection of the life of earth?
+
+And being dead, and powerless to recover
+The substance of the show whereon we gaze,
+Shall we be likened to the hapless lover,
+Who broods upon the unreturning days?
+
+Not so: for we have known how swift to perish
+Is man's delight when youth and health take wing,
+Until the winter leaves him nought to cherish
+But recollections of a vanished spring.
+
+Dream as we may, desire of life shall never
+Disturb our slumbers in the house of sleep.
+Yet oh, to think we may not greet for ever
+The one or two that, when we leave them, weep!
+
+
+
+THE OUTCAST'S FAREWELL
+
+
+
+The sun is banished,
+The daylight vanished,
+No rosy traces
+Are left behind.
+Here in the meadow
+I watch the shadow
+Of forms and faces
+Upon your blind.
+
+Through swift transitions,
+In new positions,
+My eyes still follow
+One shape most fair.
+My heart delaying
+Awhile, is playing
+With pleasures hollow,
+Which mock despair.
+
+I feel so lonely,
+I long once only
+To pass an hour
+With you, O sweet!
+To touch your fingers,
+Where fragrance lingers
+From some rare flower,
+And kiss your feet.
+
+But not this even
+To me is given.
+Of all sad mortals
+Most sad am I,
+Never to meet you,
+Never to greet you,
+Nor pass your portals
+Before I die.
+
+All men scorn me,
+Not one will mourn me,
+When from their city
+I pass away.
+Will you to-morrow
+Recall with sorrow
+Him whom with pity
+You saw to-day?
+
+Outcast and lonely,
+One thing only
+Beyond misgiving
+I hold for true,
+That, had you known me,
+You would have shown me
+A life worth living -
+A life for you.
+
+Yes: five years younger
+My manhood's hunger
+Had you come filling
+With plenty sweet,
+My life so nourished,
+Had grown and flourished,
+Had God been willing
+That we should meet.
+
+How vain to fashion
+From dreams and passion
+The rich existence
+Which might have been!
+Can God's own power
+Recall the hour,
+Or bridge the distance
+That lies between?
+
+Before the morning,
+From pain and scorning
+I sail death's river
+To sleep or hell.
+To you is given
+The life of heaven.
+Farewell for ever,
+Farewell, farewell!
+
+
+
+YET A LITTLE SLEEP
+
+
+
+Beside the drowsy streams that creep
+Within this island of repose,
+Oh, let us rest from cares and woes,
+Oh, let us fold our hands to sleep!
+
+Is it ignoble, then, to keep
+Awhile from where the rough wind blows,
+And all is strife, and no man knows
+What end awaits him on the deep?
+
+The voyager may rest awhile,
+When rest invites, and yet may be
+Neither a sluggard nor a craven.
+With strength renewed he quits the isle,
+And putting out again to sea,
+Makes sail for his desired haven.
+
+
+
+LOST LIBERTY
+
+
+
+Of our own will we are not free,
+When freedom lies within our power.
+We wait for some decisive hour,
+To rise and take our liberty.
+
+Still we delay, content to be
+Imprisoned in our own high tower.
+What is it but a strong-built bower?
+Ours are the warders, ours the key.
+
+But we through indolence grow weak.
+Our warders, fed with power so long,
+Become at last our lords indeed.
+We vainly threaten, vainly seek
+To move their ruth. The bars are strong.
+We dash against them till we bleed.
+
+
+
+AN AFTERTHOUGHT
+
+
+
+You found my life, a poor lame bird
+That had no heart to sing,
+You would not speak the magic word
+To give it voice and wing.
+
+Yet sometimes, dreaming of that hour,
+I think, if you had known
+How much my life was in your power,
+It might have sung and flown.
+
+
+
+TO J. R.
+
+
+
+Last Sunday night I read the saddening story
+Of the unanswered love of fair Elaine,
+The `faith unfaithful' and the joyless glory
+Of Lancelot, `groaning in remorseful pain.'
+
+I thought of all those nights in wintry weather,
+Those Sunday nights that seem not long ago,
+When we two read our Poet's words together,
+Till summer warmth within our hearts did glow.
+
+Ah, when shall we renew that bygone pleasure,
+Sit down together at our Merlin's feet,
+Drink from one cup the overflowing measure,
+And find, in sharing it, the draught more sweet?
+
+That time perchance is far, beyond divining.
+Till then we drain the `magic cup' apart;
+Yet not apart, for hope and memory twining
+Smile upon each, uniting heart to heart.
+
+
+
+THE TEMPTED SOUL
+
+
+
+Weak soul, by sense still led astray,
+Why wilt thou parley with the foe?
+He seeks to work thine overthrow,
+And thou, poor fool! dost point the way.
+
+Hast thou forgotten many a day,
+When thou exulting forth didst go,
+And ere the noon wert lying low,
+A broken and defenceless prey?
+
+If thou wouldst live, avoid his face;
+Dwell in the wilderness apart,
+And gather force for vanquishing,
+Ere thou returnest to his place.
+Then arm, and with undaunted heart
+Give battle, till he own thee king.
