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+Project Gutenberg's Gloucester Moors and Other Poems, by William Vaughn Moody
+
+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: Gloucester Moors and Other Poems
+
+Author: William Vaughn Moody
+
+Release Date: January 27, 2009 [EBook #27912]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GLOUCESTER MOORS AND OTHER POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, C. St. Charleskindt and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Kentuckiana Digital Library)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+By William Vaughn Moody
+
+ GLOUCESTER MOORS and Other Poems. 12mo, $1.25.
+ THE FIRE-BRINGER. 12mo, $1.10, _net_. Postage 8 cents.
+ THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT. 12mo, $1.50.
+
+ THE GREAT DIVIDE. 12mo, $1.00, _net_. Postage 10 cents.
+ THE FAITH HEALER. 12mo, $1.00, _net_. Postage 10 cents.
+
+ HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
+ BOSTON AND NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+GLOUCESTER MOORS
+
+AND OTHER POEMS
+
+
+BY
+
+
+WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: TOUT BIEN OU RIEN]
+
+
+
+
+BOSTON AND NEW YORK
+HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
+The Riverside Press Cambridge
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1901, BY WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY
+
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+Several poems of this collection, including "An Ode in Time of
+Hesitation," "The Brute," and "On a Soldier Fallen in the
+Philippines," have appeared in the _Atlantic Monthly_; "Gloucester
+Moors" and "Faded Pictures," in _Scribner's Magazine_; and "The Ride
+Back," under a different title in the _Chap-Book_. The author is
+indebted to the editors of these periodicals for leave to reprint.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ GLOUCESTER MOORS 1
+
+ GOOD FRIDAY NIGHT 5
+
+ ROAD-HYMN FOR THE START 9
+
+ AN ODE IN TIME OF HESITATION 12
+
+ THE QUARRY 22
+
+ ON A SOLDIER FALLEN IN THE PHILIPPINES 24
+
+ UNTIL THE TROUBLING OF THE WATERS 26
+
+ JETSAM 39
+
+ THE BRUTE 49
+
+ THE MENAGERIE 55
+
+ THE GOLDEN JOURNEY 62
+
+ HEART'S WILD-FLOWER 65
+
+ HARMONICS 67
+
+ ON THE RIVER 68
+
+ THE BRACELET OF GRASS 70
+
+ THE DEPARTURE 72
+
+ FADED PICTURES 74
+
+ A GREY DAY 75
+
+ THE RIDE BACK 76
+
+ SONG-FLOWER AND POPPY 80
+
+ I. IN NEW YORK
+
+ II. AT ASSISI
+
+ HOW THE MEAD-SLAVE WAS SET FREE 86
+
+ A DIALOGUE IN PURGATORY 89
+
+ THE DAGUERREOTYPE 98
+
+
+
+
+POEMS
+
+
+
+
+GLOUCESTER MOORS
+
+
+ A mile behind is Gloucester town
+ Where the fishing fleets put in,
+ A mile ahead the land dips down
+ And the woods and farms begin.
+ Here, where the moors stretch free
+ In the high blue afternoon,
+ Are the marching sun and talking sea,
+ And the racing winds that wheel and flee
+ On the flying heels of June.
+
+ Jill-o'er-the-ground is purple blue,
+ Blue is the quaker-maid,
+ The wild geranium holds its dew
+ Long in the boulder's shade.
+ Wax-red hangs the cup
+ From the huckleberry boughs,
+ In barberry bells the grey moths sup,
+ Or where the choke-cherry lifts high up
+ Sweet bowls for their carouse.
+
+ Over the shelf of the sandy cove
+ Beach-peas blossom late.
+ By copse and cliff the swallows rove
+ Each calling to his mate.
+ Seaward the sea-gulls go,
+ And the land-birds all are here;
+ That green-gold flash was a vireo,
+ And yonder flame where the marsh-flags grow
+ Was a scarlet tanager.
+
+ This earth is not the steadfast place
+ We landsmen build upon;
+ From deep to deep she varies pace,
+ And while she comes is gone.
+ Beneath my feet I feel
+ Her smooth bulk heave and dip;
+ With velvet plunge and soft upreel
+ She swings and steadies to her keel
+ Like a gallant, gallant ship.
+
+ These summer clouds she sets for sail,
+ The sun is her masthead light,
+ She tows the moon like a pinnace frail
+ Where her phosphor wake churns bright.
+ Now hid, now looming clear,
+ On the face of the dangerous blue
+ The star fleets tack and wheel and veer,
+ But on, but on does the old earth steer
+ As if her port she knew.
+
+ God, dear God! Does she know her port,
+ Though she goes so far about?
+ Or blind astray, does she make her sport
+ To brazen and chance it out?
+ I watched when her captains passed:
+ She were better captainless.
+ Men in the cabin, before the mast,
+ But some were reckless and some aghast,
+ And some sat gorged at mess.
+
+ By her battened hatch I leaned and caught
+ Sounds from the noisome hold,--
+ Cursing and sighing of souls distraught
+ And cries too sad to be told.
+ Then I strove to go down and see;
+ But they said, "Thou art not of us!"
+ I turned to those on the deck with me
+ And cried, "Give help!" But they said, "Let be:
+ Our ship sails faster thus."
+
+ Jill-o'er-the-ground is purple blue,
+ Blue is the quaker-maid,
+ The alder-clump where the brook comes through
+ Breeds cresses in its shade.
+ To be out of the moiling street
+ With its swelter and its sin!
+ Who has given to me this sweet,
+ And given my brother dust to eat?
+ And when will his wage come in?
+
+ Scattering wide or blown in ranks,
+ Yellow and white and brown,
+ Boats and boats from the fishing banks
+ Come home to Gloucester town.
+ There is cash to purse and spend,
+ There are wives to be embraced,
+ Hearts to borrow and hearts to lend,
+ And hearts to take and keep to the end,--
+ O little sails, make haste!
+
+ But thou, vast outbound ship of souls,
+ What harbor town for thee?
+ What shapes, when thy arriving tolls,
+ Shall crowd the banks to see?
+ Shall all the happy shipmates then
+ Stand singing brotherly?
+ Or shall a haggard ruthless few
+ Warp her over and bring her to,
+ While the many broken souls of men
+ Fester down in the slaver's pen,
+ And nothing to say or do?
+
+
+
+
+GOOD FRIDAY NIGHT
+
+
+ At last the bird that sang so long
+ In twilight circles, hushed his song:
+ Above the ancient square
+ The stars came here and there.
+
+ Good Friday night! Some hearts were bowed,
+ But some amid the waiting crowd
+ Because of too much youth
+ Felt not that mystic ruth;
+
+ And of these hearts my heart was one:
+ Nor when beneath the arch of stone
+ With dirge and candle flame
+ The cross of passion came,
+
+ Did my glad spirit feel reproof,
+ Though on the awful tree aloof,
+ Unspiritual, dead,
+ Drooped the ensanguined Head.
+
+ To one who stood where myrtles made
+ A little space of deeper shade
+ (As I could half descry,
+ A stranger, even as I),
+
+ I said, "These youths who bear along
+ The symbols of their Saviour's wrong,
+ The spear, the garment torn,
+ The flaggel, and the thorn,--
+
+ "Why do they make this mummery?
+ Would not a brave man gladly die
+ For a much smaller thing
+ Than to be Christ and king?"
+
+ He answered nothing, and I turned.
+ Throned in its hundred candles burned
+ The jeweled eidolon
+ Of her who bore the Son.
+
+ The crowd was prostrate; still, I felt
+ No shame until the stranger knelt;
+ Then not to kneel, almost
+ Seemed like a vulgar boast.
+
+ I knelt. The doll-face, waxen white,
+ Flowered out a living dimness; bright
+ Dawned the dear mortal grace
+ Of my own mother's face.
+
+ When we were risen up, the street
+ Was vacant; all the air hung sweet
+ With lemon-flowers; and soon
+ The sky would hold the moon.
+
+ More silently than new-found friends
+ To whom much silence makes amends
+ For the much babble vain
+ While yet their lives were twain,
+
+ We walked along the odorous hill.
+ The light was little yet; his will
+ I could not see to trace
+ Upon his form or face.
+
+ So when aloft the gold moon broke,
+ I cried, heart-stung. As one who woke
+ He turned unto my cries
+ The anguish of his eyes.
+
+ "Friend! Master!" I cried falteringly,
+ "Thou seest the thing they make of thee.
+ Oh, by the light divine
+ My mother shares with thine,
+
+ "I beg that I may lay my head
+ Upon thy shoulder and be fed
+ With thoughts of brotherhood!"
+ So through the odorous wood,
+
+ More silently than friends new-found
+ We walked. At the first meadow bound
+ His figure ashen-stoled
+ Sank in the moon's broad gold.
+
+
+
+
+ROAD-HYMN FOR THE START
+
+
+ Leave the early bells at chime,
+ Leave the kindled hearth to blaze,
+ Leave the trellised panes where children linger out the waking-time,
+ Leave the forms of sons and fathers trudging through the misty ways,
+ Leave the sounds of mothers taking up their sweet laborious days.
+
+ Pass them by! even while our soul
+ Yearns to them with keen distress.
+ Unto them a part is given; we will strive to see the whole.
+ Dear shall be the banquet table where their singing spirits press;
+ Dearer be our sacred hunger, and our pilgrim loneliness.
+
+ We have felt the ancient swaying
+ Of the earth before the sun,
+ On the darkened marge of midnight heard sidereal rivers playing;
+ Rash it was to bathe our souls there, but we plunged and all was done.
+ That is lives and lives behind us--lo, our journey is begun!
+
+ Careless where our face is set,
+ Let us take the open way.
+ What we are no tongue has told us: Errand-goers who forget?
+ Soldiers heedless of their harry? Pilgrim people gone astray?
+ We have heard a voice cry "Wander!" That was all we heard it say.
+
+ Ask no more: 't is much, 't is much!
+ Down the road the day-star calls;
+ Touched with change in the wide heavens, like a leaf the frost winds
+ touch,
+ Flames the failing moon a moment, ere it shrivels white and falls;
+ Hid aloft, a wild throat holdeth sweet and sweeter intervals.
+
+ Leave him still to ease in song
+ Half his little heart's unrest:
+ Speech is his, but we may journey toward the life for which we long.
+ God, who gives the bird its anguish, maketh nothing manifest,
+ But upon our lifted foreheads pours the boon of endless quest.
+
+
+
+
+AN ODE IN TIME OF HESITATION
+
+
+(After seeing at Boston the statue of Robert Gould Shaw, killed while
+storming Fort Wagner, July 18, 1863, at the head of the first enlisted
+negro regiment, the 54th Massachusetts.)
+
+
+ I
+
+ Before the solemn bronze Saint Gaudens made
+ To thrill the heedless passer's heart with awe,
+ And set here in the city's talk and trade
+ To the good memory of Robert Shaw,
+ This bright March morn I stand,
+ And hear the distant spring come up the land;
+ Knowing that what I hear is not unheard
+ Of this boy soldier and his negro band,
+ For all their gaze is fixed so stern ahead,
+ For all the fatal rhythm of their tread.
+ The land they died to save from death and shame
+ Trembles and waits, hearing the spring's great name,
+ And by her pangs these resolute ghosts are stirred.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Through street and mall the tides of people go
+ Heedless; the trees upon the Common show
+ No hint of green; but to my listening heart
+ The still earth doth impart
+ Assurance of her jubilant emprise,
+ And it is clear to my long-searching eyes
+ That love at last has might upon the skies.
