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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: The Heptalogia + +Author: Algernon Charles Swinburne + +Release Date: April 19, 2006 [EBook #18210] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HEPTALOGIA *** + + + + +Produced by Paul Murray, Diane Monico, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + + + + + +<h1>THE HEPTALOGIA</h1> + +<h2>By Algernon Charles Swinburne<br /><br /></h2> + +<p class="center">Taken from<br /></p> +<h4> THE COLLECTED POETICAL WORKS<br /> +OF ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE,<br /> VOL. V</h4> + + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>SWINBURNE'S POETICAL WORKS</h3> + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="8" summary="works"> +<tr><td align='right'>I.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Poems and Ballads</span> (First Series).<br /></td></tr> +<tr><td align='right'>II.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Songs before Sunrise</span>, and <span class="smcap">Songs of Two Nations</span>.<br /></td></tr> +<tr><td align='right'>III.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Poems and Ballads</span> (Second and Third Series), and <span class="smcap">Songs of The Springtides</span>.<br /></td></tr> +<tr><td align='right'>IV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Tristram of Lyonesse, The Tale of Balen, Atalanta in Calydon, Erechtheus.</span><br /></td></tr> +<tr><td align='right'>V.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Studies in Song, A Century of Roundels, Sonnets on English Dramatic Poets, The Heptalogia, Etc.</span><br /></td></tr> +<tr><td align='right'>VI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Midsummer Holiday, Astrophel, A Channel Passage and Other Poems.</span><br /></td></tr> +</table></div> + + +<p class="center"><small>LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN</small></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + + +<h1>THE HEPTALOGIA<br /><br /></h1> + +<h4>By<br /><br /></h4> + +<h3>Algernon Charles Swinburne<br /><br /><br /><br /></h3> + +<p class="center">1917<br /> +<br /> +LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN<br /> +</p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + + +<p class="center"> +<i>First printed (Chatto), 1904<br /> +Reprinted 1904, '09, '10, '12<br /> +(Heinemann), 1917</i><br /> +<br /> +<i>London: William Heinemann, 1917</i><br /> +</p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + + + +<h2>THE HEPTALOGIA<br /><br /></h2> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="8" summary="toc"> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Higher Pantheism in a Nutshell</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_373">373</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">John Jones's Wife</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_375">375</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Poet and the Woodlouse</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_396">396</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Person of the House</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_400">400</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Last Words of a Seventh-Rate Poet</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_406">406</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Sonnet for a Picture</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_421">421</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Nephelidia</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_422">422</a></td></tr> +</table></div> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<h2>SPECIMENS OF MODERN POETS<br /><br /><br /></h2> +<h1>THE HEPTALOGIA<br /><br /></h1> +<h4>OR<br /><br /></h4> +<h2>THE SEVEN AGAINST SENSE<br /><br /></h2> +<h3>A CAP WITH SEVEN BELLS<br /></h3> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="THE_HIGHER_PANTHEISM" id="THE_HIGHER_PANTHEISM"></a>THE HIGHER PANTHEISM<br /> +IN A NUTSHELL<br /><br /></h2> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">One, who is not, we see: but one, whom we see not, is:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Surely this is not that: but that is assuredly this.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">What, and wherefore, and whence? for under is over and under:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">If thunder could be without lightning, lightning could be without thunder.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Doubt is faith in the main: but faith, on the whole, is doubt:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">We cannot believe by proof: but could we believe without?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Why, and whither, and how? for barley and rye are not clover:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Neither are straight lines curves: yet over is under and over.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Two and two may be four: but four and four are not eight:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fate and God may be twain: but God is the same thing as fate.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Ask a man what he thinks, and get from a man what he feels:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">God, once caught in the fact, shows you a fair pair of heels.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Body and spirit are twins: God only knows which is which:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The soul squats down in the flesh, like a tinker drunk in a ditch.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">More is the whole than a part: but half is more than the whole:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Clearly, the soul is the body: but is not the body the soul?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">One and two are not one: but one and nothing is two:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Truth can hardly be false, if falsehood cannot be true.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Once the mastodon was: pterodactyls were common as cocks:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Then the mammoth was God: now is He a prize ox.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Parallels all things are: yet many of these are askew:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You are certainly I: but certainly I am not you.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Springs the rock from the plain, shoots the stream from the rock:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Cocks exist for the hen: but hens exist for the cock.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">God, whom we see not, is: and God, who is not, we see:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fiddle, we know, is diddle: and diddle, we take it, is dee.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a><br /></span></p> +<h2>JOHN JONES'S WIFE<br /></h2> + +<div class="poem"><div class="hd"> +<span class="i10">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i7">AT THE PIANO<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i12">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Love me and leave me; what love bids retrieve me? can June's fist grasp May?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Leave me and love me; hopes eyed once above me like spring's sprouts decay;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fall as the snow falls, when summer leaves grow false—cards packed for storm's play!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i12">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Nay, say Decay's self be but last May's elf, wing shifted, eye sheathed—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Changeling in April's crib rocked, who lets 'scape rills locked fast since frost breathed—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Skin cast (think!) adder-like, now bloom bursts bladder-like,—bloom frost bequeathed?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i12">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Ah, how can fear sit and hear as love hears it grief's heart's cracked grate's screech?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Chance lets the gate sway that opens on hate's way and shews on shame's beach<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Crouched like an imp sly change watch sweet love's shrimps lie, a toothful in each.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i12">IV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Time feels his tooth slip on husks wet from Truth's lip, which drops them and grins—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Shells where no throb stirs of life left in lobsters since joy thrilled their fins—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Hues of the prawn's tail or comb that makes dawn stale, so red for our sins!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i12">V<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Years blind and deaf use the soul's joys as refuse, heart's peace as manure,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Reared whence, next June's rose shall bloom where our moons rose last year, just as pure:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Moons' ends match roses' ends: men by beasts' noses' ends mete sin's stink's cure.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i12">VI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Leaves love last year smelt now feel dead love's tears melt—flies caught in time's mesh!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Salt are the dews in which new time breeds new sin, brews blood and stews flesh;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Next year may see dead more germs than this weeded and reared them afresh.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i12">VII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Old times left perish, there's new time to cherish; life just shifts its tune;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As, when the day dies, earth, half afraid, eyes the growth of the moon;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Love me and save me, take me or waive me; death takes one so soon!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a><br /></span> +</div></div> + +<div class="poem"><div class="hd"> +<span class="i3">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i0">BY THE CLIFF<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i4">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Is it daytime (guess),<br /></span> +<span class="i1">You that feed my soul<br /></span> +<span class="i2">To excess<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With that light in those eyes<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And those curls drawn like a scroll<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In that round grave guise?<br /></span> +<span class="i2">No or yes?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i4">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Oh, the end, I'd say!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Such a foolish thing<br /></span> +<span class="i2">(Pure girls' play!)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As a mere mute heart,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Was it worth a kiss, a ring,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">This? for two must part—<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Not to-day.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i4">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Look, the whole sand crawls,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Hums, a heaving hive,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Scrapes and scrawls—</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Such a buzz and burst!