+
+
+
+YOUTH RENEWED
+
+
+
+When one who has wandered out of the way
+Which leads to the hills of joy,
+Whose heart has grown both cold and grey,
+Though it be but the heart of a boy -
+When such a one turns back his feet
+From the valley of shadow and pain,
+Is not the sunshine passing sweet,
+When a man grows young again?
+
+How gladly he mounts up the steep hillside,
+With strength that is born anew,
+And in his veins, like a full springtide,
+The blood streams through and through.
+And far above is the summit clear,
+And his heart to be there is fain,
+And all too slowly it comes more near
+When a man grows young again.
+
+He breathes the pure sweet mountain breath,
+And it widens all his heart,
+And life seems no more kin to death,
+Nor death the better part.
+And in tones that are strong and rich and deep
+He sings a grand refrain,
+For the soul has awakened from mortal sleep,
+When a man grows young again.
+
+
+
+VANITY OF VANITIES
+
+
+
+Be ye happy, if ye may,
+In the years that pass away.
+Ye shall pass and be forgot,
+And your place shall know you not.
+
+Other generations rise,
+With the same hope in their eyes
+That in yours is kindled now,
+And the same light on their brow.
+
+They shall see the selfsame sun
+That your eyes now gaze upon,
+They shall breathe the same sweet air,
+And shall reck not who ye were.
+
+Yet they too shall fade at last
+In the twilight of the past,
+They and you alike shall be
+Lost from the world's memory.
+
+Then, while yet ye breathe and live,
+Drink the cup that life can give.
+Be ye happy, if ye may,
+In the years that pass away,
+
+Ere the golden bowl be broken,
+Ere ye pass and leave no token,
+Ere the silver cord be loosed,
+Ere ye turn again to dust.
+
+`And shall this be all,' ye cry,
+`But to eat and drink and die?
+If no more than this there be,
+Vanity of vanity!'
+
+Yea, all things are vanity,
+And what else but vain are ye?
+Ye who boast yourselves the kings
+Over all created things.
+
+Kings! whence came your right to reign?
+Ye shall be dethroned again.
+Yet for this, your one brief hour,
+Wield your mockery of power.
+
+Dupes of Fate, that treads you down
+Wear awhile your tinsel crown
+Be ye happy, if ye may,
+In the years that pass away.
+
+
+
+LOVE'S WORSHIP RESTORED
+
+
+
+O Love, thine empire is not dead,
+Nor will we let thy worship go,
+Although thine early flush be fled,
+Thine ardent eyes more faintly glow,
+And thy light wings be fallen slow
+Since when as novices we came
+Into the temple of thy name.
+
+Not now with garlands in our hair,
+And singing lips, we come to thee.
+There is a coldness in the air,
+A dulness on the encircling sea,
+Which doth not well with songs agree.
+And we forget the words we sang
+When first to thee our voices rang.
+
+When we recall that magic prime,
+We needs must weep its early death.
+How pleasant from thy towers the chime
+Of bells, and sweet the incense breath
+That rose while we, who kept thy faith,
+Chanting our creed, and chanting bore
+Our offerings to thine altar store!
+
+Now are our voices out of tune,
+Our gifts unworthy of thy name.
+December frowns, in place of June.
+Who smiled when to thy house we came,
+We who came leaping, now are lame.
+Dull ears and failing eyes are ours,
+And who shall lead us to thy towers?
+
+O hark! A sound across the air,
+Which tells not of December's cold,
+A sound most musical and rare.
+Thy bells are ringing as of old,
+With silver throats and tongues of gold.
+Alas! it is too sweet for truth,
+An empty echo of our youth.
+
+Nay, never echo spake so loud!
+It is indeed thy bells that ring.
+And lo, against the leaden cloud,
+Thy towers! Once more we leap and spring,
+Once more melodiously we sing,
+We sing, and in our song forget
+That winter lies around us yet.
+
+Oh, what is winter, now we know,
+Full surely, thou canst never fail?
+Forgive our weak untrustful woe,
+Which deemed thy glowing face grown pale.
+We know thee, mighty to prevail.
+Doubt and decrepitude depart,
+And youth comes back into the heart.
+
+O Love, who turnest frost to flame
+With ardent and immortal eyes,
+Whose spirit sorrow cannot tame,
+Nor time subdue in any wise -
+While sun and moon for us shall rise,
+Oh, may we in thy service keep
+Till in thy faith we fall asleep!
+
+
+
+BELOW HER WINDOW
+
+
+
+Where she sleeps, no moonlight shines
+No pale beam unbidden creeps.
+Darkest shade the place enshrines
+Where she sleeps.
+
+Like a diamond in the deeps
+Of the rich unopened mines
+There her lovely rest she keeps.
+
+Though the jealous dark confines
+All her beauty, Love's heart leaps.
+His unerring thought divines
+Where she sleeps.
+
+
+
+REQUIEM
+
+
+
+For thee the birds shall never sing again,
+Nor fresh green leaves come out upon the tree,
+The brook shall no more murmur the refrain
+For thee.
+
+Thou liest underneath the windswept lea,
+Thou dreamest not of pleasure or of pain,
+Thou dreadest no to-morrow that shall be.