+ The ice is runneled on the little pond;
+ A telltale patter drips from off the trees;
+ The air is touched with southland spiceries,
+ As if but yesterday it tossed the frond
+ Of pendent mosses where the live-oaks grow
+ Beyond Virginia and the Carolines,
+ Or had its will among the fruits and vines
+ Of aromatic isles asleep beyond
+ Florida and the Gulf of Mexico.
+
+
+ III
+
+ Soon shall the Cape Ann children shout in glee,
+ Spying the arbutus, spring's dear recluse;
+ Hill lads at dawn shall hearken the wild goose
+ Go honking northward over Tennessee;
+ West from Oswego to Sault Sainte-Marie,
+ And on to where the Pictured Rocks are hung,
+ And yonder where, gigantic, willful, young,
+ Chicago sitteth at the northwest gates,
+ With restless violent hands and casual tongue
+ Moulding her mighty fates,
+ The Lakes shall robe them in ethereal sheen;
+ And like a larger sea, the vital green
+ Of springing wheat shall vastly be outflung
+ Over Dakota and the prairie states.
+ By desert people immemorial
+ On Arizonan mesas shall be done
+ Dim rites unto the thunder and the sun;
+ Nor shall the primal gods lack sacrifice
+ More splendid, when the white Sierras call
+ Unto the Rockies straightway to arise
+ And dance before the unveiled ark of the year,
+ Sounding their windy cedars as for shawms,
+ Unrolling rivers clear
+ For flutter of broad phylacteries;
+ While Shasta signals to Alaskan seas
+ That watch old sluggish glaciers downward creep
+ To fling their icebergs thundering from the steep,
+ And Mariposa through the purple calms
+ Gazes at far Hawaii crowned with palms
+ Where East and West are met,--
+ A rich seal on the ocean's bosom set
+ To say that East and West are twain,
+ With different loss and gain:
+ The Lord hath sundered them; let them be sundered yet.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ Alas! what sounds are these that come
+ Sullenly over the Pacific seas,--
+ Sounds of ignoble battle, striking dumb
+ The season's half-awakened ecstasies?
+ Must I be humble, then,
+ Now when my heart hath need of pride?
+ Wild love falls on me from these sculptured men;
+ By loving much the land for which they died
+ I would be justified.
+ My spirit was away on pinions wide
+ To soothe in praise of her its passionate mood
+ And ease it of its ache of gratitude.
+ Too sorely heavy is the debt they lay
+ On me and the companions of my day.
+ I would remember now
+ My country's goodliness, make sweet her name.
+ Alas! what shade art thou
+ Of sorrow or of blame
+ Liftest the lyric leafage from her brow,
+ And pointest a slow finger at her shame?
+
+
+ V
+
+ Lies! lies! It cannot be! The wars we wage
+ Are noble, and our battles still are won
+ By justice for us, ere we lift the gage,
+ We have not sold our loftiest heritage.
+ The proud republic hath not stooped to cheat
+ And scramble in the market-place of war;
+ Her forehead weareth yet its solemn star.
+ Here is her witness: this, her perfect son,
+ This delicate and proud New England soul
+ Who leads despised men, with just-unshackled feet,
+ Up the large ways where death and glory meet,
+ To show all peoples that our shame is done,
+ That once more we are clean and spirit-whole.
+
+
+ VI
+
+ Crouched in the sea fog on the moaning sand
+ All night he lay, speaking some simple word
+ From hour to hour to the slow minds that heard,
+ Holding each poor life gently in his hand
+ And breathing on the base rejected clay
+ Till each dark face shone mystical and grand
+ Against the breaking day;
+ And lo, the shard the potter cast away
+ Was grown a fiery chalice crystal-fine
+ Fulfilled of the divine
+ Great wine of battle wrath by God's ring-finger stirred.
+ Then upward, where the shadowy bastion loomed
+ Huge on the mountain in the wet sea light,
+ Whence now, and now, infernal flowerage bloomed,
+ Bloomed, burst, and scattered down its deadly seed,--
+ They swept, and died like freemen on the height,
+ Like freemen, and like men of noble breed;
+ And when the battle fell away at night
+ By hasty and contemptuous hands were thrust
+ Obscurely in a common grave with him
+ The fair-haired keeper of their love and trust.
+ Now limb doth mingle with dissolved limb
+ In nature's busy old democracy
+ To flush the mountain laurel when she blows
+ Sweet by the southern sea,
+ And heart with crumbled heart climbs in the rose:--
+ The untaught hearts with the high heart that knew
+ This mountain fortress for no earthly hold
+ Of temporal quarrel, but the bastion old
+ Of spiritual wrong,
+ Built by an unjust nation sheer and strong,
+ Expugnable but by a nation's rue
+ And bowing down before that equal shrine
+ By all men held divine,
+ Whereof his band and he were the most holy sign.
+
+
+ VII
+
+ O bitter, bitter shade!
+ Wilt thou not put the scorn
+ And instant tragic question from thine eyes?
+ Do thy dark brows yet crave
+ That swift and angry stave--
+ Unmeet for this desirous morn--
+ That I have striven, striven to evade?
+ Gazing on him, must I not deem they err
+ Whose careless lips in street and shop aver
+ As common tidings, deeds to make his cheek
+ Flush from the bronze, and his dead throat to speak?
+ Surely some elder singer would arise,
+ Whose harp hath leave to threaten and to mourn
+ Above this people when they go astray.
+ Is Whitman, the strong spirit, overworn?
+ Has Whittier put his yearning wrath away?
+ I will not and I dare not yet believe!
+ Though furtively the sunlight seems to grieve,
+ And the spring-laden breeze
+ Out of the gladdening west is sinister
+ With sounds of nameless battle overseas;
+ Though when we turn and question in suspense
+ If these things be indeed after these ways,
+ And what things are to follow after these,
+ Our fluent men of place and consequence
+ Fumble and fill their mouths with hollow phrase,
+ Or for the end-all of deep arguments
+ Intone their dull commercial liturgies--
+ I dare not yet believe! My ears are shut!
+ I will not hear the thin satiric praise
+ And muffled laughter of our enemies,
+ Bidding us never sheathe our valiant sword
+ Till we have changed our birthright for a gourd
+ Of wild pulse stolen from a barbarian's hut;
+ Showing how wise it is to cast away
+ The symbols of our spiritual sway,
+ That so our hands with better ease
+ May wield the driver's whip and grasp the jailer's keys.
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ Was it for this our fathers kept the law?
+ This crown shall crown their struggle and their ruth?
+ Are we the eagle nation Milton saw
+ Mewing its mighty youth,
+ Soon to possess the mountain winds of truth,
+ And be a swift familiar of the sun
+ Where aye before God's face his trumpets run?
+ Or have we but the talons and the maw,
+ And for the abject likeness of our heart
+ Shall some less lordly bird be set apart?--
+ Some gross-billed wader where the swamps are fat?
+ Some gorger in the sun? Some prowler with the bat?
+
+
+ IX
+
+ Ah no!
+ We have not fallen so.
+ We are our fathers' sons: let those who lead us know!
+ 'T was only yesterday sick Cuba's cry
+ Came up the tropic wind, "Now help us, for we die!"
+ Then Alabama heard,
+ And rising, pale, to Maine and Idaho
+ Shouted a burning word.
+ Proud state with proud impassioned state conferred,
+ And at the lifting of a hand sprang forth,
+ East, west, and south, and north,
+ Beautiful armies. Oh, by the sweet blood and young
+ Shed on the awful hill slope at San Juan,
+ By the unforgotten names of eager boys
+ Who might have tasted girls' love and been stung
+ With the old mystic joys
+ And starry griefs, now the spring nights come on,
+ But that the heart of youth is generous,--
+ We charge you, ye who lead us,
+ Breathe on their chivalry no hint of stain!
+ Turn not their new-world victories to gain!
+ One least leaf plucked for chaffer from the bays
+ Of their dear praise,
+ One jot of their pure conquest put to hire,
+ The implacable republic will require;
+ With clamor, in the glare and gaze of noon,
+ Or subtly, coming as a thief at night,
+ But surely, very surely, slow or soon
+ That insult deep we deeply will requite.
+ Tempt not our weakness, our cupidity!
+ For save we let the island men go free,
+ Those baffled and dislaureled ghosts
+ Will curse us from the lamentable coasts
+ Where walk the frustrate dead.
+ The cup of trembling shall be drained quite,
+ Eaten the sour bread of astonishment,
+ With ashes of the hearth shall be made white
+ Our hair, and wailing shall be in the tent;
+ Then on your guiltier head
+ Shall our intolerable self-disdain
+ Wreak suddenly its anger and its pain;
+ For manifest in that disastrous light
+ We shall discern the right
+ And do it, tardily.--O ye who lead,
+ Take heed!
+ Blindness we may forgive, but baseness we will smite.
+
+ 1900.
+
+
+
+
+THE QUARRY
+
+
+ Between the rice swamps and the fields of tea
+ I met a sacred elephant, snow-white.
+ Upon his back a huge pagoda towered
+ Full of brass gods and food of sacrifice.
+ Upon his forehead sat a golden throne,
+ The massy metal twisted into shapes
+ Grotesque, antediluvian, such as move
+ In myth or have their broken images
+ Sealed in the stony middle of the hills.
+ A peacock spread his thousand dyes to screen
+ The yellow sunlight from the head of one
+ Who sat upon the throne, clad stiff with gems,
+ Heirlooms of dynasties of buried kings,--
+ Himself the likeness of a buried king,
+ With frozen gesture and unfocused eyes.
+ The trappings of the beast were over-scrawled
+ With broideries--sea-shapes and flying things,
+ Fan-trees and dwarfed nodosities of pine,
+ Mixed with old alphabets, and faded lore
+ Fallen from ecstatic mouths before the Flood,
+ Or gathered by the daughters when they walked
+ Eastward in Eden with the Sons of God
+ Whom love and the deep moon made garrulous.
+ Between the carven tusks his trunk hung dead;
+ Blind as the eyes of pearl in Buddha's brow
+ His beaded eyes stared thwart upon the road;
+ And feebler than the doting knees of eld,
+ His joints, of size to swing the builder's crane
+ Across the war-walls of the Anakim,
+ Made vain and shaken haste. Good need was his
+ To hasten: panting, foaming, on the slot
+ Came many brutes of prey, their several hates
+ Laid by until the sharing of the spoil.
+ Just as they gathered stomach for the leap,
+ The sun was darkened, and wide-balanced wings
+ Beat downward on the trade-wind from the sea.
+ A wheel of shadow sped along the fields
+ And o'er the dreaming cities. Suddenly
+ My heart misgave me, and I cried aloud,
+ "Alas! What dost thou here? What dost _thou_ here?"
+ The great beasts and the little halted sharp,
+ Eyed the grand circler, doubting his intent.
+ Straightway the wind flawed and he came about,
+ Stooping to take the vanward of the pack;
+ Then turned, between the chasers and the chased,
+ Crying a word I could not understand,--
+ But stiller-tongued, with eyes somewhat askance,
+ They settled to the slot and disappeared.
+
+ 1900.
+
+
+
+
+ON A SOLDIER FALLEN IN THE PHILIPPINES
+
+
+ Streets of the roaring town,
+ Hush for him, hush, be still!
