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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sea Poems, by Cale Young Rice
+
+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: Sea Poems
+
+Author: Cale Young Rice
+
+Release Date: April 4, 2010 [EBook #31877]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEA POEMS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Garcia, Josephine Paolucci 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.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SEA POEMS
+
+BY
+
+CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+"WRAITHS AND REALITIES," "TRAILS SUNWARD," "COLLECTED POEMS," ETC.
+
+NEW YORK
+THE CENTURY CO.
+1921
+
+
+Copyright, 1921, by
+The Century Co.
+
+
+TO
+HARRISON S. MORRIS
+A HATER OF SHAM AND PRETENSE,
+A LOVER OF BEAUTY AND TRUTH,
+A FIRM FRIEND.
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+
+The poems of this volume, gathered here after many requests, are, with a
+few exceptions, from my previous lyrical publications. They are also in
+a real sense an intimate record. For the sea has often enough seemed to
+me almost as a vast external subconsciousness in which the forces of my
+being--as well as the world's--were at play.
+
+Cale Young Rice.
+
+Louisville, Ky., August, 1921.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+Sea-Hoardings 3
+
+The Shore's Song to the Sea 5
+
+To a Firefly by the Sea 9
+
+Invocation 11
+
+I Know Your Heart, O Sea! 11
+
+A Sea-Ghost 13
+
+Finitude 15
+
+The Colonel's Story 16
+
+Cosmism 21
+
+Off the Irish Coast 22
+
+The Fairies of God 23
+
+The Song of the Homesick Gael 24
+
+Pageants of the Sea 26
+
+A Song of the Old Venetians 29
+
+Basking 30
+
+Sappho's Death Song 32
+
+The Wind's Word 33
+
+Submarine Mountains 34
+
+The Song of the Storm-Spirits 36
+
+The Great Seducer 37
+
+K'u-Kiang 38
+
+Typhoon 39
+
+Penang 41
+
+Nights on the Indian Ocean 42
+
+Sighting Arabia 44
+
+"All's Well" 45
+
+Somnambulism 47
+
+Chartings 48
+
+The Trail from the Sea 50
+
+Haunted Seas 54
+
+Sea Lure 54
+
+Songs to A. H. R.
+
+ I Minglings 56
+ II Love and Infinity 56
+ III Recompense 57
+ IV At the Ebb-Hour 58
+ V In a Dark Hour 59
+ VI Via Amorosa 59
+ VII Transfusion 61
+
+Need of Storm 62
+
+A Florida Interlude 63
+
+A Florida Boating Song 65
+
+Dawn Bliss 66
+
+Atavism 68
+
+Re-reckoning 69
+
+To the Afternoon Moon, At Sea 70
+
+Paths 71
+
+From a Northern Beach 73
+
+Passage 74
+
+Aleen 75
+
+To a Solitary Sea-Gull 76
+
+Ineffable Things 77
+
+The Song of a Sea-Farer 78
+
+Waves 79
+
+In a Storm 80
+
+After Their Parting 80
+
+A Word's Magic 82
+
+Sea Rhapsody 83
+
+In an Oriental Harbour 84
+
+Under the Sky 85
+
+A Song for Healing 86
+
+A Singhalese Love Lament 87
+
+The City 89
+
+Full Tide 89
+
+The Herding 91
+
+On the Maine Coast 92
+
+Seance 93
+
+A Sidmouth Lad 93
+
+Widowed 94
+
+To the Sea 95
+
+Sea-Mad 97
+
+The Atheist 98
+
+At the Helm 99
+
+Imperturbable 100
+
+Waste 100
+
+Resurgence 101
+
+Life's Answer 103
+
+As the Tide Comes In 103
+
+Sense-Sweetness 104
+
+Tidals 105
+
+A Sailor's Wife 105
+
+To Sea! 106
+
+Give Over, O Sea! 107
+
+The Nun 109
+
+Last Sight of Land 110
+
+
+
+
+SEA POEMS
+
+BY CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+
+
+
+SEA-HOARDINGS
+
+
+ My heart is open again and sea flows in,
+ It shall fill with a summer of mists and winds and clouds and waves breaking,
+ Of gull-wings over the green tide, of the surf's drenching din,
+ Of sudden horizon-sails that come and vanish, phantom-thin,
+ Of arching sapphire skies, deep and unaching.
+
+ I shall lie on the rocks just over the weeds that drape
+ The clear sea-pools, where birth and death in sunny ooze are teeming.
+ Where the crab in quest of booty sidles about, a sullen shape,
+ Where the snail creeps and the mussel sleeps with wary valves agape,
+ Where life is too grotesque to be but seeming.
+
+ And the swallow shall weave my dreams with threads of flight,
+ A shuttle with silver breast across the warp of the waves gliding;
+ And an isle far out shall be a beam in the loom of my delight,
+ And the pattern of every dream shall be a rapture bathed in light--
+ Its evanescence a beauty most abiding.
+
+ And the sunsets shall give sadness all its due,
+ They shall stain the sands and trouble the tides with all the ache of sorrow.
+ They shall bleed and die with a beauty of meaning old yet ever new,
+ They shall burn with all the hunger for things that hearts have failed to do,
+ They shall whisper of a gold that none can borrow.
+
+ And the stars shall come and build a bridge of fire
+ For the moon to cross the boundless sea, with never a fear of sinking.
+ They shall teach me of the magic things of life never to tire,
+ And how to renew, when it is low, the lamp of my desire--
+ And how to hope, in the darkest deeps of thinking.
+
+
+
+
+THE SHORE'S SONG TO THE SEA
+
+
+ Out on the rocks primeval,
+ The grey Maine rocks that slant and break to the sea,
+ With the bay and juniper round them,
+ And the leagues on leagues before them,
+ And the terns and gulls wheeling and crying, wheeling and crying over,
+ I sat heart-still and listened.
+
+ And first I could only hear the wind in my ears,
+ And the foam trying to fill the high rock-shallows.
+ And then, over the wind, over the whitely blossoming foam,
+ Low, low, like a lover's song beginning,
+ I heard the nuptial pleading of the old shore,
+ A pleading ever occultly growing louder:--
+
+ _O sea, glad bride of me!
+ Born of the bright ether and given to wed me,
+ Given to glance, ever, for me, and gleam and dance in the sun--
+ Come to my arms, come to my reaching arms,
+ That seem so still and unavailing to take you, and hold you,
+ Yet never forget,
+ Never by day or night,
+ The hymeneal delights of your embracings._
+
+ _Come, for the moon, my rival, shall not have you;
+ No, for tho twice daily afar he beckons and you go,
+ You, my bride, a little way back to meet him,
+ As if he once had been your lover, he too, and again enspelled you,
+ Soon, soon, I know it is only feigning!
+ For turning, playfully turning, tidally turning,
+ You rush foamingly, swiftly back to my arms!_
+
+ _And so would I have you rush; so rush now!
+ Come from the sands where you have stayed too long,
+ Come from the reefs where you have wandered silent,
+ For ebbings are good, the restful ebbings of love,
+ But, oh, the bridal flowings of it are better!
+ And now I would have you loose again my tresses,
+ My locks rough and weedy, rough and brown and brinily tangled,
+ But, oh, again as a bridegroom's, when your tide, whispering in,
+ Lifts them up, pulsingly up with kisses!_
+
+ _Come with your veil thrown back, breaking to spray!
+ And oh, with plangent passion!
+ Come with your naked sweetness, salt and wholesome, to my bosom;
+ Let not a cave or crevice of me miss you, or cranny,
+ For, oh, the nuptial joy you float into me,
+ The cooling ambient clasp of you, I have waited over-long,
+ And I need to know again its marriage meaning!_
+
+ _For I think it is not alone to bring forth life, that I mate you;
+ More than life is the beauty of life with love!
+ Plentiful are the children that you bear to me, the blossoms,
+ The fruits and all the creatures at your breast dewily fed,
+ But mating is troubled with a far higher meaning--
+ A hint of a consummation for all things.
+ Come utterly then,
+ Utterly to me come,
+ And let us surge together, clasped close, in infinite union,
+ Until we reach a transcendence of all birth, and all dying,
+ An ecstasy holding the universe blended--
+ Such ecstasy as is its ultimate Aim!_
+
+ So sang the shore, the long bay-scented shore,
+ Broken by many an isle, many an inlet bird-embosomed,
+ And the sea gave answer, bridally, tidally turning,
+ And leapt, radiant, into his rocky arms!
+
+
+
+
+TO A FIREFLY BY THE SEA
+
+
+ Little torch-bearer, alone with me in the night,
+ You cannot light the sea, nor I illumine life.
+ They are too vast for us, they are too deep for us.
+ We glow with all our strength, but back the shadows sweep:
+ And after a while will come--unshadowed Sleep.
+
+ Here on the rocks that take the turning tide;
+ Here by the wide lone waves and lonelier wastes of sky,
+ We keep our poet-watch, as patient poets should,
+ Questioning earth's commingled ill and good to us.
+ Yet little of them, or naught, have truly understood.
+
+ Bright are the stars, and constellated thick.
+ To you, so quick to flit along your flickering course,
+ They seem perhaps as glowing mates in other fields.
+ And all the knowledge I have gathered yields to me
+ Scarce more of the great mystery their wonder wields.
+
+ For the moon we are waiting--and behold
+ Her ardent gold drifts up, her sail has caught the breeze
+ That blows all being thro the Universe always.
+ So now, little light-keeper, you no more need nurse
+ Your gleam, for lo! she mounts, and sullen clouds disperse.
+
+ And I with aching thought may cease to burn,
+ And humbly turn to rest--knowing no glow of mine
+ Can ever be so beauteous as have been to me
+ Your soft beams here beside the sea's elusive din:
+ For grief too oft has kindled me, and pain, and the world's sin.
+
+
+
+
+INVOCATION
+
+(_From a High Cliff_)
+
+
+ Sweep unrest
+ Out of my blood,
+ Winds of the sea! Sweep the fog
+ Out of my brain
+ For I am one
+ Who has told Life he will be free.
+ Who will not doubt of work that's done,
+ Who will not fear the work to do,
+ Who will hold peaks Promethean
+ Better than all Jove's honey-dew.
+ Who when the Vulture tears his breast
+ Will smile into the Terror's Eyes.
+ Who for the World has this Bequest--
+ Hope, that eternally is wise.
+
+
+
+
+I KNOW YOUR HEART, O SEA!
+
+
+ I know your heart, O Sea!
+ You are tossed with cold desire to flood earth utterly;
+ You run at the cliffs, you fling wild billows at beaches,
+ You reach at islands with fingers of foam to crumble them;
+ Yes, even at mountain tops you shout your purpose
+ Of making the earth a shoreless circle of waters!
+
+ I know your surging heart!
+ Tides mighty and all-contemptuous rise within it,
+ Tides spurred by the wind to champ and charge and thunder--
+ Tho the sun and moon rein them--
+ At the troubling land, the breeding-place of mortals,
+ Of men who are ever transmuting life to spirit,
+ And ever taking your salt to savor their tears.
+
+ I know your tides, I know them!
+ "Down," they rage, "with the questing of men, and crying!
+ With their continents--cradles of grief and despair!
+ Better entombing waters for them, better our deeps unfathomed,
+ Where birth is soulless, life goalless, death toll-less for all,
+ And where dark ooze enshrouds past resurrection!"
+
+ Ah, yes, I know your heart!
+ I have heard it raving at coast-lights set to reveal you,
+ I have watched it foam at ships that sought to defy you,
+ I have seen it straining at cables that cross you, bearing whispers hid to you,
+ Or heaving at waves of the air that tell your hurricanes.
+
+ I know, I know your heart!
+ Men you will sink, and shores will sink; but a shore shall be man's forever,
+ From whence his lighthouse soul shall signal the Infinite,
+ Whose fleets go by, star after star, bearing their unknown burden
+ To a Port which only eternity shall determine!
+
+
+
+
+A SEA-GHOST
+
+
+ Oh, fisher-fleet, go in from the sea
+ And furl your wings.
+ The bay is gray with the twilit spray
+ And the loud surf springs.
+
+ The chill buoy-bell is rung by the hands
+ Of all the drowned,
+ Who know the woe of the wind and tow
+ Of the tides around.
+
+ Go in, go in! Oh, haste from the sea,
+ And let them rest--
+ The throng who long for the air--still long,
+ But are still unblest.
+
+ Aye, even as I, whose hands at the bell
+ Now labour most.
+ The tomb has gloom, but oh, the doom
+ Of the drear sea-ghost!
+
+ He evermore must wander the ooze
+ Beneath the wave,
+ Forlorn--to warn of the tempest born,
+ And to save--to save!
+
+ Then go, go in! and leave us the sea,
+ For only so
+ Can peace release us and give us ease
+ Of our salty woe.
+
+
+
+
+FINITUDE
+
+
+I
+
+ One ruby, amid a diamond spray of stars,
+ The coast light flashes;
+ The tide plashes,
+ Across a mile of bay-sweet land the moon
+ Comes soon:
+ She has lost half of her lustre and looks old.
+
+ A cricket, finitude's incarnate cry,
+ And the infinite waters with their hushless sigh
+ Are the two sounds
+ The night has:
+ Each in eternal wistfulness abounds.
+
+
+II
+
+ I have wakened out of my sleep because I too
+ Am wistful,
+ Tristeful;
+ Because I know that half of _me_ is gone,
+ And that all frailty cries in the cricket's tone.
+
+ I have wakened out of my sleep to watch and listen.
+ For what?
+ To see for a moment universes glisten;
+ To wonder and want--and go to sleep again,
+ And die,
+ And be forgot.