+
+Deep rest is thine, unbroken by the rain,
+Ay, or the thunder. Brother, canst thou see
+The tears that night and morning fall in vain
+For thee?
+
+
+
+THOU ART QUEEN
+
+
+
+Thou art queen to every eye,
+When the fairest maids convene.
+Envy's self can not deny
+Thou art queen.
+
+In thy step thy right is seen,
+In thy beauty pure and high,
+In thy grace of air and mien.
+
+Thine unworthy vassal I,
+Lay my hands thy hands between;
+Kneeling at thy feet I cry
+Thou art queen!
+
+
+
+IN TIME OF DOUBT
+
+
+
+`In the shadow of Thy wings, O Lord of Hosts, whom I extol,
+I will put my trust for ever,' so the kingly David sings.
+`Thou shalt help me, Thou shalt save me, only
+Thou shalt keep me whole,
+In the shadow of Thy wings.'
+
+In our ears this voice triumphant, like a blowing trumpet, rings,
+But our hearts have heard another, as of funeral bells that toll,
+`God of David where to find Thee?' No reply the question brings.
+
+Shadows are there overhead, but they are of the clouds that roll,
+Blotting out the sun from sight, and overwhelming earthly things.
+Oh, that we might feel Thy presence! Surely we could rest our soul
+In the shadow of Thy wings.
+
+
+
+THE GARDEN OF SIN
+
+
+
+I know the garden-close of sin,
+The cloying fruits, the noxious flowers,
+I long have roamed the walks and bowers,
+Desiring what no man shall win:
+
+A secret place to shelter in,
+When soon or late the angry powers
+Come down to seek the wretch who cowers,
+Expecting judgment to begin.
+
+The pleasure long has passed away
+From flowers and fruit, each hour I dread
+My doom will find me where I lie.
+I dare not go, I dare not stay.
+Without the walks, my hope is dead,
+Within them, I myself must die.
+
+
+
+URSULA
+
+
+
+There is a village in a southern land,
+By rounded hills closed in on every hand.
+The streets slope steeply to the market-square,
+Long lines of white-washed houses, clean and fair,
+With roofs irregular, and steps of stone
+Ascending to the front of every one.
+The people swarthy, idle, full of mirth,
+Live mostly by the tillage of the earth.
+
+Upon the northern hill-top, looking down,
+Like some sequestered saint upon the town,
+Stands the great convent.
+
+On a summer night,
+Ten years ago, the moon with rising light
+Made all the convent towers as clear as day,
+While still in deepest shade the village lay.
+Both light and shadow with repose were filled,
+The village sounds, the convent bells were stilled.
+No foot in all the streets was now astir,
+And in the convent none kept watch but her
+Whom they called Ursula. The moonlight fell
+Brightly around her in the lonely cell.
+Her eyes were dark, and full of unshed woe,
+Like mountain tarns which cannot overflow,
+Surcharged with rain, and round about the eyes
+Deep rings recorded sleepless nights, and cries
+Stifled before their birth. Her brow was pale,
+And like a marble temple in a vale
+Of cypress trees, shone shadowed by her hair.
+So still she was, that had you seen her there,
+You might have thought you were beholding death.
+Her lips were parted, but if any breath
+Came from between them, it were hard to know
+By any movement of her breast of snow.
+
+But when the summer night was now far spent,
+She kneeled upon the floor. Her head she leant
+Down on the cold stone of the window-seat.
+God knows if there were any vital heat
+In those pale brows, or if they chilled the stone.
+And as she knelt, she made a bitter moan,
+With words that issued from a bitter soul, -
+`O Mary, Mother, and is this thy goal,
+Thy peace which waiteth for the world-worn heart?
+Is it for this I live and die apart
+From all that once I knew? O Holy God,
+Is this the blessed chastening of Thy rod,
+Which only wounds to heal? Is this the cross
+That I must carry, counting all for loss
+Which once was precious in the world to me?
+If Thou be God, blot out my memory,
+And let me come, forsaking all, to Thee.
+But here, though that old world beholds me not,
+Here, though I seek Thee through my lonely lot,
+Here, though I fast, do penance day by day,
+Kneel at Thy feet, and ever watch and pray,
+Beloved forms from that forsaken world
+Revisit me. The pale blue smoke is curled
+Up from the dwellings of the sons of men.
+I see it, and all my heart turns back again
+From seeking Thee, to find the forms I love.
+
+`Thou, with Thy saints abiding far above,
+What canst Thou know of this, my earthly pain?
+They said to me, Thou shalt be born again,
+And learn that worldly things are nothing worth,
+In that new state. O God, is this new birth,
+Birth of the spirit dying to the flesh?
+Are these the living waters which refresh
+The thirsty spirit, that it thirst no more?
+Still all my life is thirsting to the core.
+Thou canst not satisfy, if this be Thou.
+And yet I dream, or I remember how,
+Before I came here, while I tarried yet
+Among the friends they tell me to forget,
+I never seemed to seek Thee, but I found
+Thou wert in all the loveliness around,
+And most of all in hearts that loved me well.
+
+`And then I came to seek Thee in this cell,
+To crucify my worldliness and pride,
+To lay my heart's affections all aside,
+As carnal hindrances which held my soul
+From hasting unencumbered to her goal.
