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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:33:40 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Path of Dreams, by Leigh Gordon Giltner
+
+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: The Path of Dreams
+ Poems
+
+Author: Leigh Gordon Giltner
+
+Release Date: October 25, 2008 [EBook #27024]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PATH OF DREAMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Diane Monico, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Leigh Gordon Giltner]
+
+
+
+
+The Path of Dreams
+
+_POEMS_
+
+_BY LEIGH GORDON GILTNER_
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Fleming H. Revell Company
+Chicago : New York : Toronto
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT 1900
+
+BY LEIGH GORDON GILTNER
+
+
+
+
+_TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER_
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+In Woodland Ways 9
+
+Ashes of Roses 11
+
+A Challenge 13
+
+And Yet ... 15
+
+The Master-Player 16
+
+Afterbloom 17
+
+To Bliss Carman 18
+
+When Love Passed By 19
+
+Hedonism ... Euthumism 21-22
+
+Under the Leaves 23
+
+Carmen 23
+
+To R. D. MacLean 26
+
+Love and Death 26
+
+A Winter Landscape 27
+
+Roses and Rue 28
+
+Severance 47
+
+Spartacus 48
+
+The Dead Leader 50
+
+Hagar 51
+
+Flower-Fancies 52-53
+
+Circe 54
+
+To A. M. M. 55
+
+Loveless 56
+
+Clytie--The Sunflower 57
+
+In Bondage 61
+
+To a Singer 63
+
+Blossom of Brine 64
+
+A Memory 65
+
+To Margaret 66
+
+Regret 67
+
+"God Bless You, Dear" 69
+
+Roses 71
+
+The Poet 72
+
+Shylock 72
+
+To Charles J. O'Malley 73
+
+Antithesis 74
+
+In Fortune's Twilight 74
+
+Fate 75
+
+The Path of Dreams 76
+
+An Autumn Song 78
+
+Vain 79
+
+Sartor Resartus 80
+
+Illumed 82
+
+In The Play 83
+
+To E. P. B. 84
+
+Through The Dark 85
+
+Preluding 86
+
+The Heights of Silence 87
+
+Andromeda 88
+
+Requital 90
+
+When Fades the Light 91
+
+Butterflies 92
+
+In the Dark Forest 93
+
+Insatiate 95
+
+
+
+
+To One Who Sleeps
+
+(Obiit, June 8th, 1894.)
+
+
+_Tho' storm and summer shine for long have shed
+Or blight or bloom above thy quiet bed,
+Tho' loneliness and longing cry thee dead--
+Thou art not dead, beloved. Still with me
+Are whilom hopings that encompass thee
+And dreams of dear delights that may not be.
+Asleep--adream perchance, dost thou forget
+The sometime sorrow and the fevered fret,
+Sting of salt tears and long unbreathed regret?
+Liest thou here thro' long sunshiny hours,
+Holding sweet converse with the springing flowers,
+Harking the singing of the warm sweet showers
+That fall like happy tears ... dost hear
+The birds that unafraid assail thine ear--
+And yet art silent when I whisper? Dear,
+ Dost thou not hear?_
+
+_Lying so low beneath the bending grass
+In long, still smiling tranced for aye--alas!
+Thou dost not harken when my footsteps pass.
+If haply I some tender thing should tell
+Thee of the springtime flowers thou once loved well--
+Anemone and shining asphodel;
+Should steal from Nature some enchanted lay,
+Some bird-song lilted where green branches sway--
+Heart-music that could stir thy heart alway;
+Should call thee by the old fond name again,
+Should tell thee all a heart's enduring pain
+And long rememb'ring, would'st thou mute remain?
+Alas! nor sigh nor song can thrill the ear
+Tuned to Israfel's music in the sphere
+Where things to thee erst dear no more are dear.
+ Thou dost not hear!_
+
+
+
+
+THE PATH OF DREAMS
+
+
+
+
+In Woodland Ways
+
+
+Out of the poignant glare, the shadeless heat
+Of summer noon, beseech thee follow me
+Into the dim, dream-haunted secrecy
+The cool, green glooms, the grottoed deep retreat,
+Of yon old wood; down aisles of lichened trees--
+Grey Merlins clasped by lissom Viviens
+Of clinging vine--to cloistered sylvan glens,
+Where Nature weaves her fairest mysteries.
+
+Here let us rest a little--find surcease
+For feet grown weary of the thridded street
+That echoes ever to the ceaseless beat
+Of human tread;--a brief while know the ease
+Of dreamful rest, to slumb'rous languors stilled
+On Orient rugs of dappled mosses spread
+In nooks where blossom, purple, white and red,
+The flowers Summer's lavish hands have spilled.
+
+Wild woodland creatures near us unafraid,
+Some strange enchantment doth the forest hold--
+Was that a sungleam, or a wand of gold
+By tricksy Puck or wanton Ariel swayed?
+Old oaks and beeches open wide their doors
+And hamadryads veiled in golden sheen
+Floating diaphanous o'er robes of green
+Walk with still feet the forest's russet floors.
+
+Lo, here are fairies hid in flower-bells,
+There wood-nymphs fleeing from pursuing fauns,
+And naiads fleshed with hues of rosy dawns
+Lie dreaming by white streams in dusky dells;
+We tread dim paths untrod by foot of man
+And hark the horn of Dian ringing clear;
+While faint, elusive, thin--now far, now near,
+Meseems I hear the oaten pipe of Pan.
+
+And while o'erhead the plaining wood-dove grieves,
+The cardinal--a winged, scarlet flower--
+Sprays all the air with song, a golden shower
+Of flutes-notes sifting downward thro' the leaves.
+Ah, sweet enchantment doth the forest hold,
+For Nature's self doth haunt these woodland ways,
+My fevered brow on her cool breast she lays
+And care slips from me as a garment old.
+
+
+
+
+Ashes of Roses
+
+
+Skies glooming overhead,
+ Autumn winds sighing;
+Bare yonder garden bed,
+ Flowers low lying.
+All their rich radiance fled,
+All their pale petals shed,
+Wan wraiths of Summer sped,
+ In Autumn's closes;
+Crimson and cream and gold
+Strewn on earth's bosom cold,
+Mingling with umber mold--
+ Ashes of roses.
+
+See, in yon waning West
+ Rich roses blowing
+On Heaven's palimpsest
+ God's message glowing;
+Rose hues and amethyst
+Drenched in purpureate mist,
+Darkness with Day keeps tryst,
+ Night's curtain closes;
+Quenched is the burning gold,
+Shadowed the upland wold,
+Day's fires grow dull and cold
+ Ashes of roses.
+
+So on this heart of mine
+ Shadows are lying;
+Lotus and rue entwine,
+ Dim dreams are dying;
+Stilled is the thrill divine,
+Spilled is the amber wine,
+Dimly the cold stars shine;
+ Wan age discloses
+All youth's bright blossoms dead,
+All love's rare radiance sped,
+All hope's pure petals shed--
+ Ashes of roses.
+
+
+
+
+A Challenge
+
+
+To have lived, to have loved, to have triumphed!--what more can the
+ world bestow?
+I stand at the close of the conflict, my foot on the neck of my foe.
+Prone in the dust lies the demon Despair, still shouting his shibboleth
+To the treacherous Amazon dark-browed Fate, and her grisly comrade, Death.
+To have lived! To have felt in my veins the surge of the rich, red tide of
+ life,
+The quickening stir of the strong man's heart that thrills to the sound
+ of strife;
+To have wrested success from defeat, to have striven, and struggled,
+ and won--
+Shall this seem a small thing, think you, when the Battle of Ages is done?
+To have loved! To have known of all raptures, the rapture supernal, divine,
+To have felt the throb of your heart on my heart and the bloom of your
+ lips pressed to mine;
+To have ranked with the gods on Olympus--myths tell us immortal Jove
+Cleft with his swan-wings the blue of the sky for boon of a mortal's
+ love....
+I have lived, I have loved, I have triumphed! Let Death come, or early
+ or late!
+I hurl my challenging gauntlet full in the face of Fate!
+Fate may make wreck of a future--how can she alter the past?
+I have tasted the sweets of life's chalice--why shrink from the lees
+ at the last?
+How should I cavil at aught that shall come--I stand with your head on
+ my breast--
+I have fought as I might--I have gained _you_, beloved ... to God's
+ mercy the rest!
+Tho' the heavens darken above me and the sky be shrunk as a scroll,
+In the wreck and ruin of riven worlds, should I falter, O Soul of my soul?
+Tho' the demon Despair, where he vanquished lies, still utter his
+ shibboleth--
+I fling my glove in the face of Fate and smile in the eyes of Death!
