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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs of the Mexican Seas, by Joaquin Miller
+
+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: Songs of the Mexican Seas
+
+Author: Joaquin Miller
+
+Release Date: February 4, 2012 [EBook #38766]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF THE MEXICAN SEAS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Daniel Emerson Griffith and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONGS OF THE MEXICAN SEAS
+
+ BY JOAQUIN MILLER
+ AUTHOR OF "SONGS OF THE SIERRAS," "SONGS OF ITALY," ETC.
+
+
+ BOSTON
+ ROBERTS BROTHERS
+ 1887
+
+
+ Copyright, 1887,
+ By Roberts Brothers.
+
+ UNIVERSITY PRESS:
+ John Wilson and Son, Cambridge.
+
+
+TO ABBIE.
+
+
+NOTE.--The lines in this little book, as in all my others, were
+written, or at least conceived, in the lands where the scenes are
+laid; so that whatever may be said of the imperfections of my work,
+I at least have the correct atmosphere and color. I have now and
+then sent forth from Mexico, and from remoter shores of the Gulf,
+fragments of these thoughts as they rounded into form, and some
+of them have been used at a Dartmouth College Commencement, and
+elsewhere; but as a whole the book is new.
+
+From the heart of the Sierra, where I once more hear the awful
+heart-throbs of Nature, I now intrust the first reception of these
+lessons entirely to my own country. And may I not ask in return,
+now at the last, when the shadows begin to grow long, something
+of that consideration which, thus far, has been accorded almost
+entirely by strangers?
+
+ Joaquin Miller.
+
+ Mount Shasta, California,
+ A.D. 1887.
+
+
+
+
+SONGS OF THE MEXICAN SEAS.
+
+
+
+
+THE SEA OF FIRE.
+
+
+ In that far land, farther than Yucatan,
+ Hondurian height, or Mahogany steep,
+ Where the great sea, hollowed by the hand of man
+ Hears deep come calling across to deep;
+ Where the great seas follow in the grooves of men
+ Down under the bastions of Darien:
+
+ In that land so far that you wonder whether
+ If God would know it should you fall down dead;
+ In that land so far through the wilds and weather
+ That the lost sun sinks like a warrior sped,--
+ Where the sea and the sky seem closing together,
+ Seem closing together as a book that is read:
+
+ In that nude warm world, where the unnamed rivers
+ Roll restless in cradles of bright buried gold;
+ Where white flashing mountains flow rivers of silver
+ As a rock of the desert flowed fountains of old;
+ By a dark wooded river that calls to the dawn,
+ And calls all day with his dolorous swan:
+
+ In that land of the wonderful sun and weather,
+ With green under foot and with gold over head,
+ Where the spent sun flames, and you wonder whether
+ 'Tis an isle of fire in his foamy bed:
+ Where the oceans of earth shall be welded together
+ By the great French master in his forge flame red,--
+
+ Lo! the half-finished world! Yon footfall retreating,--
+ It might be the Maker disturbed at his task.
+ But the footfall of God, or the far pheasant beating,
+ It is one and the same, whatever the mask
+ It may wear unto man. The woods keep repeating
+ The old sacred sermons, whatever you ask.
+
+ The brown-muzzled cattle come stealthy to drink,
+ The wild forest cattle, with high horns as trim
+ As the elk at their side: their sleek necks are slim
+ And alert like the deer. They come, then they shrink
+ As afraid of their fellows, of shadow-beasts seen
+ In the deeps of the dark-wooded waters of green.
+
+ It is man in his garden, scarce wakened as yet
+ From the sleep that fell on him when woman was made.
+ The new-finished garden is plastic and wet
+ From the hand that has fashioned its unpeopled shade;
+ And the wonder still looks from the fair woman's eyes
+ As she shines through the wood like the light from the skies.
+
+ And a ship now and then from some far Ophir's shore
+ Draws in from the sea. It lies close to the bank;
+ Then a dull, muffled sound of the slow-shuffled plank
+ As they load the black ship; but you hear nothing more,
+ And the dark dewy vines, and the tall sombre wood
+ Like twilight droop over the deep sweeping flood.