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Here just one thing's not alive,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">One that was at first—<br /></span> +<span class="i2">But life palls.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i4">IV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Yes, my heart, I know,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Just my heart's stone dead—<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Yes, just so.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Sick with heat, those worms<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Drop down scorched and overfed—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">No more need of germs!<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Let them go.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i4">V<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Yes, but you now, look,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">You, the rouged stage female<br /></span> +<span class="i2">With a crook,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Chalked Arcadian sham,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">You that made my soul's sleep's dream ail—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Your soul fit to damn?<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Shut the book.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a><br /></span> +</div></div> + +<div class="poem"><div class="hd"> +<span class="i6">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i3">ON THE SANDS<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i8">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">There was nothing at all in the case (conceive)<br /></span> +<span class="i1">But love; being love, it was not (understand)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Such a thing as the years let fall (believe)<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Like the rope's coil dropt from a fisherman's hand<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When the boat's hauled up—"by your leave!"<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">So—well! How that crab writhes—leg after leg<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Drawn, as a worm draws ring upon ring<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Gradually, not gladly! Chicken or egg,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Is it more than the ransom (say) of a king<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Take my meaning at least) that I beg?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Not so! You were ready to learn, I think,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">What the world said! "He loves you too well (suppose)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For such leanings! These poets, their love's mere ink—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Like a flower, their flame flashes—a rosebud, blows—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Then it all drops down at a wink!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">IV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Ah, the instance! A curl of a blossomless vine<br /></span> +<span class="i1">The vinedresser passing it sickens to see<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And mutters 'Much hope (under God) of His wine<br /></span> +<span class="i1">From the branch and the bark of a barren tree<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Spring reared not, and winter lets pine—<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">V<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"'His wine that should glorify (saith He) the cup<br /></span> +<span class="i1">That a man beholding (not tasting) might say<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"Pour out life at a draught, drain it dry, drink it up,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Give this one thing, and huddle the rest away—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Save the bitch, and be hanged to the pup!"<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">VI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"'Let it rot then!' which saying, he leaves it—we'll guess,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Feels (if the sap move at all) thus much—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yearns, and would blossom, would quicken no less,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Bud at an eye's glance, flower at a touch—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">'Die, perhaps, would you not, for her?'—'Yes!'<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">VII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Note the hitch there! That's piteous—so much being done,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">(He'll think some day, your lover) so little to do!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Such infinite days to wear out, once begun!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Since the hand its glove holds, and the footsole its shoe—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Overhead too there's always the sun!"</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">VIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Oh, no doubt they had said so, your friends—been profuse<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Of good counsel, wise hints—"where the trap lurks, walk warily—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Squeeze the fruit to the core ere you count on the juice!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">For the graft may fail, shift, wax, change colour, wane, vary, lie—"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You were cautious, God knows—to what use?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">IX<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">This crab's wiser, it strikes me—no twist but implies life—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Not a curl but's so fit you could find none fitter—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For the brute from its brutehood looks up thus and eyes life—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Stoop your soul down and listen, you'll hear it twitter,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Laughing lightly,—my crab's life's the wise life!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">X<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Those who've read S. T. Coleridge remember how Sammy sighs<br /></span> +<span class="i1">To his pensive (I think he says) Sara—"most soothing-sweet"—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Crab's bulk's less (look!) than man's—yet (quoth Cancer) I am my size,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And my bulk's girth contents me! Man's maw (see?) craves two things—wheat<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And flesh likewise—man's gluttonous—damn his eyes!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Crab's content with crab's provender: crab's love, if soothing,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Is no sweeter than pincers are soft—and a new sickle<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Cuts no sharper than crab's claws nip, keen as boar's toothing!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Yet crab's love's no less fervent than bard's, if less musical—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">'Tis a new thing I'd lilt—but a true thing.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Old songs tell us, of all drinks for Englishmen fighting, ale's<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Out and out best: salt water contents crab, it seems to me,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Though pugnacious as sailors, and skilled to steer right in gales<br /></span> +<span class="i1">That craze pilots, if slow to sing—"Sleep'st thou? thou dream'st o' me!"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In such love-strains as mine—or a nightingale's.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Ah, now, look you—tail foremost, the beast sets seaward—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">The sea draws it, sand sucks it—he's wise, my crab!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">From the napkin out jumps his one talent—good steward,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Just judge! So a man shirks the smile or the stab,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And sets his sail duly to leeward!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XIV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Trust me? Hardly! I bid you not lean (remark)<br /></span> +<span class="i1">On my spirit, your spirit—my flesh, your flesh—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Hold my hand, and tread safe through the horrible dark—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Quench my soul as with sprinklings of snow, then refresh<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With some blast of new bellows the spark!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">By no means! This were easy (men tell me) to say—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">"Give her all, throw your chance up, fall back on her heart!"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Say my friends) "she must change! after night follows day—"<br /></span> +<span class="i1">No such fool! I am safe set in hell, for my part—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">So let heaven do the worst now he may!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XVI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">What they bid me? Well, this, nothing more—"Tell her this—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">'You are mine, I yours, though the whole world fail—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Though things are not, I know there is one thing which is—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Though the oars break, there's hope for us yet—hoist the sail!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Oh, your heart! what's the heart? but your kiss!'</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XVII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Then she breaks, she drops down, she lies flat at your feet—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Take her then!" Well, I knew it—what fools are men!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Take the bee by her horns, will your honey prove sweet?<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Sweet is grass—will you pasture your cows in a fen?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Oh, if contraries could but once meet!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XVIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Love you call it? Some twitch in the moon's face (observe),<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Wet blink of her eyelid, tear dropt about dewfall,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Cheek flushed or obscured—does it make the sky swerve?<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Fetch the test, work the question to rags, bring to proof all—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Find what souls want and bodies deserve!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XIX<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Ah, we know you! Your soul works to infinite ends,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Frets, uses life up for death's sake, takes pains,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Flings down love's self—"but you, bear me witness, my friends!