+
+
+
+
+THE COLONEL'S STORY
+
+
+ No, no, my friend; there is an agony
+ Not to be exorcised out of the world
+ By any voice of hope.--But, I will tell you.
+
+ The _Sonia_ was sailing without lights--
+ Bearing three hundred souls--and without bells;
+ For she had reached the "Zone," where the Hun sharks
+ With their torpedo tongues could spit death at us
+ Out of the inky sea-hells where they hid.
+ On the main deck we stood, in a wind-shelter,--
+ My wife, and by us a pale girl whose eyes
+ Had all disaster in them. And my thought was,
+ "I hope to God the moon is shut so deep
+ In cloud-murk there in the East that hurricanes
+ Can't blow her out of it." For in the Zone
+ The moon had come to mean only betrayal,
+ And now, if ever, was her wanton chance.
+
+ The slipping water soaked with soulless dark
+ Fell under and around us shudderingly,
+ Yet somehow brought an anxious hopefulness.
+ "We're making twenty knots," I said; and felt
+ Our bow cut thro the tangle of the waves
+ As if the No Man's _Sea_ ahead of us
+ Would soon be crossed; and I, out to rejoin
+ My regiment, could set my wife safe somewhere,
+ And help again to stab that curst amphibian,
+ Autocracy--whose spawn in the sea gave it
+ A terror greater than infinitude's.
+ For God knows, with the woman that one loves
+ Aboard a ship, and only a cloud perhaps
+ Between the Hun's shark eyes and sure escape
+ From the black icy fathoms that would choke her,
+ There's little left within a man but nerves.
+ So when I drew her closer into the shelter,
+ Out of the sheering wind, the life belt
+ She wore seemed like a coffin in that sepulchre
+ Of night and sea. And when the other, there,
+ With the disaster eyes and pallid face,
+ Turned half toward us, I was shaken as if
+ The moon had suddenly walked out of her shroud
+ With phosphorescent purpose to reveal us.
+
+ But on we plunged and tumbled, till at last
+ The blank monotonous sink and swell lulled me
+ To faith. And I was only thinking softly
+ Of her--my wife's--first kiss on a summer night
+ Under the moonlit laurels of our home,
+ When came a cry from the wan girl gazing
+ Frozenly on the sea--where the moon now
+ Indeed was pointing at us pallidly
+ A death-path. And my throat was gripped by it,
+ That clutching cry, as if the glacial depths
+ Down under us already had risen up.
+ So starting toward the slipping rail I called,
+ "What is it? where?" For, tense as a clairvoyant,
+ With eyes that seemed to feel under the tide
+ The stealthy peril stalking us, she stood there.
+
+ After a moment's gazing, I too saw--
+ What she foresensed--destruction seething toward us.
+ "The boats!" I cried, "the rafts!" And stumbled back
+ Over the streaming deck to her I loved.
+ Then the shock came, as if the sea's wild heart
+ Had broken under us, and ripped the entrails,
+ The human hundreds, out of our vessel's hold,
+ To strew the foam with mania and despair,
+ With shrieks strangled by wind and wave and terror.
+ And thro that floating, mangled, blind confusion,
+ Where hands reached at the infinite then sank,
+ Where faces clung to wreckage as to eternity,
+ I sought for her who shared my life's voyage,
+ Who had been my heart's pilot; and who now,
+ Wrecked with me, swirled, too, in the torn waters....
+ And soon I saw her, still by that wan girl,
+ Tossed on a watery omnipotence.
+
+ Blind with brine I swam for her--as the moon,
+ Her treachery done, again got to a cloud.
+ Flung back by every wave, I fought; beating
+ Against them as against God. And soon, somehow,
+ Had reached to a limp body on the surge,
+ Limp and strange--but living ... and not drowned!
+ Then seeing a raft near, I struggled onward,
+ Gulping the sea and being gulped by it,
+ But finding arms at last that drew my burden
+ And me from horror to half-swooning safety.
+
+ I could have died, I think, of the relief.
+ But the moon came again, nakedly out,
+ As if to see what she had done. Then I,
+ Bending over the form that I had fought for,
+ And chafing it, saw ... not her I loved!
+ Infinite Cruelty, not her I loved!...
+ But that pale girl, with the eyes of all disaster.
+
+ Oh, yes, I raved, and said God was a Hun,
+ A Kaiser of a Universe that loathed him.
+ And back, too, would have leapt, into the waves,
+ But the same hands that saved were ready to hold me.
+
+
+
+
+COSMISM
+
+
+ The sea asleep like a dreamer sighs;
+ The salt rock-pools lie still in the sun,
+ Except for the sidling crab that creeps
+ Thro the moveless mosses green and dun.
+ The small gray snail clings everywhere,
+ For the tide is out; and the sea-weed dries
+ Its tangled tresses in the warm air,
+ That seems to ooze from the far blue skies,
+ Where not a white gull on white wing flies.
+
+ The mollusc gleams like a gem amid
+ The scurf and the clustered green sea-grapes,
+ Whose trellis is but the rock's bare side,
+ Whose husbandman but the tide that drapes.
+ The little sandpiper tilts and picks
+ His food, on the wet sea-marges hid,
+ Till sudden a wave comes in and flicks
+ Him off, then flashes away to bid
+ Another frighten him--as it did.
+
+ O sweet is the world of living things,
+ And sweet are the mingled sea and shore!
+ It seems as if I never again
+ Shall find life ill--as oft before.
+ As if my days should come as the clouds
+ Come yonder--and vanish without wings;
+ As if all sorrow that ever shrouds
+ My soul and darkly about it clings
+ Had lost forever its ravenings.
+
+ As if I knew with a deeper sense
+ That good alone is ultimate;
+ That never an evil wrought of God
+ Or man came truly out of hate.
+ That Better springs from the heart of Worse,
+ As calm from the heaving elements;
+ That all things born to the Universe
+ May suffer and perish utterly hence,
+ But never refute its Innocence.
+
+
+
+
+OFF THE IRISH COAST
+
+
+ Gulls on the wind,
+ Crying! crying!
+ Are you the ghosts
+ Of Erin's dead?
+ Of the forlorn
+ Whose days went sighing
+ Ever for Beauty
+ That ever fled?
+
+ Ever for Light
+ That never kindled?
+ Ever for Song
+ No lips have sung?
+ Ever for Joy
+ That ever dwindled?
+ Ever for Love that stung?
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRIES OF GOD
+
+
+ Last night I slipt from the banks of dream
+ And swam in the currents of God,
+ On a tide where His fairies were at play,
+ Catching salt tears in their little white hands,
+ For human hearts;
+ And dancing, dancing, in gala bands,
+ On the currents of God;
+ And singing, singing:--
+
+ _There is no wind blows here or spray--
+ Wind upon us!
+ Only the waters ripple away
+ Under our feet as we gather tears.
+ God has made mortals for the years,
+ Us for alway!
+ God has made mortals full of fears,
+ Fears for the night and fears for the day.
+ If they would free them of grief that sears,
+ If they would keep what love endears,
+ If they would lay no more lilies on biers--
+ Let them say!
+ For we are swift to enchant and tire
+ Time's will!
+ Our feet are wiser than all desire,
+ Our song is better than faith or fame;
+ To whom it is given no ill e'er came,
+ Who has it not grows chill!
+ Who has it not grows laggard and lame,
+ Nor knows that the world is a Minstrel's lyre,
+ Smitten and never still!..._
+
+ Last night on the currents of God.
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF THE HOMESICK GAEL
+
+(_In the characteristic minor of a recent literary movement_)
+
+
+ I long to see the solan-goose
+ Wing over Ailsa crag
+ At dusk again--or Girvan gulls at dawn;
+ To see the osprey grayly glide
+ The winds of Kamasaig:
+ For grayness now my heart is set upon.
+
+ The grayness of sea-spaces where
+ There's loneliness alone,
+ Save for the wings that sweep it with unrest,
+ Save for the hunger-cries that sound
+ And die into a moan,
+ Save for the moaning hunger in my breast.
+
+ For grayness is the hue of all
+ In life that is not lies.
+ A thousand years of tears are in my heart;
+ And only in their mystery
+ Can I be truly wise:
+ From light and laughter follies only start.
+
+ I long to see the mists again
+ Above the tumbling tide
+ Of Ailsa, at the coming of the night.
+ There's weariness and emptiness
+ And soul unsatisfied
+ Forever in the places of delight.
+
+
+
+
+PAGEANTS OF THE SEA
+
+
+ What memories have I of it,
+ The sea, continent-clasping,
+ The sea whose spirit is a sorcery,
+ The sea whose magic foaming is immortal!
+ What memories have I of it thro the years!
+
+ What memories of its shores!...
+ Of shadowy headlands doomed to stay the storm;
+ And red cliffs clawing ever into the tides;
+ Of misty moors whose royal heather purples;
+ Of channeled marshes, village-nesting hills;
+ Of crags wind-eaten, homes of hungry gulls;
+ Of bays--
+ Where sails float furled, resting softly at harbour,
+ Until, winging again, they sweep away.
+
+ What memories have I, too,
+ Of faring out at dawn upon tameless waters,
+ Upon the infinite wasted yearning of them,
+ While winds, the mystic harp-strings of the world,
+ Were sounding sweet farewells;
+ While coast and lighthouse tower were fading fast,
+ And from me all the world slipped like a garment.
+
+ What memories of mid-deeps!...
+ Of heaving on thro haunted vasts of foam,
+ Thro swaying terrors of tormented tides;
+ While the wind, no more singing, took to raving,
+ In rhythmic infinite words,
+ A chantey ancient and immeasurable
+ Concerning man and God.
+
+ What memories of fog-spaces--
+ Wide leaden deserts of dim wavelessness,
+ Smooth porpoise-broken glass
+ As gray as a dream upon despair's horizon;
+ What sailing soft till lo the shroud was lifted
+ And suddenly there came, as a great joy,
+ The blue sublimity of summer skies,
+ The azure mystery of happy heavens,
+ The passionate sweet parley of the breeze,
+ And dancing waves--that lured us on and on
+ Past islands above whose verdant mountain-heads
+ Enchanted clouds were hanging,
+ And whence wild spices wandered;
+ Past iridescent reefs and vessels bound
+ For ports unknown:
+ O far, far past, until the sun, in fire,
+ An impotent and shrunken orb lay dying,
+ On heaving twilight purple gathered round.
+
+ And then, what nights!...
+ The phantom moon in misty resurrection
+ Arising from her sepulchre in the East
+ And sparkling the dark waters--
+ The unremembering moon!
+ And covenants of star to faithful star,
+ Dewy, like tears of God, across the sky;
+ And under the moon's fair ring Orion running
+ Forever in great war adown the West.
+ What far, infinite nights!
+ With cloud-horizons where the lightning slumbered
+ Or wakened once and again with startled watch,
+ Again to fall asleep
+ And leave the moon-path free for all my thoughts
+ To wander peacefully
+ Away and still away
+ Until the stars sighed out in dawn's great pallor,
+ Just as the lands of my desire appeared.
+
+ What memories ... have I of it!
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF THE OLD VENETIANS
+
+
+ The seven fleets of Venice
+ Set sail across the sea
+ For Cyprus and for Trebizond
+ Ayoub and Araby.
+ Their gonfalons are floating far,
+ St. Mark's has heard the mass,
+ And to the noon the salt lagoon
+ Lies white, like burning glass.
+
+ The seven fleets of Venice--
+ And each its way to go,
+ Led by a Falier or Tron,
+ Zorzi or Dandalo.
+ The Patriarch has blessed them all,
+ The Doge has waved the word,
+ And in their wings the murmurings
+ Of waiting winds are heard.
+
+ The seven fleets of Venice--
+ And what shall be their fate?
+ One shall return with porphyry
+ And pearl and fair agate.
+ One shall return with spice and spoil
+ And silk of Samarcand.
+ But nevermore shall _one_ win o'er
+ The sea, to any land.
+
+ _Oh, they shall bring the East back,
+ And they shall bring the West,
+ The seven fleets our Venice sets
+ A-sail upon her quest.
+ But some shall bring despair back
+ And some shall leave their keels
+ Deeper than wind or wave frets,
+ Or sun ever steals._
+
+
+
+
+BASKING
+
+
+ Give me a spot in the sun,
+ With a lizard basking by me,
+ In Sicily, over the sea,
+ Where Winter is sweet as Spring,
+ Where Etna lifts his plume
+ Of curling smoke to try me,
+ But all in vain for I will not climb
+ His height so ravishing.
+
+ Give me a spot in the sun,
+ So high on a cliff that, under,
+ Far down, the flecking sails
+ Like white moths flit the blue;
+ That over me on a crag
+ There hangs, O aery wonder,
+ A white town drowsing in its nest
+ That cypress-tops peep thro.
+
+ Give me a spot in the sun,
+ With contadini singing,
+ And a goat-boy at his pipes
+ And donkey bells heard round
+ Upon steep mountain paths
+ Where a peasant cart comes swinging
+ Mid joyous hot invectives--that
+ So blameless here abound.
+
+ Give me a spot in the sun,
+ In a land whose speech is flowers,
+ Whose breath is Hybla-sweet,
+ Whose soul is still a faun's,
+ Whose limbs the sea enlaps,
+ Thro long delicious hours,
+ With liquid tenderness and light
+ Sweet as Elysian dawns.
+
+ Give me a spot in the sun
+ With a view past vale and villa,
+ Past grottoed isle and sea
+ To Italy and the Cape
+ Around whose turning lies
+ Old heathen-hearted Scylla,
+ Whom may an ancient sailor prayed
+ The gods he might escape.