+
+
+
+
+And Yet ...
+
+
+Upon the meads where we were wont to stray,
+'Guiling with springtime hopes the winter hours,
+The Spring has smiled; yon slope that late gloomed gray
+And sternly sad, 'neath April's tender showers
+Grows green and glad again. The rippled grass,
+A soundless sea o'er which white cloud-sails pass,
+Breaks at my feet in billows foamed with flowers;
+And blue-eyed myrtle blooms with lashes wet
+Smile to me thro' their tears. The skies are blue,
+And life is sweet to-day and hope seems true;
+My heart is barren of its long regret--
+ And yet...
+
+The willow wears a wistful green. A dream
+Of Summer warmth the wine-sweet breezes hold,
+Fair wildings blow--bright buttercups agleam
+Like shining sequins scattered on the wold,
+And daffodills--a wealth of faery gold.
+The building birds their coming bliss presage
+With lilt and lyric brimming o'er the page
+Of Nature's volume bound in green and gold.
+Here 'mid the birds and blossoms 'neath the blue--
+My heart unburthened of the old regret--
+Let me forget long striving to forget;
+For life is sweet to-day and hope seems true--
+And yet...
+
+
+
+
+The Master-Player
+
+
+Mute was the mighty organ. None might break
+The silence that had thralled it since was stilled
+The master-hand beneath whose touch it thrilled
+To music such as choiring seraphs make--
+Until a mightier Master came to wake
+Th' elusive chords and subtle harmonies
+That lay imprisoned in the cold white keys
+And once again the soul of Music spake.
+Methought my soul's most perfect melodies
+No hand again to sonance could evoke--
+A silent harp whose potence none might prove--
+But, lo! one came who swept its chords and woke
+Celestial strains, divinest harmonies,
+Responsive to the master-touch of Love.
+
+
+
+
+Afterbloom
+
+
+Gay was her garden as some gorgeous fabric
+ Weft on an Orient loom,
+Star-set upon the sward quaint, old-time blossoms
+ Wrought broidery of bloom.
+
+Verbenas, dahlias, asters, scarlet cannas
+ Like torches flaming tall;
+(Methought the fair, old face, enframed in silver,
+ The sweetest flower of all!)
+
+And one rare rose she watched each year with hoping
+ Till the dear eyes grew dim--
+But ere a single blossom burst in beauty
+ God took her home to Him.
+Yet when the Spring next woke the earth to laughter
+ And boon of blossom gave,
+Starred was the rose with white, unearthly flowers--
+ We laid them on her grave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And so, meseems, the buds we woo most fondly
+ Nor light nor perfume shed;
+And Love's gold-hearted rose and Hope's star-flower
+ Oft bloom when we are dead.
+
+
+
+
+To Bliss Carman
+
+
+Great hearted brother to the wilderness,
+ Comrade of Wind and Sea! Interpreter
+Of nomad Nature! Ere the quick'ning stir
+ Of Spring-sap thrills the wood from sullen stress
+Of Winter's spell--away from thronged press
+ Of urban ways thy wild feet wander far
+Tracking the steps of some white Northern star
+ Whose rays are beacon to thy restlessness.
+Weird mystic of the Northland's mystery,
+ Thou 'front'st the Unseen Shadow, nor dost fear
+To meet the Scarlet Hunter on the trail;
+ Pagan as Pan; to all things sylvan dear,
+Nature's own vagrant, buoyant, driftless, free--
+ All winds and woods and waters cry thee hail!
+
+
+
+
+When Love Passed By
+
+
+I dreamt of love in the golden glory
+Of youth unshadowed by cloud or care;
+Steeped in the love-lore of song and story,
+I said, "My Love shall be wondrous fair."
+
+I said, "Her hands shall be filled with flowers,
+(My heart shall tell me when Love draws nigh!)
+She shall steal sweet boon from the graceless hours,
+Her eyes shall be blue as the cerule sky.
+
+"Her hair shall be bright as the stars' gold gleaming,
+Her lips shall be red with her heart's rich wine,
+Her face shall be fair as my fondest dreaming,
+Each pulse of my being shall call her mine!"
+
+Then long for the voice of my heart I harkened,
+Tranced in love's hoping--all hope else forgot--
+I waited lonely; the daylight darkened,
+The twilight deepened--but love came not.
+
+Then One passed by in the dusking shadows,
+The night's dusk shadows slept on her hair--
+She passed like a gleam o'er the dew-drenched meadows,
+And my heart throbbed fast--but she was not fair.
+
+Her face was pale and her dark eyes pleading,
+Her smile was wistful and gravely sweet;
+She passed me by where I stood unheeding,
+And dropped a violet at my feet.
+
+She went her way o'er the silent meadows,
+(Ah, traitorous heart that you tricked me so!)
+I sat alone in the deepening shadows--
+Love had passed by--and I did not know.
+
+
+
+
+Hedonism
+
+
+Since we must sleep the endless Sleep at last,
+Since Life's grim juggernaut 'neath ruthless wheels
+Crushes the heart; since Age like Winter steals
+On Youth's fair-flowered fields with blighting blast--
+Then to the gods our doubts and fears be cast!
+Enough of Sorrow! Joyance is our due.
+Gather the roses! Spurn th' envenomed rue.
+Fling to the waiting winds the pallid past.
+Steep thee in mellow moods and dear desires;
+Pluck Love's flame-hearted flower ere it dies;
+Cull nectared kisses sweet as morning's breath,
+Warm Chastity at Passion's purple fires;
+Nepenthe quaff--till drained the chalice lies.
+After ... the shrouded sleep, the dreamless dark of Death.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Euthumism
+
+
+If in the spirit glows no spark divine;
+If soulless dust return to dust again;
+If, after life, but death and dark remain--
+Then it were well to make the moment thine,
+Bacchante-steeping soul and sense in wine,
+In lotus-lulling languors, fond desires
+That heat the heart with fierce, unhallowed fires--
+Till Pleasure, Circe-like, transform us into swine.
+But if some subtler spirit thrill our clay,
+Some God-like flame illume this fleeting dust--
+Promethean fire snatched from the Olympian height--
+Then must we choose the nobler, higher Way,
+Seeking the Beautiful, the Pure, the Just--
+The ultimate crowned triumph of the Right!
+
+
+
+
+Under the Leaves
+
+
+The phalanxes of corn stand grim and serried,
+ Dull gold the sodden sheaves,
+The violets that smiled with Spring are buried
+ Under the leaves.
+
+Along the land the Winter's doom is creeping
+ All vainly Autumn grieves;
+And she who made my heart's sweet Spring is sleeping
+ Under the leaves.
+
+
+
+
+Carmen
+
+
+Night in Seville, and the twinkle
+ Of stars in the far azure set,
+The mandolin's torturing tinkle,
+ The click of the castanet!
+Music and wine and low laughter,
+ Love and a torment of tune--
+Hate and a poignard thereafter,
+ Under the yellow moon.
+
+Here in the night I await her,
+ Under the slumberous moon;
+Yearns my fierce spirit to mate her--
+ All my sick senses aswoon
+Beneath the wild sway of her dancing
+ Passion and pride are at war;--
+Thrall to her amorous glancing,
+ Grandee and toreador.
+
+Carmen Gitana, behold her!
+ Bright passion-flower of the South;
+Soft Southern languors enfold her,
+ Scarlet the bloom of her mouth;
+Passionate, sensuous, cruel,
+ Raying warm laughter and light,
+A ruby--a scintillant jewel--
+ Set on the brow of the Night!
+
+Ah, the wild rhythm of her dancing!
+ Lithe with the jaguar's grace,
+Ah, the sweet fire of her glancing,
+ The love-litten lure of her face!
+And ah, in my fierce arms to hold her
+ This strange scarlet flower of the South.
+Close to my heart-beat to fold her
+ Drinking the wine of her mouth!
+
+Sweet, thou art weary with dancing,
+ Sick of the music and light
+Praises and overbold glancing--
+ Steal with me into the night;
+Out of the riot of laughter,
+ Out of the torment of tune--
+Love and close kisses thereafter
+ Under the sensuous moon!
+
+Carmen, my fierce arms enfold thee,
+ Bright passion-flower of the South,
+Close to my hot heart I hold thee,
+ Crushing the flower of thy mouth.
+Love--for the loving that swayed me,
+ Passion--for passion long past--
+Hate--for the hate that betrayed me ...
+ My dirk in your side at the last!
+
+
+
+
+To R. D. MacLean
+
+
+If words were winged arrows tipped with flame,
+Far-flying thro' the vast of time and space,
+If Erato should lend me some rare grace,
+Then might I dare to breathe in song your name.