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Have I lost spring? count up (see) the winter's fresh gains!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Is the shrub spoilt? the pine's hair impends!"</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XX<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">What, you'd say—"Mark how God works! Years crowd, time wears thin,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Earth keeps good yet, the sun goes on, stars hold their own,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And you'll change, climb past sight of the world, shift your skin,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Never heeding how life moans—'more flesh now, less bone!'<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For that cheek's worn waste outline (death's grin)<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Pleads with time still—'what good if I lose this? but see—'"<br /></span> +<span class="i1">(There's the crab gone!) "'I said, "Though earth sinks,"'" (you perceive?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, true, back there!) your soul now—"'"yet some vein might be<br /></span> +<span class="i1">(Could one find it alive in the heart's core's pulse, cleave<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Through the life-springs where "you" melts in "me")—<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"'"Some true vein of the absolute soul, which survives<br /></span> +<span class="i1">All that flesh runs to waste through"—and lo, this fails!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Here's death close on us! One life? a million of lives!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Why choose one sail to watch of these infinite sails?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Time's a tennis-play? thank you, no, fives!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"'Stop life's ball then!' Such folly! melt earth down for that,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Till the pure ore eludes you and leaves you raw scoriæ?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Pish, the vein's wrong!" But you, friends—come, what were you at<br /></span> +<span class="i1">When God spat you out suddenly? what was the story He<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Cut short thus, the growth He laid flat?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXIV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Wait! the crab's twice alive, mark! Oh, worthy, your soul,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Of strange ends, great results, novel labours! Take note,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I reject this for one! (ay, now, straight to the hole!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Safe in sand there—your skirts smooth out all as they float!)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I, shirk drinking through flaws in the bowl?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Or suppose now that rock's cleft—grim, scored to the quick,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">As a man's face kept fighting all life through gets scored,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Mossed and marked with grey purulent leprosies, sick,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Flat and foul as man's life here (be swift with your sword—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Cut the soul out, stuck fast where thorns prick!)</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXVI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">—Say it let the rock's heart out, its meaning, the thing<br /></span> +<span class="i1">All was made for, devised, ruled out gradually, planned—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, that sea-shell, perhaps—since it lies, such a ring<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Of pure colour, a cup full of sunbeams, to stand<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Say, in Lent) at the priest's hand—(no king!)<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XXVII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Blame the cleft then? Praise rather! So—just a chance gone!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Had you said—"Save the seed and secure souls in flower"—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, how time laughs, years palpitate, pro grapples con,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Till one day you shrug shoulders—"Well, gone, the good hour!"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Till one night—"Is God off now? or on?"</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a><br /></span> +</div></div> + +<div class="poem"><div class="hd"> +<span class="i6">IV<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i3">UP THE SPOUT<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i8">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Hi! Just you drop that! Stop, I say!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Shirk work, think slink off, twist friend's wrist?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Where that spined sand's lined band's the bay—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Lined blind with true sea's blue, as due—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Promising—not to pay?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">For the sea's debt leaves wet the sand;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Burst worst fate's weights in one burst gun?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">A man's own yacht, blown—What? off land?<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Tack back, or veer round here, then—queer!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Reef points, though—understand?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">I'm blest if I do. Sigh? be blowed!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Love's doves make break life's ropes, eh? Tropes!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Faith's brig, baulked, sides caulked, rides at road;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Hope's gropes befogged, storm-dogged and bogged—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Clogged, water-logged, her load!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">IV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Stowed, by Jove, right and tight, away!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">No show now how best plough sea's brow,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Wrinkling—breeze quick, tease thick, ere day,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Clear sheer wave's sheen of green, I mean,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With twinkling wrinkles—eh?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">V<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Sea sprinkles winkles, tinkles light<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Shells' bells—boy's joys that hap to snap!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">It's just sea's fun, breeze done, to spite<br /></span> +<span class="i1">God's rods that scourge her surge, I'd urge—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Not proper, is it—quite?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">VI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">See, fore and aft, life's craft undone!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Crank plank, split spritsail—mark, sea's lark!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That grey cold sea's old sprees, begun<br /></span> +<span class="i1">When men lay dark i' the ark, no spark,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">All water—just God's fun!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">VII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Not bright, at best, his jest to these<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Seemed—screamed, shrieked, wreaked on kin for sin!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When for mirth's yell earth's knell seemed please<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Some dumb new grim great whim in him<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Made Jews take chalk for cheese.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">VIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Could God's rods bruise God's Jews? Their jowls<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Bobbed, sobbed, gaped, aped the plaice in face:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">None heard, 'tis odds, his—God's—folk's howls.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Now, how must I apply, to try<br /></span> +<span class="i0">This hookiest-beaked of owls?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">IX<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Well, I suppose God knows—I don't.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Time's crimes mark dark men's types, in stripes<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Broad as fen's lands men's hands were wont<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Leave grieve unploughed, though proud and loud<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With birds' words—No! he won't!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">X<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">One never should think good impossible.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Eh? say I'd hide this Jew's oil's cruse—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">His shop might hold bright gold, engrossible<br /></span> +<span class="i1">By spy—spring's air takes there no care<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To wave the heath-flower's glossy bell!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">But gold bells chime in time there, coined—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Gold! Old Sphinx winks there—"Read my screed!"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Doctrine Jews learn, use, burn for, joined<br /></span> +<span class="i1">(Through new craft's stealth) with health and wealth—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">At once all three purloined!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">I rose with dawn, to pawn, no doubt,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">(Miss this chance, glance untried aside?)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">John's shirt, my—no! Ay, so—the lout!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Let yet the door gape, store on floor<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And not a soul about?<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i8">XIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Such men lay traps, perhaps—and I'm<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Weak—meek—mild—child of woe, you know!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But theft, I doubt, my lout calls crime.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Shrink? Think! Love's dawn in pawn—you spawn<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Of Jewry! Just in time!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a><br /></span> +</div></div> + +<div class="poem"><div class="hd"> +<span class="i7">V<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i4">OFF THE PIER<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i9">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">One last glance at these sands and stones!