+ He comes, who was stricken down
+ Doing the word of our will.
+ Hush! Let him have his state,
+ Give him his soldier's crown.
+ The grists of trade can wait
+ Their grinding at the mill,
+ But he cannot wait for his honor, now the trumpet has been blown.
+ Wreathe pride now for his granite brow, lay love on his breast of
+ stone.
+
+ Toll! Let the great bells toll
+ Till the clashing air is dim.
+ Did we wrong this parted soul?
+ We will make it up to him.
+ Toll! Let him never guess
+ What work we set him to.
+ Laurel, laurel, yes;
+ He did what we bade him do.
+ Praise, and never a whispered hint but the fight he fought was good;
+ Never a word that the blood on his sword was his country's own
+ heart's-blood.
+
+ A flag for the soldier's bier
+ Who dies that his land may live;
+ O, banners, banners here,
+ That he doubt not nor misgive!
+ That he heed not from the tomb
+ The evil days draw near
+ When the nation, robed in gloom,
+ With its faithless past shall strive.
+ Let him never dream that his bullet's scream went wide of its island
+ mark,
+ Home to the heart of his darling land where she stumbled and sinned
+ in the dark.
+
+
+
+
+UNTIL THE TROUBLING OF THE WATERS
+
+
+ Two hours, two hours: God give me strength for it!
+ He who has given so much strength to me
+ And nothing to my child, must give to-day
+ What more I need to try and save my child
+ And get for him the life I owe to him.
+ To think that I may get it for him now,
+ Before he knows how much he might have missed
+ That other boys have got! The bitterest thought
+ Of all that plagued me when he came was this,
+ How some day he would see the difference,
+ And drag himself to me with puzzled eyes
+ To ask me why it was. He would have been
+ Cruel enough to do it, knowing not
+ That was the question my rebellious heart
+ Cried over and over one whole year to God,
+ And got no answer and no help at all.
+ If he had asked me, what could I have said?
+ What single word could I have found to say
+ To hide me from his searching, puzzled gaze?
+ Some coward thing at best, never the truth;
+ The truth I never could have told him. No,
+ I never could have said, "God gave you me
+ To fashion you a body, right and strong,
+ With sturdy little limbs and chest and neck
+ For fun and fighting with your little mates,
+ Great feats and voyages in the breathless world
+ Of out-of-doors,--He gave you me for this,
+ And I was such a bungler, that is all!"
+ O, the old lie--that thought was not the worst.
+ I never have been truthful with myself.
+ For by the door where lurked one ghostly thought
+ I stood with crazy hands to thrust it back
+ If it should dare to peep and whisper out
+ Unbearable things about me, hearing which
+ The women passing in the streets would turn
+ To pity me and scold me with their eyes,
+ Who was so bad a mother and so slow
+ To learn to help God do his wonder in her
+ That she--O my sweet baby! It was not
+ The fear that you would see the difference
+ Between you and the other boys and girls;
+ No, no, it was the dimmer, wilder fear,
+ That you might never see it, never look
+ Out of your tiny baby-house of mind,
+ But sit your life through, quiet in the dark,
+ Smiling and nodding at what was not there!
+ A foolish fear: God could not punish so.
+ Yet until yesterday I thought He would.
+ My soul was always cowering at the blow
+ I saw suspended, ready to be dealt
+ The moment that I showed my fear too much.
+ Therefore I hid it from Him all I could,
+ And only stole a shaking glance at it
+ Sometimes in the dead minutes before dawn
+ When He forgets to watch. Till yesterday.
+ For yesterday was wonderful and strange
+ From the beginning. When I wakened first
+ And looked out at the window, the last snow
+ Was gone from earth; about the apple-trees
+ Hung a faint mist of bloom; small sudden green
+ Had run and spread and rippled everywhere
+ Over the fields; and in the level sun
+ Walked something like a presence and a power,
+ Uttering hopes and loving-kindnesses
+ To all the world, but chiefly unto me.
+ It walked before me when I went to work,
+ And all day long the noises of the mill
+ Were spun upon a core of golden sound,
+ Half-spoken words and interrupted songs
+ Of blessed promise, meant for all the world,
+ But most for me, because I suffered most.
+ The shooting spindles, the smooth-humming wheels,
+ The rocking webs, seemed toiling to some end
+ Beneficent and human known to them,
+ And duly brought to pass in power and love.
+ The faces of the girls and men at work
+ Met mine with intense greeting, veiled at once,
+ As if they knew a secret they must keep
+ For fear the joy would harm me if they told
+ Before some inkling filtered to my mind
+ In roundabout ways. When the day's work was done
+ There lay a special silence on the fields;
+ And, as I passed, the bushes and the trees,
+ The very ruts and puddles of the road
+ Spoke to each other, saying it was she,
+ The happy woman, the elected one,
+ The vessel of strange mercy and the sign
+ Of many loving wonders done in Heaven
+ To help the piteous earth.
+
+ At last I stopped
+ And looked about me in sheer wonderment.
+ What did it mean? What did they want with me?
+ What was the matter with the evening now
+ That it was just as bound to make me glad
+ As morning and the live-long day had been?
+ Me, who had quite forgot what gladness was,
+ Who had no right to anything but toil,
+ And food and sleep for strength to toil again,
+ And that fierce frightened anguish of my love
+ For the poor little spirit I had wronged
+ With life that was no life. What had befallen
+ Since yesterday? No need to stop and ask!
+ Back there in the dark places of my mind
+ Where I had thrust it, fearing to believe
+ An unbelievable mercy, shone the news
+ Told by the village neighbors coming home
+ Last night from the great city, of a man
+ Arisen, like the first evangelists,
+ With power to heal the bodies of the sick,
+ In testimony of his master Christ,
+ Who heals the soul when it is sick with sin.
+ Could such a thing be true in these hard days?
+ Was help still sent in such a way as that?
+ No, no! I did not dare to think of it,
+ Feeling what weakness and despair would come
+ After the crazy hope broke under me.
+ I turned and started homeward, faster now,
+ But never fast enough to leave behind
+ The voices and the troubled happiness
+ That still kept mounting, mounting like a sea,
+ And singing far-off like a rush of wings.
+ Far down the road a yellow spot of light
+ Shone from my cottage window, rayless yet,
+ Where the last sunset crimson caught the panes.
+ Alice had lit the lamp before she went;
+ Her day of pity and unmirthful play
+ Was over, and her young heart free to live
+ Until to-morrow brought her nursing-task
+ Again, and made her feel how dark and still
+ That life could be to others which to her
+ Was full of dreams that beckoned, reaching hands,
+ And thrilling invitations young girls hear.
+ My boy was sleeping, little mind and frame
+ More tired just lying there awake two hours
+ Than with a whole day's romp he should have been.
+ He would not know his mother had come home;
+ But after supper I would sit awhile
+ Beside his bed, and let my heart have time
+ For that worst love that stabs and breaks and kills.
+ This I thought over to myself by rote
+ And habit, but I could not feel my thoughts;
+ For still that dim unmeaning happiness
+ Kept mounting, mounting round me like a sea,
+ And singing inward like a wind of wings.
+
+ Before I lifted up the latch, I knew.
+ I felt no fear; the One who waited there
+ In the low lamplight by the bed, had come
+ Because I was his sister and in need.
+ My word had got to Him somehow at last,
+ And He had come to help me or to tell
+ Where help was to be found. It was not strange.
+ Strange only He had stayed away so long;
+ But that should be forgotten--He was here.
+ I pushed the door wide open and looked in.
+ He had been kneeling by the bed, and now,
+ Half-risen, kissed my boy upon the lips,
+ Then turned and smiled and pointed with his hand.
+ I must have fallen on the threshold stone,
+ For I remember that I felt, not saw,
+ The resurrection glory and the peace
+ Shed from his face and raiment as He went
+ Out by the door into the evening street.
+ But when I looked, the place about the bed
+ Was yet all bathed in light, and in the midst
+ My boy lay changed,--no longer clothed upon
+ With scraps and shreds of life, but like the child
+ Of some most fortunate mother. In a breath
+ The image faded. There he lay again
+ The same as always; and the light was gone.
+ I sank with moans and cries beside the bed.
+ The cruelty, O Christ, the cruelty!
+ To come at last and then to go like that,
+ Leaving the darkness deeper than before!
+ Then, though I heard no sound, I grew aware
+ Of some one standing by the open door
+ Among the dry vines rustling in the porch.
+ My heart laughed suddenly. He had come back!
+ He had come back to make the vision true.
+ He had not meant to mock me: God was God,
+ And Christ was Christ; there was no falsehood there.
+ I heard a quiet footstep cross the room
+ And felt a hand laid gently on my hair,--
+ A human hand, worn hard by daily toil,
+ Heavy with life-long struggle after bread.
+ Alice's father. The kind homely voice
+ Had in it such strange music that I dreamed
+ Perhaps it was the Other speaking in him,
+ Because His own bright form had made me swoon
+ With its too much of glory. What he brought
+ Was news as good as ever heavenly lips
+ Had the dear right to utter. He had been
+ All day among the crowds of curious folk
+ From the great city and the country-side
+ Gathered to watch the Healer do his work
+ Of mercy on the sick and halt and blind,
+ And with his very eyes had seen such things
+ As awestruck men had witnessed long ago
+ In Galilee, and writ of in the Book.
+ To-morrow morning he would take me there
+ If I had strength and courage to believe.
+ It might be there was hope; he could not say,
+ But knew what he had seen. When he was gone
+ I lay for hours, letting the solemn waves
+ Thundering joy go over and over me.
+
+ Just before midnight baby fretted, woke;
+ He never yet has slept a whole night through
+ Without his food and petting. As I sat
+ Feeding and petting him and singing soft,
+ I felt a jealousy begin to ache
+ And worry at my heartstrings, hushing down
+ The gladness. Jealousy of what or whom?
+ I hardly knew, or could not put in words;
+ At least it seemed too foolish and too wrong
+ When said, and so I shut the thought away.
+ Only, next minute, it came stealing back.
+ After the change, would my boy be the same
+ As this one? Would he be my boy at all,
+ And not another's--his who gave the life
+ I could not give, or did not anyhow?
+ How could I look in his new eyes to claim
+ The whole of him, the body and the breath,
+ When some one not his mother, a strange man,
+ Had clothed him in that beauty of the flesh--
+ Perhaps (for who could know?), perhaps, by some
+ Hateful disfiguring miracle, had even
+ Transformed his spirit to a better one,
+ Better, but not the same I prayed for him
+ Down out of Heaven through the sleepless nights,--
+ The best that God would send to such as me.
+ I tried to strangle back the wicked pain;
+ Fancied him changed and tried to love him so.
+ No use; it was another, not my child,
+ Not my frail, broken, priceless little one,
+ My cup of anguish, and my trembling star
+ Hung small and sad and sweet above the earth,
+ So sure to fall but for my cherishing!
+
+ When he had dropped asleep again, I rose
+ And wrestled with the sinful selfishness,
+ The dark injustice, the unnatural pain.
+ Fevered at last with pacing to and fro,
+ I raised the bedroom window and leaned out.
+ The white moon, low behind the sycamores,
+ Silvered the silent country; not a voice
+ Of all the myriads summer moves to sing
+ Had yet awakened; in the level moon
+ Walked that same presence I had heard at dawn
+ Uttering hopes and loving-kindnesses,
+ But now, dispirited and reticent,
+ It walked the moonlight like a homeless thing.