+And all this have I done, or else have striven
+To do, obeying the behest of Heaven,
+And my reward is bitterness. I seem
+To wander always in a feverish dream
+On plains where there is only sun and sand,
+No rock or tree in all the weary land,
+My thirst unquenchable, my heart burnt dry.
+And still in my parched throat I faintly cry,
+Deliver me, O Lord: bow down Thine ear!
+
+`He will not answer me. He does not hear.
+I am alone within the universe.
+Oh for a strength of will to rise and curse
+God, and defy Him here to strike me dead!
+But my heart fails me, and I bow my head,
+And cry to Him for mercy, still in vain.
+Oh for some sudden agony of pain,
+To make such insurrection in my soul
+That I might burst all bondage of control,
+Be for one moment as the beasts that die,
+And pour my life in one blaspheming cry!'
+
+The morning came, and all the convent towers
+Were gilt with glory by the golden hours.
+But where was Ursula? The sisters came
+With quiet footsteps, calling her by name,
+But there was none that answered. In her cell,
+The glad, illuminating sunshine fell
+On form and face, and showed that she was dead.
+`May Christ receive her soul!' the sisters said,
+And spoke in whispers of her holy life,
+And how God's mercy spared her pain and strife,
+And gave this quiet death. The face was still,
+Like a tired child's, that lies and sleeps its fill.
+
+
+
+UNDESIRED REVENGE
+
+
+
+Sorrow and sin have worked their will
+For years upon your sovereign face,
+And yet it keeps a faded trace
+Of its unequalled beauty still,
+As ruined sanctuaries hold
+A crumbled trace of perfect mould
+In shrines which saints no longer fill.
+
+I knew you in your splendid morn,
+Oh, how imperiously sweet!
+I bowed and worshipped at your feet,
+And you received my love with scorn.
+Now I scorn you. It is a change,
+When I consider it, how strange
+That you, not I, should be forlorn.
+
+Do you suppose I have no pain
+To see you play this sorry part,
+With faded face and broken heart,
+And life lived utterly in vain?
+Oh would to God that you once more
+Might scorn me as you did of yore,
+And I might worship you again!
+
+
+
+POETS
+
+
+
+Children of earth are we,
+Lovers of land and sea,
+Of hill, of brook, of tree,
+Of all things fair;
+Of all things dark or bright,
+Born of the day and night,
+Red rose and lily white
+And dusky hair.
+
+Yet not alone from earth
+Do we derive our birth.
+What were our singing worth
+Were this the whole?
+Somewhere from heaven afar
+Hath dropped a fiery star,
+Which makes us what we are,
+Which is our soul.
+
+
+
+A PRESENTIMENT
+
+
+
+It seems a little word to say -
+FAREWELL--but may it not, when said,
+Be like the kiss we give the dead,
+Before they pass the doors for aye?
+
+Who knows if, on some after day,
+Your lips shall utter in its stead
+A welcome, and the broken thread
+Be joined again, the selfsame way?
+
+The word is said, I turn to go,
+But on the threshold seem to hear
+A sound as of a passing bell,
+Tolling monotonous and slow,
+Which strikes despair upon my ear,
+And says it is a last farewell.
+
+
+
+A BIRTHDAY GIFT
+
+
+
+No gift I bring but worship, and the love
+Which all must bear to lovely souls and pure,
+Those lights, that, when all else is dark, endure;
+Stars in the night, to lift our eyes above;
+
+To lift our eyes and hearts, and make us move
+Less doubtful, though our journey be obscure,
+Less fearful of its ending, being sure
+That they watch over us, where'er we rove.
+
+And though my gift itself have little worth,
+Yet worth it gains from her to whom `tis given,
+As a weak flower gets colour from the sun.
+Or rather, as when angels walk the earth,
+All things they look on take the look of heaven -
+For of those blessed angels thou art one.
+
+
+
+CYCLAMEN
+
+
+
+I had a plant which would not thrive,
+Although I watered it with care,
+I could not save the blossoms fair,
+Nor even keep the leaves alive.
+
+I strove till it was vain to strive.
+I gave it light, I gave it air,
+I sought from skill and counsel rare
+The means to make it yet survive.
+
+A lady sent it me, to prove
+She held my friendship in esteem;
+I would not have it as she said,
+I wanted it to be for love;
+And now not even friends we seem,
+And now the cyclamen is dead.
+
+
+
+LOVE RECALLED IN SLEEP
+
+
+
+There was a time when in your face
+There dwelt such power, and in your smile
+I know not what of magic grace;
+They held me captive for a while.
+
+Ah, then I listened for your voice!
+Like music every word did fall,
+Making the hearts of men rejoice,
+And mine rejoiced the most of all.
+
+At sight of you, my soul took flame.
+But now, alas! the spell is fled.
+Is it that you are not the same,
+Or only that my love is dead?
+
+I know not--but last night I dreamed
+That you were walking by my side,
+And sweet, as once you were, you seemed,
+And all my heart was glorified.
+
+Your head against my shoulder lay,
+And round your waist my arm was pressed,
+And as we walked a well-known way,
+Love was between us both confessed.