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Time goes past men, and lives to his liking,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Steals, and ruins, and sometimes atones.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Why should he be king, though, and why not I king?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There now, that wind, like a swarm of sick drones!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Is it heaven or mere earth (come!) that moves so and moans?<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Oh, I knew, when you loved me, my soul was in flowerage—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Now the frost comes; from prime, though, I watched through to nones,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Read love's litanies over—his age was not our age!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">No more flutes in this world for me now, dear! trombones.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">All that youth once denied and made mouths at, age owns.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Facts put fangs out and bite us; life stings and grows viperous;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And time's fugues are a hubbub of meaningless tones.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Once we followed the piper; now why not the piper us?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Love, grown grey, plays mere solos; we want antiphones.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">IV<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">And we sharpen our wits up with passions for hones,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Melt down loadstars for magnets, use women for whetstones,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Learn to bear with dead calms by remembering cyclones,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Snap strings short with sharp thumbnails, till silence begets tones,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Burn our souls out, shift spirits, turn skins and change zones;<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">V<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Then the heart, when all's done with, wakes, whimpers, intones<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Some lost fragment of tune it thought sweet ere it grew sick;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Is it life that disclaims this, or death that disowns?)<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Mere dead metal, scrawled bars—ah, one touch, you make music!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Love's worth saving, youth doubts, but experience depones.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">VI<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">In the darkness (right Dickens) of Tom-All-Alone's<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Or the Morgue out in Paris, where tragedy centuples<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Life's effects by Death's algebra, Shakespeare (Malone's)<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Might have said sleep was murdered—new scholiasts have sent you pills<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To purge text of him! Bread? give me—Scotticè—scones!<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">VII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Think, what use, when youth's saddle galls bay's back or roan's,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">To seek chords on love's keys to strike, other than his chords?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There's an error joy winks at and grief half condones,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Or life's counterpoint grates the C major of discords—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">'Tis man's choice 'twixt sluts rose-crowned and queens age dethrones.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">VIII<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">I for instance might groan as a bag-pipe groans,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Give the flesh of my heart for sharp sorrows to flagellate,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Grief might grind my cheeks down, age make sticks of my bones,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">(Though a queen drowned in tears must be worth more than Madge elate)<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Rose might turn burdock, and pine-apples cones;<br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span></div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i9">IX<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">My skin might change to a pitiful crone's,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">My lips to a lizard's, my hair to weed,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">My features, in fact, to a series of loans;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Thus much is conceded; now, you, concede<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You would hardly salute me by choice, John Jones?<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<div class="footnotes"><div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> First edition:—<br /> +And my face bear his brand—mine, that once bore Love's badge elate!</p></div></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>THE POET AND THE WOODLOUSE<br /></h2> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Said a poet to a woodlouse—"Thou art certainly my brother;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">I discern in thee the markings of the fingers of the Whole;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I recognize, in spite of all the terrene smut and smother,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">In the colours shaded off thee, the suggestions of a soul.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Yea," the poet said, "I smell thee by some passive divination,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">I am satisfied with insight of the measure of thine house;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">What had happened I conjecture, in a blank and rhythmic passion,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Had the æons thought of making thee a man, and me a louse.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"The broad lives of upper planets, their absorption and digestion,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Food and famine, health and sickness, I can scrutinize and test;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Through a shiver of the senses comes a resonance of question,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And by proof of balanced answer I decide that I am best."</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Man, the fleshly marvel, alway feels a certain kind of awe stick<br /></span> +<span class="i1">To the skirts of contemplation, cramped with nympholeptic weight:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Feels his faint sense charred and branded by the touch of solar caustic,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">On the forehead of his spirit feels the footprint of a Fate."<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Notwithstanding which, O poet," spake the woodlouse, very blandly,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">"I am likewise the created,—I the equipoise of thee;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I the particle, the atom, I behold on either hand lie<br /></span> +<span class="i1">The inane of measured ages that were embryos of me.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"I am fed with intimations, I am clothed with consequences,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And the air I breathe is coloured with apocalyptic blush:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ripest-budded odours blossom out of dim chaotic stenches,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And the Soul plants spirit-lilies in sick leagues of human slush.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"I am thrilled half cosmically through by cryptophantic surgings,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Till the rhythmic hills roar silent through a spongious kind of blee:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And earth's soul yawns disembowelled of her pancreatic organs,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Like a madrepore if mesmerized, in rapt catalepsy.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"And I sacrifice, a Levite—and I palpitate, a poet;—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Can I close dead ears against the rush and resonance of things?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Symbols in me breathe and flicker up the heights of the heroic;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Earth's worst spawn, you said, and cursed me? look! approve me! I have wings.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Ah, men's poets! men's conventions crust you round and swathe you mist-like,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And the world's wheels grind your spirits down the dust ye overtrod:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">We stand sinlessly stark-naked in effulgence of the Christlight,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And our polecat chokes not cherubs; and our skunk smells sweet to God.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"For He grasps the pale Created by some thousand vital handles,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Till a Godshine, bluely winnowed through the sieve of thunderstorms,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Shimmers up the non-existent round the churning feet of angels;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And the atoms of that glory may be seraphs, being worms.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Friends, your nature underlies us and your pulses overplay us;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Ye, with social sores unbandaged, can ye sing right and steer wrong?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For the transient cosmic, rooted in imperishable chaos,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Must be kneaded into drastics as material for a song.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Eyes once purged from homebred vapours through humanitarian passion<br /></span> +<span class="i1">See that monochrome a despot through a democratic prism;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Hands that rip the soul up, reeking from divine evisceration,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Not with priestlike oil anoint him, but a stronger-smelling chrism.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Pass, O poet, retransfigured! God, the psychometric rhapsode,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Fills with fiery rhythms the silence, stings the dark with stars that blink;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">All eternities hang round him like an old man's clothes collapsèd,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">While he makes his mundane music—<span class="smcap">and he will not stop, I think."