+ O, how to cleanse me of the cowardice!
+ How to be just! Was I a mother, then,
+ A mother, and not love her child as well
+ As her own covetous and morbid love?
+ Was it for this the Comforter had come,
+ Smiling at me and pointing with His hand?
+ --What had He meant to have me think or do,
+ Smiling and pointing?
+
+ All at once I saw
+ A way to save my darling from myself
+ And make atonement for my grudging love!
+ Under the sycamores and up the hill
+ And down across the river, the wet road
+ Went stretching cityward, silvered in the moon.
+ I who had shrunk from sacrifice, even I,
+ Who had refused God's blessing for my boy,
+ Would take him in my arms and carry him
+ Up to the altar of the miracle.
+ I would not wait for daylight, nor the help
+ Of any human friendship; I alone,
+ Through the still miles of country, I alone,
+ Only my arms to shield him and my feet
+ To bear him: he should have no one to thank
+ But me for that. I knew the way was long,
+ But knew strength would be given. So I came.
+ Soon the stars failed; the late moon faded too:
+ I think my heart had sucked their beams from them
+ To build more blue amid the murky night
+ Its own miraculous day. From creeks and fields
+ The fog climbed slowly, blotted out the road;
+ And hid the signposts telling of the town;
+ After a while rain fell, with sleet and snow.
+ What did I care? Baby was snug and dry.
+ Some day, when I was telling him of this,
+ He would but hug me closer, hearing how
+ The night conspired against us. Better hard
+ Than easy, then: I almost felt regret
+ My body was so capable and strong
+ To do its errand. Honeyed drop by drop,
+ The ghostly jealousy, loosening at my breast,
+ Distilled into a dew of quiet tears
+ And fell with splash of music in the wells
+ And on the hidden rivers of my soul.
+
+ The hardest part was coming through the town.
+ The country, even when it hindered most,
+ Seemed conscious of the thing I went to find.
+ The rocks and bushes looming through the mist
+ Questioned and acquiesced and understood;
+ The trees and streams believed; the wind and rain,
+ Even they, for all their temper, had some words
+ Of faith and comfort. But the glaring streets,
+ The dizzy traffic, the piled merchandise,
+ The giant buildings swarming with fierce life--
+ Cared nothing for me. They had never heard
+ Of me nor of my business. When I asked
+ My way, a shade of pity or contempt
+ Showed through men's kindness--for they all were kind.
+ Daunted and chilled and very sick at heart,
+ I walked the endless pavements. But at last
+ The streets grew quieter; the houses seemed
+ As if they might be homes where people lived;
+ Then came the factories and cottages,
+ And all was well again. Much more than well,
+ For many sick and broken went my way,
+ Alone or helped along by loving hands;
+ And from a thousand eyes the famished hope
+ Looked out at mine--wild, patient, querulous,
+ But always hope and hope, a thousand tongues
+ Speaking one word in many languages.
+
+ In two hours He will come, they say, will stand
+ There on the steps, above the waiting crowd,
+ And touch with healing hands whoever asks
+ Believingly, in spirit and in truth.
+ Can such a mercy be, in these hard days?
+ Is help still sent in such a way as that?
+ Christ, I believe; pity my unbelief!
+
+
+
+
+JETSAM
+
+
+ I wonder can this be the world it was
+ At sunset? I remember the sky fell
+ Green as pale meadows, at the long street-ends,
+ But overhead the smoke-wrack hugged the roofs
+ As if to shut the city from God's eyes
+ Till dawn should quench the laughter and the lights.
+ Beneath the gas flare stolid faces passed,
+ Too dull for sin; old loosened lips set hard
+ To drain the stale lees from the cup of sense;
+ Or if a young face yearned from out the mist
+ Made by its own bright hair, the eyes were wan
+ With desolate fore-knowledge of the end.
+ My life lay waste about me: as I walked,
+ From the gross dark of unfrequented streets
+ The face of my own youth peered forth at me,
+ Struck white with pity at the thing I was;
+ And globed in ghostly fire, thrice-virginal,
+ With lifted face star-strong, went one who sang
+ Lost verses from my youth's gold canticle.
+ Out of the void dark came my face and hers
+ One vivid moment--then the street was there;
+ Bloat shapes and mean eyes blotted the sear dusk;
+ And in the curtained window of a house
+ Whence sin reeked on the night, a shameful head
+ Was silhouetted black as Satan's face
+ Against eternal fires. I stumbled on
+ Down the dark slope that reaches riverward,
+ Stretching blind hands to find the throat of God
+ And crush Him in his lies. The river lay
+ Coiled in its factory filth and few lean trees.
+ All was too hateful--I could not die there!
+ I whom the Spring had strained unto her breast,
+ Whose lips had felt the wet vague lips of dawn.
+ So under the thin willows' leprous shade
+ And through the tangled ranks of riverweed
+ I pushed--till lo, God heard me! I came forth
+ Where, 'neath the shoreless hush of region light,
+ Through a new world, undreamed of, undesired,
+ Beyond imagining of man's weary heart,
+ Far to the white marge of the wondering sea
+ This still plain widens, and this moon rains down
+ Insufferable ecstasy of peace.
+
+ My heart is man's heart, strong to bear this night's
+ Unspeakable affliction of mute love
+ That crazes lesser things. The rocks and clods
+ Dissemble, feign a busy intercourse;
+ The bushes deal in shadowy subterfuge,
+ Lurk dull, dart spiteful out, make heartless signs,
+ Utter awestricken purpose of no sense,--
+ But I walk quiet, crush aside the hands
+ Stretched furtively to drag me madmen's ways.
+ I know the thing they suffer, and the tricks
+ They must be at to help themselves endure.
+ I would not be too boastful; I am weak,
+ Too weak to put aside the utter ache
+ Of this lone splendor long enough to see
+ Whether the moon is still her white strange self
+ Or something whiter, stranger, even the face
+ Which by the changed face of my risen youth
+ Sang, globed in fire, her golden canticle.
+ I dare not look again; another gaze
+ Might drive me to the wavering coppice there,
+ Where bat-winged madness brushed me, the wild laugh
+ Of naked nature crashed across my blood.
+ So rank it was with earthy presences,
+ Faun-shapes in goatish dance, young witches' eyes
+ Slanting deep invitation, whinnying calls
+ Ambiguous, shocks and whirlwinds of wild mirth,--
+ They had undone me in the darkness there,
+ But that within me, smiting through my lids
+ Lowered to shut in the thick whirl of sense,
+ The dumb light ached and rummaged, and with out,
+ The soaring splendor summoned me aloud
+ To leave the low dank thickets of the flesh
+ Where man meets beast and makes his lair with him,
+ For spirit reaches of the strenuous vast,
+ Where stalwart stars reap grain to make the bread
+ God breaketh at his tables and is glad.
+ I came out in the moonlight cleansed and strong,
+ And gazed up at the lyric face to see
+ All sweetness tasted of in earthen cups
+ Ere it be dashed and spilled, all radiance flung
+ Beyond experience, every benison dream,
+ Treasured and mystically crescent there.
+
+ O, who will shield me from her? Who will place
+ A veil between me and the fierce in-throng
+ Of her inexorable benedicite?
+ See, I have loved her well and been with her!
+ Through tragic twilights when the stricken sea
+ Groveled with fear, or when she made her throne
+ In imminent cities built of gorgeous winds
+ And paved with lightnings; or when the sobering stars
+ Would lead her home 'mid wealth of plundered May
+ Along the violet slopes of evensong.
+ Of all the sights that starred the dreamy year,
+ For me one sight stood peerless and apart:
+ Bright rivers tacit; low hills prone and dumb;
+ Forests that hushed their tiniest voice to hear;
+ Skies for the unutterable advent robed
+ In purple like the opening iris buds;
+ And by some lone expectant pool, one tree
+ Whose gray boughs shivered with excess of awe,--
+ As with preluding gush of amber light,
+ And herald trumpets softly lifted through,
+ Across the palpitant horizon marge
+ Crocus-filleted came the singing moon.
+ Out of her changing lights I wove my youth
+ A place to dwell in, sweet and spiritual,
+ And all the bitter years of my exile
+ My heart has called afar off unto her.
+ Lo, after many days love finds its own!
+ The futile adorations, the waste tears,
+ The hymns that fluttered low in the false dawn,
+ She has uptreasured as a lover's gifts;
+ They are the mystic garment that she wears
+ Against the bridal, and the crocus flowers
+ She twined her brow with at the going forth;
+ They are the burden of the song she made
+ In coming through the quiet fields of space,
+ And breathe between her passion-parted lips
+ Calling me out along the flowering road
+ Which summers through the dimness of the sea.
+
+ Hark, where the deep feels round its thousand shores
+ To find remembered respite, and far drawn
+ Through weed-strewn shelves and crannies of the coast
+ The myriad silence yearns to myriad speech.
+ O sea that yearns a day, shall thy tongues be
+ So eloquent, and heart, shall all thy tongues
+ Be dumb to speak thy longing? Say I hold
+ Life as a broken jewel in my hand,
+ And fain would buy a little love with it
+ For comfort, say I fain would make it shine
+ Once in remembering eyes ere it be dust,--
+ Were life not worthy spent? Then what of this,
+ When all my spirit hungers to repay
+ The beauty that has drenched my soul with peace?
+ Once at a simple turning of the way
+ I met God walking; and although the dawn
+ Was large behind Him, and the morning stars
+ Circled and sang about his face as birds
+ About the fieldward morning cottager,
+ My coward heart said faintly, "Let us haste!
+ Day grows and it is far to market-town."
+ Once where I lay in darkness after fight,
+ Sore smitten, thrilled a little thread of song
+ Searching and searching at my muffled sense
+ Until it shook sweet pangs through all my blood,
+ And I beheld one globed in ghostly fire
+ Singing, star-strong, her golden canticle;
+ And her mouth sang, "The hosts of Hate roll past,
+ A dance of dust motes in the sliding sun;
+ Love's battle comes on the wide wings of storm,
+ From east to west one legion! Wilt thou strive?"
+ Then, since the splendor of her sword-bright gaze
+ Was heavy on me with yearning and with scorn
+ My sick heart muttered, "Yea, the little strife,
+ Yet see, the grievous wounds! I fain would sleep."
+ O heart, shalt thou not once be strong to go
+ Where all sweet throats are calling, once be brave
+ To slake with deed thy dumbness? Let us go
+ The path her singing face looms low to point,
+ Pendulous, blanched with longing, shedding flame
+ Of silver on the brown grope of the flood;
+ For all my spirit's soilure is put by
+ And all my body's soilure, lacking now
+ But the last lustral sacrament of death
+ To make me clean for those near-searching eyes
+ That question yonder whether all be well,
+ And pause a little ere they dare rejoice.
+
+ Question and be thou answered, passionate face!
+ For I am worthy, worthy now at last
+ After so long unworth; strong now at last
+ To give myself to beauty and be saved;
+ Now, being man, to give myself to thee,
+ As once the tumult of my boyish heart
+ Companioned thee with rapture through the world,
+ Forth from a land whereof no poet's lip
+ Made mention how the leas were lily-sprent,
+ Into a land God's eyes had looked not on
+ To love the tender bloom upon the hills.