+
+ Give me a spot in the sun:
+ With sly old Pan as lazy
+ As I, ever to tempt me
+ To disbelief and doubt
+ Of all gods else, from Jove
+ To Bacchus born wine-crazy.
+ Give me, I say, a spot in the sun,
+ And Realms I'll do without!
+
+
+
+
+SAPPHO'S DEATH SONG
+
+(_On her sea-cliff in Leucady_)
+
+
+ What have I gathered the years did not take from me?
+ (Swallows, hear, as you fly from the cold!)
+ Whom have I bound to me never to break from me?
+ (Whom, O wind of the wold?)
+ Whom, O wind! O hunter of spirits!
+ (Pierce his spirit whose spear is in mine!)
+ Then let Oblivion loose this ache from me, Proserpine!
+
+ Lyre and the laurel the Muses gave to me,
+ (Why comes summer when winter is nigh!)
+ Spent am I now and pain-voices rave to me.
+ (O sea and its cry!)
+ O the sea that has suffered all sorrow!
+ (Sea of the Delphian tongue ever shrill!)
+ Nought from the wreck of love can now save to me
+ Any thrill!
+
+ Life that we live passes pale or amorous.
+ (Tread, O vintagers, grapes in the press!)
+ Mine's but a prey to Erinnyes clamorous.
+ (O for wine that will bless!)
+ Wine that foams, but is free of all madness
+ (Free, O Cypris, of fury's breath!)
+ Free as I now shall be, O glamorous
+ Queen of Death!
+
+
+
+
+THE WIND'S WORD
+
+
+ A star that I love,
+ The sea, and I,
+ Spake together across the night.
+ "Have peace," said the star,
+ "Have power," said the sea;
+ "Yea!" I answered, "and Fame's delight!"
+ The wind on his way
+ To Araby
+ Paused and listened and sighed and said,
+ "I passed on the sands
+ A Pharaoh's tomb:
+ All these did he have--and he is dead."
+
+
+
+
+SUBMARINE MOUNTAINS
+
+
+ Under the sea, which is their sky, they rise
+ To watery altitudes as vast as those
+ Of far Himalayan peaks impent in snows
+ And veils of cloud and sacred deep repose.
+ Under the sea, their flowing firmament,
+ More dark than any ray of sun can pierce,
+ The earthquake thrust them up with mighty tierce
+ And left them to be seen but by the eyes
+ Of awed imagination inward bent.
+
+ Their vegetation is the viscid ooze,
+ Whose mysteries are past belief or thought.
+ Creation seems around them devil-wrought,
+ Or by some cosmic urgence gone distraught.
+ Adown their precipices chill and dense
+ With the dank midnight creep or crawl or climb
+ Such tentacled and eyeless things of slime,
+ Such monster shapes as tempt us to accuse
+ Life of a miscreative impotence.
+
+ About their peaks the shark, their eagle, floats,
+ In the thick azure far beneath the air,
+ Or downward sweeps upon what prey may dare
+ Set forth from any silent weedy lair.
+ But one desire on all their slopes is found,
+ Desire of food, the awful hunger strife,
+ Yet here, it may be, was begun our life
+ Here all the dreams on which our vision dotes
+ In unevolved obscurity were bound.
+
+ Too strange it is, too terrible! And yet
+ It matters not how we were wrought or whence
+ Life came to us with all its throb intense
+ If in it is a Godly Immanence.
+ It matters not,--if haply we are more
+ Than creatures half-conceived by a blind force
+ That sweeps the universe in a chance course:
+ For only in Unmeaning Might is met
+ The intolerable thought none can ignore.
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF THE STORM-SPIRITS
+
+
+ Come over the tide,
+ Come over the foam,
+ Dance on the hurricane, leap its waves,
+ Dream not of the calm sea-caves
+ Nor of content in them and home.
+ For that is the reason the hearts of men
+ Are ever weary--they would abide
+ Somewhere out of the spumy stride
+ Of the world's spindrift--a want denied.
+ That is the reason: tho they know
+ That the restive years have no true home,
+ But only a Whence, Whither, and When--
+ Whence and Whither, for hearts to roam.
+ So who would tarry and rest the while,
+ Not dance as we, and sing on the wind,
+ Against the whole flow of the world has sinned,
+ And soon is weary and cannot smile.
+ Dance then, dance, on the fleeting spray!
+ None can gather eternity
+ Into his heart and bid it stay,
+ Swiftly again it slips away.
+ Dance, and know that the will of Life
+ Is the wind's will and the will of the tide,
+ And who finds not a home in its strife
+ Shall find no home on any side!
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT SEDUCER
+
+
+ Who looks too long from his window
+ At the gray, wide, cold sea,
+ Where breakers scour the beaches
+ With fingers of sharp foam;
+ Who looks too long thro the gray pane
+ At the mad, wild, bold sea,
+ Shall sell his hearth to a stranger
+ And turn his back on home.
+
+ Who looks too long from his window--
+ Tho his wife waits by the fireside--
+ At a ship's wings in the offing,
+ At a gull's wings on air,
+ Shall latch his gate behind him,
+ Tho his cattle call from the byre-side,
+ And kiss his wife--and leave her--
+ And wander everywhere.
+
+ Who looks too long in the twilight,
+ Or the dawn-light, or the noon-light,
+ Who sees an anchor lifted
+ And hungers past content,
+ Shall pack his chest for the world's end,
+ For alien sun--or moonlight,
+ And follow the wind, sateless,
+ To Disillusionment!
+
+
+
+
+K'U-KIANG
+
+
+ Because the sun like a Chinese lantern
+ Set in a temple of clouds tonight,
+ I was back in K'u-Kiang!
+
+ Because in a temple of dragon clouds,
+ As if with incense misty red,
+ It hung there over the rim of the sea,
+ I was back in a narrow street,
+ Where amber faces pass all day,
+ Going to pay, going to pray,
+ Going the same old human way
+ They have gone for a thousand years, men say,
+ In K'u-Kiang.
+
+ And I heard the coolie cry for his fare,
+ I heard the merchant praise his ware
+ Of bronze and porcelain set to snare,
+ In K'u-Kiang!
+ I saw strange streaming signs in black
+ With gold and crimson on their back--
+ Opiate signs in an opiate street;
+ Where the slip and patter of felt-shod feet
+ Is old as the sun;
+ And the temple door
+ As cool and dark as the night.
+
+ And where dim lanterns, swinging there,
+ As a lure to human grief and care,
+ Half reveal and half conceal
+ The ancestral gloom of the gods.
+
+ I saw all this with sudden pang,
+ As if by hashish swept or bhang,
+ Because the sun, like a Chinese lantern,
+ Set in a temple of clouds!
+
+
+
+
+TYPHOON
+
+(_At Hong-kong_)
+
+
+ I was weary and slept on the Peak;
+ The air clung close like a shroud,
+ And ever the blue-fly at my ear
+ Buzzed haunting, hot and loud;
+ I awoke and the sky was dun
+ With awe and a dread that soon
+ Went shuddering thro my heart, for I knew
+ That it meant typhoon! typhoon!
+
+ In the harbour below, far down,
+ The junks like fowl in a flock
+ Were tossing in wingless terror, or fled
+ Fluttering in from the shock.
+ The city, a breathless bend
+ Of roofs, by the water strewn,
+ Lay silent and waiting, yet there was none
+ Within it but said typhoon!
+
+ Then it came, like a million winds
+ Gone mad immeasurably,
+ A torrid and tortuous tempest stung
+ By rape of the fair South Sea.
+ And it swept like a scud escaped
+ From crater of sun or moon,
+ And struck as no power of Heaven could,
+ Or of Hell--typhoon! typhoon!
+
+ And the junks were smitten and torn,
+ The drowning struggled and cried,
+ Or, dashed on the granite walls of the sea,
+ In succourless hundreds died.
+ Till I shut the sight from my eyes
+ And prayed for my soul to swoon:
+ If ever I see God's face, let it
+ Be guiltless of that typhoon!
+
+
+
+
+PENANG
+
+
+ I want to go back to Singapore
+ And ship along the Straits,
+ To a bungalow I know beside Penang;
+ Where cocoanut palms along the shore
+ Are waving, and the gates
+ Of Peace shut Sorrow out forevermore.
+ I want to go back and hear the surf
+ Come beating in at night,
+ Like the washing of eternity over the dead.
+ I want to see dawn fare up and day
+ Go down in golden light;
+ I want to go back to Penang! I want to go back!
+
+ I want to go back to Singapore
+ And up along the Straits
+ To the bungalow that waits me by the tide.
+ Where the Tamil and Malay tell their lore
+ At evening--and the fates
+ Have set no soothless canker at life's core.
+ I want to go back and mend my heart
+ Beneath the tropic moon,
+ While the tamarind-tree is whispering thoughts of sleep.
+ I want to believe that Earth again
+ With Heaven is in tune.
+ I want to go back to Penang! I want to go back!
+
+ I want to go back to Singapore
+ And ship along the Straits
+ To the bungalow I left upon the strand.
+ Where the foam of the world grows faint before
+ It enters, and abates
+ In meaning as I hear the palm-wind pour.
+ I want to go back and end my days
+ Some evening when the Cross
+ On the southern sky hangs heavily far and sad.
+ I want to remember when I die
+ That life elsewhere was loss.
+ I want to go back to Penang! I want to go back!
+
+
+
+
+NIGHTS ON THE INDIAN OCEAN
+
+
+ Nights on the Indian Ocean,
+ Long nights of moon and foam,
+ When silvery Venus low in the sky
+ Follows the sun home.
+ Long nights when the mild monsoon
+ Is breaking south-by-west,
+ And when soft clouds and the singing shrouds
+ Make all that is seem best.
+
+ Nights on the Indian Ocean,
+ Long nights of space and dream,
+ When silent Sirius round the Pole
+ Swings on, with steady gleam;
+ When oft the pushing prow
+ Seems pressing where before
+ No prow has ever pressed--or shall
+ From hence forevermore.
+
+ Nights on the Indian Ocean,
+ Long nights--with land at last,
+ Dim land, dissolving the long sea-spell
+ Into a sudden past--
+ That seems as far away
+ As this our life shall seem
+ When under the shadow of death's shore
+ We drop its ended dream.
+
+
+
+
+SIGHTING ARABIA
+
+
+ My heart, that is Arabia, O see!
+ That talismanic sweep of sunset coast,
+ Which lies like richly wrought enchantment's ghost
+ Before us, bringing back youth's witchery!
+
+ "Arabian Nights!" At last to us one comes,
+ The crescent moon upon its purple brow.
+ Will not Haroun and Bagdad rise up now
+ There on the shore, to beating of his drums?
+
+ Is not that gull a roc? That sail Sindbad's?
+ That rocky pinnacle a minaret?
+ Does the wind call to prayer from it? O yet
+ I hear the fancy, fervid as a lad's!
+
+ "Allah il Allah," rings it; O my heart,
+ Fall prostrate, for to Mecca we are near,
+ That flashing light is but a sign sent clear
+ From her, your houri, as her curtains part!
+
+ Soon she will lean out from her lattice, soon,
+ And bid you climb up to your Paradise,
+ Which is her panting lips and passion eyes
+ Under the drunken sweetness of the moon!
+
+ O heart, my heart, drink deeply ere they die,
+ The sunset dome, the minaret, the dreams
+ Flashing afar from youth's returnless streams:
+ For we, my heart, must grow old, you and I!
+
+
+
+
+"ALL'S WELL"
+
+
+ I
+
+ The illimitable leaping of the sea,
+ The mouthing of its madness to the moon,
+ The seething of its endless sorcery,
+ Its prophecy no power can attune,
+ Swept over me as, on the sounding prow
+ Of a great ship that steered into the stars,
+ I stood and felt the awe upon my brow
+ Of death and destiny and all that mars.
+
+
+ II
+
+ The wind that blew from Cassiopeia cast
+ Wanly upon my ear a rune that rung;
+ The sailor in his eyrie on the mast
+ Sang an "All's well," that to the spirit clung
+ Like a lost voice from some aerial realm
+ Where ships sail on forever to no shore,
+ Where Time gives Immortality the helm,
+ And fades like a far phantom from life's door.
+
+
+ III
+
+ "And is all well, O Thou Unweariable,
+ Who launchest worlds upon bewildered space,"
+ Rose in me, "All? or did thy hand grow dull
+ Building this world that bears a piteous race?
+ O was it launched too soon or launched too late?
+ Or can it be a derelict that drifts
+ Beyond thy ken toward some reef of Fate
+ On which Oblivion's sand forever shifts?"
+
+
+ IV
+
+ The sea grew softer as I questioned--calm
+ With mystery that like an answer moved,
+ And from infinity there fell a balm,
+ The old peace that God _is_, tho all unproved.
+ The old faith that tho gulfs sidereal stun
+ The soul, and knowledge drown within their deep,
+ There is no world that wanders, no not one
+ Of all the millions, that He does not keep.
+
+
+
+
+SOMNAMBULISM
+
+
+ I
+
+ Night is above me,
+ And Night is above the night.
+ The sea is beside me soughing, or is still.
+ The earth as a somnambulist moves on
+ In a strange sleep ...
+ A sea-bird cries.
+ And the cry wakes in me
+ Dim, dead sea-folk, my sires--
+ Who more than myself are me.
+ Who sat on their beach long nights ago and saw
+ The sea in its silence;
+ And cursed it or implored;
+ Or with the Cross defied;
+ Then on the morrow in their boats went down.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Night is above me ...
+ And Night is above the night.