</span><br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span></div></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="THE_PERSON_OF_THE_HOUSE" id="THE_PERSON_OF_THE_HOUSE"></a>THE PERSON OF THE HOUSE</h2> + +<h3>IDYL CCCLXVI</h3> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="hd"> +<span class="i0">THE ACCOMPANIMENTS<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i2 smcap">1. The Monthly Nurse<br /></span> +<span class="i2 smcap">2. The Caudle<br /></span> +<span class="i2 smcap">3. The Sentences<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i4">THE KID<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i1"><b>1. THE MONTHLY NURSE</b><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">The sickly airs had died of damp;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Through huddling leaves the holy chime<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Flagged; I, expecting Mrs. Gamp,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Thought—"Will the woman come in time?"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Upstairs I knew the matron bed<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Held her whose name confirms all joy<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To me; and tremblingly I said,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">"Ah! will it be a girl or boy?"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And, soothed, my fluttering doubts began<br /></span> +<span class="i1">To sift the pleasantness of things;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Developing the unshapen man,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">An eagle baffled of his wings;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Considering, next, how fair the state<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And large the license that sublimes<br /></span> +<span class="i0">A nineteenth-century female fate—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Sweet cause that thralls my liberal rhymes!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">And Chastities and colder Shames,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Decorums mute and marvellous,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And fair Behaviour that reclaims<br /></span> +<span class="i1">All fancies grown erroneous,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Moved round me musing, till my choice<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Faltered. A female in a wig<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Stood by me, and a drouthy voice<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Announced her—Mrs. Betsy Prig.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i2"><b>2. THE CAUDLE</b><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Sweet Love that sways the reeling years,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">The crown and chief of certitudes,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For whose calm eyes and modest ears<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Time writes the rule and text of prudes—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That, surpliced, stoops a nuptial head,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Nor chooses to live blindly free,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But, with all pulses quieted,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Plays tunes of domesticity—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That Love I sing of and have sung<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And mean to sing till Death yawn sheer,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">He rules the music of my tongue,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Stills it or quickens, there or here.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I say but this: as we went up<br /></span> +<span class="i1">I heard the Monthly give a sniff<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And "<i>if</i> the big dog makes the pup—"<br /></span> +<span class="i1">She murmured—then repeated "if!"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The caudle on a slab was placed;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">She snuffed it, snorting loud and long;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I fled—I would not stop to taste—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And dreamed all night of things gone wrong.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i2"><b>3. THE SENTENCES</b><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i6">I<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Abortive Love is half a sin;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">But Love's abortions dearer far<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Than wheels without an axle-pin<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Or life without a married star.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i6">II<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">My rules are hard to understand<br /></span> +<span class="i1">For him whom sensual rules depress;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">A bandbox in a midwife's hand<br /></span> +<span class="i1">May hold a costlier bridal dress.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> + +<span class="i6">III<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"I like her not; in fact I loathe;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Bugs hath she brought from London beds."<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Friend! wouldst thou rather bear their growth<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Or have a baby with two heads?<br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span> +</div><div class="hd"> + +<span class="i2">IDYL CCCLXVI<br /></span> +</div><div class="hd"> +<span class="i4">THE KID<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">My spirit, in the doorway's pause,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Fluttered with fancies in my breast;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Obsequious to all decent laws,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">I felt exceedingly distressed.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I knew it rude to enter there<br /></span> +<span class="i1">With Mrs. V. in such a state;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And, 'neath a magisterial air,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Felt actually indelicate.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I knew the nurse began to grin;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">I turned to greet my Love. Said she—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"Confound your modesty, come in!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">—What shall we call the darling, V.?"<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(There are so many charming names!<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Girls'—Peg, Moll, Doll, Fan, Kate, Blanche, Bab:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Boys'—Mahershahal-hashbaz, James,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Luke, Nick, Dick, Mark, Aminadab.)<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Lo, as the acorn to the oak,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">As well-heads to the river's height,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As to the chicken the moist yolk,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">As to high noon the day's first white—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Such is the baby to the man.<br /></span> +<span class="i1">There, straddling one red arm and leg,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Lay my last work, in length a span,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Half hatched, and conscious of the egg.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">A creditable child, I hoped;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And half a score of joys to be<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Through sunny lengths of prospect sloped<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Smooth to the bland futurity.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O, fate surpassing other dooms,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">O, hope above all wrecks of time!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">O, light that fills all vanquished glooms,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">O, silent song o'ermastering rhyme!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I covered either little foot,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">I drew the strings about its waist;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Pink as the unshell'd inner fruit,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">But barely decent, hardly chaste,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Its nudity had startled me;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">But when the petticoats were on,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"I know," I said; "its name shall be<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Paul Cyril Athanasius John."<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"Why," said my wife, "the child's a girl."<br /></span> +<span class="i1">My brain swooned, sick with failing sense;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With all perception in a whirl,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">How could I tell the difference?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"Nay," smiled the nurse, "the child's a boy."<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And all my soul was soothed to hear<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That so it was: then startled Joy<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Mocked Sorrow with a doubtful tear.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I was glad as one who sees<br /></span> +<span class="i1">For sensual optics things unmeet:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As purity makes passion freeze,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">So faith warns science off her beat.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Blessed are they that have not seen,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And yet, not seeing, have believed:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To walk by faith, as preached the Dean,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And not by sight, have I achieved.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Let love, that does not look, believe;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Let knowledge, that believes not, look:</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Truth pins her trust on falsehood's sleeve,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">While reason blunders by the book.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Then Mrs. Prig addressed me thus;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">"Sir, if you'll be advised by me,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You'll leave the blessed babe to us;<br /></span> +<span class="i1">It's my belief he wants his tea."<br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span> +</div></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="LAST_WORDS_OF_A_SEVENTH-RATE_POET" id="LAST_WORDS_OF_A_SEVENTH-RATE_POET"></a>LAST WORDS OF A SEVENTH-RATE POET</h2> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Bill, I feel far from quite right—if not further: already the pill<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Seems, if I may say so, to bubble inside me. A poet's heart, Bill,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Is a sort of a thing that is made of the tenderest young bloom on a fruit.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You may pass me the mixture at once, if you please—and I'll thank you to boot<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For that poem—and then for the julep. This really is damnable stuff!