+Ah, Player-king, unmoved by all renown,
+Acclaim and praise that wait upon your name,
+You pluck a laurel from the wreath of fame,
+Then, careless of the guerdon, cast it down.
+
+
+
+
+Love and Death
+
+
+Ever athwart Life's sunlit, upland ways
+Falleth the shadow of impending Death,
+And still Life's flowers beneath his blighting breath
+To ashes wither, and to dust, her bays.
+What were the worth of hard-won power or praise?
+Awaits us all the grave-cell dark and deep,
+The greedy grave-worm's maw, the awful sleep
+When Death his cold hand on our pulses lays.
+What then the end of action or of strife?
+The sphinxed riddle of the Universe,
+Nature's unsolved enigma, who may prove?
+Life's Passion Play all blindly men rehearse....
+But yet our recompense for birth, for life,
+For death itself, meseems, is deathless Love!
+
+
+
+
+A Winter Landscape
+
+
+A mystic world mantled in white simarre
+Arachne-spun with argent woof; her wede
+Starred with strange crystals wrought from frozen spar,
+Sprent with pearl frost-flowers; girt with diamond brede,
+Rubied with berries red as drops of blood,
+Befringed with gelid, many-irised gems;
+Broidered with lace weft of an elfin brood--
+ Hoar filagree to deck her garment hems.
+
+Sheer slanting down the sky an opal light
+Pierces the snow-blur's veil of wannish gray,
+In iridescent sheen, tingeing the dazzling white
+With amethystine, gold or beryl ray.
+Along the West the transient sunset gleam--
+An ardor brief! Crimson on crimson grows
+Till all the waning sky, incarnadine,
+ Glows like blown petals of a shattered rose.
+
+
+
+
+Roses and Rue
+
+
+I.
+
+A swift thought flashed to my mind that day
+When I first saw you, regally tall
+'Mid a throng of pigmies--a very Saul--
+How some woman's heart must admit your sway,
+Some woman's soul to your soul be thrall;
+(And though not for me were the rapture to prove you,
+I thrilled as I thought how a woman might love you!)
+
+Then--strange that our eyes for a moment should meet
+And hold each other a breathless space,
+That a light as of dawn should leap into your face,
+That the lips that were stern should an instant grow sweet--
+Ere you turned, at a word, with a courtier's grace.
+(And I knew that tho' many a woman had loved you,
+Till that moment, the glance of no woman had moved you!)
+
+Then you stood at my side and one murmured your name,
+The proud old name that you worthily wore,
+And I drank the soul-chalice Fate's mandate upbore
+To my lips, as the fire of your glance leapt to flame;
+What need were of words? heart speaks heart evermore--
+(And I knew that were mine but the rapture to prove you,
+How deeply, how dearly one woman might love you!)
+
+
+II.
+
+Do I idly dream, as the village maid,
+Who thinks, as she spins, of a princekin gay
+On a prancing steed, who shall come her way
+To woo her and win her and bear her away
+Thro' the vasty depths of the forest shade
+To a palace set in a sylvan glade,--
+To love her for aye and a day?
+
+Is it like that he with his princely pride--
+The son of a proud old race,
+Shall stoop with Cophetua's kingly grace
+To lift me up to the vacant place,
+To reign like a queen at his side?
+Can the world afford him no worthier bride--
+No bride with a queenlier grace?
+
+Aye, a foolish dream for a sordid day
+When men seek power--and women, gold--
+Gone is the chivalrous age of old
+When maids were loving and men were bold,
+And good King Arthur held knightly sway!
+Ah, love and knighthood were laid away
+With the cuirass and helm of old.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But a horseman rides to the wicket gate--
+All my pulses proclaim it he,
+My knight who has parted the waves of the sea,
+Who has cleft the wide world in his searching for me....
+Fond, foolish, dreaming!--for surely Fate
+Decrees him the winning a worthier mate
+Than a simple girl like me!
+
+
+III.
+
+Why does he come to me,
+With his deep, impassioned eyes,
+Stealing my soul from me?
+Surely a high emprise
+For such an one as he
+To smile an hour on me--
+To win a worthless prize,
+Would he might let me be!
+Proud am I--proud as he
+For my name as his is old--
+What should he say to me?
+I have neither lands nor gold.
+Ah, a merry jest 'twill be
+To win my heart from me--
+(The tale will be soon told!)
+Would he might let me be!
+
+
+IV.
+
+Swept, swept away is my vaunted pride
+On a flood-tide of tenderness;
+I envy the dog that bounds to his side,
+And the chestnut mare he is wont to ride
+'Cross moor and mead when the day is fine,
+As she lays her head in a mute caress
+'Gainst the arm of _her_ lord--and _mine!_
+
+
+V.
+
+Ah, silver and gold of the glad June morning--
+Gold of the sunshine and silver of dew,
+Dew drop gems all the meads adorning--
+Are love and the rose-time a theme for scorning?
+Roses, roses,--dream not of rue!
+ Am I not loved by you?
+
+Antiphonal to sweet sylvan singers,
+The brook with its maddening, gladdening rune!
+And my lover's kiss still thrills and lingers,
+Lingers and burns on my tremulous fingers!
+Ah, birds in a very riot of tune
+Pour out my joy to the heart of June!
+
+He loves me--loves me! My heart is singing.--
+(Heart, oh heart of my heart is it true?)
+Song on my lips from my soul upringing,
+A passion of bliss to the breezes flinging,
+Roses, roses--nor dream of rue!
+ I am beloved by you.
+
+
+VI.
+
+To be his wife! Calm all my soul is filling,
+A calm too deep for smiles--or even tears;
+A perfect trust to slumber subtly stilling
+ My whilom doubts and fears.
+
+Each little common thing to me seems rarer,
+My life each day becomes more dear to me;
+Love, am I fair? Ah, fain would I be fairer--
+ And yet more fair for thee.
+
+Like to a priestess some loved shrine adorning,
+I deck the charms but poorly prized, till late,
+The beauty once I held too slight for scorning--
+ To thee, now consecrate!
+
+As if some god of old had stooped to love me--
+Some star had pierced my darkness with its ray--
+I worship thee--an idol throned above me--
+ Forgetting thou art clay.
+
+Rejoicing in the gift that God has given,
+I may forget the Giver. Love, I fear
+Lest I shall e'en forget to sigh for Heaven--
+ When heaven for me is here!
+
+
+VII.
+
+Strange that a love supreme
+Should be swayed by a petty pride,
+As a straw might turn aside
+The swift onflowing tide
+Of a mighty seaward stream!
+
+I know that the fault was mine,
+But I cannot, will not speak;
+How should I, suppliant, meek,
+His gracious pardon seek--
+Tho' the fault were mine--all mine?
+
+Aye, tho' my heart should break,
+Something--or pride or shame--
+Forbids me that I should claim
+As mine the fault, the blame--
+Aye, tho' my heart should break!
+
+
+VIII.
+
+Last night he came to me,
+His dark eyes grave and sweet--
+(Eyes that I could not meet!)
+To crave my pardon--_mine!_
+With that kingly courtesy
+Which makes his least deed fine.
+
+What fiend took hold on me?
+I would nor speak nor heed,
+Tho' he bent his pride to plead--
+(He, all unused to sue!)
+Though he sought full tenderly
+For a pardon not _his_ due.
+
+Fool! to have played with fire--
+Had I not full often heard
+How when his wrath was stirred
+It burst all bounds and leapt
+Higher and ever higher
+Like flames by the storm-wind swept?
+
+Yet--tho' his face was white
+With a passion that shook his soul--
+Not once did he waive control,
+Tho' his heart to its depths was stirred--
+He leashed his wrath that night
+Nor uttered one bitter word.
+
+Pride held me stubbornly dumb,
+Stilling what words I would say,
+While I flung my heart's treasure away,
+While I tampered with fire--to my cost;
+Till I knew the ultimate end had come--
+I had matched pride with love--and lost!
+
+
+IX.
+
+ What poisoned pen has written
+ The words that bar my breath;
+ What hard, harsh hand has smitten
+ My soul with death?
+
+"_Love, my love_"--these the words I read--
+"_The vision and dream of a life have died.
+Hurt to the heart by the words you said,_
+Angered, stung by a wounded pride,
+Mad with the thought that your love was dead--
+I have wedded a loveless, unloved bride--
+ Would I had died instead!_"
+
+ My heart refuses to understand
+ The words that burn my brain;
+ Palsied, stunned by a felling blow
+ Struck by a cherished hand,
+ I am all too numb for pain;
+ Dead to a deathless woe,
+ Helpless to understand,
+ Shall I ever feel again?