+ Rocks are about me, and, beyond, the sand ...
+ And the low reluctant tide,
+ That rushes back to ebb a last farewell
+ To the flotsam borne so long upon its breast.
+ Rocks ... But the tide is out,
+ And the slime lies naked, like a thing ashamed
+ That has no hiding-place.
+ And the sea-bird hushes--
+ The bird and all far cries within my blood--
+ And earth as a somnambulist moves on.
+
+
+
+
+CHARTINGS
+
+
+ There is no moon, only the sea and stars;
+ There is no land, only the vessel's bow
+ On which I stand alone and wonder how
+ Men ever dream of ports beyond the bars
+ Of Finitude that fix the Here and Now.
+ A meteor falls, and foam beneath me breaks;
+ Dim phosphor fires within it faintly die.
+ So soft the sea is that it seems a sky
+ On which eternity to life awakes.
+
+ The universe is spread before my face,
+ Worlds where perchance a million seas like this
+ Are flowing and where tides of pain and bliss
+ Find, as on earth, so prevalent a place
+ That nothing of their wont we there should miss.
+ The Universe, that man has dared to say
+ Is but one Being--ah, courageous thought!
+ Which is so vast that hope itself is fraught
+ With shame, while saying it, and shrinks away.
+
+ Shrinks, even as now! For clouds sweep up the skies
+ And darken the wide waters circling round,
+ From out whose deep arises the old sound
+ Of Terror unto which no tongue replies
+ But Faith--that nothing ever shall confound.
+ Not only pagan Perseus but the Cross
+ Is shrouded--with wild wind and wilder rain,
+ That on me beat until my soul again
+ Sings unsurrendering to fears of Loss.
+
+ For this I know,--yea, tho all else lie hid
+ Uncharted on the waters of our fate,
+ All lands of Whence or Whither, whose estate
+ In vain imagination seeks to thrid,
+ Yet cannot, for the fog within Death's gate,--
+ This thing I know, that life, whatever its Source
+ Or Destiny, comes with an upward urge,
+ And that we cannot thwart its mighty surge,
+ But with a joy in strife must keep the course.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRAIL FROM THE SEA
+
+
+ I took the trail to the wooded canyon,
+ The trail from the sea:
+ For I heard a calling in me,
+ A landward calling irresistible in me:--
+
+ _Have done with things of the sea--things of the soul;
+ Have done with waters that slip away from under you.
+ Have done with things faithless, things unfathomable and vain;
+ With the vast deeps of Time and the Hereafter._
+
+ _Have done with the fog-breather, the fog-beguiler;
+ With the foam of the never-resting.
+ Have done with tides and passions, tides and mysteries for a season.
+ Have done with infinite yearnings cast adrift on infinite vagueness--
+ With never a certain sail, never a rudder sure for guidance,
+ With never a compass-needle free of desire._
+
+ _For the ways of earth are good, as well as sea-ways,
+ The peaks of it as well as ports unknown.
+ Not only perils matter, stormy perils, over the pathless,
+ Not only the shoals that sink your ship of dreams.
+ Not only the phantom lure of far horizons,
+ Not only the windy guess at the goals of God._
+
+ _But morning matters, and dew upon the rose,
+ And noon, shadowless noon, and simple sheep on the pastures straying.
+ And toil matters, amid the accustomed corn,
+ And peace matters, the valley-spirit of peace, unprone to wander,
+ Unprone to pierce to the world's end--and past it.
+ And zephyrs matter, that never lift up a sail,
+ Save that of the thistle voyaging over the meadow._
+
+ _And the lark--oh--the sunny lark--as well as the songless petrel,
+ Who cries the foamy length of a thousand leagues.
+ And silence matters, silence free of all surging,
+ Silence, the spirit of happiness and home._
+
+ _And oh how much the laugh of a child matters:
+ More than the green of an island suddenly lit by sun at dawn.
+ And friends, the greetings of friends, how they matter:
+ More than ships that meet and fling a wild ahoy and pass,
+ On any alien tides however enchanted.
+ And the face of love, the evening face of love, at a window waiting,
+ Shall ever a kindled Light on any long-unlifting shore,
+ Shall ever a Harbor Light like that light matter?_
+
+ _Ah no! so enough of the sea and the soul for a season.
+ Too long followed they leave life as a dream,
+ Reality as a mirage when port is made.
+ "Ever in sight of the human," is the helm-word of the wisest,
+ For earth is not earth to one upon the flood of infinity;
+ To the eye, then, it is but an atom-star, adrift, and oh,
+ No longer warm with the beating of countless hearts._
+
+ _No longer warm with the human throb--the simple breath of today,
+ With yester-hours or the near dreams of to-morrow.
+ No longer rich with the little innumerous blooms of brief delights,
+ Nor all divinely drenched with sympathy.
+ No longer green with the humble grass of duties that must grow,
+ To clothe it against desert aridity.
+ No longer zoned with the air of hope, no longer large with faith--
+ No longer heaven enough--if Heaven fails us!_
+
+
+
+
+HAUNTED SEAS
+
+
+ A gleaming glassy ocean,
+ Under a sky of gray;
+ A tide that dreams of motion,
+ Or moves, as the dead may;
+ A bird that dips and wavers
+ Over lone waters round,
+ Then with a cry that quavers
+ Is gone--a spectral sound.
+
+ The brown sad sea-weed drifting
+ Far from the land, and lost.
+ The faint warm fog unlifting,
+ The derelict long-tossed,
+ But now at rest--tho haunted
+ By the death-scenting shark,
+ Whose prey no more undaunted
+ Slips from it, spent and stark.
+
+
+
+
+SEA LURE
+
+(_The Maine Coast_)
+
+
+ It is so, O sea! wild roses
+ Bloom here in the scent of your brine.
+ And the juniper round them closes,
+ And the bays amid them twine,
+ To guard and to praise their beauty;
+ And the gulls above them cry,
+ And the stern rocks stand on duty,
+ Where the surf beats white and high.
+
+ It is so, O sea! wild roses,
+ With the day-long fog bedrenched,
+ Have come from their inland closes
+ With a thirst for you unquenched.
+ And over your cliffs they clamber,
+ And over your vast they gaze;
+ For the tides of you can enamour
+ Even them with their woodland ways.
+
+ Yea, the passion of you and the power
+ And the largeness are a lure
+ To even the heart of a flower,
+ O sea, with a heart unsure!
+ For love is a thing unsated,
+ Nor ever in any breast
+ Has it dwelt, all want abated,
+ At rest.
+
+
+
+
+SONGS TO A. H. R.
+
+
+I
+
+MINGLINGS
+
+ It is the old old vision,
+ The moonlit sea--and you.
+ I cannot make disseverance
+ Between the two.
+ For all the world's wide beauty
+ To me you seem,
+ All that I love in shadow
+ Or glow or gleam.
+
+ It is the old old murmur,
+ The sea's sound and your voice.
+ God in his Bliss between them
+ Could make no choice.
+ For all the world's deep music
+ In you I hear:
+ Nor shall I ask death, ever,
+ For aught more dear.
+
+
+II
+
+LOVE AND INFINITY
+
+ Across the kindling twilight moon
+ A late gull wings to rest.
+ The sea is murmuring underneath
+ Its vast eternal quest.
+ The coast-light flashes over the tide
+ A red and warning eye,
+ And oh the world is very wide,
+ But you are nigh!
+
+ The stars come out from zone to zone,
+ The wind knows every one
+ And blows their message to my heart,
+ As it has ever done.
+ "They are all God's," it tells me, "all,
+ However huge or high."
+ But ah I could not trust its call--
+ Were you not by!
+
+
+III
+
+RECOMPENSE
+
+ Not if I chose from a world of days
+ Could I find a day like this.
+ The sky is a wreath of azure haze
+ And the sea an azure bliss.
+ The surf runs racing the young salt wind,
+ Shouting without a fear
+ Over reef, bar, cliff and scaur,
+ Where you and I lie near.
+
+ O you and I who have watched the sky
+ And sea from many a shore!
+ You, love, and I who will live and die--
+ And watch the sea no more!
+ O joy of the world! Joy of love,
+ Joy that can say to death,
+ "Tho you end all with your wanton pall,
+ We two have had this breath!"
+
+
+IV
+
+AT THE EBB-HOUR
+
+ As I hear, thro the midnight sighing,
+ The low ebb-tide withdrawn,
+ And gulls on the dark cliff crying
+ For far discernless dawn,
+ It seems that all life is lying
+ Within your every breath,
+ Yet I can not believe in dying,
+ Or death.
+
+ As I hear, from the gray church tower,
+ The bell's unfailing sound
+ Peal forth hour after hour
+ To night's lone reaches round,
+ It seems as if Time's wan power
+ Would sear all things apace--
+ All, save in my heart one flower,
+ Your face.
+
+
+V
+
+IN A DARK HOUR
+
+ You are not with me--only the moon,
+ The sea and the gulls' cry, out of tune;
+ The myriad cry of the gulls still strewn
+ On the sands where the tide will enter soon.
+
+ You are not with me, only the breath
+ Of the wind--and then the wind's death.
+ A shrouding silence then that saith,
+ "Even as wind love vanisheth."
+
+ You are not with me--only fear,
+ As old as earth's first frenzied bier
+ That severed two whose hearts were near,
+ And left one with all Life unclear.
+
+
+VI
+
+VIA AMOROSA
+
+ When we two walk, my love, on the path
+ The moon makes over the sea,
+ To the end of the world where sorrow hath
+ An end that is ecstasy,
+ Should we not think of the other road
+ Of wearying dust and stone
+ Our feet would fare did each but care
+ To follow the way alone?
+
+ When we two slip at night to the skies
+ And find one star that we keep
+ As a trysting-place to which our eyes
+ May lead our souls ere sleep,
+ Should we not pause for a little space
+ And think how many must sigh
+ Because they gaze over starry ways
+ With no heart-comrade by?
+
+ When we two then lie down to our dreams
+ That deepen still the delight
+ Of our wandering where stars and streams
+ Stray in immortal light,
+ Should we not grieve with the myriads
+ From East of earth to West
+ Who lay them down at night but to drown
+ A longing for some loved breast?
+
+ Ah, yes, for life has a thousand gifts,
+ But love it is gives life.
+ Who walks thro his world in loneness lifts
+ A soul that is sorrow-rife.
+ But they to whom it is given to tread
+ The moon-path and not sink
+ Can ever say the unhappiest way
+ Earth has is fair, to the brink.
+
+
+VII
+
+TRANSFUSION
+
+ A shoal-light flashes east,
+ And livid lightning west,
+ The silvery dark night-sea between,
+ On which we ride at rest,
+ And gaze far, far away
+ Into the fretless skies,
+ World-sadness in our thought--but ah,
+ Content within our eyes.
+
+ The ship's bell strikes--the sound
+ Floats shrouded to our ears,
+ Then suddenly, as at a touch,
+ The universe appears
+ A Presence Infinite
+ That penetrates our love
+ And makes us one with night and sea
+ And all the stars above.
+
+
+
+
+NEED OF STORM
+
+(_Naples-on-the-Gulf_)
+
+
+ On the green floor of the Gulf the wind is walking,
+ Printing it with invisible feet;
+ The tide is talking.
+
+ Purple and grey the horizon walls them round
+ With purpler clouds.
+ They wander in it like guests gently astray
+ In a house deep mystery shrouds.
+
+ I do not know the speech of the tide,
+ For too articulate have become my years:
+ Beauty brings only words, not breathless tears.
+
+ So the young heron fishing there in the foam
+ On the sand's edge,
+ Would once have taken my spirit far, far home
+ To the infinite, when he vanished thro the gloam.
+
+ But now I am left behind on the beach--a shell
+ That no more knows the wonder of the sea's swell,
+ Or more than the empty echo of its knell.
+
+ To sea then, Life, wildly to sea with a storm
+ Sweep me again,
+ From the smooth dull beach of custom where I lie,
+ That I may feel once more
+ The swaying surge of passion thro me swarm!
+
+
+
+
+A FLORIDA INTERLUDE
+
+(_Naples-on-the-Gulf_)
+
+
+ I
+
+ Behind me lie the Everglades,
+ The mystic grassy Everglades,
+ Where the moccasin and the Seminole glide
+ In secret silent Indian ways.
+ Before me lies the Gulf,
+ The cup of blue bright tropic waters,
+ Held to the parched lips of the South
+ To cool and quench its thirst.
+
+ Behind me lie the Everglades,
+ Before me lies the Gulf,
+ Which the sunset soon shall change to wine,
+ A Eucharist for the longing soul.
+ Its rim of land shall be transformed
+ To Mexic opal and chrysoprase,
+ And then shall come the moon
+ As calm as a thought of Christ.
+
+ As calm as a thought of Christ--
+ Over the cup's sand-rim enchased
+ With palm and pine, Floridian friends,
+ Saying their twilight litanies;
+ While homeward flies the heron
+ To his island cypress in the swamp,
+ Which Spanish mosses drape and the moon
+ Silverly soothes to peace.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Behind me lie the Everglades,
+ Where the bittern wails to the moon's face.
+ Peace is gone as I wake
+ And memory in me wails
+ From the primal swamp, Heredity,
+ Whence I have come with all the desires
+ Of creeping, walking, flying things,
+ To creep or walk or fly.
+
+ With all the desires of the earth-creatures;
+ Yet with a want transcendent,
+ A want that comes with the glimmer of stars
+ And pierces to my heart.
+ A want of the life I have not known,
+ Of the life unknowable,
+ In the Everglades of the Universe
+ Where the Great Spirit glides.