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Not the poem, of course.) Do you snivel, old friend? well, it's nasty enough,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But I think I can stand it—I think so—ay, Bill, and I could were it worse.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But I'll tell you a thing that I can't and I won't. 'Tis the old, old curse—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The gall of the gold-fruited Eden, the lure of the angels that fell.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">'Tis the core of the fruit snake-spotted in the hush of the shadows of hell,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Where a lost man sits with his head drawn down, and a weight on his eyes.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You know what I mean, Bill—the tender and delicate mother of lies,</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Woman, the devil's first cousin—no doubt by the female side.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The breath of her mouth still moves in my hair, and I know that she lied,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I feel her, Bill, sir, inside me—she operates there like a drug.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Were it better to live like a beetle, to wear the cast clothes of a slug,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Be the louse in the locks of the hangman, the mote in the eye of the bat,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Than to live and believe in a woman, who must one day grow aged and fat?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You must see it's preposterous, Bill, sir. And yet, how the thought of it clings!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I have lived out my time—I have prigged lots of verse—I have kissed (ah, that stings!)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Lips that swore I had cribbed every line that I wrote on them—cribbed—honour bright!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Then I loathed her; but now I forgive her; perhaps after all she was right.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yet I swear it was shameful—unwomanly, Bill, sir—to say that I fibbed.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Why, the poems were mine, for I bought them in print. Cribbed? of course they were cribbed.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yet I wouldn't say, cribbed from the French—Lady Bathsheba thought it was vulgar—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But picked up on the banks of the Don, from the lips of a highly intelligent Bulgar.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I'm aware, Bill, that's out of all metre—I can't help it—I'm none of your sort<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Who set metres, by Jove, above morals—not exactly. They don't go to Court—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As I mentioned one night to that cowslip-faced pet, Lady Rahab Redrabbit</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Whom the Marquis calls Drabby for short). Well, I say, if you want a thing, grab it—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That's what I did, at least, when I took that <i>danseuse</i> to a swell <i>cabaret</i>,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Where expense was no consideration. A poet, you see, now and then must be gay.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(I declined to give more, I remember, than fifty centeems to the waiter;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For I asked him if that was enough; and the jackanapes answered—<i>Peut-être</i>.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, it isn't in you to draw up a <i>menu</i> such as ours was, though humble:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When I told Lady Shoreditch, she thought it a regular <i>grand tout ensemble</i>.)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">She danced the heart out of my body—I can see in the glare of the lights,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I can see her again as I saw her that evening, in spangles and tights.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When I spoke to her first, her eye flashed so, I heard—as I fancied—the spark whiz<br /></span> +<span class="i0">From her eyelid—I said so next day to that jealous old fool of a Marquis.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">She reminded me, Bill, of a lovely volcano, whose entrails are lava—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Or (you know my <i>penchant</i> for original types) of the upas in Java.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In the curve of her sensitive nose was a singular species of dimple,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Where the flush was the mark of an angel's creased kiss—if it wasn't a pimple.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Now I'm none of your bashful John Bulls who don't know a pilau from a puggaree<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Nor a chili, by George, from a chopstick. So, sir, I marched into her snuggery,</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">And proposed a light supper by way of a finish. I treated her, Bill,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To six <i>entrées</i> of ortolans, sprats, maraschino, and oysters. It made her quite ill.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Of which moment of sickness I took some advantage. I held her like this,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And availed myself, sir, of her sneezing, to shut up her lips with a kiss.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The waiters, I saw, were quite struck; and I felt, I may say, <i>entre nous</i>,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Like Don Juan, Lauzun, Almaviva, Lord Byron, and old Richelieu.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(You'll observe, Bill, that rhyme's quite Parisian; a Londoner, sir, would have cited old Q.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">People tell me the French in my verses recalls that of Jeames or John Thomas: I<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Must maintain it's as good as the average accent of British diplomacy.)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">These are moments that thrill the whole spirit with spasms that excite and exalt.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I stood more than the peer of the great Casanova—you know—de Seingalt.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">She was worth, sir, I say it without hesitation, two brace of her sisters.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, why should all honey turn rhubarb—all cherries grow onions—all kisses leave blisters?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Oh, and why should I ask myself questions? I've heard such before—once or twice.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, I can't understand it—but, O, I imagine it strikes me as nice.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There's a deity shapes us our ends, sir, rough-hew them, my boy, how we will—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As I stated myself in a poem I published last year, you know, Bill—<br /></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span> +<span class="i0">Where I mentioned that that was the question—to be, or, by Jove, not to be.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Ah, it's something—you'll think so hereafter—to wait on a poet like me.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Had I written no more than those verses on that Countess I used to call Pussy—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yes, Minette or Manon—and—you'll hardly believe it—she said they were all out of Musset.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Now I don't say they weren't—but what then? and I don't say they were—I'll bet pounds against pennies on<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The subject—I wish I may never die Laureate, if some of them weren't out of Tennyson.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I think—I don't like to be certain, with Death, so to speak, by me, frowning—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But I think there were some—say a dozen, perhaps, or a score—out of Browning.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And—though God knows his poems are not (as all mine are, sir) perfumed with orris—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Or at least with patchouli—I wouldn't be sworn there were none out of Morris.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And it's possible—only the legend of Circe is quite an old yarn—old<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As the hills—that I might have been thinking, perhaps, of a poem by Arnold<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When I sang how Ulysses—Odysseus I mean—would have yearned to dishevel her<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Bright hair with his kisses, and painted myself at her feet—a Strayed Reveller.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As for poets who go on a contrary tack to what I go and you go—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You remember my lyrics <i>translated</i>—like "sweet bully Bottom"—from Hugo?</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Though I will say it's curious that simply on just that account there should be<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Men so bold as to say that not one of my poems was written by me.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">It would stir the political bile or the physical spleen of a drab or a Tory<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To hear critics disputing my claim to Empedocles, Maud, and the Laboratory.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yes, it's singular—nay, I can't think of a parallel (ain't it a high lark?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As that Countess would say)—there are few men believe it was I wrote the Ode to a Skylark.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And it often has given myself and Lord Albert no end of diversion<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To hear fellows maintain to my face it was Wordsworth who wrote the Excursion,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When they know that whole reams of the verses recur in my authorized works<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Here and there, up and down! Why, such readers are infidels—heretics—Turks.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And the pitiful critics who think in their paltry presumption to pay me a<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Pretty compliment, pairing me off, sir, with Keats—as if <i>he</i> could write Lamia!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">While I never produced a more characteristic and exquisite book,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">One that gave me more real satisfaction, than did, on the whole, Lalla Rookh.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Was it there that I called on all debtors, being pestered myself by a creditor, (he<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Isn't paid yet) to rise, by the proud appellation of bondsmen—hereditary?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yes—I think so. And yet, on my word, I can't think why I think it was so.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">It more probably was in the poem I made a few seasons ago<br /></span> +<span class="i0">On that Duchess—her name now? ah, thus one outlives a whole cycle of joys!