+ To-morrow, when the fishers come at dawn
+ Upon that shell of me the sea has tossed
+ To land, as fit for earth to use again,
+ Men, meeting at the shops and corner streets,
+ Will speak a word of pity, glossing o'er
+ With altered accent, dubious sweep of hand,
+ Their virile, just contempt for one who failed.
+ But they can never cast my earnings up,
+ Who know so well my losses. Even you
+ Who in the mild light of the spirit walk
+ And hold yourselves acquainted with the truth,
+ Be not too swift to judge and cast me out!
+ You shall find other, nobler ways than mine
+ To work your soul's redemption,--glorious noons
+ Of battle 'neath the heaven-suspended sign,
+ And nightly refuge 'neath God's aegis-rim;
+ Increase of wisdom, and acquaintance held
+ With the heart's austerities; still governance,
+ And ripening of the blood in the weekday sun
+ To make the full-orbed consecrated fruit
+ At life's end for the Sabbath supper meet.
+ I shall not sit beside you at that feast,
+ For ere a seedling of my golden tree
+ Pushed off its petals to get room to grow,
+ I stripped the boughs to make an April gaud
+ And wreathe a spendthrift garland for my hair.
+ But mine is not the failure God deplores;
+ For I of old am beauty's votarist,
+ Long recreant, often foiled and led astray,
+ But resolute at last to seek her there
+ Where most she does abide, and crave with tears
+ That she assoil me of my blemishment.
+ Low looms her singing face to point the way,
+ Pendulous, blanched with longing, shedding flame
+ Of silver on the brown grope of the flood.
+ The stars are for me; the horizon wakes
+ Its pilgrim chanting; and the little sand
+ Grows musical of hope beneath my feet.
+ The waves that leap to meet my swimming breast
+ Gossip sweet secrets of the light-drenched way,
+ And when the deep throbs of the rising surge
+ Pulse upward with me, and a rain of wings
+ Blurs round the moon's pale place, she stoops to reach
+ Still welcome of bright hands across the wave,
+ And sings low, low, globed all in ghostly fire,
+ Lost verses from my youth's gold canticle.
+
+
+
+
+THE BRUTE
+
+
+ Through his might men work their wills.
+ They have boweled out the hills
+ For food to keep him toiling in the cages they have wrought;
+ And they fling him, hour by hour,
+ Limbs of men to give him power;
+ Brains of men to give him cunning; and for dainties to devour
+ Children's souls, the little worth; hearts of women, cheaply bought:
+ He takes them and he breaks them, but he gives them scanty thought.
+
+ For about the noisy land,
+ Roaring, quivering 'neath his hand,
+ His thoughts brood fierce and sullen or laugh in lust of pride
+ O'er the stubborn things that he,
+ Breaks to dust and brings to be.
+ Some he mightily establishes, some flings down utterly.
+ There is thunder in his stride, nothing ancient can abide,
+ When he hales the hills together and bridles up the tide.
+
+ Quietude and loveliness,
+ Holy sights that heal and bless,
+ They are scattered and abolished where his iron hoof is set;
+ When he splashes through the brae
+ Silver streams are choked with clay,
+ When he snorts the bright cliffs crumble and the woods go down like
+ hay;
+ He lairs in pleasant cities, and the haggard people fret
+ Squalid 'mid their new-got riches, soot-begrimed and desolate.
+
+ They who caught and bound him tight
+ Laughed exultant at his might,
+ Saying, "Now behold, the good time comes for the weariest and the
+ least!
+ We will use this lusty knave:
+ No more need for men to slave;
+ We may rise and look about us and have knowledge ere the grave."
+ But the Brute said in his breast, "Till the mills I grind have ceased,
+ The riches shall be dust of dust, dry ashes be the feast!
+
+ "On the strong and cunning few
+ Cynic favors I will strew;
+ I will stuff their maw with overplus until their spirit dies;
+ From the patient and the low
+ I will take the joys they know;
+ They shall hunger after vanities and still an-hungered go.
+ Madness shall be on the people, ghastly jealousies arise;
+ Brother's blood shall cry on brother up the dead and empty skies.
+
+ "I will burn and dig and hack
+ Till the heavens suffer lack;
+ God shall feel a pleasure fail him, crying to his cherubim,
+ 'Who hath flung yon mud-ball there
+ Where my world went green and fair?'
+ I shall laugh and hug me, hearing how his sentinels declare,
+ ''T is the Brute they chained to labor! He has made the bright earth
+ dim.
+ Store of wares and pelf a plenty, but they got no good of him.'"
+
+ So he plotted in his rage:
+ So he deals it, age by age.
+ But even as he roared his curse a still small Voice befell;
+ Lo, a still and pleasant voice bade them none the less rejoice,
+ For the Brute must bring the good time on; he has no other choice.
+ He may struggle, sweat, and yell, but he knows exceeding well
+ He must work them out salvation ere they send him back to hell.
+
+ All the desert that he made
+ He must treble bless with shade,
+ In primal wastes set precious seed of rapture and of pain;
+ All the strongholds that he built
+ For the powers of greed and guilt--
+ He must strew their bastions down the sea and choke their towers with
+ silt;
+ He must make the temples clean for the gods to come again,
+ And lift the lordly cities under skies without a stain.
+
+ In a very cunning tether
+ He must lead the tyrant weather;
+ He must loose the curse of Adam from the worn neck of the race;
+ He must cast out hate and fear,
+ Dry away each fruitless tear,
+ And make the fruitful tears to gush from the deep heart and clear.
+ He must give each man his portion, each his pride and worthy place;
+ He must batter down the arrogant and lift the weary face,
+ On each vile mouth set purity, on each low forehead grace.
+
+ Then, perhaps, at the last day,
+ They will whistle him away,
+ Lay a hand upon his muzzle in the face of God, and say,
+ "Honor, Lord, the Thing we tamed!
+ Let him not be scourged or blamed.
+ Even through his wrath and fierceness was thy fierce wroth world
+ reclaimed!
+ Honor Thou thy servants' servant; let thy justice now be shown."
+ Then the Lord will heed their saying, and the Brute come to his own,
+ 'Twixt the Lion and the Eagle, by the armpost of the Throne.
+
+
+
+
+THE MENAGERIE
+
+
+ Thank God my brain is not inclined to cut
+ Such capers every day! I 'm just about
+ Mellow, but then--There goes the tent-flap shut.
+ Rain 's in the wind. I thought so: every snout
+ Was twitching when the keeper turned me out.
+
+ That screaming parrot makes my blood run cold.
+ Gabriel's trump! the big bull elephant
+ Squeals "Rain!" to the parched herd. The monkeys scold,
+ And jabber that it 's rain water they want.
+ (It makes me sick to see a monkey pant.)
+
+ I 'll foot it home, to try and make believe
+ I 'm sober. After this I stick to beer,
+ And drop the circus when the sane folks leave.
+ A man 's a fool to look at things too near:
+ They look back, and begin to cut up queer.
+
+ Beasts do, at any rate; especially
+ Wild devils caged. They have the coolest way
+ Of being something else than what you see:
+ You pass a sleek young zebra nosing hay,
+ A nylghau looking bored and distingue,--
+
+ And think you 've seen a donkey and a bird.
+ Not on your life! Just glance back, if you dare.
+ The zebra chews, the nylghau has n't stirred;
+ But something 's happened, Heaven knows what or where,
+ To freeze your scalp and pompadour your hair.
+
+ I 'm not precisely an aeolian lute
+ Hung in the wandering winds of sentiment,
+ But drown me if the ugliest, meanest brute
+ Grunting and fretting in that sultry tent
+ Did n't just floor me with embarrassment!
+
+ 'T was like a thunder-clap from out the clear,
+ One minute they were circus beasts, some grand,
+ Some ugly, some amusing, and some queer:
+ Rival attractions to the hobo band,
+ The flying jenny, and the peanut stand.
+
+ Next minute they were old hearth-mates of mine!
+ Lost people, eyeing me with such a stare!
+ Patient, satiric, devilish, divine;
+ A gaze of hopeless envy, squalid care,
+ Hatred, and thwarted love, and dim despair.
+
+ Within my blood my ancient kindred spoke,--
+ Grotesque and monstrous voices, heard afar
+ Down ocean caves when behemoth awoke,
+ Or through fern forests roared the plesiosaur
+ Locked with the giant-bat in ghastly war.
+
+ And suddenly, as in a flash of light,
+ I saw great Nature working out her plan;
+ Through all her shapes from mastodon to mite
+ Forever groping, testing, passing on
+ To find at last the shape and soul of Man.
+
+ Till in the fullness of accomplished time,
+ Comes brother Forepaugh, upon business bent,
+ Tracks her through frozen and through torrid clime,
+ And shows us, neatly labeled in a tent,
+ The stages of her huge experiment;
+
+ Blabbing aloud her shy and reticent hours;
+ Dragging to light her blinking, slothful moods;
+ Publishing fretful seasons when her powers
+ Worked wild and sullen in her solitudes,
+ Or when her mordant laughter shook the woods.
+
+ Here, round about me, were her vagrant births;
+ Sick dreams she had, fierce projects she essayed;
+ Her qualms, her fiery prides, her crazy mirths;
+ The troublings of her spirit as she strayed,
+ Cringed, gloated, mocked, was lordly, was afraid,
+
+ On that long road she went to seek mankind;
+ Here were the darkling coverts that she beat
+ To find the Hider she was sent to find;
+ Here the distracted footprints of her feet
+ Whereby her soul's Desire she came to greet.
+
+ But why should they, her botch-work, turn about
+ And stare disdain at me, her finished job?
+ Why was the place one vast suspended shout
+ Of laughter? Why did all the daylight throb
+ With soundless guffaw and dumb-stricken sob?
+
+ Helpless I stood among those awful cages;
+ The beasts were walking loose, and I was bagged!
+ I, I, last product of the toiling ages,
+ Goal of heroic feet that never lagged,--
+ A little man in trousers, slightly jagged.
+
+ Deliver me from such another jury!
+ The Judgment-day will be a picnic to 't.
+ Their satire was more dreadful than their fury,
+ And worst of all was just a kind of brute
+ Disgust, and giving up, and sinking mute.
+
+ Survival of the fittest, adaptation,
+ And all their other evolution terms,
+ Seem to omit one small consideration,
+ To wit, that tumblebugs and angleworms
+ Have souls: there 's soul in everything that squirms.
+
+ And souls are restless, plagued, impatient things,
+ All dream and unaccountable desire;
+ Crawling, but pestered with the thought of wings;
+ Spreading through every inch of earth's old mire
+ Mystical hanker after something higher.
+
+ Wishes _are_ horses, as I understand.
+ I guess a wistful polyp that has strokes
+ Of feeling faint to gallivant on land
+ Will come to be a scandal to his folks;
+ Legs he will sprout, in spite of threats and jokes.
+
+ And at the core of every life that crawls
+ Or runs or flies or swims or vegetates--
+ Churning the mammoth's heart-blood, in the galls
+ Of shark and tiger planting gorgeous hates,
+ Lighting the love of eagles for their mates;
+
+ Yes, in the dim brain of the jellied fish
+ That is and is not living--moved and stirred
+ From the beginning a mysterious wish,
+ A vision, a command, a fatal Word:
+ The name of Man was uttered, and they heard.
+
+ Upward along the aeons of old war
+ They sought him: wing and shank-bone, claw and bill
+ Were fashioned and rejected; wide and far
+ They roamed the twilight jungles of their will;
+ But still they sought him, and desired him still.