+
+ The black masts are tangled with branches that cross,
+ The rich, fragrant gums fall from branches to deck,
+ The thin ropes are swinging with streamers of moss
+ That mantle all things like the shreds of a wreck;
+ The long mosses swing, there is never a breath:
+ The river rolls still as the river of death.
+
+
+I.
+
+ In the beginning,--ay, before
+ The six-days' labors were well o'er;
+ Yea, while the world lay incomplete,
+ Ere God had opened quite the door
+ Of this strange land for strong men's feet,--
+ There lay against that westmost sea
+ One weird-wild land of mystery.
+
+ A far white wall, like fallen moon,
+ Girt out the world. The forest lay
+ So deep you scarcely saw the day,
+ Save in the high-held middle noon:
+ It lay a land of sleep and dreams,
+ And clouds drew through like shoreless streams
+ That stretch to where no man may say.
+
+ Men reached it only from the sea,
+ By black-built ships, that seemed to creep
+ Along the shore suspiciously,
+ Like unnamed monsters of the deep.
+ It was the weirdest land, I ween,
+ That mortal eye has ever seen:
+
+ A dim, dark land of bird and beast,
+ Black shaggy beasts with cloven claw,--
+ A land that scarce knew prayer or priest,
+ Or law of man, or Nature's law;
+ Where no fixed line drew sharp dispute
+ 'Twixt savage man and silent brute.
+
+
+II.
+
+ It hath a history most fit
+ For cunning hand to fashion on;
+ No chronicler hath mentioned it;
+ No buccaneer set foot upon.
+ 'Tis of an outlawed Spanish Don,--
+ A cruel man, with pirate's gold
+ That loaded down his deep ship's hold.
+
+ A deep ship's hold of plundered gold!
+ The golden cruise, the golden cross,
+ From many a church of Mexico,
+ From Panama's mad overthrow,
+ From many a ransomed city's loss,
+ From many a follower stanch and bold,
+ And many a foeman stark and cold.
+
+ He found this wild, lost land. He drew
+ His ship to shore. His ruthless crew,
+ Like Romulus, laid lawless hand
+ On meek brown maidens of the land,
+ And in their bloody forays bore
+ Red firebrands along the shore.
+
+
+III.
+
+ The red men rose at night. They came,
+ A firm, unflinching wall of flame;
+ They swept, as sweeps some fateful sea
+ O'er land of sand and level shore
+ That howls in far, fierce agony.
+ The red men swept that deep, dark shore
+ As threshers sweep a threshing-floor.
+
+ And yet beside the slain Don's door
+ They left his daughter, as they fled:
+ They spared her life, because she bore
+ Their Chieftain's blood and name. The red
+ And blood-stained hidden hoards of gold
+ They hollowed from the stout ship's hold,
+ And bore in many a slim canoe--
+ To where? The good priest only knew.
+
+
+IV.
+
+ The course of life is like the sea:
+ Men come and go; tides rise and fall;
+ And that is all of history.
+ The tide flows in, flows out to-day,--
+ And that is all that man may say;
+ Man is, man was,--and that is all.
+
+ Revenge at last came like a tide,--
+ 'Twas sweeping, deep, and terrible;
+ The Christian found the land, and came
+ To take possession in Christ's name.
+ For every white man that had died
+ I think a thousand red men fell,--
+ A Christian custom; and the land
+ Lay lifeless as some burned-out brand.
+
+
+V.
+
+ Ere while the slain Don's daughter grew
+ A glorious thing, a flower of spring,
+ A lithe slim reed, a sun-loved weed,
+ A something more than mortal knew;
+ A mystery of grace and face,--
+ A silent mystery that stood
+ An empress in that sea-set wood,
+ Supreme, imperial in her place.
+
+ It might have been men's lust for gold,--
+ For all men knew that lawless crew
+ Left hoards of gold in that ship's hold,
+ That drew ships hence, and silent drew
+ Strange Jasons to that steep wood shore,
+ As if to seek that hidden store,--
+ I never either cared or knew.
+
+ I say it might have been this gold
+ That ever drew and strangely drew
+ Strong men of land, strange men of sea,
+ To seek this shore of mystery
+ With all its wondrous tales untold:
+ The gold or her, which of the two?
+ It matters not; I never knew.