+
+
+
+
+A FLORIDA BOATING SONG
+
+
+ Down thro Florida keys,
+ From island, to island!
+ Down thro Florida keys,
+ Where mangrove roots dip in the seas!
+ A myriad tangled roots
+ From each palmetto byland,
+ Oyster-encrusted roots mid which
+ The heron wades in the shallow shades!
+
+ Down thro Florida keys,
+ Around them, between them,
+ Thro low green Florida keys,
+ So low they scarce seem born of the seas!
+ Where pouchy pelicans roost
+ On cypresses that lean them
+ Out over the idle lap of the tide
+ That comes and goes with balmy flows!
+
+ Down thro Florida keys,
+ Thro mazes on mazes
+ Of ripple-encircled keys,
+ Where sun and wind play as they please!
+ Where the eaglet, high in air,
+ Or the wild white ibis, dazes
+ Eyes that follow them up the blue,
+ As the heart would do, the heart too!
+
+ Down thro Florida keys
+ I'm going, I'm going!
+ Thro low green Florida keys
+ And greener glades of Florida seas!
+ And this is all I know,
+ That all in the world worth knowing
+ Is joy like that of the tarpon's leap
+ In air divine with the warm sunshine!
+
+
+
+
+DAWN-BLISS
+
+(_Naples-on-the-Gulf_)
+
+
+ I went out at dawn,
+ Pelicans were fishing,
+ Big-beaked, grey and brown;
+ Little waves were swishing.
+ Clouds creamed the sky,
+ As shells creamed the shore;
+ Wild aery hues of beauty
+ Round seemed to pour!
+
+ I went out at dawn,
+ Pelicans were floating,
+ Big beaks on their breasts;
+ Up the sun came boating.
+ "Ship ahoy!" I cried,
+ To his golden sail.
+ Bliss-winds of beauty in me
+ Broke--to a gale!
+
+ I went out at dawn,
+ Pelicans were winging.
+ Palms waved passion plumes,
+ Beach sands were singing.
+ Stripped, save of strength,
+ I plunged into the sea
+ And swam, till the bliss of beauty
+ Died away in me.
+
+
+
+
+ATAVISM
+
+
+ I leant out over a ledging cliff and looked down into the sea,
+ Where weed and kelp and dulse swayed, in green translucency;
+ Where the abalone clung to the rock and the star-fish lay about,
+ Purpling the sands that slid away under the silver trout.
+
+ And the sea-urchin too was there, and the sea-anemone.
+ It was a world of watery shapes and hues and wizardry.
+ And I felt old stirrings wake in me, under the tides of time,
+ Sea-hauntings I had brought with me out of the ancient slime.
+
+ And now, as I muse, I cannot rid my senses of the spell
+ That in a tidal trance all things around me drift and swell
+ Under the sea of the Universe, down into which strange eyes
+ Keep peering at me, as I peered, with wonder and surmise.
+
+
+
+
+RE-RECKONING
+
+
+ Two years have gone, and again I stand
+ On the bow of a mighty ship
+ That pushes her way 'twixt sea and stars
+ With soft and dreamy dip.
+ Two years of labouring, heart and hand,
+ Of waging spirit-wars,
+ Of wondering ever what life is--
+ And if death heals its scars.
+
+ Two years; and again the mast-bell sounds
+ Above me--with a low voice,
+ As ghostly as the white phosphor-foam
+ That breaks with the old noise
+ Of waters that have washed all bounds
+ Of earth, that is man's home--
+ His ark--on the wide ether flung,
+ Unrestingly to roam.
+
+ For, even as we, is this our earth
+ An endless wanderer
+ Far down a universe with vast
+ Strange voyagings astir;
+ And where time ever brings to birth
+ A craving, never past,
+ To fare from where we are, to where
+ No anchor ever was cast.
+
+ A craving--in the mote, the man,
+ The mollusc and the star;
+ A yearning on--O life! O life!
+ How far leads it, how far?
+ All unbelievably began
+ Our voyage, mid a strange strife--
+ That, meaningless, yet seems to mean
+ It is with Wisdom rife.
+
+ But if it is not, shall we say,
+ "Let man scuttle his ship,
+ And drown in universal death
+ The griefs that at him grip?"
+ No; for no surety rests therein
+ To certain end of breath.
+ He can but let hope set the course
+ His soul foretokeneth.
+
+
+
+
+TO THE AFTERNOON MOON, AT SEA
+
+
+ Take care, O wisp of a moon,
+ Vague on the sunny blue above the sea,
+ Or the gull flying across you
+ Will pierce your veil-thin shape with a sharp wing!
+
+ Take care, or the wind will wilt you,
+ As he does the clouds snowily drifting by you,
+ And diffuse you over the sky, a silvery mist,
+ To give more cool to the day!
+
+ Take care, so near the horizon,
+ Or a phantom skipper, one who has long been drowned,
+ Will reach above it and seize you
+ And make you his sail to circle the world forever!
+
+ Take care, take care! for frailty
+ Is the prey of the strong, and you, a wraith of it,
+ Have yet a long while to go before nightfall
+ Brings you to sure effulgence!
+
+
+
+
+PATHS
+
+
+ Crushing in my hand
+ The bay as I pass,
+ Drinking in its fragrance
+ With the sea's scent,
+ While gull-wings write
+ Poems white and fast
+ On the blue sky
+ That is soft with content;
+ Crushing in my hand
+ The bay and the juniper,
+ While I record
+ Each line the gulls write,
+ I go by sea paths
+ Down to the sea's edge,
+ I go by heart paths
+ Deep into delight.
+
+ Simple is my joy
+ As the little sandpiper's,
+ Who follows beside me
+ With silvery song;
+ Blither than the breeze,
+ That skims great billows
+ Nor knows how deep
+ Is their flow--or strong.
+ Simple is my joy,
+ A sunny sense-sweetness,
+ Full of bird-bliss,
+ Bay-warmth, spray-leap.
+ Mysteries there are
+ And miseries beneath it,
+ But sunk, like wrecks,
+ Far down in the deep.
+
+
+
+
+FROM A NORTHERN BEACH
+
+
+ Is it because for a million years
+ The tide has entered here
+ From cold north seas
+ Where ice-floes freeze
+ That ever unto my ear
+ Primordial loneness in its voice
+ Comes telling of that time
+ When life was not, upon the earth,
+ But only glacier-rime?
+
+ Is it because these granite rocks
+ I share with weed and scurf
+ Were held so long
+ By the ice-throng
+ That now they take the surf
+ So selflessly and soullessly,
+ As if God's Immanence
+ Had been pressed from them, never more
+ To enter, with sweet sense?
+
+ And is it because I, too, evolved
+ From ice and sea and shore,
+ Can understand
+ How life has spanned
+ The lifeless ages o'er,
+ That as I sit here, suddenly
+ The tide again seems stilled
+ And earth beneath a great white pall
+ Again lies changed and chilled?
+
+ So it must be--ah, so; for soft
+ Within my muted brain
+ The heritage
+ Of age on age
+ Reverberates again.
+ Wherefore when glacial Silence comes
+ With Death shall I emerge
+ From that as from the frozen Past,
+ Under Life's endless urge?
+
+
+
+
+PASSAGE
+
+
+ A dark sail,
+ Like a wild-goose wing,
+ Where the sunset was.
+ The moon soon will silver its sinewy flight
+ Thro the night watches,
+ And the far flight
+ Of those immortal migrants,
+ The ever-returning stars.
+
+
+
+
+ALEEN
+
+
+ The long line of the foaming coast
+ Is muffled by the fog's gray ghost.
+ I cross the league of sea between
+ And lift the latch and kiss Aleen.
+
+ She throws a log upon the fire.
+ I draw her to me, nigh and nigher.
+ She does not know what a brief time
+ Ago it was my arms held--crime.
+
+ The surf is beating on the shore.
+ We hear our own heart-beatings more.
+ She speaks of _him_ and my reply
+ Is silence: does she wonder why?
+
+ "I do not love him: have no fear,"
+ Her whisper is, against my ear.
+ At last, "I have no fear," say I.
+ She starts, as at a wild-beast's cry.
+
+ And then she sees red on my coat.
+ A still-born cry throbs in her throat.
+ The fog sweeps by the window pane.
+ Her sight is fixed on one dull stain.
+
+ I rise and light my pipe and go,
+ Leaving her standing, staring so.
+ The wind means storm, I think, to-night:
+ But more than that will make her white.
+
+ And yet had it been yesterday
+ She said those words, I still could pray.
+ There would be still a God above--
+ For two, now overwhelmed, to love!
+
+
+
+
+TO A SOLITARY SEA-GULL
+
+
+ Lone white gull with sickle wings,
+ You reap for the heart inscrutable things:
+ Sorrow of mists and surf of the shore,
+ Winds that sigh of the nevermore;
+ Fret of foam and flurry of rain,
+ Swept far over the troubled tide;
+ Maths of mystery and grey pain
+ The sea's voice ever yields, beside.
+ Lone white gull, you reap for the heart
+ Life's most sad and inscrutable part.
+
+
+
+
+INEFFABLE THINGS
+
+
+ The little song-sparrow is gone
+ And the summer is nearly ended,
+ The rill of his song was a happy rift
+ In the surging sound of the sea.
+ The swallow is lingering on,
+ And the silvery swift sandpiper,
+ And I--tho I know my saddened heart
+ Has lost an ineffable thing,
+ That summer no more can bring.
+
+ With the first bay-leaves that flung
+ Their scent to me by the billows,
+ I twined some faith, some trust,
+ As glad as the sparrow's song.
+ And the terns that darted among
+ The tides seemed weaving for me
+ Impalpable wings of peace and hope--
+ That now have taken flight
+ Beyond the day and the night.
+
+ Ah, Life, you have known my plea
+ For sun and the tide of fortune,
+ For winds to waken my sail and bear
+ Me joyously over the world.
+ Know too how much of your fog
+ And storm and rain I will suffer,
+ If only you do not sweep from me
+ The dear ineffable things,
+ To which your fragrance clings.
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF A SEA-FARER
+
+
+ Many are on the sea to-day
+ With all sails set.
+ The tide rolls in a restive gray,
+ The wind blows wet.
+ The gull is weary of his wings,
+ And I am weary of all things.
+
+ Heavy upon me longing lies,
+ My sad eyes gaze
+ Across sad leagues that sink and rise
+ And sink always.
+ My life has sunk and risen so,
+ I'd have it cease awhile to flow.
+
+
+
+
+WAVES
+
+
+ The evening sails come home
+ With twilight in their wings.
+ The harbour-light across the gloam
+ Springs;
+ The wind sings.
+
+ The waves begin to tell
+ The sea's night-sorrow o'er,
+ Weaving within their ancient spell
+ More
+ Than earth's lore.
+
+ The rising moon wafts strange
+ Low lures across the tide,
+ On which my dim thoughts seem to range,
+ Stride
+ Upon stride,
+
+ Until, with flooding thrill,
+ They seem at last to blend
+ With waves that from the Eternal Will
+ Wend,
+ Without end.
+
+
+
+
+IN A STORM
+
+(_To a Petrel_)
+
+
+ All day long in the spindrift swinging,
+ Bird of the sea! bird of the sea!
+ How I would that I had thy winging--
+ How I envy thee!
+
+ How I would that I had thy spirit,
+ So to careen, joyous to cry,
+ Over the storm and never fear it!
+ Into the night that hovers near it!
+ Calm on a reeling sky!
+
+ All day long, and the night, unresting!
+ Ah! I believe thy every breath
+ Means that life's best comes ever breasting
+ Peril and pain and death!
+
+
+
+
+AFTER THEIR PARTING
+
+(_A Woman Speaks_)
+
+
+ You know that rock on a rocky coast,
+ Where the moon came up, a ruined ghost,
+ Distorted until her shape almost
+ Seemed breaking?
+ Came up like a phantom silently
+ And dropped her shroud on the red night sea,
+ Then walked, a spectral mystery,
+ Unwaking?
+
+ You know how, sudden, there came a change,
+ When she had left the sea's low range,
+ Its lurid crimson, stark and strange,
+ Behind her?
+ How, sudden, her silver self shone thro,
+ Tranquilly free of the earth's stained hue,
+ And found a way where the clouds were few
+ To bind her?
+
+ You know this? Then go back some day,
+ When I have gone the moonless way,
+ To that dark rock whereon we lay
+ And waited;
+ And when the moon has arisen free,
+ Your soiling doubt shall fall from me,
+ And eased of unrest your heart shall be,
+ And sated.
+
+
+
+
+A WORD'S MAGIC
+
+
+ Do you remember Etajima,
+ And how, upon a moon-fogged sea,
+ As ghostly as ever a tide shall be,
+ We passed an island silently?
+
+ And how a low voice in the gloom
+ Of the temple pine-trees leaning there
+ Said _sayonara_ to one somewhere
+ Unseen in the shadow-haunted air?
+
+ Just _sayonara_: but it seemed
+ The soul of all farewells that night,
+ The sigh of all withdrawn delight,
+ The sound of love's last rapture-rite.
+
+ And now, after long years, it comes
+ Again from isles of memory
+ To bring once more to birth in me
+ The breath of all lost witchery.
+
+ Yes, one low word of parting, now
+ Echoing, thro the fog of years,
+ Has touched my heart with beauty's tears,
+ And youth thro all things reappears.
+
+
+
+
+SEA RHAPSODY
+
+(_Out of Hong-kong_)
+
+
+ Never again, never again
+ Did I hope to breathe such joy!
+ The sea is blue and the winds halloo
+ Up to the sun "Ahoy!"