+
+ Man they desired, but mind you, Perfect Man,
+ The radiant and the loving, yet to be!
+ I hardly wonder, when they came to scan
+ The upshot of their strenuosity,
+ They gazed with mixed emotions upon _me_.
+
+ Well, my advice to you is, Face the creatures,
+ Or spot them sideways with your weather eye,
+ Just to keep tab on their expansive features;
+ It is n't pleasant when you 're stepping high
+ To catch a giraffe smiling on the sly.
+
+ If nature made you graceful, don't get gay
+ Back-to before the hippopotamus;
+ If meek and godly, find some place to play
+ Besides right where three mad hyenas fuss:
+ You may hear language that we won't discuss.
+
+ If you 're a sweet thing in a flower-bed hat,
+ Or her best fellow with your tie tucked in,
+ Don't squander love's bright springtime girding at
+ An old chimpanzee with an Irish chin:
+ _There may be hidden meaning in his grin._
+
+
+
+
+THE GOLDEN JOURNEY
+
+
+ All day he drowses by the sail
+ With dreams of her, and all night long
+ The broken waters are at song
+ Of how she lingers, wild and pale,
+ When all the temple lights are dumb,
+ And weaves her spells to make him come.
+
+ The wide sea traversed, he will stand
+ With straining eyes, until the shoal
+ Green water from the prow shall roll
+ Upon the yellow strip of sand--
+ Searching some fern-hid tangled way
+ Into the forest old and grey.
+
+ Then he will leap upon the shore,
+ And cast one look up at the sun,
+ Over his loosened locks will run
+ The dawn breeze, and a bird will pour
+ Its rapture out to make life seem
+ Too sweet to leave for such a dream.
+
+ But all the swifter will he go
+ Through the pale, scattered asphodels,
+ Down mote-hung dusk of olive dells,
+ To where the ancient basins throw
+ Fleet threads of blue and trembling zones
+ Of gold upon the temple stones.
+
+ There noon keeps just a twilight trace;
+ Twixt love and hate, and death and birth,
+ No man may choose; nor sobs nor mirth
+ May enter in that haunted place.
+ All day the fountain sphynx lets drip
+ Slow drops of silence from her lip.
+
+ To hold the porch-roof slender girls
+ Of milk-white marble stand arow;
+ Doubt never blurs a single brow,
+ And never the noon's faintness curls
+ From their expectant hush of pride
+ The lips the god has glorified.
+
+ But these things he will barely view,
+ Or if he stay to heed them, still
+ But as the lark the lights that spill
+ From out the sun it soars unto,
+ Where, past the splendors and the heats,
+ The sun's heart's self forever beats.
+
+ For wide the brazen doors will swing
+ Soon as his sandals touch the pave;
+ The anxious light inside will wave
+ And tremble to a lunar ring
+ About the form that lieth prone
+ Before the dreadful altar-stone.
+
+ She will not look or speak or stir,
+ But with drowned lips and cheeks death-white
+ Will lie amid the pool of light,
+ Until, grown faint with thirst of her,
+ He shall bow down his face and sink
+ Breathless beneath the eddying brink.
+
+ Then a swift music will begin,
+ And as the brazen doors shut slow,
+ There will be hurrying to and fro,
+ And lights and calls and silver din,
+ While through the star-freaked swirl of air
+ The god's sweet cruel eyes will stare.
+
+
+
+
+HEART'S WILD-FLOWER
+
+
+ To-night her lids shall lift again, slow, soft, with vague desire,
+ And lay about my breast and brain their hush of spirit fire,
+ And I shall take the sweet of pain as the laborer his hire.
+
+ And though no word shall e'er be said to ease the ghostly sting,
+ And though our hearts, unhoused, unfed, must still go wandering,
+ My sign is set upon her head while stars do meet and sing.
+
+ Not such a sign as women wear who make their foreheads tame
+ With life's long tolerance, and bear love's sweetest, humblest name,
+ Nor such as passion eateth bare with its crown of tears and flame.
+
+ Nor such a sign as happy friend sets on his friend's dear brow
+ When meadow-pipings break and blend to a key of autumn woe,
+ And the woodland says playtime 's at end, best unclasp hands and go.
+
+ But where she strays, through blight or blooth, one fadeless flower
+ she wears,
+ A little gift God gave my youth,--whose petals dim were fears,
+ Awes, adorations, songs of ruth, hesitancies, and tears.
+
+ O heart of mine, with all thy powers of white beatitude,
+ What are the dearest of God's dowers to the children of his blood?
+ How blow the shy, shy wilding flowers in the hollows of his wood?
+
+
+
+
+HARMONICS
+
+
+ This string upon my harp was best beloved:
+ I thought I knew its secrets through and through;
+ Till an old man, whose young eyes lightened blue
+ 'Neath his white hair, bent over me and moved
+ His fingers up and down, and broke the wire
+ To such a laddered music, rung on rung,
+ As from the patriarch's pillow skyward sprung
+ Crowded with wide-flung wings and feet of fire.
+
+ O vibrant heart! so metely tuned and strung
+ That any untaught hand can draw from thee
+ One clear gold note that makes the tired years young--
+ What of the time when Love had whispered me
+ Where slept thy nodes, and my hand pausefully
+ Gave to the dim harmonics voice and tongue?
+
+
+
+
+ON THE RIVER
+
+
+ The faint stars wake and wonder,
+ Fade and find heart anew;
+ Above us and far under
+ Sphereth the watchful blue.
+
+ Silent she sits, outbending,
+ A wild pathetic grace,
+ A beauty strange, heart-rending,
+ Upon her hair and face.
+
+ O spirit cries that sever
+ The cricket's level drone!
+ O to give o'er endeavor
+ And let love have its own!
+
+ Within the mirrored bushes
+ There wakes a little stir;
+ The white-throat moves, and hushes
+ Her nestlings under her.
+
+ Beneath, the lustrous river,
+ The watchful sky o'erhead.
+ God, God, that Thou should'st ever
+ Poison thy children's bread!
+
+
+
+
+THE BRACELET OF GRASS
+
+
+ The opal heart of afternoon
+ Was clouding on to throbs of storm,
+ Ashen within the ardent west
+ The lips of thunder muttered harm,
+ And as a bubble like to break
+ Hung heaven's trembling amethyst,
+ When with the sedge-grass by the lake
+ I braceleted her wrist.
+
+ And when the ribbon grass was tied,
+ Sad with the happiness we planned,
+ Palm linked in palm we stood awhile
+ And watched the raindrops dot the sand;
+ Until the anger of the breeze
+ Chid all the lake's bright breathing down,
+ And ravished all the radiancies
+ From her deep eyes of brown.
+
+ We gazed from shelter on the storm,
+ And through our hearts swept ghostly pain
+ To see the shards of day sweep past,
+ Broken, and none might mend again.
+ Broken, that none shall ever mend;
+ Loosened, that none shall ever tie.
+ O the wind and the wind, will it never end?
+ O the sweeping past of the ruined sky!
+
+
+
+
+THE DEPARTURE
+
+
+ I
+
+ I sat beside the glassy evening sea,
+ One foot upon the thin horn of my lyre,
+ And all its strings of laughter and desire
+ Crushed in the rank wet grasses heedlessly;
+ Nor did my dull eyes care to question how
+ The boat close by had spread its saffron sails,
+ Nor what might mean the coffers and the bales,
+ And streaks of new wine on the gilded prow.
+ Neither was wonder in me when I saw
+ Fair women step therein, though they were fair
+ Even to adoration and to awe,
+ And in the gracious fillets of their hair
+ Were blossoms from a garden I had known,
+ Sweet mornings ere the apple buds were blown.
+
+
+ II
+
+ One gazed steadfast into the dying west
+ With lips apart to greet the evening star;
+ And one with eyes that caught the strife and jar
+ Of the sea's heart, followed the sunward breast
+ Of a lone gull; from a slow harp one drew
+ Blind music like a laugh or like a wail;
+ And in the uncertain shadow of the sail
+ One wove a crown of berries and of yew.
+ Yet even as I said with dull desire,
+ "All these were mine, and one was mine indeed,"
+ The smoky music burst into a fire,
+ And I was left alone in my great need,
+ One foot upon the thin horn of my lyre
+ And all its strings crushed in the dripping weed.
+
+
+
+
+FADED PICTURES
+
+
+ Only two patient eyes to stare
+ Out of the canvas. All the rest--
+ The warm green gown, the small hands pressed
+ Light in the lap, the braided hair
+
+ That must have made the sweet low brow
+ So earnest, centuries ago,
+ When some one saw it change and glow--
+ All faded! Just the eyes burn now.
+
+ I dare say people pass and pass
+ Before the blistered little frame,
+ And dingy work without a name
+ Stuck in behind its square of glass.
+
+ But I, well, I left Raphael
+ Just to come drink these eyes of hers,
+ To think away the stains and blurs
+ And make all new again and well.
+
+ Only, for tears my head will bow,
+ Because there on my heart's last wall,
+ Scarce one tint left to tell it all,
+ A picture keeps its eyes, somehow.
+
+
+
+
+A GREY DAY
+
+
+ Grey drizzling mists the moorlands drape,
+ Rain whitens the dead sea,
+ From headland dim to sullen cape
+ Grey sails creep wearily.
+ I know not how that merchantman
+ Has found the heart; but 't is her plan
+ Seaward her endless course to shape.
+
+ Unreal as insects that appall
+ A drunkard's peevish brain,
+ O'er the grey deep the dories crawl,
+ Four-legged, with rowers twain:
+ Midgets and minims of the earth,
+ Across old ocean's vasty girth
+ Toiling--heroic, comical!
+
+ I wonder how that merchant's crew
+ Have ever found the will!
+ I wonder what the fishers do
+ To keep them toiling still!
+ I wonder how the heart of man
+ Has patience to live out its span,
+ Or wait until its dreams come true.
+
+
+
+
+THE RIDE BACK
+
+
+ _Before the coming of the dark, he dreamed
+ An old-world faded story: of a knight,
+ Much like in need to him, who was no knight!
+ And of a road, much like the road his soul
+ Groped over, desperate to meet Her soul.
+ Beside the bed Death waited. And he dreamed._
+
+
+ His limbs were heavy from the fight,
+ His mail was dark with dust and blood;
+ On his good horse they bound him tight,
+ And on his breast they bound the rood
+ To help him in the ride that night.
+
+ When he crashed through the wood's wet rim,
+ About the dabbled reeds a breeze
+ Went moaning broken words and dim;
+ The haggard shapes of twilight trees
+ Caught with their scrawny hands at him.
+
+ Between the doubtful aisles of day
+ Strange folk and lamentable stood
+ To maze and beckon him astray,
+ But through the grey wrath of the wood
+ He held right on his bitter way.
+
+ When he came where the trees were thin,
+ The moon sat waiting there to see;
+ On her worn palm she laid her chin,
+ And laughed awhile in sober glee
+ To think how strong this knight had been.
+
+ When he rode past the pallid lake,
+ The withered yellow stems of flags
+ Stood breast-high for his horse to break;
+ Lewd as the palsied lips of hags
+ The petals in the moon did shake.
+
+ When he came by the mountain wall,
+ The snow upon the heights looked down
+ And said, "The sight is pitiful.
+ The nostrils of his steed are brown
+ With frozen blood; and he will fall."