+
+ But this I know, that as for me,
+ Between that face and the hard fate
+ That kept me ever from my own,
+ As some wronged monarch from his throne,
+ God's heaped-up gold of land or sea
+ Had never weighed one feather's weight.
+
+ Her home was on the wooded height,--
+ A woody home, a priest at prayer,
+ A perfume in the fervid air,
+ And angels watching her at night.
+ I can but think upon the skies
+ That bound that other Paradise.
+
+
+VI.
+
+ Below a star-built arch, as grand
+ As ever bended heaven spanned;
+ Tall trees like mighty columns grew--
+ They loomed as if to pierce the blue,
+ They reached as reaching heaven through.
+
+ The shadowed stream rolled far below,
+ Where men moved noiseless to and fro
+ As in some vast cathedral, when
+ The calm of prayer comes to men,
+ With benedictions, bending low.
+
+ Lo! wooded sea-banks, wild and steep!
+ A trackless wood; a snowy cone
+ That lifted from this wood alone!
+ This wild wide river, dark and deep!
+ A ship against the shore asleep!
+
+
+VII.
+
+ An Indian woman crept, a crone,
+ Hard by about the land alone,
+ The relic of her perished race.
+ She wore rich, rudely-fashioned bands
+ Of gold above her bony hands:
+ She hissed hot curses on the place!
+
+
+VIII.
+
+ Go seek the red man's last retreat!
+ A lonesome land, the haunted lands!
+ Red mouths of beasts, red men's red hands:
+ Red prophet-priest, in mute defeat!
+
+ His boundaries in blood are writ!
+ His land is ghostland! That is his,
+ Whatever man may claim of this;
+ Beware how you shall enter it!
+ He stands God's guardian of ghostlands;
+ Ay, this same wrapped half-prophet stands
+ All nude and voiceless, nearer to
+ The awful God than I or you.
+
+
+IX.
+
+ This bronzed child, by that river's brink,
+ Stood fair to see as you can think,
+ As tall as tall reeds at her feet,
+ As fresh as flowers in her hair;
+ As sweet as flowers over-sweet,
+ As fair as vision more than fair!
+
+ How beautiful she was! How wild!
+ How pure as water-plant, this child,--
+ This one wild child of Nature here
+ Grown tall in shadows.
+ And how near
+ To God, where no man stood between
+ Her eyes and scenes no man hath seen,--
+ This maiden that so mutely stood,
+ The one lone woman of that wood.
+
+ Stop still, my friend, and do not stir,
+ Shut close your page and think of her.
+ The birds sang sweeter for her face;
+ Her lifted eyes were like a grace
+ To seamen of that solitude,
+ However rough, however rude.
+
+ The rippled rivers of her hair,
+ That ran in wondrous waves, somehow
+ Flowed down divided by her brow,--
+ Half mantled her within its care,
+ And flooded all, or bronze or snow,
+ In its uncommon fold and flow.
+
+ A perfume and an incense lay
+ Before her, as an incense sweet
+ Before blithe mowers of sweet May
+ In early morn. Her certain feet
+ Embarked on no uncertain way.
+
+ Come, think how perfect before men,
+ How sweet as sweet magnolia bloom
+ Embalmed in dews of morning, when
+ Rich sunlight leaps from midnight gloom
+ Resolved to kiss, and swift to kiss
+ Ere yet morn wakens man to bliss.
+
+
+X.
+
+ The days swept on. Her perfect year
+ Was with her now. The sweet perfume
+ Of womanhood in holy bloom,
+ As when red harvest blooms appear,
+ Possessed her now. The priest did pray
+ That saints alone should pass that way.
+
+ A red bird built beneath her roof,
+ Brown squirrels crossed her cabin sill,
+ And welcome came or went at will.
+ A hermit spider wove his web,
+ And up against the roof would spin
+ His net to catch mosquitoes in.
+
+ The silly elk, the spotted fawn,
+ And all dumb beasts that came to drink,
+ That stealthy stole upon the brink
+ In that dim while that lies between
+ The coming night and going dawn,
+ On seeing her familiar face
+ Would fearless stop and stand in place.
+
+ She was so kind, the beasts of night
+ Gave her the road as if her right;
+ The panther crouching overhead
+ In sheen of moss would hear her tread
+ And bend his eyes, but never stir
+ Lest he by chance might frighten her.