+ "Ahoy!" they shout and the mists they rout
+ From the mountain-tops go streaming
+ In happy play where the gulls sway,
+ And a million waves are gleaming!
+
+ And every wave, billowing brave,
+ Is tipped with a wild delight.
+ A garden of isles around me smiles,
+ Bathed in the blue noon light,
+ The rude brown bunk of the fishing junk
+ Seems fair as a sea-king's palace:
+ O wine of the sky the gods have spilt
+ Out of its crystal chalice!
+
+ For wine is the wind, wine the sea,
+ Wine for the sinking spirit,
+ To lift it up from the cling of clay
+ Into high Bliss--or near it!
+ So let me drink till I cease to think,
+ And know with a sting of rapture
+ That joy is yet as wide as the world
+ For men, at last, to capture!
+
+
+
+
+IN AN ORIENTAL HARBOUR
+
+
+ All the ships of the world come here,
+ Rest a little, then set to sea;
+ Some ride up to the waiting pier,
+ Some drop anchor beyond the quay.
+ Some have funnels of blue and black,
+ (Some come once but come not back!)
+ Some have funnels of red and yellow,
+ Some--O war!--have funnels of gray.
+
+ All the ships of the world come here,
+ Ships from every billow's foam;
+ Fruiter and oiler, pirateer,
+ Liner and lugger and tramp a-roam.
+ Some are scented of palm and pine,
+ (Some are fain for the Pole's far clime).
+ Some are scented of soy and senna,
+ Some--ah me!--are scented of home.
+
+ All the ships of the world come here,
+ Day and night there is sound of bells,
+ Seeking the port they calmly steer,
+ Clearing the port they ring farewells.
+ Under the sun or under the stars
+ (Under the light of swaying spars),
+ Under the moon or under morning
+ Do they swing, as the tide swells.
+
+ All the ships of the world come here,
+ Rest a little and then are gone,
+ Over the crystal planet-sphere
+ Swept, thro every season, on.
+ Swept to every cape and isle
+ (Every coast of cloud or smile),
+ Swept till over them sweeps the sorrow
+ Of their last sea-dawn.
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE SKY
+
+
+ Far out to sea go the fishing junks,
+ With all sails set,
+ The tide swings gray and the clouds sway,
+ The wind blows wet;
+ Blows wet from the long coast lying dim
+ As if mist-born.
+ Far out they sail, as the stars pale,
+ The stars of morn.
+
+ Far out to sea go the fishing junks,
+ And I who pass
+ Upon a deck that is vaster reck
+ No more, alas,
+ Of all their life, or they of mine,
+ Than comes to this,--
+ That under the sky we live and die,
+ Like all that is.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG FOR HEALING
+
+(_On the South Seas_)
+
+
+ When I return to the world again,
+ The world of fret and fight,
+ To grapple with godless things and men,
+ In battle, wrong or right,
+ I will remember this--the sea,
+ And the white stars hanging high,
+ And the vessel's bow
+ Where calmly now
+ I gaze to the boundless sky.
+
+ When I am deaf with the din of strife,
+ And blind amid despair,
+ When I am choked with the dust of life
+ And long for free soul-air,
+ I will recall this sound--the sea's,
+ And the wide horizon's hope,
+ And the wind that blows
+ And the phosphor snows
+ That fall as the cleft waves ope.
+
+ When I am beaten--when I fall
+ On the bed of black defeat,
+ When I have hungered, and in gall
+ Have got but shame to eat,
+ I will remember this--the sea,
+ And its tide as soft as sleep,
+ And the clear night sky
+ That heals for aye
+ All who will trust its Deep.
+
+
+
+
+A SINGHALESE LOVE LAMENT
+
+
+ As the cocoanut-palm
+ That pines, my love,
+ Away from the sound
+ Of the planter's voice,
+ Am I, for I hear
+ No more resound
+ Your song by the pearl-strewn sea!
+ The sun may come
+ And the moon wax round,
+ And in its beam
+ My mates may rejoice,
+ But I feast not
+ And my heart is dumb,
+ As I long, O long, for thee!
+
+ In the jungle-deeps,
+ Where the cobra creeps,
+ The leopard lies
+ In wait for me,
+ But O, my love,
+ When the daylight dies
+ There is more to my dread than he!
+ Harsh lonely tears
+ That assail my eyes
+ Are worse to bear,--
+ For the misery
+ That makes them well
+ Is the long, long years
+ That I moan away from thee!
+
+ O again, again,
+ In my katamaran
+ A-keel would I push
+ To your palmy door!
+ Again would I hear
+ The heave and hush
+ Of your song by the plantain-tree.
+ But far away
+ Do I toil and crush
+ The hopes that arise
+ At my sick heart's core.
+ For never near
+ Does it come, the day
+ That draws me again to thee!
+
+
+
+
+THE CITY
+
+
+ Soft and fair by the Desert's edge,
+ And on the dim blue edge of the sea,
+ Where white gulls wing all day and fledge
+ Their young on the high cliff's sandy ledge,
+ There is a city I have beheld,
+ Sometime or where, by day or dream,
+ I know not which, for it seems enspelled
+ As I am by its memory.
+
+ Pale minarets of the Prophet pierce
+ Above it into the white of the skies,
+ And sails enchanted a thousand years
+ Flit at its feet while fancy steers.
+ No face of all its faces to me
+ Is known--no passion of it or pain.
+ It is but a city by the sea,
+ Enshrined forever beyond my eyes!
+
+
+
+
+FULL TIDE
+
+
+ Sea-scents, wild-rose scents,
+ Bay and barberry too,
+ Drench the wind, the Maine wind,
+ That gulls are dipping thro,
+ With soft hints, sweet hints,
+ With lull, lure and desire;
+ With memory-wafts and mysteries,
+ And all the ineffable histories
+ Made when the sea and land meet,
+ And the sun lends nuptial fire.
+
+ Sea-foam, and dream-foam,
+ And which is which, who knows,
+ When all day long the heart goes out
+ To every wave that blows,
+ That blossoms on the bright tide,
+ Then sheds a shimmering crest
+ And yields its tossing place to one
+ Whose blooming is as quickly done--
+ For beauty is ever swift--begot
+ Of rapture and unrest.
+
+ Sea-deeps, and soul-deeps,
+ And where shall faith be found
+ If not within the heart's beat
+ Or in the surging sound
+ Of the sea, which is the earth's heart,
+ Beating with tireless might;
+ Beating--tho but a tragedy
+ Life seems on every land and sea;
+ Beating to bring all breath, somehow,
+ Out of despair's blight.
+
+
+
+
+THE HERDING
+
+
+ Quietly, quietly in from the fields
+ Of the grey Atlantic the billows come,
+ Like sheep to the fold.
+ Shorn by the rocks of fleecy foam,
+ They sink on the brown seaweed at home;
+ And a bell, like that of a bellwether,
+ Is scarcely heard from the buoy--
+ Save when they suddenly stumble together,
+ In herded hurrying joy,
+ Upon its guidance: then soft music
+ From it is tolled.
+
+ Far out in the murk that follows them in
+ Is heard the call of the fog-horn's voice,
+ Like a shepherd's--low.
+ And the strays as if waiting it seem to pause
+ And lift their heads and listen--because
+ It is sweet from wandering ways to be driven,
+ When we have fearless breasts,
+ When all that we strayed for has been given,
+ When no want molests
+ Us more--no need of the tide's ebbing
+ And tide's flow.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE MAINE COAST
+
+
+ The rocks, lean fingers of the land,
+ Reach out into the sea
+ And cool themselves, all day long,
+ In the tide drippingly.
+ They catch the seaweed in them
+ And the starfish on their tips,
+ And gulls that light
+ And the swift flight
+ Of swallows skimming grey and white--
+ And spars of broken ships.
+
+ The moon, God's perfect silver,
+ With which He pays the world
+ For toil and quest and day's unrest,
+ Is washed on them and swirled.
+ And avidly they seize it,
+ Then let it slip away,
+ Only again
+ And yet again
+ To grasp at it--as eager men
+ At joy no hand can stay.
+
+
+
+
+SEANCE
+
+
+ Hovering wings of terns
+ Over the rock-pools flutter,
+ For the tide, ebbed far out,
+ Seems to stumble and stutter;
+ Seems like a spirit lost,
+ Unable to come again
+ Back to the wonted ways and days
+ Of ever-wanting men.
+
+ And the moon, a medium
+ Trance-pale, is laying her light
+ Over its surge--till, lo,
+ It turns from the deep and night.
+ And the spirit-word it brings
+ Is the message of all time,
+ That doubt is only the ebb of faith,
+ Which ever reflows sublime!
+
+
+
+
+A SIDMOUTH LAD
+
+
+ Salcombe Hill and four hills more
+ Lie to leftward of this shore.
+ On the right Peak Hill arises
+ Ever rises, sickening, o'er.
+
+ Two score rotting years I've seen
+ Sidmouth sit those hills between:
+ Only Sidmouth--and twice over
+ Must I bide it, as I've been.
+
+ Then a churchyard hole for me,
+ By the dull voice of the sea.
+ Rotting, still in Sidmouth rotting,
+ Rotting to eternity.
+
+
+
+
+WIDOWED
+
+
+ One wild gull on a wilder storm,
+ Winging to keep her lone heart warm.
+ One wild gull by the surf--and I,
+ Beaten by wind and rain and sky.
+
+ One wild gull in the offing lost,
+ Wilder heart in my bosom tost.
+ One wild gull--O why but one!
+ Two, dear God, should there be--or none!
+
+
+
+
+TO THE SEA
+
+
+ Are you enraged, O sea, with the blue peace
+ Of heaven, so to uplift your armied waves,
+ Your billowy rebellion against its ease,
+ And with Tartarean mutter from cold caves,
+ From shuddering profundities where shapes
+ Of awe glide thro entangled leagues of ooze,
+ To hoot your watery omens evermore,
+ And evermore your moanings interfuse
+ With seething necromancy and mad lore?
+
+ Or do you labour with the drifting bones
+ Of countless dead, O mighty Alchemist,
+ Within whose stormy crucible the stones
+ Of sunk primordial shores, granite and schist,
+ Are crumbled by your all-abrasive beat?
+ With immemorial chanting to the moon,
+ And cosmic incantation, do you crave
+ Rest to be found not till your wilds are strewn
+ Frigid and desert over earth's last grave?
+
+ You seem drunk with immensity, mad, blind--
+ With raving deaf, with wandering forlorn,
+ Parent of Demogorgon whose dire mind
+ Is night and earthquake, shapeless shame and scorn
+ Of the o'ermounting birth of Harmony.
+ Bound in your briny bed and gnawing earth
+ With foamy writhing and fierce-panted tides,
+ You are as Fate in torment of a dearth
+ Of black disaster and destruction's strides.
+
+ And how you shatter silence from the world,
+ Incarnate Motion of all mystery!
+ Whose waves are fury-wings, whose winds are hurled
+ Whither your Ghost tempestuous can see
+ A desolate apocalypse of death.
+ Yea, how you shatter silence from the world,
+ With emerald overflowing, waste on waste
+ Of flashing susurration, dashed and swirled
+ On isles and continents that shrink abased!
+
+ And yet, O veering veil of the Unknown,
+ Gathered from primal mist and firmament;
+ O surging shape of Life's unfathomed moan,
+ Whelming humanity with fears unmeant;
+ Yet do I love you, far above all fear,
+ And loving you unconquerably trust
+ The runes that from your ageless surfing start
+ Would read, were they revealed, gust upon gust,
+ That Immortality is might of heart!
+
+
+
+
+SEA-MAD
+
+(_A Breton Maid_)
+
+
+ Three waves of the sea came up on the wind to me!
+ One said:
+ "Away! he is dead!
+ Upon my foam I have flung his head!
+ Go back to your cote, you never shall wed!--
+ (Nor he!)"
+
+ Three waves of the sea came up on the wind to me.
+ Two brake.
+ The third with a quake
+ Cried loud, "O maid, I'll find for thy sake
+ His dead lost body: prepare his wake!"
+ (And back it plunged to the sea!)
+
+ Three waves of the sea came up on the wind to me.
+ One bore--
+ And swept on the shore--
+ His pale, pale face I shall kiss no more!
+ Ah, woe to women death passes o'er!
+ (Woe's me!)
+
+
+
+
+THE ATHEIST
+
+
+ Over a scurf of rocks the tide
+ Wanders inward far and wide,
+ Lifting the sea-weed's sloven hair,
+ Filling the pools and foaming there,
+ Sighing, sighing everywhere.
+
+ Merged are the marshes, merged the sands,
+ Save the dunes with pine-tree hands
+ Stretching upward toward the sky,
+ Where the sun, their god, moves high:
+ Would I too had a god--yea, I!
+
+ For, the sea is to me but sea,
+ And the sky but infinity.
+ Tides and times are but some chance
+ Born of a primal atom-dance.
+ All is a mesh of Circumstance.
+
+ In it there is no Heart--no Soul--
+ No illimitable Goal--
+ Only wild happenings, by wont
+ Made into laws no might can shunt
+ From the deep grooves in which they hunt.
+
+ Wings of the gull I watch or claws
+ Of the cold crab whose strangeness awes:
+ Faces of men that feel the force
+ Of a hid thing they call life's course:
+ It is their hoping or remorse.
+
+ Yet it may be that I have missed
+ Something that only they who tryst,
+ Not with the sequence of events
+ But with their viewless Immanence,
+ Find and acclaim with spirit-sense.
+
+
+
+
+AT THE HELM
+
+(_Nova Scotia_)
+
+
+ Fog, and a wind that blows the sea
+ Blindly into my eyes.