+
+But when with dawn I woke from sleep,
+And slow came back the unlovely truth,
+I wept, as an old man might weep
+For the lost paradise of youth.
+
+
+
+FOOTSTEPS IN THE STREET
+
+
+
+Oh, will the footsteps never be done?
+The insolent feet
+Thronging the street,
+Forsaken now of the only one.
+
+The only one out of all the throng,
+Whose footfall I knew,
+And could tell it so true,
+That I leapt to see as she passed along,
+
+As she passed along with her beautiful face,
+Which knew full well
+Though it did not tell,
+That I was there in the window-space.
+
+Now my sense is never so clear.
+It cheats my heart,
+Making me start
+A thousand times, when she is not near.
+
+When she is not near, but so far away,
+I could not come
+To the place of her home,
+Though I travelled and sought for a month and a day.
+
+Do you wonder then if I wish the street
+Were grown with grass,
+And no foot might pass
+Till she treads it again with her sacred feet?
+
+
+
+FOR A PRESENT OF ROSES
+
+
+
+Crimson and cream and white -
+My room is a garden of roses!
+Centre and left and right,
+Three several splendid posies.
+
+As the sender is, they are sweet,
+These lovely gifts of your sending,
+With the stifling summer heat
+Their delicate fragrance blending.
+
+What more can my heart desire?
+Has it lost the power to be grateful?
+Is it only a burnt-out fire,
+Whose ashes are dull and hateful?
+
+Yet still to itself it doth say,
+`I should have loved far better
+To have found, coming in to-day,
+The merest scrap of a letter.'
+
+
+
+IN TIME OF SORROW
+
+
+
+Despair is in the suns that shine,
+And in the rains that fall,
+This sad forsaken soul of mine
+Is weary of them all.
+
+They fall and shine on alien streets
+From those I love and know.
+I cannot hear amid the heats
+The North Sea's freshening flow
+
+The people hurry up and down,
+Like ghosts that cannot lie;
+And wandering through the phantom town
+The weariest ghost am I.
+
+
+
+A NEW SONG TO AN OLD TUNE--FROM VICTOR HUGO
+
+
+
+If a pleasant lawn there grow
+By the showers caressed,
+Where in all the seasons blow
+Flowers gaily dressed,
+Where by handfuls one may win
+Lilies, woodbine, jessamine,
+I will make a path therein
+For thy feet to rest.
+
+If there live in honour's sway
+An all-loving breast
+Whose devotion cannot stray,
+Never gloom-oppressed -
+If this noble breast still wake
+For a worthy motive's sake,
+There a pillow I will make
+For thy head to rest.
+
+If there be a dream of love,
+Dream that God has blest,
+Yielding daily treasure-trove
+Of delightful zest,
+With the scent of roses filled,
+With the soul's communion thrilled,
+There, oh! there a nest I'll build
+For thy heart to rest.
+
+
+
+THE FIDDLER
+
+
+
+There's a fiddler in the street,
+And the children all are dancing:
+Two dozen lightsome feet
+Springing and prancing.
+
+Pleasure he gives to you,
+Dance then, and spare not!
+For the poor fiddler's due,
+Know not and care not.
+
+While you are prancing,
+Let the fiddler play.
+When you're tired of dancing
+He may go away.
+
+
+
+THE FIRST MEETING
+
+
+
+Last night for the first time, O Heart's Delight,
+I held your hand a moment in my own,
+The dearest moment which my soul has known,
+Since I beheld and loved you at first sight.
+
+I left you, and I wandered in the night,
+Under the rain, beside the ocean's moan.
+All was black dark, but in the north alone
+There was a glimmer of the Northern Light.
+
+My heart was singing like a happy bird,
+Glad of the present, and from forethought free,
+Save for one note amid its music heard:
+God grant, whatever end of this may be,
+That when the tale is told, the final word
+May be of peace and benison to thee.
+
+
+
+A CRITICISM OF CRITICS
+
+
+
+How often have the critics, trained
+To look upon the sky
+Through telescopes securely chained,
+Forgot the naked eye.
+
+Within the compass of their glass
+Each smallest star they knew,
+And not a meteor could pass
+But they were looking through.
+
+When a new planet shed its rays
+Beyond their field of vision,
+And simple folk ran out to gaze,
+They laughed in high derision.
+
+They railed upon the senseless throng
+Who cheered the brave new light.
+And yet the learned men were wrong,
+The simple folk were right.
+
+
+
+MY LADY
+
+
+
+My Lady of all ladies! Queen by right
+Of tender beauty; full of gentle moods;
+With eyes that look divine beatitudes,
+Large eyes illumined with her spirit's light;
+
+Lips that are lovely both by sound and sight,
+Breathing such music as the dove, which broods
+Within the dark and silence of the woods,
+Croons to the mate that is her heart's delight.
+
+Where is a line, in cloud or wave or hill,
+To match the curve which rounds her soft-flushed cheek?
+A colour, in the sky of morn or of even,
+To match that flush? Ah, let me now be still!
+If of her spirit I should strive to speak,
+I should come short, as earth comes short of heaven.