+
+ Yet in her splendid strength, her eyes,
+ There lay the lightning of the skies;
+ The love-hate of the lioness,
+ To kill the instant, or caress:
+ A pent-up soul that sometimes grew
+ Impatient; why, she hardly knew.
+
+ At last she sighed, uprose, and threw
+ Her strong arms out as if to hand
+ Her love, sun-born and all complete
+ At birth, to some brave lover's feet
+ On some far, fair, and unseen land,
+ As knowing now not what to do!
+
+
+XI.
+
+ How beautiful she was! Why, she
+ Was inspiration! She was born
+ To walk God's summer hills at morn,
+ Nor waste her by this wood-dark sea.
+ What wonder, then, her soul's white wings
+ Beat at its bars, like living things!
+
+ Once more she sighed! She wandered through
+ The sea-bound wood, then stopped and drew
+ Her hand above her face, and swept
+ The lonesome sea, and all day kept
+ Her face to sea, as if she knew
+ Some day, some near or distant day,
+ Her destiny should come that way.
+
+
+XII.
+
+ How proud she was! How darkly fair!
+ How full of faith, of love, of strength!
+ Her calm, proud eyes! Her great hair's length,--
+ Her long, strong, tumbled, careless hair,
+ Half curled and knotted anywhere,
+ From brow to breast, from cheek to chin,
+ For love to trip and tangle in!
+
+
+XIII.
+
+ At last a tall strange sail was seen:
+ It came so slow, so wearily,
+ Came creeping cautious up the sea,
+ As if it crept from out between
+ The half-closed sea and sky that lay
+ Tight wedged together, far away.
+
+ She watched it, wooed it. She did pray
+ It might not pass her by, but bring
+ Some love, some hate, some anything,
+ To break the awful loneliness
+ That like a nightly nightmare lay
+ Upon her proud and pent-up soul
+ Until it barely brooked control.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+ The ship crept silent up the sea,
+ And came--
+ You cannot understand
+ How fair she was, how sudden she
+ Had sprung, full-grown, to womanhood:
+ How gracious, yet how proud and grand;
+ How glorified, yet fresh and free,
+ How human, yet how more than good.
+
+
+XV.
+
+ The ship stole slowly, slowly on;--
+ Should you in Californian field
+ In ample flower-time behold
+ The soft south rose lift like a shield
+ Against the sudden sun at dawn,
+ A double handful of heaped gold,
+ Why you, perhaps, might understand
+ How splendid and how queenly she
+ Uprose beside that wood-set sea.
+
+ The storm-worn ship scarce seemed to creep
+ From wave to wave. It scarce could keep--
+ How still this fair girl stood, how fair!
+ How proud her presence as she stood
+ Between that vast sea and west wood!
+ How large and liberal her soul,
+ How confident, how purely chare,
+ How trusting; how untried the whole
+ Great heart, grand faith, that blossomed there!
+
+
+XVI.
+
+ Ay, she was as Madonna to
+ The tawny, lawless, faithful few
+ Who touched her hand and knew her soul:
+ She drew them, drew them as the pole
+ Points all things to itself.
+ She drew
+ Men upward as a moon of spring,
+ High wheeling, vast and bosom-full,
+ Half clad in clouds and white as wool,
+ Draws all the strong seas following.
+
+ Yet still she moved as sad, as lone
+ As that same moon that leans above,
+ And seems to search high heaven through
+ For some strong, all-sufficient love,
+ For one brave love to be her own,
+ To lean upon, to love, to woo,
+ To lord her high white world, to yield
+ His clashing sword against her shield.
+
+ Oh, I once knew a sad, white dove
+ That died for such sufficient love,
+ Such high-born soul with wings to soar:
+ That stood up equal in its place,
+ That looked love level in the face,
+ Nor wearied love with leaning o'er
+ To lift love level where she trod
+ In sad delight the hills of God.
+
+
+XVII.
+
+ How slow before the sleeping breeze,
+ That stranger ship from under seas!
+ How like to Dido by her sea,
+ When reaching arms imploringly,--
+ Her large, round, rich, impassioned arms,
+ Tossed forth from all her storied charms,--
+ This one lone maiden leaning stood
+ Above that sea, beside the wood!