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fair supplants black and brown succeeds golden. The poem made rather a noise.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And indeed I have seen worse verses; but as for the woman, my friend—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Though his neck had been never so stiff, she'd have made a philosopher bend.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As the broken heart of a sunset that bleeds pure purple and gold<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In the shudder and swoon of the sickness of colour, the agonies old<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That engirdle the brows of the day when he sinks with a spasm into rest<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And the splash of his kingly blood is dashed on the skirts of the west,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Even such was my own, when I felt how much sharper than any snake's tooth<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Was the passion that made me mistake Lady Eve for her niece Lady Ruth.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The whole world, colourless, lapsed. Earth fled from my feet like a dream,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And the whirl of the walls of Space was about me, and moved as a stream<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Flowing and ebbing and flowing all night to a weary tune<br /></span> +<span class="i0">("Such as that of my verses"? Get out!) in the face of a sick-souled moon.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The keen stars kindled and faded and fled, and the wind in my ears<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Was the wail of a poet for failure—you needn't come snivelling tears</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">And spoiling the mixture, confound you, with dropping your tears into that!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I know I'm pathetic—I must be—and you soft-hearted and fat,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I'm grateful of course for your kindness—there, don't come hugging me, now—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But because a fellow's pathetic, you needn't low like a cow.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">I should like—on my soul, I should like—to remember—but somehow I can't—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">If the lady whose love has reduced me to this was the niece or the aunt.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But whichever it was, I feel sure, when I published my lays of last year<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(You remember their title—The Tramp—only seven-and-sixpence—not dear),<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I sent her a copy (perhaps her tears fell on the title-page—yes—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I should like to imagine she wept)—and the Bride of Bulgaria (MS.)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I forwarded with it. The lyrics, no doubt, she found bitter—and sweet;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But the Bride she rejected, you know, with expressions I will not repeat.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Well—she did no more than all publishers did. Though my prospects were marred,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I can pity and pardon them. Blindness, mere blindness! And yet it was hard.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For a poet, Bill, is a blossom—a bird—a billow—a breeze—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">A kind of creature that moves among men as a wind among trees.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">And a bard who is also the pet of patricians and dowagers doubly can<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Express his contempt for canaille in his fables where beasts are republican.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yet with all my disdainful forgiveness for men so deficient in <i>ton</i><br /></span> +<span class="i0">I cannot but feel it was cruel—I cannot but think it was wrong.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I with the heat of my heart still burning against all bars<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As the fire of the dawn, so to speak, in the blanched blank brows of the stars—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I with my tremulous lips made pale by musical breath—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I with the shade in my eyes that was left by the kisses of Death—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(For Death came near me in youth, and touched my face with his face,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And put in my lips the songs that belong to a desolate place—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Desolate truly, my heart and my lips, till her kiss filled them up!)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I with my soul like wine poured out with my flesh for the cup—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">It was hard for me—it was hard—Bill, Bill, you great owl, was it not?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For the day creeps in like a Fate: and I think my grand passion is rot:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I dreamily seem to perceive, by the light of a life's dream done,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The lotion at six, and the mixture at ten, and the draught before one.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Yes—I feel rather better. Man's life is a mull, at the best;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And the patent perturbator pills are like bullets of lead in my chest.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When a man's whole spirit is like the lost Pleiad, a blown-out star,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Is there comfort in Holloway, Bill? is there hope of salvation in Parr?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">True, most things work to their end—and an end that the shroud overlaps.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Under lace, under silk, under gold, sir, the skirt of a winding-sheet flaps—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Which explains, if you think of it, Bill, why I can't, though my soul thereon broodeth,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Quite make out if I loved Lady Tamar as much as I loved Lady Judith.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yet her dress was of violet velvet, her hair was hyacinth-hued,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And her ankles—no matter. A face where the music of every mood<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Was touched by the tremulous fingers of passionate feeling, and made<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Strange melodies, scornful, but sweeter than strings whereon sorrow has played<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To enrapture the hearing of mirth when his garland of blossom and green<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Turns to lead on the anguished forehead—"you don't understand what I mean"?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Well, of course I knew you were stupid—you always were stupid at school—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Now don't say you weren't—but I'm hanged if I thought you were quite such a fool!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You don't see the point of all this? I was talking of sickness and death—<br /></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span> +<span class="i0">In that poem I made years ago, I said this—"Love, the flower-time whose breath<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Smells sweet through a summer of kisses and perfumes an autumn of tears<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Is sadder at root than a winter—its hopes heavy-hearted like fears.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Though I love your Grace more than I love little Letty, the maid of the mill,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Yet the heat of your lips when I kiss them" (you see we were intimate, Bill)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"And the beat of the delicate blood in your eyelids of azure and white<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Leave the taste of the grave in my mouth and the shadow of death on my sight.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fill the cup—twine the chaplet—come into the garden—get out of the house—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Drink to <i>me</i> with your eyes—there's a banquet behind, where worms only carouse!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As I said to sweet Katie, who lived by the brook on the land Philip farmed—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Worms shall graze where my kisses found pasture!" The Duchess, I may say, was charmed.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">It was read to the Duke, and he cried like a child. If you'll give me a pill,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I'll go on till past midnight. That poem was said to be—Somebody's, Bill.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But you see you can always be sure of my hand as the mother that bore me<br /></span> +<span class="i0">By the fact that I never write verse which has never been written before me.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Other poets—I blush for them, Bill—may adore and repudiate in turn a<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Libitina, perhaps, or Pandemos; my Venus, you know, is Laverna.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Nay, that epic of mine which begins from foundations the Bible is built on—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">"Of man's <i>first</i> disobedience"—I've heard it attributed, dammy, to Milton.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Well, it's lucky for them that it's not worth my while, as I may say, to break spears<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With the hirelings, forsooth, of the press who assert that Othello was Shakespeare's.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When he that can run, sir, may read—if he borrows the book, or goes on tick—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In my poems the bit that describes how the Hellespont joins the Propontic.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There are men, I believe, who will tell you that Gray wrote the whole of The Bard—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Or that I didn't write half the Elegy, Bill, in a Country Churchyard.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When you know that my poem, The Poet, begins—"Ruin seize thee!" and ends<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With recapitulations of horrors the poet invokes on his friends.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And I'll swear, if you look at the dirge on my relatives under the turf, you<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Will perceive it winds up with some lines on myself—and begins with the curfew.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Now you'll grant it's more probable, Bill—as a man of the world, if you please—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That all these should have prigged from myself than that I should have prigged from all these.