+ And I know not if my soul shall be
+ When the day dies.
+
+ But if it be not and I lose
+ All that men live to gain--
+ I who have known but heaving hues
+ Of wind and rain--
+
+ Still I shall envy no man's lot,
+ For I have held this great,
+ Never in whines to have forgot
+ That Fate is Fate.
+
+
+
+
+IMPERTURBABLE
+
+
+ Three times the fog rolled in today, a silent shroud,
+ From which the breakers ran like ghosts, moaning and tumbling.
+ Three times a startled sea-bird cried aloud,
+ On the wind stumbling.
+
+ But I cast my net with never a fear, tho wraiths in me
+ And birds of wild unrest were stirring and starting and crying.
+ For I knew that under the sway of every sea
+ There is calm lying.
+
+
+
+
+WASTE
+
+
+ I flung a wild rose into the sea,
+ I know not why.
+ For swinging there on a rathe rose-tree,
+ By the scented bay and barberry,
+ Its petals gave all their sweet to me,
+ As I passed by.
+
+ And yet I flung it into the tide,
+ And went my way.
+ I climbed the gray rocks, far and wide,
+ And many a cove of peace I tried,
+ With none of them all to be satisfied,
+ The whole long day.
+
+ For I had wasted a beautiful thing,
+ Which might have won
+ Each passing heart to pause and sing,
+ On the sea-path there, of its blossoming.
+ And who wastes beauty shall feel want's sting,
+ As I had done.
+
+
+
+
+RESURGENCE
+
+
+ I was content, O Sea, to be free for a space from striving,
+ Content as the brown weed is, at rest on rocks in the sun,
+ When the salt tide is out, and the surf no more is riving
+ At its roots, or swirling and bidding it sway where the white waves run.
+
+ I was content--with life, and love, and a little over;
+ A little achieved of the much that is given to men to do.
+ But now with your tidal strife do you come again, vain rover,
+ And tell of vastitudes, to be sailed, or sounded, anew.
+
+ Now again do you surge. And the fathomless tides of thinking,
+ Of wanting, waiting, despairing--or daring--with you come;
+ The inner tides of the soul, that had ebbed with slumberous shrinking,
+ But now are bursting again, thro the caves of it long numb.
+
+ So vainly I lie on the cliff with the blissful Blue above me
+ And listless sated gulls afloat below on the swells,
+ For I am soothless, sateless, because of desires that shove me
+ Out and away with the winds, on quests no distance quells!
+
+
+
+
+LIFE'S ANSWER
+
+
+ A stroke of lightning stabbed the storm-black sea,
+ As if it sought the heart of Life thereunder,
+ And meant to put an end to it utterly;--
+ Then came thunder--
+ Wildly applauding thunder.
+
+ Riven with fear the foam-crests ran before it,
+ Hissed by the rain and beaten down to darkness.
+ A gull rose out of the murk with wings that tore it--
+ Life's answer to the storm's terrible starkness.
+
+
+
+
+AS THE TIDE COMES IN
+
+
+ The quivering terns dart wild and dive,
+ As the tide comes tumbling in.
+ The calm rock-pools grow all alive,
+ With the tide tumbling in.
+ The crab who under the brown weed creeps,
+ And the snail who lies in his house and sleeps,
+ Awake and stir, as the plunging sweeps
+ Of the tide come tumbling in.
+
+ Gray driftwood swishes along the sand,
+ As the tide comes tumbling in.
+ With wreck and wrack from many a land,
+ On the tide, tumbling in.
+ About the beach are a broken spar,
+ A pale anemone's torn sea-star
+ And scattered scum of the waves' old war,
+ As the tide tumbles in.
+
+ And, oh, there is a stir at the heart of me,
+ As the tide comes tumbling in.
+ All life once more is a part of me,
+ As the tide tumbles in.
+ New hopes awaken beneath despair
+ And thoughts slip free of the sloth of care,
+ While beauty and love are everywhere--
+ As the tide comes tumbling in.
+
+
+
+
+SENSE-SWEETNESS
+
+
+ Flowers are dancing, waves playing, pines swaying, gulls are a-swarm;
+ Sea and heather, sunning together, glad of the weather, with God are warm.
+
+ Flowers are dancing, clouds winging, larks singing, summer abrew--
+ Summer the old ecstatic passion of Life to fashion the world anew.
+
+
+
+
+TIDALS
+
+
+ Low along the sea, low along the sea,
+ The gray gulls are flying, and one sail swings;
+ The tide is foaming in; the soft wind sighing;
+ The brown kelp is stretching, to the surf, harp-strings.
+
+ Low along the sea, low along the sea,
+ The gray gulls are flying, and one sail fades;
+ The tide is foaming out; the soft wind dying;
+ And white stars are peeping from the night's pale shades.
+
+
+
+
+A SAILOR'S WIFE
+
+
+ Into port when the sun was setting
+ Rode the ship that bore my love,
+ Over the breakers wildly fretting,
+ Under the skies above.
+
+ Down to the beach I ran to meet him;
+ He would come as he had said:
+ And he came--in a sailor's coffin,
+ Dead! . . . . . .
+
+ O the ships of the sea! the lovers
+ Torn by them apart!...
+ The tide has nothing now to tell me,
+ The breakers break my heart!
+
+
+
+
+TO SEA!
+
+
+ Give me the tiller; up with the sail!
+ Now let her swing to the breeze.
+ Out to sea with a dripping rail,
+ To sea, with a heart at ease!
+
+ Out of the Harbour! out of the Bay!
+ Out by the valiant Light,
+ Out by rocks where the young gulls lay--
+ And glad winds teach them flight!
+
+ Out of the Harbour! out of the Bay!
+ Out to the open sea!
+ O there's not in the world a way
+ To feel so wildly free!
+
+ So, let her quiver! So, let her leap!
+ So, let her dance the foam!
+ All life else is a narrow keep,
+ The sea alone is home!
+
+
+
+
+GIVE OVER, O SEA!
+
+
+ Give over, O sea! You never shall reach Nirvana!
+ Your tides, like the tidal generations, ever shall rise and fall,
+ And your infinite waves find birth, rebirth, and billowy dissolution.
+
+ The years of your existence are unending.
+ The years of your unresting are forever.
+ The sun, who is desire, ever begets in you his passion,
+ And the moon is ever drawing you, with silvery soft alluring,
+ To surge and sway, to wander and fret, to waste yourself in foam.
+ So Buddha-calm shall never descend upon you.
+
+ And tho it may often seem you have found the Way,
+ Your tempest-sins return and quicken to wild reincarnations,
+ And again great life, pulsing and perilous,
+ Omnipotent life, that ever resurges thro the universe,
+ Lashes you back to striving, back to yearning, back to speech.
+ To utterance on all shores of the world
+ Of things unutterable.
+
+ Give over then, you never shall reach Nirvana!
+ Nor I, who am your acolyte for a moment;
+ Who swing a censer of fragrant words before your priestly feet,
+ That tread these altar-rocks, bedraped with weeds gently afloat,
+ And with the wild flutter of gulls wildly mysterious.
+
+ Give over and call your winds again to join you!
+ O chanter of deep enchantments, of uncharted litanies,
+ Call them and bid them say with you that life transcends retreat,
+ And that, in the temple of its Immanence,
+ There is no peace that does not spring daily from peacelessness,
+ And no Nirvana save in the lee of storm.
+
+
+
+
+THE NUN
+
+
+ A lone palm leans in the moonlight,
+ Over a convent wall.
+ The sea below is waking and breaking
+ With a calm heave and fall.
+ A young nun sits at a window;
+ For Heaven she is too fair;
+ Yet even the dove of God might nest
+ In her bosom beating there.
+
+ A lone ship sails from the harbour:
+ Whom does it bear away?
+ Her lover who, sin-hearted, has parted
+ And left her but to pray?
+ She has no lover, nor ever
+ Has heard afar love's sigh.
+ Only the Convent's vesper vow
+ Has ever dimmed her eye.
+
+ For naught knows she of her beauty,
+ More than the palm of its peace:
+ And none shall cross her portal, to mortal
+ Desires to bend her knees.
+ The ways of the world have flowers,
+ And any who will pluck those;
+ But in His hand, against all harm,
+ God still will keep some rose.
+
+
+
+
+LAST SIGHT OF LAND
+
+
+ The clouds in woe hang far and dim;
+ I look again, and lo,
+ Only a faint and shadow line
+ Of shore--I watch it go.
+
+ The gulls have left the ship and wheel
+ Back to the cliff's gray wraith.
+ Will it be so of all our thoughts
+ When we set sail on Death?
+
+ And what will the last sight be of life
+ As lone we fare and fast?
+ Grief and a face we love in mist--
+ Then night and awe too vast?
+
+ Or the dear light of Hope--like that,
+ Oh, see, from the lost shore
+ Kindling and calling "Onward, you
+ Shall reach the Evermore!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+ On this and following pages are listed other books by Cale
+ Young Rice. They are all published by The Century Co., 353
+ Fourth Avenue, New York City.
+
+
+SHADOWY THRESHOLDS
+
+By CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+"Cale Young Rice is far too great a pout to be acclaimed in some
+partisan circles.... He is intensely American ... as authentic an artist
+as Shelley or Keats.... He has the magic of Poe without that poet's
+morbidity.... He is America's living master-poet."--_D. F. Hannigan (The
+Rochester Post-Express)._
+
+"This volume maintains Mr. Rice's usual high level and proves anew his
+right to one of the high places among modern poets."--_Edward J. Wheeler
+(Current Opinion)._
+
+"Mr. Rice is modern in the broadest sense of that term. Many of his
+poems are without rhyme and have irregular metres, but they never offend
+thereby.... His place in contemporary first class company is
+secure.--_The Springfield Republican._
+
+"A volume possessing range and variety, together with a lyric quality
+which distinguishes this poet, who ranks among the foremost American
+writers."--_The Post-Intelligencer (Seattle)._
+
+"Mr. Rice in his dramas is an enchanter, and to cast a spell is better
+than to have uttered the most lovely lyrics--but he has done both."--_E.
+A. Jonas (The Louisville Herald)._
+
+"A new volume showing again the power and beauty of Mr. Rice's
+genius."--_The Boston Globe._
+
+"What a pleasure to take up a new book by Cale Young Rice. Here we have
+variety, if ever.... If one can only own one of his books this is a good
+volume to choose."--_The Galveston News._
+
+"Cale Young Rice is a poet capable of sounding the deep imaginative
+strain not only with melody, but with vigor and power of thought. This
+volume will add another shining stone to his reputation."--_The San
+Francisco Chronicle._
+
+"Once more a book of the same high order as all Mr. Rice's work."--_The
+Rochester Democrat-Chronicle._
+
+"Shadowy Thresholds has as great a variety of poetic forms as any volume
+of late years.... Mr. Rice illumines many phases of life, uniting in his
+work the finish and romance of the older poetry with the directness that
+constitutes the best merit of the new."--_The Louisville Evening Post._
+
+_12mo. 179 pages. Price $1.50_
+
+
+WRAITHS AND REALITIES
+
+By CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+"In the writing of lyrics Mr. Rice is unequalled by any modern poet....
+One must go outside of contemporary life to find anything of similar
+excellence."--_Gordon Ray Young (The Los Angeles Times)._
+
+"A new book by Mr. Rice is always an event in American
+letters...."--_The New York Tribune._
+
+"Here, for all to read, is poetic genius spurred and wrought upon ... by
+a rare and wondrous poetic inspiration.... It is like great chimes
+sounding--jangled at times or overborne--but always great."--_The
+Philadelphia North American._
+
+"Mr. Rice in his narratives can tell such tales as the old ballad-makers
+would have gloated over, and can make them contemporary and convincing.
+He can create life tragedies or comedies in a few lines and leave the
+reader with a sense of having been given a full meal of circumstance....
+He is original without striving to be so, and one can never be
+embarrassed by the affirmation that he has come to hold a high place
+among poets of America."--_The Chicago Tribune._
+
+"Cale Young Rice has been credited with some of the finest poetry, and
+regarded as a distinguished master of lyric utterance, and this latest
+volume is warrant for such approval."--_The Brooklyn Eagle._
+
+"We find in Mr. Rice the large and elemental vision a poet must have to
+serve his people when overwhelmed by elemental sorrows and passions. His
+poetry is a spiritual force interpreting life in the various phases of
+intellect and emotion, with a beauty of finish and sense of form that
+are unerring."--_The Louisville Post._
+
+"All that has been said of Cale Young Rice, and that is much indeed, is
+justified in this latest volume."--_The San Francisco Chronicle._
+
+"Cale Young Rice is a real poet of genuine and sincere inspiration,
+never reminiscent or imitative or obvious, but singing from a full heart
+his keen, meditative songs."--_The New York Times._
+
+_12mo. 187 pages. Price $1.50_
+
+
+COLLECTED PLAYS AND POEMS
+
+By CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+"The great quality of Cale Young Rice's work is that, amid all
+distractions and changes in contemporary taste, it remains true to the
+central drift of great poetry. His interests are very wide ... and his
+books open up a most varied world of emotion and romance."--_Gilbert
+Murray._
+
+"The quality of Mr. Rice's work is high. It is seen at its best in his
+poetic dramas, which maintain an astonishing elevation and intensity of
+passion ... but his visionary and philosophical poems are nearly as
+fine. He has a thorough mastery of form, yet notwithstanding the ease of
+his verse it is never slipshod or mechanical."--_The Spectator
+(London)._
+
+"With variations of phrase Cale Young Rice has been described by critics
+here and in America as "the most distinguished master of lyric utterance
+in the New World." ... He has dramatic genius ... and is a born maker of
+songs.... His later volumes confirm the judgment of those who have named
+him the first and most distinctive of modern American lyrists, and one
+of the world's true poets."--_F. Heath (The London Bookman)._
+
+"Mr. Rice is an American poet whose reputation is deserved.... He has
+achieved a high position as poet and dramatist, a great fertility and
+variety of outlook being marked features of his work."--_The London
+Times._
+
+"Foremost among writers who have brought America into prominence in the
+realm of modern thought is Mr. Cale Young Rice.... 'Collected Plays and
+Poems' is one of the best offerings of verse we have had for long.