+
+ The ship crept strangely up the seas;
+ Her shrouds seemed shreds, her masts seemed trees,--
+ Strange tattered trees of toughest bough
+ That knew no cease of storm till now.
+ The maiden pitied her; she prayed
+ Her crew might come, nor feel afraid;
+ She prayed the winds might come,--they came,
+ As birds that answer to a name.
+
+ The maiden held her blowing hair
+ That bound her beauteous self about;
+ The sea-winds housed within her hair:
+ She let it go, it blew in rout
+ About her bosom full and bare.
+ Her round, full arms were free as air,
+ Her high hands clasped, as clasped in prayer.
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+ The breeze grew bold, the battered ship
+ Began to flap her weary wings;
+ The tall, torn masts began to dip
+ And walk the wave like living things.
+ She rounded in, she struck the stream,
+ She moved like some majestic dream.
+
+ The captain kept her deck. He stood
+ A Hercules among his men;
+ And now he watched the sea, and then
+ He peered as if to pierce the wood.
+ He now looked back, as if pursued,
+ Now swept the sea with glass, as though
+ He fled or feared some hidden foe.
+
+ Swift sailing up the river's mouth,
+ Swift tacking north, swift tacking south,
+ He touched the overhanging wood;
+ He tacked his ship; his tall black mast
+ Touched tree-top mosses as he passed;
+ He touched the steep shore where she stood.
+
+
+XIX.
+
+ Her hands still clasped as if in prayer,
+ Sweet prayer set to silentness;
+ Her sun-browned throat uplifted, bare
+ And beautiful.
+ Her eager face
+ Illumed with love and tenderness,
+ And all her presence gave such grace,
+ Dark shadowed in her cloud of hair,
+ That she seemed more than mortal fair.
+
+
+XX.
+
+ He saw. He could not speak. No more
+ With lifted glass he sought the sea;
+ No more he watched the wild new shore.
+ Now foes might come, now friends might flee;
+ He could not speak, he would not stir,--
+ He saw but her, he feared but her.
+
+ The black ship ground against the shore,
+ She ground against the bank as one
+ With long and weary journeys done,
+ That would not rise to journey more.
+
+ Yet still this Jason silent stood
+ And gazed against that sun-lit wood,
+ As one whose soul is anywhere.
+
+ All seemed so fair, so wondrous fair!
+ At last aroused, he stepped to land
+ Like some Columbus. They laid hand
+ On lands and fruits, and rested there.
+
+
+XXI.
+
+ He found all fairer than fair morn
+ In sylvan land, where waters run
+ With downward leap against the sun,
+ And full-grown sudden May is born.
+ He found her taller than tall corn
+ Tiptoe in tassel; found her sweet
+ As vale where bees of Hybla meet.
+
+ An unblown rose, an unread book;
+ A wonder in her wondrous eyes;
+ A large, religious, steadfast look
+ Of faith, of trust,--the look of one
+ New welcomed in her Paradise.
+
+ He read this book,--read on and on
+ From titlepage to colophon:
+ As in cool woods, some summer day,
+ You find delight in some sweet lay,
+ And so entranced read on and on
+ From titlepage to colophon.
+
+
+XXII.
+
+ And who was he that rested there,--
+ This Hercules, so huge, so rare,
+ This giant of a grander day,
+ This Theseus of a nobler Greece,
+ This Jason of the golden fleece?
+ And who was he? And who were they
+ That came to seek the hidden gold
+ Long hallowed from the pirate's hold?
+ I do not know. You need not care.
+
+ . . . . . .
+
+ They loved, this maiden and this man,
+ And that is all I surely know,--
+ The rest is as the winds that blow.
+ He bowed as brave men bow to fate,
+ Yet proud and resolute and bold;
+ She, coy at first, and mute and cold,
+ Held back and seemed to hesitate,--
+ Half frightened at this love that ran
+ Hard gallop till her hot heart beat
+ Like sounding of swift courser's feet.
+
+
+XXIII.
+
+ Two strong streams of a land must run
+ Together surely as the sun
+ Succeeds the moon. Who shall gainsay
+ The fates that reign, that wisely reign?
+ Love is, love was, shall be again.
+ Like death, inevitable it is;
+ Perchance, like death, the dawn of bliss.