+
+
+X.
+
+Awake, alive to pain! The first steel gleam of morn
+Stabs deep the heart I thought had shrunk to dust,
+The love I prayed might die to loveless scorn
+Awakes and cries ... Ah, God, how is it just
+A fault so slight such meed of pain should pay,
+That one mad word in pride and anger spoken
+Should leave two lives forever crushed and broken,
+Should plait a scourge to lash my soul for aye?
+
+How can a just God see men suffer thus?--
+Unheedful of the cosmic cry of pain,
+Unmoved by all the pangs that torture us,
+Knowing our prayers and tears alike are vain--
+Like to a wanton boy who feels no thrill
+Of pity for the weak his strength holds thrall,
+Who pins a helpless butterfly against a wall,
+Watching the bright wings flutter and grow still.
+
+We are the sport of some malignant Power
+Who nails us to our crosses, hard and fast,
+Who sees us flutter for a little hour,
+Struggle and suffer ... and grow still at last;
+Who hears untouched the ceaseless, cosmic groan
+Wrung from his creatures' tortured lips alway;
+He will not hear or heed! What need to pray?
+There is no hand to help. We stand alone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Father, forgive! I know not what I say,
+Frenzied, tortured, torn on the rack of pain;
+Teach these pain-writhen lips once more to pray--
+ Help me to trust again!
+
+
+XI.
+
+ A year! How slight a space
+ When winged with ecstasy!
+ (An aeon dark to me.)
+He has brought her home--God lend me grace!
+To-night in the throng I shall see his face--
+ He has long forgotten me.
+ A year! I have learned to smile,
+ I have taught my eyes to lie,
+I have lived and laughed and sung--the while
+ I have only longed to die.
+
+
+XII.
+
+I have seen him once again,
+There in the throng with his wife
+(An eagle matched with a pitiful wren!)
+Bitter in sooth has his portion been--
+Chained to a clog for life!
+Strange that our eyes as of yore should meet
+And hold each other a breathless space,
+That the dawn-light of old should illumine his face,
+That the lips that were stern should an instant grow sweet,
+Touched with the old-time tender grace.
+But his eyes were haggard and old with pain
+(Traitors to thwart his resolute will!)
+They told me the struggle was vain--all vain!
+ He loves me--loves me still.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+Cruel! that I should be glad
+ That he loves and suffers still,
+Yet how should my soul be sad
+That his passionate, resolute will
+Cannot crush the love that is stronger than he,
+ The love that is all for me!
+
+The year has left its trace
+ (Cover it how he will!)
+On the proud, impassive face
+And I know how he suffers still--
+Thrall to a love that is stronger than he,
+ A love that is all for me.
+
+Surely, ah surely, I know
+ I who have known his love,
+I who have loved him so,
+What such a bond must prove,
+Linked to a loveless, unloved wife,
+ Chained to a clog for life!
+
+
+XIV.
+
+ She loves him not, they say,
+ Save for his lands and gold;
+ She is narrow, selfish, cold,
+ Stabbing and wounding his soul each day,
+ Growing further and further away
+ From the heart it was hers to hold.
+
+ Yet not all blameless he,
+ A woman is quick to feel
+ What man would fain conceal;
+ Surely she can but see
+ That naught to his life is she,
+ Nay--nor can ever be!
+
+I am happier--happier far--than he;
+He is meshed in a galling silken hold,
+Bound with a jewelled band of gold;
+While I, at least, am free.
+And I know what his daily life must be.
+Linked with a nature paltry, slight,
+He with his generous, kingly soul,
+Stung and goaded past all control
+By a thousand petty barbs of venom and spite.
+
+Once, but once have we met,
+And we spoke of trivial things,
+Of the changes a twelvemonth brings,
+Of late Summer, lingering yet...
+(Ah, how should a heart that has loved forget?)
+Traitors ever to thwart his will
+His eyes confirm what I half divine.
+A bitter, bootless victory mine,
+He cannot choose but to love me still!
+
+
+XV.
+
+Whose was the fault, the blame?
+She has fled and left him free,
+Free! but a stain of shame
+Rests on the proud old name.
+At a bitter cost she has set him free--
+Free! with a blemished fame.
+
+And he with the pride of his race,
+With a resolute, calm control,
+Locks in his heart the heart's disgrace,
+Shows of his shame no subtlest trace,
+Hiding the hurt of a stricken soul
+'Neath the calm of a passionless face.
+
+He had deemed it a cowardly thing to fly
+While the village prated anent his shame,
+And an added blot on his noble name
+ By his own hand to die.
+
+But oft in the deep of night I hear
+Borne on the wild night wind,
+The beat of the mare's hoofs thundering past,
+And my heart is clutched by an icy fear
+Of a direful thing that may chance at last;
+For ride he never so far, so fast--
+Black Care rides hard behind.
+
+
+XVI.
+
+Last night as I stood in the gloaming's gray,
+Ere the moon came into the sky,
+He came to me for a last good-bye--
+ At last he is going away.
+
+His face in the dusk showed stern and set,
+Old and haggard and worn with pain;
+"Dear, I may never see you again--
+ Mine but the meed regret!
+How can I ask you to share my shame,
+How can I give you my blemished name,
+ Yet how shall the heart forget?
+
+Naught in my life save a dream have I,
+A dream--a vision, too fair to be,
+A rose that blooms 'mid the rue for me--
+ Naught but a dream ... Good-bye."
+
+And then, ere he lifted his bridle rein
+To ride away down the dark'ning land,
+He bent and touched with his lips the hand
+I had laid on the chestnut's mane.
+
+
+XVII.
+
+Something ... my senses will scarce recall ...
+The horror they came in the night to tell ...
+The mare had galloped riderless home,
+Blown and bleeding and flecked with foam,
+And they found him there by the sunken wall,
+Hurt to the death by the desperate fall.
+How it had chanced, he could only tell,
+Ere the merciful numbness stole his brain;
+How the chestnut rose to the leap and fell....
+Then his senses closed on the shocks of pain.
+He spoke, they told me, but once again--
+To whisper my name with his struggling breath--
+(Thank God, he suffered so brief a while)
+Then peacefully sank on the breast of Death,
+ Dead, with his lips asmile.
+
+How can I wish him alive again,
+Lying so peacefully, placidly still,
+With that carven smile on his marble face.
+How can I pray that his heart should thrill
+To waking and waking's pain?
+Lying so peacefully, placidly still.
+With the old, sweet smile on his quiet face,
+Dead to the sting of a heart's disgrace....
+How should I wish him a lesser grace,
+How should I strive with a wiser Will?
+Yet how can the heart that is reft divine
+Death's mystical, measureless charity?
+The cry of the stricken king is mine:
+ "Would I had died for thee!"
+
+
+
+
+Severance
+
+
+Not severed by long leagues of lonely land,
+ Nor sundered by wide wastes of sounding sea;
+But ever side by side and hand in hand,
+ And yet--apart are we.
+
+
+
+
+Spartacus
+
+
+He stands storm-browed, imperial, chief
+ Of all Rome's gladiators; brave
+ Beyond all others; fearless in belief,
+ A captive--but no slave.
+His brow is like a god's--a brow of power,
+ Lips soft with human sweetness--ere the day
+ He entered the arena, and the hour
+ He first beheld man's life-blood mixed with clay.
+
+Felt rise within him bestial strange desires
+ And savage instincts in a brutal heart
+ That battened on men's blood; burned with unhallowed fires
+ Of slaughter--till--a thing apart,
+A hired butcher of his fellow men, he stands
+ Daring the fasting lion in his den,
+ Or some fierce gladiator on the blood-stained sands,--
+ A savage chief of yet more savage men!
+
+He stands, with massive throat and thews of steel,
+ While loud acclaims the listening heavens fill,
+ And Roman women smile. He does not know; or feel
+ A moment's joy or one triumphant thrill.
+He heeds them not. He sees as in a dream
+ His home and Cyrasella's citron groves;
+ A youth again, beside some purling stream,
+ With gladsome heart and joyous pipe he roves.
+
+He sees anon that gentle shepherd boy,
+ Who knew no harsher sound than plaining flute,
+ In the arena stand--Rome's sport and toy--
+ A bestial, blood-stained hireling brute....
+Then swift thro' every throbbing, pulsing vein
+ The fierce unconquered spirit of old Sparta ran.
+ Rome's fiercest gladiator is to-day again
+ A Thracian--and a man!
+
+
+
+
+The Dead Leader
+
+
+After the waiting and the anguished weeping
+ He lies at rest at last.