+Indeed, it has real brilliance.... Mr. Rice's plays are
+masterful."--_The Book Monthly (London)._
+
+"Cale Young Rice is highly esteemed by readers wherever English is the
+native speech."--_The Manchester Guardian._
+
+"In Mr. Rice we have a voice such as America has rarely known
+before."--_The Rochester (N. Y.) Post-Express._
+
+"Mr. Rice of today is the poet who sang to us yesterday of the big,
+vital things of life.... With real genius he brings to the soul a sense
+of things many of us have but dimly sensed in all our years."--_The
+Philadelphia Record._
+
+"These volumes are an anthology wrought by a master hand and endowed
+with perennial vitality.... This writer is the most distinguished master
+of lyric utterance in the new world ... and he has contributed much to
+the scanty stock of American literary fame. Fashions in poetry come and
+go, and minor lights twinkle fitfully as they pass in tumultuous review.
+But these volumes are of the things that are eternal in poetic
+expression.... They embody the hopes and impulses of universal
+humanity."--_The Philadelphia North-American._
+
+"Mr. Rice has been hailed by too many critics as the poet of his
+country, if not of his generation, not to create a demand for a full
+edition of his works."--_The Hartford (Conn.) Courant._
+
+"This gathering of his forces stamps Mr. Rice as one of the world's true
+poets, remarkable alike for strength, versatility and beauty of
+expression."--_The Chicago Herald (Ethel M. Colton)._
+
+"It is with no undue repetition that we speak of the very great range
+and very great variety of Mr. Rice's subject, inspiration, and mode of
+expression.... The passage of his spirit is truly from deep to
+deep."--_Margaret S. Anderson (The Louisville Evening Post)._
+
+"It is good to find such sincere and beautiful work as is in these two
+volumes.... Here is a writer with no wish to purchase fame at the price
+of eccentricity of either form or subject."--_The Independent._
+
+"Mr. Rice's style is that of the masters.... Yet it is one that
+is distinctively American.... He will live with our great
+poets."--_Louisville Herald (J. J. Cole)._
+
+"Mr. Rice is an American by birth, but he is not merely an American
+poet. Over existence and the whole world his vision extends. He is a
+poet of human life and his range is uncircumscribed."--_The Baltimore
+Evening News._
+
+"Viewing Mr. Rice's plays as a whole, I should say that his prime virtue
+is fecundity or affluence, the power to conceive and combine events
+resourcefully, and an abundance of pointed phrases which recalls and
+half restores the great Elisabethans. His aptitude for structure is
+great."--_The Nation (O. W. Firkins)._
+
+"Mr. Rice has fairly won his singing robes and has a right to be ranked
+with the first of living poets. One must read the volumes to get an idea
+of their cosmopolitan breadth and fresh abiding charm.... The dramas,
+taken as a whole, represent the most important work of the kind that has
+been done by any living writer.... This work belongs to that great world
+where the mightiest spiritual and intellectual forces are forever
+contending; to that deeper life which calls for the rarest gifts of
+poetic expression."--_The Book News Monthly (Albert S. Henry)._
+
+_12mo. 2 vols. Price $4.00_
+
+
+ The following volumes are now included in the author's
+ "Collected Plays and Poems," and are not obtainable
+ elsewhere:
+
+
+At the World's Heart
+
+"This book justifies the more than transatlantic reputation of its
+author."--_The Sheffield (England) Daily Telegraph._
+
+
+Porzia: A Play
+
+"It matters little that we hesitate between ranking Mr. Rice highest as
+dramatist or lyrist; what matters is that he has the faculty divine
+beyond any living poet of America; his inspiration is true, and his
+poetry is the real thing."--_The London Bookman._
+
+
+Far Quests
+
+"It shows a wide range of thought and sympathy, and real skill in
+workmanship, while occasionally it rises to heights of simplicity and
+truth, that suggest such inspiration as should mean lasting fame."--_The
+Daily Telegraph (London)._
+
+
+The Immortal Lure: Four Plays
+
+"It is great art--with great vitality."--_James Lane Allen._
+
+"Different from Paola and Francesca, but excelling it--or any of Stephen
+Phillips's work--in a vivid presentment of a supreme moment in the lives
+of the characters."--_The New York Times._
+
+
+Many Gods
+
+"These poems are flashingly, glowingly full of the East.... What I am
+sure of in Mr. Rice is that here we have an American poet whom we may
+claim as ours."--_William Dean Howells, in The North American Review._
+
+
+Nirvana Days
+
+"Mr. Rice has the technical cunning that makes up almost the entire
+equipment of many poets nowadays, but human nature is more to him always
+... and he has the feeling and imaginative sympathy without which all
+poetry is but an empty and vain thing."--_The London Bookman._
+
+
+A Night in Avignon: A Play
+
+"It is as vivid as a page from Browning. Mr. Rice has the dramatic
+pulse."--_James Huneker._
+
+
+Yolanda of Cyprus: A Play
+
+"It has real life and drama, not merely beautiful words, and so differs
+from the great mass of poetic plays."--_Prof. Gilbert Murray._
+
+
+David: A Play
+
+"It is safe to say that were Mr. Rice an Englishman or a Frenchman, his
+reputation as his country's most distinguished poetic dramatist would
+have been assured by a more universal sign of recognition."--_The
+Baltimore News._
+
+
+Charles Di Tocca: A Play
+
+"It is the most powerful, vital, and truly tragical drama written by an
+American for some years. There is genuine pathos, mighty yet never
+repellent passion, great sincerity and penetration, and great elevation
+and beauty of language."--_The Chicago Post._
+
+
+Song-Surf
+
+"Mr. Rice's work betrays wide sympathies with nature and life, and a
+welcome originality of sentiment and metrical harmony."--_Sydney Lee._
+
+
+TRAILS SUNWARD
+
+By CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+"Cale Young Rice has written some of the finest poetry of the last
+decade, and is the author of the very best poetic dramas ever written by
+an American.... He is one of the few supreme lyrists ... and one of the
+few remaining lovers of beauty ... who write it. One of the very few
+writers of _vers libre_ who know just what they are doing."--_The Los
+Angles Times._
+
+"Another book by Cale Young Rice ... one of the few poetic geniuses this
+country has produced.... In its sixty or more poems may be found the
+hall mark of individuality that denotes preeminence and signalizes
+independence."--_The Philadelphia North American._
+
+"Mr. Rice attempts and succeeds in deepening the note of his singing ...
+keeping its brilliant technique, its intricate verse formation, but
+seeking all the while for words to interpret the profound things of
+life. The music of his lines is more perfect than ever, his rhythms
+fresh and varied."--_Littell's Living Age._
+
+"Cale Young Rice's work is always simple and sincere ... but that does
+not prevent him from voicing his song with passion and virility. Nearly
+all his poems have elevation of thought and feeling, with beauty of
+imagery and music."--_The New York Times._
+
+"Whether the forms of this book are lyrical, narrative, or dramatic,
+there is an excellence of workmanship that denotes the master hand....
+And while the range of ideas is broad, the treatment of each is
+distinguished by a strength and beauty remarkably fine."--_The Continent
+(Chicago)._
+
+"Mr. Rice proves the fine argument of his preface ... for this book has
+in it form and beauty and a full reflection of the externals as well as
+the soul of the America he loves."--_The Philadelphia Public Ledger._
+
+"The work of this poet always demands and receives unstinted
+admiration.... His is not the poetic fashion of the moment, but of all
+poetic time."--_The Chicago Herald._
+
+"In 'Trails Sunward,' Mr. Rice demonstrates as heretofore the
+possibility of attaining poetic growth and originality even in the
+Twentieth Century, without extremism.... Sanity linked with vitality and
+breadth in art make for permanence, and one can but feel that Mr. Rice
+builds for more than a day."--_The Louisville Courier Journal._
+
+"I rarely use the term 'sublimity,' yet in touches of 'The Foreseers,'
+particularly in its cavern-set opening, I should say that Mr. Rice had
+scaled that eminence."--_O. W. Firkins (The Nation)._
+
+_12mo. 150 pages. Price $1.50_
+
+
+EARTH AND NEW EARTH
+
+By CALE YOUNG RICE
+
+"America has today no poet who answers so well the multiplex tests of
+poetry as does Cale Young Rice."--_New York Sun._
+
+"Glancing through the reviews quoted at the end of 'Earth and New Earth'
+we note that we have said some very enthusiastic things in praise of the
+poetry of Cale Young Rice, and yet there is not an adjective we would
+withdraw. On the contrary each new volume only confirms the expectation
+of the better work this writer was to produce."--_The San Francisco
+Chronicle._
+
+"This is a volume of verse rich in dramatic quality and beauty of
+conception.... Every poem is quotable and the collection must appeal to
+all who can appreciate the highest forms of modern verse."--_The
+Bookseller (New York)._
+
+"Any one familiar with 'Cloister Lays,' 'The Mystic,' etc., does not
+need to be told that they rank with the very best poetry. And Mr. Rice's
+dramas are not equaled by any other American author's.... And when those
+who are loyal to poetic traditions cherished through the whole history
+of our language contemplate the anemia and artificiality of
+contemporaries, they can but assert that Mr. Rice has the grasp and
+sweep, the rhythm, imagery and pulsating sympathy, which in wondering
+admiration are ascribed to genius."--_The Los Angeles Times._
+
+"This latest collection shows no diminution in Mr. Rice's versatility or
+power of expression. Its poems are serious, keen, distinctively free and
+vitally spiritual in thought."--_The Continent (Chicago)._
+
+"Mr. Rice is concerned with thoughts that are more than timely; they
+represent a large vision of the world events now transpiring ... and his
+affirmation of the spiritual in such an hour establishes him in the
+immemorial office of the poet-prophet.... The volume is a worthy
+addition to the large amount of his work."--_Anna L. Hopper in The
+Louisville Courier-Journal._
+
+"Cale Young Rice is the greatest living American poet."--_D. F.
+Hannigan, Lit. Ed. The Rochester Post-Express._
+
+"The indefinable spirit of swift imaginative suggestion is never
+lacking. The problems of fate are still big with mystery and propounded
+with tense elemental dramatism."--_The Philadelphia North-American._
+
+"The work of Cale Young Rice emerges clearly as the most distinguished
+offering of this country to the combined arts of poetry and the drama.
+'Earth and New Earth' strikes a ringing new note of the earth which
+shall be after the War."--_The Memphis Commercial-Appeal._
+
+_12mo. 158 pages. $1.50_
+
+
+TURN ABOUT TALES
+
+(PROSE)
+
+By CALE YOUNG RICE and ALICE HEGAN RICE
+
+"This volume of stories should hold its own with any collection likely
+to be published this year."--_New York Post (The Literary Review)._
+
+"American writers have been distinctive as narrators of the short story,
+but few, if any, volumes of such stories have recently been published in
+this country equal to 'Turn About Tales.'"--_D. F. Hannigan (The
+Rochester Post-Express)._
+
+"The gamut of the volume runs from spiritualism to the depths. It
+contains something of almost anything one happens to want. Better yet,
+it contains something new."--_The Boston Transcript._
+
+"Mr. Rice has written well--so well as to justify prediction that he
+will, if he elect to do so, achieve greater distinction as a short story
+writer than as a poet. His 'Lowry,' 'Francella' and 'Aaron Harwood,' to
+cite a few of the stories, meet the test of artistic stories.... Each
+leaves an impression that will impel re-reading."--_Galveston News._
+
+"Both writers portray, in their best vein, a consummate though
+distinctive skill in analyzing and delineating human emotions and
+experience."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+"Those who have read Mr. Rice's poetry will find his dramatic genius
+manifest in these stories."--_The Watchman, N. Y._
+
+"Mrs. Rice's humor and pathos combine well with Mr. Rice's mastery of
+diction and deep human understanding."--_Milwaukee Journal._
+
+"Each story is notable for beauty of technique ... each has its definite
+appeal."--_Louisville Evening Post (Margaret S. Anderson)._
+
+"Each of the stories is of such finished workmanship as to make reading
+of it an unadulterated pleasure."--_Baltimore Sun._
+
+"The book is one of the best of the kind in this year's American
+fiction."--_The Spectator (Portland, Ore.)_
+
+"Mr. Rice has grappled with the constructive problems of his time, so
+one finds them without surprise in this newly adopted vehicle.... Three
+of his stories have a realism as relentless as Chekov's ... and it goes
+without saying that his stories are technically admirable."--_Louisville
+Courier-Journal._
+
+"Mr. Rice so lives through his characters that, as Whitman says, he 'Is
+that man' of whom he writes."--_Pittsburg Sun._
+
+"The same dramatic power and beauty that mark Mr. Rice's lyrics will be
+found in these prose stories."--_Cincinnati Times-Star._
+
+"One seldom finds a book of short stories so satisfying
+throughout."--_Minneapolis Journal._
+
+_Price $1.90_
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sea Poems, by Cale Young Rice
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEA POEMS ***
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