+
+
+
+PARTNERSHIP IN FAME
+
+
+
+Love, when the present is become the past,
+And dust has covered all that now is new,
+When many a fame has faded out of view,
+And many a later fame is fading fast -
+
+If then these songs of mine might hope to last,
+Which sing most sweetly when they sing of you,
+Though queen and empress wore oblivion's hue,
+Your loveliness would not be overcast.
+
+Now, while the present stays with you and me,
+In love's copartnery our hearts combine,
+Life's loss and gain in equal shares to take.
+Partners in fame our memories then would be:
+Your name remembered for my songs; and mine
+Still unforgotten for your sweetness' sake.
+
+
+
+A CHRISTMAS FANCY
+
+
+
+Early on Christmas Day,
+Love, as awake I lay,
+And heard the Christmas bells ring sweet and clearly,
+My heart stole through the gloom
+Into your silent room,
+And whispered to your heart, `I love you dearly.'
+
+There, in the dark profound,
+Your heart was sleeping sound,
+And dreaming some fair dream of summer weather.
+At my heart's word it woke,
+And, ere the morning broke,
+They sang a Christmas carol both together.
+
+Glory to God on high!
+Stars of the morning sky,
+Sing as ye sang upon the first creation,
+When all the Sons of God
+Shouted for joy abroad,
+And earth was laid upon a sure foundation.
+
+Glory to God again!
+Peace and goodwill to men,
+And kindly feeling all the wide world over,
+Where friends with joy and mirth
+Meet round the Christmas hearth,
+Or dreams of home the solitary rover.
+
+Glory to God! True hearts,
+Lo, now the dark departs,
+And morning on the snow-clad hills grows grey.
+Oh, may love's dawning light
+Kindled from loveless night,
+Shine more and more unto the perfect day!
+
+
+
+THE BURIAL OF WILLIAM--THE CONQUEROR
+
+
+
+Oh, who may this dead warrior be
+That to his grave they bring?
+`Tis William, Duke of Normandy,
+The conqueror and king.
+
+Across the sea, with fire and sword,
+The English crown he won;
+The lawless Scots they owned him lord,
+But now his rule is done.
+
+A king should die from length of years,
+A conqueror in the field,
+A king amid his people's tears,
+A conqueror on his shield.
+
+But he, who ruled by sword and flame,
+Who swore to ravage France,
+Like some poor serf without a name,
+Has died by mere mischance.
+
+To Caen now he comes to sleep,
+The minster bells they toll,
+A solemn sound it is and deep,
+May God receive his soul!
+
+With priests that chant a wailing hymn,
+He slowly comes this way,
+To where the painted windows dim
+The lively light of day.
+
+He enters in. The townsfolk stand
+In reverent silence round,
+To see the lord of all the land
+Take house in narrow ground.
+
+While, in the dwelling-place he seeks,
+To lay him they prepare,
+One Asselin FitzArthur speaks,
+And bids the priests forbear.
+
+`The ground whereon this abbey stands
+Is mine,' he cries, `by right.
+`Twas wrested from my father's hands
+By lawlessness and might.
+
+Duke William took the land away,
+To build this minster high.
+Bury the robber where ye may,
+But here he shall not lie.'
+
+The holy brethren bid him cease;
+But he will not be stilled,
+And soon the house of God's own peace
+With noise and strife is filled.
+
+And some cry shame on Asselin,
+Such tumult to excite,
+Some say, it was Duke William's sin,
+And Asselin does right.
+
+But he round whom their quarrels keep,
+Lies still and takes no heed.
+No strife can mar a dead man's sleep,
+And this is rest indeed.
+
+Now Asselin at length is won
+The land's full price to take,
+And let the burial rites go on,
+And so a peace they make.
+
+When Harold, king of Englishmen,
+Was killed in Senlac fight,
+Duke William would not yield him then
+A Christian grave or rite.
+
+Because he fought for keeping free
+His kingdom and his throne,
+No Christian rite nor grave had he
+In land that was his own.
+
+And just it is, this Duke unkind,
+Now he has come to die,
+In plundered land should hardly find
+Sufficient space to lie.
+
+
+
+THE DEATH OF WILLIAM RUFUS
+
+
+
+The Red King's gone a-hunting, in the woods his father made
+For the tall red deer to wander through the thicket and the glade,
+The King and Walter Tyrrel, Prince Henry and the rest
+Are all gone out upon the sport the Red King loves the best.
+
+Last night, when they were feasting in the royal banquet-hall,
+De Breteuil told a dream he had, that evil would befall
+If the King should go to-morrow to the hunting of the deer,
+And while he spoke, the fiery face grew well-nigh pale to hear.
+
+He drank until the fire came back, and all his heart was brave,
+Then bade them keep such woman's tales to tell an English slave,
+For he would hunt to-morrow, though a thousand dreams foretold
+All the sorrow and the mischief De Breteuil's brain could hold.
+
+So the Red King's gone a-hunting, for all that they could do,
+And an arrow in the greenwood made De Breteuil's dream come true.
+They said `twas Walter Tyrrel, and so it may have been,
+But there's many walk the forest when the leaves are thick and
+green.