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I could cry when I think of it, friend, if such tears would comport with my dignity,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That the author of Christabel ever should smart from such vulgar malignity.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(You remember perhaps that was one of the first little things that I carolled</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">After finishing Marmion, the Princess, the Song of the Shirt, and Childe Harold.)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Oh, doubtless it always has been so—Ah, doubtless it always will be—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There are men who would say that myself is a different person from me.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Better the porridge of patience a poor man snuffs in his plate<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Than the water of poisonous laurels distilled by the fingers of hate.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">'Tis a dark-purple sort of a moonlighted kind of a midnight, I know;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">You remember those verses I wrote on Irene, from Edgar A. Poe?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">It was Lady Aholibah Levison, daughter of old Lord St. Giles,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Who inspired those delectable strains, and rewarded her bard with her smiles.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There are tasters who've sipped of Castalia, who don't look on <i>my</i> brew as <i>the</i> brew:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There are fools who can't think why the names of my heroines of title should always be Hebrew.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">'Twas my comrade, Sir Alister Knox, said, "Noo, dinna ye fash wi' Apollo, mon;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Gang to Jewry for wives and for concubines, lad—look at David and Solomon.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And it gives an erotico-scriptural twang," said that high-born young man, "—tickles<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The lug" (he meant ear) "of the reader—to throw in a touch of the Canticles."<br /></span> +<span class="i0">So I versified half of The Preacher—it took me a week, working slowly. Bah!</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">You don't half know the sex, Bill—they like it. And what if her name was Aholibah?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I recited her charms, in conjunction with those of a girl at the <i>café</i>,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In a poem I published in collaboration with Templeton (Taffy).<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There are prudes in a world full of envy—and some of them thought it too strong<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To compare an earl's daughter by name with a girl at a French <i>restaurant</i>.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I regarded her, though, with the chivalrous eyes of a knight-errant on quest;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I may say I don't know that I ever felt prouder, old friend, of a conquest.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And when <i>I</i>'ve been made happy, I never have cared a brass farthing who knew it; I<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Thank my stars I'm as free from mock-modesty, friend, as from vulgar fatuity.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I can't say if my spirit retains—for the subject appears to me misty—any tie<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To such associations as Poesy weaves round the records of Christianity.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">There are bards—I may be one myself—who delight in their skill to unlock a lip's<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Rosy secrets by kisses and whispers of texts from the charming Apocalypse.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">It was thus that I won, by such biblical pills of poetical manna,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">From two elders—Sir Seth and Lord Isaac—the liking of Lady Susanna.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But I left her—a woman to me is no more than a match, sir, at tennis is—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When I heard she'd gone off with my valet, and burnt my rhymed version of Genesis.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">You may see by my shortness of speech that my time's almost up: I perceive<br /></span> +<span class="i0">That my new-fangled brevity strikes you: but don't—though the public will—grieve.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As it's sometimes my whim to be vulgar, it's sometimes my whim to be brief;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">As when once I observed, after Heine, that "she was a harlot, and I" (which is true) "was a thief."<br /></span> +<span class="i0">(Though you hardly should cite this particular line, by the way, as an instance of absolute brevity:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I'm aware, man, of that; so you needn't disgrace yourself, sir, by such grossly mistimed and impertinent levity.)<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I don't like to break off, any more than you wish me to stop: but my fate is<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Not to vent half a million such rhymes without blockheads exclaiming—<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i10 smcap">Jam Satis.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0"><i>Specimen from the speaker's original poems.</i><br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Come into the orchard, Anne,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">For the dark owl, Night, has fled,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And Phosphor slumbers, as well as he can<br /></span> +<span class="i1">With a daffodil sky for a bed:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And the musk of the roses perplexes a man,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">And the pimpernel muddles his head.<br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span> +</div></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="SONNET_FOR_A_PICTURE" id="SONNET_FOR_A_PICTURE"></a>SONNET FOR A PICTURE</h2> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">That nose is out of drawing. With a gasp,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">She pants upon the passionate lips that ache<br /></span> +<span class="i2">With the red drain of her own mouth, and make<br /></span> +<span class="i0">A monochord of colour. Like an asp,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">One lithe lock wriggles in his rutilant grasp.<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Her bosom is an oven of myrrh, to bake<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Love's white warm shewbread to a browner cake.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The lock his fingers clench has burst its hasp.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The legs are absolutely abominable.<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Ah! what keen overgust of wild-eyed woes<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Flags in that bosom, flushes in that nose?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Nay! Death sets riddles for desire to spell,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Responsive. What red hem earth's passion sews,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">But may be ravenously unripped in hell?<br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span> +</div></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="NEPHELIDIA" id="NEPHELIDIA"></a>NEPHELIDIA</h2> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through a notable nimbus of nebulous noonshine,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flower that flickers with fear of the flies as they float,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Are they looks of our lovers that lustrously lean from a marvel of mystic miraculous moonshine,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">These that we feel in the blood of our blushes that thicken and threaten with throbs through the throat?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Thicken and thrill as a theatre thronged at appeal of an actor's appalled agitation,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Fainter with fear of the fires of the future than pale with the promise of pride in the past;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Flushed with the famishing fullness of fever that reddens with radiance of rathe recreation,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Gaunt as the ghastliest of glimpses that gleam through the gloom of the gloaming when ghosts go aghast?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Nay, for the nick of the tick of the time is a tremulous touch on the temples of terror,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Strained as the sinews yet strenuous with strife of the dead who is dumb as the dust-heaps of death:<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Surely no soul is it, sweet as the spasm of erotic emotional exquisite error,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Bathed in the balms of beatified bliss, beatific itself by beatitude's breath.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a><br /></span> +<span class="i0">Surely no spirit or sense of a soul that was soft to the spirit and soul of our senses<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Sweetens the stress of suspiring suspicion that sobs in the semblance and sound of a sigh;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Only this oracle opens Olympian, in mystical moods and triangular tenses—<br /></span> +<span class="i1">"Life is the lust of a lamp for the light that is dark till the dawn of the day when we die."<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Mild is the mirk and monotonous music of memory, melodiously mute as it may be,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">While the hope in the heart of a hero is bruised by the breach of men's rapiers, resigned to the rod;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Made meek as a mother whose bosom-beats bound with the bliss-bringing bulk of a balm-breathing baby,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">As they grope through the grave-yard of creeds, under skies growing green at a groan for the grimness of God.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Blank is the book of his bounty beholden of old, and its binding is blacker than bluer:<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Out of blue into black is the scheme of the skies, and their dews are the wine of the bloodshed of things;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Till the darkling desire of delight shall be free as a fawn that is freed from the fangs that pursue her,<br /></span> +<span class="i1">Till the heart-beats of hell shall be hushed by a hymn from the hunt that has harried the kennel of kings.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Heptalogia, by Algernon Charles Swinburne + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HEPTALOGIA *** + +***** This file should be named 18210-h.htm or 18210-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18210/ + +Produced by Paul Murray, Diane Monico, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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