+How should we mourn him tranced in peaceful sleeping,
+ His pain all past!
+
+The Right's Excalibur his strong arm wielded
+ A little space lies low;
+The victor in life's sometime strife has yielded
+ To man's last Foe.
+
+Late--all too late--our loyal tribute giving
+ A loyal, fearless soul!
+He whom we honored late--so late--while living,
+ Lies dead beside the goal.
+
+Yet this the solace of these long sad hours
+ While we who loved him weep,
+We breathe an answering message in our flowers
+ To him who lies asleep.
+
+To him whom soon the deep, cold earth must cover,
+ To him whose dying breath
+Left to our hearts a message bridging over
+ The dark abyss of Death.
+
+
+
+
+Hagar
+
+
+To have known Heaven and then to walk in Hell!
+Is it not hell to know his face no more,
+Supplanted, spurned and thrust without his door.
+Seeing another with my loved lord dwell
+Sheltered within the tents of wedded love
+While I must roam the desert of Despair?
+Ah, God above me harken to my prayer!
+Send down thy mercy on me as a dove
+Folding its white wings on my tortured breast.
+Let me not see the anguish of my child
+With hunger torn, with thirst's consuming wild,
+Strike us, oh God, into Thy deep dark Rest!
+Lo! I have sinned. I kneel and kiss the rod,
+But she, the wife, who cast us forth to die ...
+I curse her not! Judge Thou between us, God,
+Which in Thy sight is guiltier, she or I?
+
+
+
+
+Water-Lilies
+
+
+They float ethereal, unearthly white
+ Upon the bosom of the darkling mere,
+Raying the dusk with slumbrous silver light--
+ Eidolons of lost moons erst mirrored there.
+
+
+
+
+Salvias
+
+
+Wooing the wind's wild caresses,
+ Courting the sun's fierce flame--
+Wantons in cardinal dresses
+ Flaunting their scarlet shame.
+
+
+
+
+Yellow Jessamine
+
+
+Like little yellow stars that, fallen down,
+ Hang pendulous, enmeshed among the boughs,
+Mild golden radiances they gem the crown
+ Fair Summer sets upon her beauteous brows.
+
+
+
+
+Sunflowers
+
+
+They bloom in lowly places--
+ Unmeet for fairer beds--
+Like swarthy Ethiop faces
+ With yellow-turbaned heads.
+
+
+
+
+The Rose
+
+
+All Orient odors, spikenard, balm and myrrh,
+ Perfumes of Araby and farthest Ind--
+Sweet incense from the chaliced heart of her
+ She pours upon the feet of every wind.
+
+
+
+
+Circe
+
+I.
+
+
+Where fair AEaeia smiles across the sea
+To olive-crowned Italia, th' enchantress dwells--
+A woman set about with dreams and spells,
+Weird incantations, charms and mystery.
+Most strangely pale and strangely fair is she--
+Yet deadlier than the hemlock draught her smile,
+Darker than Stygian glooms her subtle guile....
+Drawn by her deep eyes' spell, across the sea
+The Argive galleys wing, till beached they lie
+Upon the fatal strand. The Greeks beguile
+The hasting hours with revelry and wine
+Within her halls.... Eftsoon strange sorcery
+The Circe weaves. They who were men erewhile
+Now grovel at her feet, transformed to swine.
+
+
+II.
+
+'Neath myriad mellow tapers' golden glow
+A woman stands, proud, insolent and fair;
+A single gem meshed in the dusk-dyed hair
+Burns like the evening star descending low
+Adown the dark'ning sky. Upon the snow
+Of her full-blossomed breast deep rubies lie.
+Her fragrant presence breathes sweet sorcery;
+The shimmering saffron satin's flexile flow
+Outlines each sinuous curve; a sensuous smile,
+A touch that fires to flame each pulsant vein--
+One draught of eyes more deep than depths of wine
+The senses steal, the soul and brain beguile
+Till all seem merged in feeling ... and again
+A Circe's spells transform men into swine.
+
+
+
+
+To A. M. M.
+
+
+She is so shy, this little love of mine,
+ So pale and pure, almost I fear to speak
+The love that thrills my every pulse like wine
+ Yet brings no answering flush to her fair cheek.
+
+She is so calm that Passion's stirring strain
+ To chanson soft and low unbidden dies;
+The while her longing lover sighs in vain
+ For one soft love-glance from her down-dropped eyes.
+
+A lily she that from its garden bed,
+ Into the golden sunshine glad and sweet
+Lifts to far sapphire skies its radiant head,
+ Unheedful of the base weeds at its feet.
+
+Yet--should one loving reverently kneel
+ And draw the lily's close-shut leaves apart,
+Perchance those waxen petals might reveal
+ Enshrined within, a glowing golden heart.
+
+
+
+
+Loveless
+
+
+As some poor starveling at a palace gate
+ Sees curtained gleams from banquet-litten halls,
+Hears song out-ringing from the festal walls,
+ Scents viands that shall princely palates sate,
+Yet in the outer gloom may only wait,
+ Crouched in the cold, thrice-thankful for some least
+Mean morsel flung him from the plenteous feast--
+ Poor bondman to the ball and chain of Fate!
+So, lonely at Love's outer gate I stand
+ And glimpse the brightness and the bliss within,
+Where love-lit smiles transmute the dark to day--
+ I wait without--I may not enter in;
+Long, wistfully, I gaze--then void of hand
+ And starved of spirit, sadly turn away.
+
+
+
+
+Clytie--The Sunflower
+
+(To F. H.)
+
+
+In pale green twilight lands
+ Under the sea
+Her rainbow palace stands,
+ Irised and opaline;
+ Agate and almondine,
+Corals and pearly shells
+Swept from deep ocean dells,
+ Strewing the silver strands,
+ Starring the golden sands
+In the green twilight lands
+ Under the sea.
+
+All thro' the dreamy day
+ Under the sea
+Where the sea-maidens play,
+ Twining foam-garlands fair,
+ Girding their golden hair,
+Clad in her moss-robe green
+Veiled in her bright locks' sheen--
+ Where the dim seaweeds sway,
+ Trackless her white feet stray
+All thro' the dreamy day
+ Under the sea.
+
+Or like a star she glides
+ Over the sea,
+Deftly her steeds she guides--
+ Gold-fish that glint and gleam,
+ Jewels alive they seem--
+Softly the surges swell,
+Rocking the rosy shell
+ Where the sea-maiden rides,
+ Wafture of wooing tides,
+Swift as a star she glides
+ Over the sea.
+
+One day she lifts her eyes
+ Up from the sea
+Where the great sun-god flies
+ Over the world afar,
+ Guiding his golden car--
+All his star brow aglow,
+All his bright hair aflow;
+ Dawn in his radiance lies,
+ Dusk at his coming dies--
+Hapless she lifts her eyes
+ Up from the sea.
+
+Swiftly his steeds speed on
+ Over the sea,
+Soon is the splendor flown,
+ Lone on the shore she stands.
+ Stretching imploring hands,
+Lifting impassioned eyes
+Where the last sun-gleam dies;
+ All the day's brightness gone,
+ Hapless she stands alone,
+Heedless the god speeds on
+ Over the sea.
+
+Ever her wistful gaze
+ Over the sea
+Yearns on the sun-god's rays--
+ Till by some subtle power
+ Changed to a golden flower--
+Still in her robe of green,
+Crowned with her gold hair's sheen
+ Slight on her stem she sways ...
+ Yet does her yearning gaze
+Follow the sun-god's rays
+ Over the sea.
+
+
+
+
+In Bondage
+
+
+What can it profit a man tho' he have the soul of a god
+Sunk in the form of a beast, with a senseless simian face--
+What can the world perceive of the subtler inward grace
+Breathing upon the dust of the coarse clay clod?
+What knows the world of me--the Me that is prisoned within--
+Seeing only the self that sickens its sensitive eyes--
+How can it know that this hateful mask hides not the sneer of Sin,
+That this cloak of crass, crude flesh, is a trusty soul's disguise?
+
+What can I hope to win? Which of the gifts men prize?
+What can I have or hold of the bounteous boon I crave--
+I, with the coarse stubbed hands, the dull and narrow eyes,
+The low-browed leer of the brutal, base-born slave?
+What can I know of Love? I, with my ape-like face,
+Frighting the tender trust of the timorous, shrinking maid,
+Who, drawn by my deep soul's spell, half-yields to the soul's embrace
+Then looks on its hideous mask and trembles and flees dismayed.