+
+There's many walk the forest, who would gladly see the sport,
+When the King goes out a-hunting with the nobles of his court,
+And when the nobles scatter, and the King is left alone,
+There are thickets where an English slave might string his bow
+unknown.
+
+The forest laws are cruel, and the time is hard as steel
+To English slaves, trod down and bruised beneath the Norman heel.
+Like worms they writhe, but by-and-by the Norman heel may learn
+There are worms that carry poison, and that are not slow to turn.
+
+The lords came back, by one and two, from straying far apart,
+And they found the Red King lying with an arrow in his heart.
+Who should have done the deed, but him by whom it first was seen?
+So they said `twas Walter Tyrrel, and so it may have been.
+
+They cried upon Prince Henry, the brother of the King,
+And he came up the greenwood, and rode into the ring.
+He looked upon his brother's face, and then he turned away,
+And galloped off to Winchester, where all the treasure lay.
+
+`God strike me,' cried De Breteuil, `but brothers' blood is thin!
+And why should ours be thicker that are neither kith nor kin?'
+They spurred their horses in the flank, and swiftly thence they
+passed,
+But Walter Tyrrel lingered and forsook his liege the last.
+
+They say it was enchantment, that fixed him to the scene,
+To look upon his traitor's work, and so it may have been.
+But presently he got to horse, and took the seaward way,
+And all alone within the glade, in state the Red King lay.
+
+Then a creaking cart came slowly, which a charcoal-burner drove.
+He found the dead man lying, a ghastly treasure-trove;
+He raised the corpse for charity, and on his wagon laid,
+And so the Red King drove in state from out the forest glade.
+
+His hair was like a yellow flame about the bloated face,
+The blood had stained his tunic from the fatal arrow-place.
+Not good to look upon was he, in life, nor yet when dead.
+The driver of the cart drove on, and never turned his head.
+
+When next the nobles throng at night the royal banquet-hall,
+Another King will rule the feast, the drinking and the brawl,
+While Walter Tyrrel walks alone upon the Norman shore,
+And the Red King in the forest will chase the deer no more.
+
+
+
+AFTER WATERLOO
+
+
+
+On the field of Waterloo we made Napoleon rue
+That ever out of Elba he decided for to come,
+For we finished him that day, and he had to run away,
+And yield himself to Maitland on the Billy-ruffium.
+
+`Twas a stubborn fight, no doubt, and the fortune wheeled about,
+And the brave Mossoos kept coming most uncomfortable near,
+And says Wellington the hero, as his hopes went down to zero,
+`I wish to God that Blooker or the night was only here!'
+
+But Blooker came at length, and we broke Napoleon's strength,
+And the flower of his army--that's the old Imperial Guard -
+They made a final sally, but they found they could not rally,
+And at last they broke and fled, after fighting bitter hard.
+
+Now Napoleon he had thought, when a British ship he sought,
+And gave himself uncalled-for, in a manner, you might say,
+He'd be treated like a king with the best of every thing,
+And maybe have a palace for to live in every day.
+
+He was treated very well, as became a noble swell,
+But we couldn't leave him loose, not in Europe anywhere,
+For we knew he would be making some gigantic undertaking,
+While the trustful British lion was reposing in his lair.
+
+We tried him once before near the European shore,
+Having planted him in Elba, where he promised to remain,
+But when he saw his chance, why, he bolted off to France,
+And he made a lot of trouble--but it wouldn't do again.
+
+Says the Prince to him, `You know, far away you'll have to go,
+To a pleasant little island off the coast of Africay,
+Where they tell me that the view of the ocean deep and blue,
+Is remarkable extensive, and it's there you'll have to stay.'
+
+So Napoleon wiped his eye, and he wished the Prince good-bye,
+And being stony-broke, made the best of it he could,
+And they kept him snugly pensioned, where his Royal Highness
+mentioned,
+And Napoleon Boneyparty is provided for for good.
+
+Now of that I don't complain, but I ask and ask in vain,
+Why me, a British soldier, as has lost a useful arm
+Through fighting of the foe, when the trumpets ceased to blow,
+Should be forced to feed the pigs on a little Surrey farm,
+
+While him as fought with us, and created such a fuss,
+And in the whole of Europe did a mighty deal of harm,
+Should be kept upon a rock, like a precious fighting cock,
+And be found in beer and baccy, which would suit me to a charm?
+
+
+
+DEATH AT THE WINDOW
+
+
+
+This morning, while we sat in talk
+Of spring and apple-bloom,
+Lo! Death stood in the garden walk,
+And peered into the room.
+
+Your back was turned, you did not see
+The shadow that he made.
+He bent his head and looked at me;
+It made my soul afraid.
+
+The words I had begun to speak
+Fell broken in the air.
+You saw the pallor of my cheek,
+And turned--but none was there.
+
+He came as sudden as a thought,
+And so departed too.
+What made him leave his task unwrought?
+It was the sight of you.
+
+Though Death but seldom turns aside
+From those he means to take,
+He would not yet our hearts divide,
+For love and pity's sake.
+
+
+
+MAKE-BELIEVES
+
+
+
+When I was young and well and glad,
+I used to play at being sad;
+Now youth and health are fled away,
+At being glad I sometimes play.