+
+ The iron passes of the hills
+ With question were importunate;
+ And, but the sharp-tongued icy rills
+ Had grown for once compassionate,
+ The spiteful shades had had their wills.
+
+ Just when the ache in breast and brain
+ And the frost smiting at his face
+ Had sealed his spirit up with pain,
+ He came out in a better place,
+ And morning lay across the plain.
+
+ He saw the wet snails crawl and cling
+ On fern-stalks where the rime had run,
+ The careless birds went wing and wing,
+ And in the low smile of the sun
+ Life seemed almost a pleasant thing.
+
+ Right on the panting charger swung
+ Through the bright depths of quiet grass;
+ The knight's lips moved as if they sung,
+ And through the peace there came to pass
+ The flattery of lute and tongue.
+
+ From the mid-flowering of the mead
+ There swelled a sob of minstrelsy,
+ Faint sackbuts and the dreamy reed,
+ And plaintive lips of maids thereby,
+ And songs blown out like thistle seed.
+
+ Forth from her maidens came the bride,
+ And as his loosened rein fell slack
+ He muttered, "In their throats they lied
+ Who said that I should ne'er win back
+ To kiss her lips before I died!"
+
+
+
+
+SONG-FLOWER AND POPPY
+
+
+ I
+
+ IN NEW YORK
+
+ He plays the deuce with my writing time,
+ For the penny my sixth-floor neighbor throws;
+ He finds me proud of my pondered rhyme,
+ And he leaves me--well, God knows
+ It takes the shine from a tunester's line
+ When a little mate of the deathless Nine
+ Pipes up under your nose!
+
+ For listen, there is his voice again,
+ Wistful and clear and piercing sweet.
+ Where did the boy find such a strain
+ To make a dead heart beat?
+ And how in the name of care can he bear
+ To jet such a fountain into the air
+ In this gray gulch of a street?
+
+ Tuscan slopes or the Piedmontese?
+ Umbria under the Apennine?
+ South, where the terraced lemon-trees
+ Round rich Sorrento shine?
+ Venice moon on the smooth lagoon?--
+ Where have I heard that aching tune,
+ That boyish throat divine?
+
+ Beyond my roofs and chimney pots
+ A rag of sunset crumbles gray;
+ Below, fierce radiance hangs in clots
+ O'er the streams that never stay.
+ Shrill and high, newsboys cry
+ The worst of the city's infamy
+ For one more sordid day.
+
+ But my desire has taken sail
+ For lands beyond, soft-horizoned:
+ Down languorous leagues I hold the trail,
+ From Marmalada, steeply throned
+ Above high pastures washed with light,
+ Where dolomite by dolomite
+ Looms sheer and spectral-coned,
+
+ To purple vineyards looking south
+ On reaches of the still Tyrrhene;
+ Virgilian headlands, and the mouth
+ Of Tiber, where that ship put in
+ To take the dead men home to God,
+ Whereof Casella told the mode
+ To the great Florentine.
+
+ Up stairways blue with flowering weed
+ I climb to hill-hung Bergamo;
+ All day I watch the thunder breed
+ Golden above the springs of Po,
+ Till the voice makes sure its wavering lure,
+ And by Assisi's portals pure
+ I stand, with heart bent low.
+
+ O hear, how it blooms in the blear dayfall,
+ That flower of passionate wistful song!
+ How it blows like a rose by the iron wall
+ Of the city loud and strong.
+ How it cries "Nay, nay" to the worldling's way,
+ To the heart's clear dream how it whispers, "Yea;
+ Time comes, though the time is long."
+
+ Beyond my roofs and chimney piles
+ Sunset crumbles, ragged, dire;
+ The roaring street is hung for miles
+ With fierce electric fire.
+ Shrill and high, newsboys cry
+ The gross of the planet's destiny
+ Through one more sullen gyre.
+
+ Stolidly the town flings down
+ Its lust by day for its nightly lust;
+ Who does his given stint, 't is known,
+ Shall have his mug and crust.--
+ Too base of mood, too harsh of blood,
+ Too stout to seize the grosser good,
+ Too hungry after dust!
+
+ O hark! how it blooms in the falling dark,
+ That flower of mystical yearning song:
+ Sad as a hermit thrush, as a lark
+ Uplifted, glad, and strong.
+ Heart, we have chosen the better part!
+ Save sacred love and sacred art
+ Nothing is good for long.
+
+
+ II
+
+ AT ASSISI
+
+ Before St. Francis' burg I wait,
+ Frozen in spirit, faint with dread;
+ His presence stands within the gate,
+ Mild splendor rings his head.
+ Gently he seems to welcome me:
+ Knows he not I am quick, and he
+ Is dead, and priest of the dead?
+
+ I turn away from the gray church pile;
+ I dare not enter, thus undone:
+ Here in the roadside grass awhile
+ I will lie and watch for the sun.
+ Too purged of earth's good glee and strife,
+ Too drained of the honied lusts of life,
+ Was the peace these old saints won!
+
+ And lo! how the laughing earth says no
+ To the fear that mastered me;
+ To the blood that aches and clamors so
+ How it whispers "Verily."
+ Here by my side, marvelous-dyed,
+ Bold stray-away from the courts of pride,
+ A poppy-bell flaunts free.
+
+ St. Francis sleeps upon his hill,
+ And a poppy flower laughs down his creed;
+ Triumphant light her petals spill,
+ His shrines are dim indeed.
+ Men build and plan, but the soul of man,
+ Coming with haughty eyes to scan,
+ Feels richer, wilder need.
+
+ How long, old builder Time, wilt bide
+ Till at thy thrilling word
+ Life's crimson pride shall have to bride
+ The spirit's white accord,
+ Within that gate of good estate
+ Which thou must build us soon or late,
+ Hoar workman of the Lord?
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE MEAD-SLAVE WAS SET FREE
+
+
+ Nay, move not! Sit just as you are,
+ Under the carved wings of the chair.
+ The hearth-glow sifting through your hair
+ Turns every dim pearl to a star
+ Dawn-drowned in floods of brightening air.
+
+ I have been thinking of that night
+ When all the wide hall burst to blaze
+ With spears caught up, thrust fifty ways
+ To find my throat, while I lay white
+ And sick with joy, to think the days
+
+ I dragged out in your hateful North--
+ A slave, constrained at banquet's need
+ To fill the black bull's horns with mead
+ For drunken sea-thieves--were henceforth
+ Cast from me as a poison weed,
+
+ While Death thrust roses in my hands!
+ But you, who knew the flowers he had
+ Were no such roses ripe and glad
+ As nod in my far southern lands,
+ But pallid things to make men sad,
+
+ Put back the spears with one calm hand,
+ Raised on your knee my wondering head,
+ Wiped off the trickling drops of red
+ From my torn forehead with a strand
+ Of your bright loosened hair, and said:
+
+ "Sea-rovers! would you kill a skald?
+ This boy has hearkened Odin sing
+ Unto the clang and winnowing
+ Of raven's wings. His heart is thralled
+ To music, as to some strong king;
+
+ "And this great thraldom works disdain
+ Of lesser serving. Once release
+ These bonds he bears, and he may please
+ To give you guerdon sweet as rain
+ To sailors calmed in thirsty seas."
+
+ Then, having soothed their rage to rest,
+ You led me to old Skagi's throne,
+ Where yellow gold rims in the stone;
+ And in my arms, against my breast,
+ Thrust his great harp of walrus bone.
+
+ How they came crowding, tunes on tunes!
+ How good it was to touch the strings
+ And feel them thrill like happy things
+ That flutter from the gray cocoons
+ On hedge rows, in your gradual springs!
+
+ All grew a blur before my sight,
+ As when the stealthy white fog slips
+ At noonday on the staggering ships;
+ I saw one single spot of light,
+ Your white face, with its eager lips--
+
+ And so I sang to that. O thou
+ Who liftedst me from out my shame!
+ Wert thou content when Skagi came,
+ Put his own chaplet on my brow,
+ And bent and kissed his own harp-frame?
+
+
+
+
+A DIALOGUE IN PURGATORY
+
+
+ _Poi disse un altro.... "Io son Buonconte:
+ Giovanna o altri non ha di me cura;
+ Per ch' io vo tra costor con bassa fronte."_
+
+ _Seguito il terzo spirito al secondo,
+ "Ricorditi di me, che son la Pia;
+ Siena mi fe, disfecemi Maremma.
+ Salsi colui che inannellata pria
+ Disposata m' avea colla sua gemma."_
+
+ PURGATORIO, CANTO V.
+
+
+ I
+
+ BUONCONTE
+
+ Sister, the sun has ceased to shine;
+ By companies of twain and trine
+ Stars gather; from the sea
+ The moon comes momently.
+
+ On all the roads that ring our hill
+ The sighing and the hymns are still:
+ It is our time to gain
+ Strength for to-morrow's pain.
+
+ Yet still your eyes are wholly bent
+ Upon the way that Virgil went,
+ Following Sordello's sign,
+ With the dark Florentine.
+
+ Night now has barred their upward track:
+ There where the mountain-side folds back
+ And in the Vale of Flowers
+ The Princes count their hours
+
+ Those three friends sit in the clear starlight
+ With the green-clad angels left and right,--
+ Soul made by wakeful soul
+ More earnest for the goal.
+
+ So let us, sister, though our place
+ Is barren of that Valley's grace,
+ Sit hand in hand, till we
+ Seem rich as those friends be.
+
+
+ II
+
+ LA PIA
+
+ Brother, 't were sweet your hand to feel
+ In mine; it would a little heal
+ The shame that makes me poor,
+ And dumb at the heart's core.
+
+ But where our spirits felt Love's dearth,
+ Down on the green and pleasant earth,
+ Remains the fleshly shell,
+ Love's garment tangible.
+
+ So now our hands have naught to say:
+ Heart unto heart some other way
+ Must utter forth its pain,
+ Must glee or comfort gain.
+
+ Ah, no! For souls like you and me
+ Some comfort waits, but never glee:
+ Not yours the young men's singing
+ In Heaven, at the bride-bringing;
+
+ Not mine, beside God's living waters,
+ Dance of the marriageable daughters,
+ The laughter and the ease
+ Beneath His summer trees.
+
+
+ III
+
+ BUONCONTE
+
+ In fair Arezzo's halls and bowers
+ My Giovanna speeds her hours
+ Delicately, nor cares
+ To shorten by her prayers
+
+ My days upon this mount of ruth:
+ If those who come from earth speak sooth,
+ Though still I call and call,
+ She does not heed at all.
+
+ And if aright your words I read
+ At Dante's passing, he you wed
+ Dipped from the drains of Hell
+ The marriage hydromel.
+
+ O therefore, while the moon intense
+ Holds yonder dreaming sea suspense,
+ And round the shadowy coasts
+ Gather the wistful ghosts,
+
+ Let us sit quiet all the night,
+ And wonder, wonder on the light
+ Worn by those spirits fair
+ Whom Love has not left bare.
+
+
+ IV
+
+ LA PIA
+
+ Even as theirs, the chance was mine
+ To meet and mate beneath Love's sign,
+ To feel in soul and sense
+ The solemn influence
+
+ Which, breathed upon a man or maid,
+ Maketh forever unafraid,
+ Though life with death unite
+ That spirit to affright,--
+
+ Which lifts the changed heart high up,
+ As the priest lifts the changed cup,
+ Boldens the feet to pace
+ Before God's proving face.
+
+ O just a thought beyond the blue
+ The wings of the dove yearned down and through!