+
+Yet must the soul of fire chained to this cursed clay,
+Galled by its fetters of flesh, seared with a thousand scars,
+Shriek and struggle and beat its breast on its prison bars
+Thro' the night's long dark of despair till the dawning of ultimate day,
+Till the glow of that ultimate dawn transfigure the tortured face
+And the sacred fire within crumble the coarse clay clod.
+Till the Soul, breathed on by an unseen, unknown Grace,
+Stripped of its bonds of flesh, stand face to face with its God!
+
+
+
+
+To a Singer
+
+
+Beneath thy Midas touch life's sullen grays
+Are thrilled to sudden gold; as some far gleam
+From wings of Helios athwart thy dream
+Irradiates for thee earth's darksome ways.
+Wild woodland voices ripple thro' thy lays;
+Sweet silvern murmurs from some deep-delled spring,
+Brook, tree and flower and each insensate thing,
+The throstle's call, the calm of sun-steeped days,
+A glint of sunshine on the swallow's wing,
+Fern-filagrees, the drowsy drone of bee
+Made drunk with draughts of purple wild-grape wine;
+All these Orphean music holds for thee,
+And all thy days and dreams companioning
+Walks Nature with her hand close-clasped in thine.
+
+
+
+
+Blossom of Brine
+
+
+Morn! and a white sail winging
+Over the sunlit waves;
+A song on the breezes ringing
+Up from the coral caves
+Where sea-nymphs, white arms lifting
+Wreaths for the sea-god twine
+Of the frail foam-flowers drifting
+On the wave-crests--blossom of brine.
+
+Night! and a dark rack flying
+Over the sullen waves;
+A dirge on the night winds sighing
+Up from the cold sea caves
+Where sea-nymphs white arms lifting
+Wreaths for a pall entwine
+For a still white face is drifting
+On the wave-crest--blossom of brine.
+
+
+
+
+A Memory
+
+
+Strange that across the vast of varied years,
+ Fraught with life's wonted alloy--mingled joy and pain--
+Sun-kissed with smiles or gloomed with mists of tears,
+ Old memories should wake to life again.
+Old thoughts and dreams, words breathed by lips long dumb,
+ Songs sung by voices silent now for aye,
+Like hosts of speechless spectres thronging come
+ Dim formless wraiths of each dear vanished day.
+
+Strange that a fragment of a life replete,
+ A few brief hours as men measure time,
+A chapter in life's book, closed now--yet vaguely sweet
+ As odor-laden zephyrs from some far-off clime--
+Should drift across my heart while joysome memories rise
+ Of golden moments snatched from Arcady,
+Of silver sails and opal-tinted skies,
+ Of viridescent earth and sapphire sea.
+
+Of Lotus-land where pleasure dreamful lies,
+ Of kindred souls responsive each to each,
+Of thoughts half hidden by deep-tinted eyes--
+ (Sweet traitors telling that denied to speech!)
+The merest fragment of a life replete,
+ A sun-gleam 'mid existence's sombre grays,
+Eyes, hands and hearts that for one moment meet
+ In strange, sweet yearning ... then--divided ways.
+
+
+
+
+To Margaret
+
+
+Maiden of varying mood,
+Thalia thou hast wooed,
+ Thespis thereafter,
+Till 'neath thy lyric sway
+Each heart must tribute pay--
+ Tears blent with laughter.
+So in the days to be
+This do we crave for thee,
+ Through life's hereafter,
+Throughout the changing years,
+May all thy griefs and tears
+ Be blent with laughter.
+
+
+
+
+Regret
+
+
+ Shimmer of rose and pearl,
+Sheen on an opal sky;
+ Day's crimson banners unfurl,
+Purple-pleached shadow-gleams die;
+ Dawn flowers bourgeoning fair,
+Meads with the dawn-dews wet;
+ Rare is the morn--ah, rare!
+But in the heart, regret--
+ A vague regret.
+
+ Clouds like the scattered snow
+Stippling a sapphire sky;
+ Fervor and heat and glow,
+Zephyrs that swoon and die.
+ Drowseth the nooning air
+On meads with red poppies set;
+ Fair is the day--ah, fair!
+But in the heart, regret--
+ And still ... regret.
+
+ Flashes of burning gold,
+Flushes of crimson light
+ Faint on a waning wold,
+Stealeth the silent night.
+ One from a casement bar
+Leaneth with lashes wet,
+ Watching the last wan star
+Fade like a heart's regret--
+ A vain regret.
+
+
+
+
+"God Bless You, Dear"
+
+
+Dear patient face and placid brow,
+ Dear lips that smiled despite of pain,
+Brave toil-worn hands, so helpful now,
+ Sweet spirit free from earthly stain.
+Within the doorway Mother stands,
+ The while a merry barefoot lad,
+Across the springtime meadow-lands
+ Goes whistling schoolward, blithe and glad;
+And where the pathway breasts the hill,
+ I stay my steps and turn to hear
+Her loving voice, as lingering still,
+ She calls, "Good-bye! God bless you, dear."
+
+Dear patient face and furrowed brow,
+ Dear lips that smile thro' all life's pain,
+Brave toil-worn hands, so weary now,
+ Sweet soul unmarred by earthly stain.
+Within the doorway Mother stands,
+ The while a man oppressed with care,
+Across the waning Autumn lands,
+ Goes toil-ward, fain to strive and bear;
+And where the pathway breasts the hill,
+ I stay my steps and turn to hear
+Her trembling voice, as ling'ring still,
+ She calls, "Good-bye! God bless you, dear."
+
+Dear peaceful face and placid brow,
+ Dear lips that smile secure from pain,
+Brave toil-worn hands, soft-folded now,
+ Sweet spirit freed from earthly stain.
+Within God's portal Mother stands,
+ The while a man forspent with care
+Seeketh the far-off meadow-lands,
+ By faith made strong to strive and bear.
+And as I breast life's weary hill,
+ I ofttimes pause--meseems I hear
+The well-loved accents breathing still
+ The old fond prayer, "God bless you, dear."
+
+
+
+
+Roses
+
+
+"Where leaves the Rose of Yesterday?"--Rubaiyat.
+
+A red rose burns upon his breast
+ Where erst a white rose lay;
+Above his fervent heart-throb pressed--
+ The red rose of To-day.
+
+What recks he of the flower that dies--
+ (For roses bloom alway!)
+Low in the dust, forgotten, lies
+ The rose of Yesterday.
+
+But yet, To-day's red rose must die,
+ (For roses fade alway!)
+To-morrow crushed, forgot, 'twill lie--
+ A rose of Yesterday.
+
+
+
+
+The Poet
+
+
+One fluting on sad wolds Pan's flight left drear,
+ One crying down the wayward wind of Chance,
+One piping unto feet that will not dance
+ And mourning unto ears that will not hear.
+
+
+
+
+Shylock
+
+
+Cold craft and avarice look from out his eyes,
+His face with evil passion marred and seamed,
+Looks frowningly upon a Christian world.
+Behind that hateful mask a demon lurks
+To urge the narrow soul to darksome deeds
+Of violence and greed, of hate and ruth.
+His God, a God of wrath, a tyrant force
+To mete to helpless souls eternal doom;
+A Juggernaut, a hard unsentient power,--
+But yet less potent than the yellow gold
+Those crooked talons clutch, and for the which
+The miser Shylock fain would sell his soul.
+
+
+
+
+Sonnet
+
+(To Charles J. O'Malley.)
+
+
+As when above orchestral undertone,
+ The plaining wail of muted violin,
+ The hushed oboe and the distant din,
+Of muffled drum or viol's raucous groan--
+Sudden arises one pure voice-like tone,
+ A silver trumpet's tongue that stirs the soul
+ To feel the theme, and the harmonious whole
+A sonant setting seems for that alone;
+So, high above earth's murmurous stir and strife,
+ Riseth thy voice in clear enringing song--
+ No minor plaint of dull despairing pain,
+But one true note of hope that bids us long
+ For higher things; and all the din of life
+ Seems to subserve the sweetness of thy strain.
+
+
+
+
+Antithesis
+
+
+The poet wrought a song of sadness, fraught
+ With all the pain the world's sad heart hath proved;
+He sang of doubt, and dreams that end in naught ...
+ Then, smiling, turned and kissed the lips he loved.
+
+The poet wrought a song of joyance, thrilled
+ With all the peace the world's glad heart hath kept;
+He sang of hope and happy dreams fulfilled ...
+ Then bent his face upon his hands and wept.
+
+
+
+
+In Fortune's Twilight
+
+
+The old house totters 'neath its weight of years,
+Bowed, like the form of him who shelters there,
+Old, friendless, lone--save for the wanton, Care,
+Who flouts him, mocks his grief with gibes and jeers
+And laughs to see his piteous hopes grow fears.