+
+
+
+A COINCIDENCE
+
+
+
+Every critic in the town
+Runs the minor poet down;
+Every critic--don't you know it?
+Is himself a minor poet.
+
+
+
+ART'S DISCIPLINE
+
+
+
+Long since I came into the school of Art,
+A child in works, but not a child in heart.
+Slowly I learn, by her instruction mild,
+To be in works a man, in heart a child.
+
+
+
+THE TRUE LIBERAL
+
+
+
+The truest Liberal is he
+Who sees the man in each degree,
+Who merit in a churl can prize,
+And baseness in an earl despise,
+Yet censures baseness in a churl,
+And dares find merit in an earl.
+
+
+
+A LATE GOOD NIGHT
+
+
+
+My lamp is out, my task is done,
+And up the stair with lingering feet
+I climb. The staircase clock strikes one.
+Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+My solitary room I gain.
+A single star makes incomplete
+The blackness of the window pane.
+Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+Dim and more dim its sparkle grows,
+And ere my head the pillows meet,
+My lids are fain themselves to close.
+Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+My lips no other words can say,
+But still they murmur and repeat
+To you, who slumber far away,
+Good night, my love! good night, my sweet!
+
+
+
+AN EXILE'S SONG
+
+
+
+My soul is like a prisoned lark,
+That sings and dreams of liberty,
+The nights are long, the days are dark,
+Away from home, away from thee!
+
+My only joy is in my dreams,
+When I thy loving face can see.
+How dreary the awakening seems,
+Away from home, away from thee!
+
+At dawn I hasten to the shore,
+To gaze across the sparkling sea -
+The sea is bright to me no more,
+Which parts me from my home and thee.
+
+At twilight, when the air grows chill,
+And cold and leaden is the sea,
+My tears like bitter dews distil,
+Away from home, away from thee.
+
+I could not live, did I not know
+That thou art ever true to me,
+I could not bear a doubtful woe,
+Away from home, away from thee.
+
+I could not live, did I not hear
+A voice that sings the day to be,
+When hitherward a ship shall steer,
+To bear me back to home and thee.
+
+Oh, when at last that day shall break
+In sunshine on the dancing sea,
+It will be brighter for the sake
+Of my return to home and thee!
+
+
+
+FOR SCOTLAND
+
+
+
+Beyond the Cheviots and the Tweed,
+Beyond the Firth of Forth,
+My memory returns at speed
+To Scotland and the North.
+
+For still I keep, and ever shall,
+A warm place in my heart for Scotland,
+Scotland, Scotland,
+A warm place in my heart for Scotland.
+
+Oh, cruel off St. Andrew's Bay
+The winds are wont to blow!
+They either rest or gently play,
+When there in dreams I go.
+
+And there I wander, young again,
+With limbs that do not tire,
+Along the coast to Kittock's Den,
+With whinbloom all afire.
+
+I climb the Spindle Rock, and lie
+And take my doubtful ease,
+Between the ocean and the sky,
+Derided by the breeze.
+
+Where coloured mushrooms thickly grow,
+Like flowers of brittle stalk,
+To haunted Magus Muir I go,
+By Lady Catherine's Walk.
+
+In dreams the year I linger through,
+In that familiar town,
+Where all the youth I ever knew,
+Burned up and flickered down.
+
+There's not a rock that fronts the sea,
+There's not an inland grove,
+But has a tale to tell to me
+Of friendship or of love.
+
+And so I keep, and ever shall,
+The best place in my heart for Scotland,
+Scotland, Scotland,
+The best place in my heart for Scotland!
+
+
+
+THE HAUNTED CHAMBER
+
+
+
+Life is a house where many chambers be,
+And all the doors will yield to him who tries,
+Save one, whereof men say, behind it lies
+The haunting secret. He who keeps the key,
+
+Keeps it securely, smiles perchance to see
+The eager hands stretched out to clutch the prize,
+Or looks with pity in the yearning eyes,
+And is half moved to let the secret free.
+
+And truly some at every hour pass through,
+Pass through, and tread upon that solemn floor,
+Yet come not back to tell what they have found.
+We will not importune, as others do,
+With tears and cries, the keeper of the door,
+But wait till our appointed hour comes round.
+
+
+
+NIGHTFALL
+
+
+
+Let me sleep. The day is past,
+And the folded shadows keep
+Weary mortals safe and fast.
+Let me sleep.
+
+I am all too tired to weep
+For the sunlight of the Past
+Sunk within the drowning deep.
+
+Treasured vanities I cast
+In an unregarded heap.
+Time has given rest at last.
+Let me sleep.
+
+
+
+IN TIME OF SICKNESS
+
+
+
+Lost Youth, come back again!
+Laugh at weariness and pain.
+Come not in dreams, but come in truth,
+Lost Youth.
+
+Sweetheart of long ago,
+Why do you haunt me so?
+Were you not glad to part,
+Sweetheart?
+
+Still Death, that draws so near,
+Is it hope you bring, or fear?
+Is it only ease of breath,
+Still Death?
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{1} Mr. Butler lectures on Physics, or, as it is called in
+Scotland, Natural Philosophy.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of R. F. Murray: His Poems with a Memoir
+
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