+ Even now I hear and hear
+ How near they were, how near!
+
+ I murmur not. Rightly disgraced,
+ The weak hand stretched abroad in haste
+ For gifts barely allowed
+ The tacit, strong, and proud.
+
+ But therefore was I so intent
+ To watch where Dante onward went
+ With the Roman spirit pure
+ And the grave troubadour,
+
+ Because my mind was busy then
+ With the loves that wait those gentle men:
+ Cunizza one; and one
+ Bice, above the sun;
+
+ And for the other, more and less
+ Than woman's near-felt tenderness,
+ A million voices dim
+ Praising him, praising him.
+
+
+ V
+
+ BUONCONTE
+
+ The waves that wash this mountain's base
+ Were crimson in the sun's low rays,
+ When, singing high and fast,
+ An angel downward passed,
+
+ To bid some patient soul arise
+ And make it fair for Paradise;
+ And upward, so attended,
+ That soul its journey wended;
+
+ Yet you, who in these lower rings
+ Wait for the coming of such wings,
+ Turned not your eyes to view
+ Whether they came for you,
+
+ But watched, but watched great Virgil stayed
+ Greeting Sordello's couchant shade,
+ Which to salute him rose
+ Like lion from its pose;
+
+ While humbly by those lords of song
+ Stood he whose living limbs are strong
+ To mount where Mary's bliss
+ Is shed on Beatrice.
+
+ On him your gaze was fastened, more
+ Than on those great names Mantua bore;
+ Your eyes hold the distress
+ Still, of that wistfulness.
+
+ Yea, fit he seemed much love to rouse!
+ His pilgrim lips and iron brows
+ Grew like a woman's, dim,
+ While you held speech with him;
+
+ And troubled came his mortal breath
+ The while I told him of my death;
+ His looks were changed and wan
+ When Virgil led him on.
+
+
+ VI
+
+ LA PIA
+
+ E'er since Casella came this morn,
+ Newly o'er yonder ocean borne,
+ Bound upward for the choir
+ Who purge themselves in fire,
+
+ And from that meinie he was of
+ Stayed backward at my cry of love,
+ To speak awhile with me
+ Of life and Tuscany,
+
+ And, parting, told us how e'er day
+ Was done, Dante would come this way,
+ With mortal feet, to find
+ His sweetheart, sky-enshrined,--
+
+ E'er since Casella spoke such news
+ My heart has lain in a golden muse,
+ Picturing him and her,
+ What starry ones they were.
+
+ And now the moon sheds its compassion
+ O'er the hushed mount, I try to fashion
+ The manner of their meeting,
+ Their few first words of greeting.
+
+ O well for them, with clasped hands,
+ Unshamed amid the heavenly bands!
+ They hear no pitying pair
+ Of old-time lovers there
+
+ Look down and say in an undertone,
+ "This latest-come, who comes alone,
+ Was still alone on earth,
+ And lonely from his birth."
+
+ Nor feel a sudden whisper mar
+ God's weather, "Dost thou see the scar
+ That spirit hideth so?
+ Who dealt her such a blow
+
+ "That God can hardly wipe it out?"
+ And answer, "She gave love, no doubt,
+ To one who saw not fit
+ To set much store by it."
+
+
+
+
+THE DAGUERREOTYPE
+
+
+ This, then, is she,
+ My mother as she looked at seventeen,
+ When she first met my father. Young incredibly,
+ Younger than spring, without the faintest trace
+ Of disappointment, weariness, or tean
+ Upon the childlike earnestness and grace
+ Of the waiting face.
+ These close-wound ropes of pearl
+ (Or common beads made precious by their use)
+ Seem heavy for so slight a throat to wear;
+ But the low bodice leaves the shoulders bare
+ And half the glad swell of the breast, for news
+ That now the woman stirs within the girl.
+ And yet,
+ Even so, the loops and globes
+ Of beaten gold
+ And jet
+ Hung, in the stately way of old,
+ From the ears' drooping lobes
+ On festivals and Lord's-day of the week,
+ Show all too matron-sober for the cheek,--
+ Which, now I look again, is perfect child,
+ Or no--or no--'t is girlhood's very self,
+ Moulded by some deep, mischief-ridden elf
+ So meek, so maiden mild,
+ But startling the close gazer with the sense
+ Of passions forest-shy and forest-wild,
+ And delicate delirious merriments.
+
+ As a moth beats sidewise
+ And up and over, and tries
+ To skirt the irresistible lure
+ Of the flame that has him sure,
+ My spirit, that is none too strong to-day,
+ Flutters and makes delay,--
+ Pausing to wonder on the perfect lips,
+ Lifting to muse upon the low-drawn hair
+ And each hid radiance there,
+ But powerless to stem the tide-race bright,
+ The vehement peace which drifts it toward the light
+ Where soon--ah, now, with cries
+ Of grief and giving-up unto its gain
+ It shrinks no longer nor denies,
+ But dips
+ Hurriedly home to the exquisite heart of pain,--
+ And all is well, for I have seen them plain,
+ The unforgettable, the unforgotten eyes!
+ Across the blinding gush of these good tears
+ They shine as in the sweet and heavy years
+ When by her bed and chair
+ We children gathered jealously to share
+ The sunlit aura breathing myrrh and thyme,
+ Where the sore-stricken body made a clime
+ Gentler than May and pleasanter than rhyme,
+ Holier and more mystical than prayer.
+
+ God, how thy ways are strange!
+ That this should be, even this,
+ The patient head
+ Which suffered years ago the dreary change!
+ That these so dewy lips should be the same
+ As those I stooped to kiss
+ And heard my harrowing half-spoken name,
+ A little ere the one who bowed above her,
+ Our father and her very constant lover,
+ Rose stoical, and we knew that she was dead.
+ Then I, who could not understand or share
+ His antique nobleness,
+ Being unapt to bear
+ The insults which time flings us for our proof,
+ Fled from the horrible roof
+ Into the alien sunshine merciless,
+ The shrill satiric fields ghastly with day,
+ Raging to front God in his pride of sway
+ And hurl across the lifted swords of fate
+ That ringed Him where He sat
+ My puny gage of scorn and desolate hate
+ Which somehow should undo Him, after all!
+ That this girl face, expectant, virginal,
+ Which gazes out at me
+ Boon as a sweetheart, as if nothing loth
+ (Save for the eyes, with other presage stored)
+ To pledge me troth,
+ And in the kingdom where the heart is lord
+ Take sail on the terrible gladness of the deep
+ Whose winds the gray Norns keep,--
+ That this should be indeed
+ The flesh which caught my soul, a flying seed,
+ Out of the to and fro
+ Of scattering hands where the seedsman Mage,
+ Stooping from star to star and age to age
+ Sings as he sows!
+ That underneath this breast
+ Nine moons I fed
+ Deep of divine unrest,
+ While over and over in the dark she said,
+ "Blessed! but not as happier children blessed"--
+ That this should be
+ Even she....
+ God, how with time and change
+ Thou makest thy footsteps strange!
+ Ah, now I know
+ They play upon me, and it is not so.
+ Why, 't is a girl I never saw before,
+ A little thing to flatter and make weep,
+ To tease until her heart is sore,
+ Then kiss and clear the score;
+ A gypsy run-the-fields,
+ A little liberal daughter of the earth,
+ Good for what hour of truancy and mirth
+ The careless season yields
+ Hither-side the flood o' the year and yonder of the neap;
+ Then thank you, thanks again, and twenty light good-byes.--
+ O shrined above the skies,
+ Frown not, clear brow,
+ Darken not, holy eyes!
+ Thou knowest well I know that it is thou!
+ Only to save me from such memories
+ As would unman me quite,
+ Here in this web of strangeness caught
+ And prey to troubled thought
+ Do I devise
+ These foolish shifts and slight;
+ Only to shield me from the afflicting sense
+ Of some waste influence
+ Which from this morning face and lustrous hair
+ Breathes on me sudden ruin and despair.
+ In any other guise,
+ With any but this girlish depth of gaze,
+ Your coming had not so unsealed and poured
+ The dusty amphoras where I had stored
+ The drippings of the winepress of my days.
+ I think these eyes foresee,
+ Now in their unawakened virgin time,
+ Their mother's pride in me,
+ And dream even now, unconsciously,
+ Upon each soaring peak and sky-hung lea
+ You pictured I should climb.
+ Broken premonitions come,
+ Shapes, gestures visionary,
+ Not as once to maiden Mary
+ The manifest angel with fresh lilies came
+ Intelligibly calling her by name;
+ But vanishingly, dumb,
+ Thwarted and bright and wild,
+ As heralding a sin-defiled,
+ Earth-encumbered, blood-begotten, passionate man-child,
+ Who yet should be a trump of mighty call
+ Blown in the gates of evil kings
+ To make them fall;
+ Who yet should be a sword of flame before
+ The soul's inviolate door
+ To beat away the clang of hellish wings;
+ Who yet should be a lyre
+ Of high unquenchable desire
+ In the day of little things.--
+ Look, where the amphoras,
+ The yield of many days,
+ Trod by my hot soul from the pulp of self
+ And set upon the shelf
+ In sullen pride
+ The Vineyard-master's tasting to abide--
+ O mother mine!
+ Are these the bringings-in, the doings fine,
+ Of him you used to praise?
+ Emptied and overthrown
+ The jars lie strown.
+ These, for their flavor duly nursed,
+ Drip from the stopples vinegar accursed;
+ These, I thought honied to the very seal,
+ Dry, dry,--a little acid meal,
+ A pinch of mouldy dust,
+ Sole leavings of the amber-mantling must;
+ These, rude to look upon,
+ But flasking up the liquor dearest won,
+ Through sacred hours and hard,
+ With watching and with wrestlings and with grief,
+ Even of these, of these in chief,
+ The stale breath sickens, reeking from the shard.
+ Nothing is left. Ay, how much less than naught!
+ What shall be said or thought
+ Of the slack hours and waste imaginings,
+ The cynic rending of the wings,
+ Known to that froward, that unreckoning heart
+ Whereof this brewage was the precious part,
+ Treasured and set away with furtive boast?
+ O dear and cruel ghost,
+ Be merciful, be just!
+ See, I was yours and I am in the dust.
+ Then look not so, as if all things were well!
+ Take your eyes from me, leave me to my shame,
+ Or else, if gaze they must,
+ Steel them with judgment, darken them with blame;
+ But by the ways of light ineffable
+ You bade me go and I have faltered from,
+ By the low waters moaning out of hell
+ Whereto my feet have come,
+ Lay not on me these intolerable
+ Looks of rejoicing love, of pride, of happy trust!
+
+ Nothing dismayed?
+ By all I say and all I hint not made
+ Afraid?
+ O then, stay by me! Let
+ These eyes afflict me, cleanse me, keep me yet.
+ Brave eyes and true!
+ See how the shriveled heart, that long has lain
+ Dead to delight and pain,
+ Stirs, and begins again
+ To utter pleasant life, as if it knew
+ The wintry days were through;
+ As if in its awakening boughs it heard
+ The quick, sweet-spoken bird.
+ Strong eyes and brave,
+ Inexorable to save!
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Transcriber's Note: |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | Spacing for contractions has been retained to match the original |
+ | 1901 text. |
+ | |
+ | Both "gray" and "grey" are used in this text, as per the original. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Gloucester Moors and Other Poems, by
+William Vaughn Moody
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