+Not his the joy of placid, sun-crowned age--
+His dim eyes falter as he scans the page
+Of Life's worn album, blotted with his tears.
+He sees in dreams the wife he loved--long dead;
+The son--once proud to bear his father's name--
+Who mixed his honest blood with dire disgrace;
+The wayward girl who wrought her father shame ...
+He sits alone with Care; the day has fled
+And twilight falls, upon the furrowed face.
+
+
+
+
+Fate
+
+
+Thro' countless aeons sunless and remote
+ A Soul went searching for its spirit mate,
+Thro' star-stained space, o'er wind-swept deep, afloat,
+ Forever desolate.
+
+Anon, another spirit, lone of heart
+ Goes forth thro' voiceless void to seek its mate;
+Eftsoon they meet, these twain, strike hands ... and part!
+ And this is Fate.
+
+
+
+
+The Path of Dreams
+
+
+Beside the stream that silverly steals on
+To swell the song of that far-sounding sea
+Which breaks upon the utmost shore of Thought,
+They who have drunk at Song's immortal spring
+Walk with glad feet the upland path of dreams
+That whitely winds thro' long low-lying lands--
+By one, yclept the Way of Fools--a plain
+Of dust and ashes and of Dead Sea fruit;
+But by another called the Path of Hope
+That leads far up the slope of heart's desire;--
+And haply both speak truth--for oft the way
+Is set with stones that tear the climbing feet,
+And oft for roses there is bitter rue,
+And oft for singing there is idle scorn,
+And sneers full oft for smiles. Yet well we know
+The upland Path of Dreams that whitely winds
+(Yclept or Way of Fools or Path of Hope)
+Leads upward ever to the Hills of Song!
+
+Beside the silent stream whose soundless tide
+Sets ever to the unknown tideless sea
+They who have drunk of Slumber's poppied draught
+Walk with unsandalled feet the path of dreams
+That winds thro' gray, low-lying fields of sleep
+To dim dream shores girt with dim spectre-trees,
+Swayed ever by the sweep of unseen wings,
+Slow-stirring palms and arabesques of ferns
+And fields of sombre bloom and scentless flowers
+Not of their wonted hue, but dimly gray,
+Where songless birds like shades of shadows flit,
+And silent winds from poppied meadows blow--
+And here dear presences to us denied
+By sterner Day, approach to cry us hail;
+And here a little do we taste the joy
+Of kisses dreamed on lips forever mute,
+A little know the bliss of Hope fulfilled,
+And dreams that seem as true as very Truth ...
+Yet well we know that with the stir of dawn,
+Waking, we must return from Sleep's far fields!
+Beside the Lethean stream whose soundless tide
+Sets ever to the unknown tideless Sea
+That breaks upon the farthest unknown shore--
+They who have quaffed dark Asrael's mystic draught
+Walk with still feet the viewless Path of Dreams
+That winds thro' long, low-lying fields of Sleep
+To fields Elysian or Tartarian glooms;
+And haply, longed-for presences denied
+By sterner Life shall come to cry us hail,--
+Bright radiances from realms of light eterne,
+Or shadows from the shades of awful Dis--
+But whether here we taste of Hope fulfilled,
+Or find our dreams are but as drifted dust--
+From dark of Dis or realms of Light eterne,
+Full well we know we shall return no more!
+
+
+
+
+An Autumn Song
+
+
+The dim sun slips adown the sky
+That dies from gold to gray;
+The homing birds that Southward fly
+To my heart's hailing make reply,
+ Piping "Good-bye, good-bye!"
+
+Southward I turn my wistful eyes,
+Southward, where all my treasure lies,
+Whither the homing sparrow flies,
+ Piping, "Good-bye, good-bye!"
+
+The chill blast sweeps the steely sky
+That glooms a sullen gray;
+Soft summer winds that Southward fly
+To my soul's sighing make reply
+ Breathing "Good-bye, good-bye!"
+
+Southward I turn my longing eyes,
+Southward my yearning spirit hies,
+Whither or bird or zephyr flies
+ Sighing "Good-bye, good-bye!"
+
+
+
+
+Vain
+
+
+Wreath of laurel and crown of bay
+ And the noisy trump of Fame,
+Praise for the singer's deathless lay,
+ And a listening world's acclaim.
+
+But the singer sits with his grief alone
+ Where love lies cold and dead.
+The plaudits fall on a heart of stone;
+ The Soul of the song has fled.
+
+
+
+
+Sartor Resartus
+
+
+Ah, God be merciful to him who sees
+Thro' ermined pomp and pageantry of kings,
+Thro' regal mien and beauty's witcheries
+The poor, weak, shrivelled soul that crouches hid
+Within the body's hold! Thrice-cursed is he
+Whose soul sees souls of others face to face,
+Who strips the outer man like vestments off
+And views the naked heart in all its shame
+And poverty; who still must rend the veil
+Of motive, purpose, false humanity
+And futile pretense! God! to walk this world
+Doomed still to see what others fain would hide,
+Reading men's thoughts as scholars read the page
+Of some old language dead to all save them;
+Seeing beneath the tender woman flesh,
+The woman-grace, the pleading woman-eyes,
+The grisly skeleton, the hollow ribs,
+The eyeless sockets and the grinning jaw;
+Reading for aye the sneer beneath the smile,
+The lie that lurks behind the seeming truth;
+To know that such, or haply worse, am I,
+A living lie, false prophet to myself,
+Clothed on with shimmering robes of fallacy
+And vain deceit! Ah God, where is the truth?
+Are all men false or lies the fault in me
+Who, vulture-like, seize only on the taint,
+And leave the pure? If haply thus it be
+In pity take away the subtle sight
+That pierces thought. Give back the old fond faith,
+The young belief in all humanity;
+Hide from my view the canker in the rose,
+The taint in truth, the blight upon the bloom.
+
+Far better 'twere to drink the hemlock draught
+And, happy, deem it nectar than to find
+The drop of gall within the nectared cup.
+Far better trust repaid with treachery
+Than doubt confirmed! Ah, Thou all-seeing God
+Who art the Truth, make me to see the truth;
+Lift from my soul the shadow; in the room
+Of doubt, send trust. Let me believe again;
+Help me to see the highest in mankind!
+
+
+
+
+Illumed
+
+
+Like to a little child, whose straying feet,
+Tracking the fox-fire's guiling glint and gleam,
+Have wandered far afield by marsh and stream
+While just before the wavering glimmers fleet
+On and still on where sky and meadow meet,
+Till, spent and fearful in the gathering gloom,
+At last he sees the guiding light of home,
+Where love awaits and mother-kisses sweet.
+So was it mine through fens of doubt to stray
+Pursuing still some fair ephemeron,
+Or fleeting gleam, or shimmering fallacy,
+Till through the deepening dusk a beacon shone
+Set by the hand of Love to light the way
+O Father, to implicit trust in Thee!
+
+
+
+
+In the Play
+
+
+In a painted "Forest of Arden," in the glare of the garish light,
+In doublet and hose, be-powdered and rouged, you sigh to me night by night;
+Attuned to the sway of your cadenced voice, as a harp to the wooing wind,
+I thrill at the touch of your painted lips--for--"_I am your Rosalind!_"
+
+Could you know that my art in seeming was a dearer thing than art,
+That the love-words spoken nightly spring straight from a loving heart;
+Could you know that my soul speaks to you--aye soul and spirit and mind!
+When I gaze deep into your eyes and breathe--"_And I am your Rosalind!_"
+
+To you 'tis a vain dissembling--a part of the work of the day,
+And the words that your voice makes music, but the dull, dead lines of
+ the play.
+Little you care for the woman you woo, save as a foil designed.
+To prove your skill as a lover--yet--"_I am your Rosalind!_"
+
+I merge in the player, the woman! The actress good at her art
+Must needs look well to each glance and tone, must needs play still
+ her part--
+
+Tho' the woman's soul that must else be mute; aye soul and spirit and mind!
+Cry to your soul in another's words--"_And I am your Rosalind!_"
+
+
+
+
+To E. P. B.
+
+
+Imperial as that famed Elizabeth
+ Before whose feet a knight his cloak cast down--
+A sovereign--altho' thine only crown
+ Love's roses 'twine for thee, Elizabeth.
+
+Ah, maiden sweeter than morn's nectared breath,
+ Across thy path no regal robe I fling--
+Only a living, loving heart I bring
+ To lay at thy dear feet, Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+
+Through the Dark
+
+
+Last night they laid me in my winding sheet,
+ Set burning tapers at my feet and head,
+Decked me with wan white blossoms faint and sweet,
+ And told each other softly, "She is dead."
+
+Ay, dumb and dead! Enshrouded, cold and stark
+ I lay where waned the tawny tapers dim,
+Pulseless and pale; yet thro' the dreadful dark
+ I lived in thoughts of _him_.
+
+The morning came. One who had loved me bent
+ Above my face with tears and bated breath;
+Laid on my heart the roses _he_ had sent--
+ And I--was glad of death!
+
+
+
+
+Preluding
+
+
+Frail fronds of ferns uncurling,
+Blue iris flags unfurling,
+Pale showers of blossoms swirling
+Like clouds of wind-blown snow;
+With fragile wildings playing,
+Like two blithe children maying,
+Across the glad meads straying,
+ Together, dear, we go.
+
+The silver clouds far-drifting,
+Vague lights and shadows shifting,
+The sungleams gold-dust sifting
+Down thro' the latticed leaves;
+Gray brooks the meadows lacing,
+Young flow'rs the uplands gracing,
+Her faery 'broidery tracing
+ The skillful spider weaves.
+
+From long, long day-dreams shaken,
+The vivid violets waken;
+His Southern haunts forsaken,
+The bluebird flecks the sky;
+Ah, breath of bloom-bright heather,
+Ah, golden Maytime weather,
+We drift in dreams together--
+ Together, you and I.
+
+
+
+
+The Heights of Silence
+
+(Transcribed from "The Choir Invisible.")
+
+
+Above the valleys, peopled, fair and warm,
+ Rise the bleak, silent uplands where abide
+Wraiths of lost loves, love's recompense denied,
+ Unspoken, unconfessed, unsatisfied....
+Cold, silent heights, engirt with zones of storm,
+ Where Love for aye unmated must abide.
+
+The broad, sweet downward vistas of the flesh
+ Stretch fair and far; the calm white spirit-height
+Is lone and chill; there dimly shines the light
+ Of sun and star that burns and beacons bright
+Where Sin spreads still her guiling, glitt'ring mesh.
+ Ah, warm the valley! Lone and chill the height!
+
+Yet he who wins the height's sublimity--
+ The silent height where loves unlived abide,
+Loves stainless, sublimated, purified--
+ Shall glimpse that land, to grosser view denied,
+Where love and longing infinite shall be
+ Or ever stilled--or ever satisfied.
+
+
+
+
+Andromeda
+
+
+Bound ever to a great grey rock of Doom,
+ Striving with futile hands to rive the chain
+Of woven fear, distrust and subtle pain,
+ While gaunt wolf-waves that leap from out the gloom
+Of doubt's cold sea are snarling at my feet,
+ As nearer writhes the dragon of Despair
+Foul with dank horrors of his caverned lair,
+ And like a clock of doom the dark tides beat....
+I lift my eyes; Lo! sudden sweeps along
+ Thought's empyrean and the vast of dreams
+One star-browed, Jove-like, human-orbed; meseems
+ His feet are winged with music, shod with song;
+Ah, Perseus, should'st thou, pitying, leave the sky
+ To loose my bonds--then all the fear were gone,
+Soul touching soul, trust from distrust were won,
+ Like god and goddess 'fronted, thou and I;
+Despair were slain, closed the unequal strife,
+ Thy great soul's strength should make weak purpose strong,
+Thy hand should lead me up the slopes of Song,
+ Thy winged feet guide me to the peaks of Life!
+
+
+
+
+Requital
+
+
+What tho' you loved me once? Man's love at best
+ Is but a mood--the fancy of an hour,
+You held all faith and truth a theme for jest,
+ Love's recompense, a smile. You knew your power.
+
+What tho' you loved me then? You went away
+ And left my life an arid waste of pain;
+And now--your best years spent, your idols clay--
+ You stretch imploring arms to me again.
+
+What tho' you love me still? What tho' you say
+ The current of your life toward mine is set,
+As vagrant stars obey the planets' sway,
+ Or perfume clingeth to the violet?
+
+What tho' I once loved you? See in yon West
+ Day's fires have burned to ashes cold and gray;
+So in my quiet heart love's wild unrest
+ By its own flame consumed, is dead for aye.
+
+
+
+
+When Fades the Light
+
+
+When fades the light along the western sky,
+ When dies the last dim rose to subtlest gray,
+When darkling mere and mead enshadowed lie,
+ And Night's wide arms enfold the wearied Day;
+When tired lilies ring their vesper bells
+ And dusking leaves speak whispered orison,
+When cassocked Twilight breathing benison
+ His rosary of flashing fireflies tells--
+Then ends the day-long struggle. Strong no more
+ I drift far out on Fancy's phantom sea,
+Setting full sail for that forbidden shore
+ Where waiteth Love for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When fades the light from out my dying eyes,
+ And soul and sense seem slipping soft away,
+When Death's swift shallop launched on Lethe lies
+ Waiting to wing me to the unknown Gray;
+When things of time and thought grow strangely dim,
+ And the pent spirit strains to loose its bands
+Till from the fettered feet and helpless hands
+ Shall fall life's shackles pitiless and grim--
+Then shall the conflict cease. Enchained no more
+ My soul shall sail the silent unknown sea
+Until it touch the unforbidden shore
+ Where Love awaiteth me.
+
+
+
+
+Butterflies
+
+
+As if a bed of bloom had taken wing--
+ Bright marigolds, nasturtiums, zinnias gay--
+They breast the breeze or, lightly poising, cling
+ To other flowers not animate as they.
+
+
+
+
+In the Dark Forest
+
+
+The long gray twilight falls and deeper glooms
+ Close round the graying wood that dimmer grows
+As dies the Day's last yearning tint of rose,
+ And Dusk spins shadows on her eldritch looms.
+The black bat flits, the eerie white moth flies--
+ Wan ghost of yesterday's bright butterfly--
+The dusking forest pools uplooking lie
+ Like graveless dead men's staring, sightless eyes.
+
+Ah, eerie, eerie is the lonely wood,
+ But lo! the faeries light their firefly lamps,
+Elusive foxfire flames from marish damps;
+ Hastes to the morris-dance an elfin brood;
+A far bell chimes, the cricket cheerly shrills,
+ The droning beetle sounds his hoarse bassoon
+And hylas trill; eftsoon the rising moon
+ The ambient air to molten silver thrills.
+
+Then all the lyric night is set to song!
+ The cuckoo calls, the plaining whippoorwill
+Cries faint and far away; more distant still
+ The hoopoe, hid his marshy haunts among,
+Wails with the cry of some lost soul in pain;
+ The nightingale engilds the pulsant dark
+With golden-throated melody--but hark!
+ The night-jar's discord mars the perfect strain.
+
+The night wears on, black shadows throng apace,
+ The wood is still, the moon grows wan and old,
+White marsh-mists wreathe like clammy arms, death-cold,
+ And moth-wings like dead fingers sweep my face;
+The bittern wailing leaves the sombre pool,
+ Voicing the world-old pain that never dies;
+The owl with ghoulish laughter outward flies
+ Like some weird Vivien shrieking, "Fool!" and "Fool!"
+
+
+
+
+Insatiate
+
+
+What though she lieth mute on yonder hill?
+ Though ivy green and shadowy eglatere
+ Have held in tender fold through many a year
+Her quiet grave, I fear her--fear her still.
+
+He loved her once. Ay, though he hold me fast
+ And sear my lips with kisses burning-sweet,
+ No touch of mine can make his life replete
+For man's first love is oftentimes his last.
+
+A still face glimmers through my dreams for aye.
+ E'en when I strain him close with feverish grasp
+ Wan grave-cold fingers loose the clinging clasp,
+And grave-cold lips my fervid kisses stay.
+
+She lives incarnate in each flower fair,
+ Her eyes illume the violets in my hand,
+ The golden-rod that lights the Autumn land
+Seems but the scattered star-dust of her hair.
+
+Love's perfect flower may never bloom for me--
+ For me his wife. For ah! I fear her still
+ Who lies forever mute on yonder hill.
+He loved her once. Would God that I were she!
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+Table of Contents: Slight listing changes were made to match poem titles.
+
+Page 29: Added opening parenthesis:
+ (And I knew that tho' many a woman had loved you,
+ Till that moment, the glance of no woman had moved you!)
+
+Page 47: Added closing parenthesis:
+ (Thank God, he suffered so brief a while)
+
+Page 70: Corrected wathway to pathway:
+ And where the pathway breasts the hill,
+
+Page 79: Added a blank line after first stanza:
+ Piping "Good-bye, good-bye!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Path of Dreams, by Leigh Gordon Giltner
+
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