+ Let us, then, love the perfect day,
+ The twelve o'clock of life, and stop
+ The two hands pointing to the top,
+ And hold them tightly while we may.
+
+
+XXIV.
+
+ How piteous strange is love! The walks
+ By wooded ways; the silent talks
+ Beneath the broad and fragrant bough.
+ The dark deep wood, the dense black dell,
+ Where scarce a single gold beam fell
+ From out the sun.
+ They rested now
+ On mossy trunk. They wandered then
+ Where never fell the feet of men.
+
+ Then longer walks, then deeper woods,
+ Then sweeter talks, sufficient sweet,
+ In denser, deeper solitudes,--
+ Dear careless ways for careless feet;
+ Sweet talks of paradise for two,
+ And only two, to watch or woo.
+
+ She rarely spake. All seemed a dream
+ She would not waken from. She lay
+ All night but waiting for the day,
+ When she might see his face, and deem
+ This man, with all his perils passed,
+ Had found the Lotus-land at last.
+
+
+XXV.
+
+ The year waxed fervid, and the sun
+ Fell central down. The forest lay
+ A-quiver in the heat. The sea
+ Below the steep bank seemed to run
+ A molten sea of gold.
+ Away
+ Against the gray and rock-built isles
+ That broke the molten watery miles
+ Where lonesome sea-cows called all day,
+ The sudden sun smote angrily.
+
+ Therefore the need of deeper deeps,
+ Of denser shade for man and maid,
+ Of higher heights, of cooler steeps,
+ Where all day long the sea-wind stayed.
+
+ They sought the rock-reared steep. The breeze
+ Swept twenty thousand miles of seas;
+ Had twenty thousand things to say
+ Of love, of lovers of Cathay,
+ To lovers 'mid these high-held trees.
+
+
+XXVI.
+
+ To left, to right, below the height,
+ Below the wood by wave and stream,
+ Plumed pampas grasses grew to gleam
+ And bend their lordly plumes, and run
+ And shake, as if in very fright
+ Before sharp lances of the sun.
+
+ They saw the tide-bound battered ship
+ Creep close below against the bank;
+ They saw it cringe and shrink; it shrank
+ As shrinks some huge black beast with fear
+ When some uncommon dread is near.
+ They heard the melting resin drip,
+ As drip the last brave blood-drops when
+ Life's battle waxes hot with men.
+
+
+XXVII.
+
+ Yet what to her were burning seas,
+ Or what to him was forest flame?
+ They loved; they loved the glorious trees,
+ The gleaming tides, or rise or fall;
+ They loved the lisping winds that came
+ From sea-lost spice-set isles unknown,
+ With breath not warmer than their own:
+ They loved, they loved,--and that was all.
+
+
+XXVIII.
+
+ Full noon! Below the ancient moss
+ With mighty boughs high clanged across,
+ The man with sweet words, over-sweet,
+ Fell pleading, plaintive, at her feet.
+
+ He spake of love, of boundless love,--
+ Of love that knew no other land,
+ Or face, or place, or anything;
+ Of love that like the wearied dove
+ Could light nowhere, but kept the wing
+ Till she alone put forth her hand,
+ And so received it in her ark
+ From seas that shake against the dark!
+
+ He clasped her hands, climbed past her knees,
+ Forgot her hands and kissed her hair,--
+ The while her two hands clasped in prayer,
+ And fair face lifted to the trees.
+
+ Her proud breast heaved, her pure proud breast
+ Rose like the waves in their unrest
+ When counter storms possess the seas.
+ Her mouth, her arched, uplifted mouth,
+ Her ardent mouth that thirsted so,--
+ No glowing love-song of the South
+ Can say; no man can say or know
+ The glory there, and so live on
+ Content without that glory gone!
+
+ Her face still lifted up. And she
+ Disdained the cup of passion he
+ Hard pressed her panting lips to touch.
+ She dashed it by despised, and she
+ Caught fast her breath. She trembled much,
+ And sudden rose full height, and stood
+ An empress in high womanhood:
+ She stood a tower, tall as when
+ Proud Roman mothers suckled men
+ Of old-time truth and taught them such.
+
+
+XXIX.
+
+ Her soul surged vast as space is. She
+ Was trembling as a courser when
+ His thin flank quivers, and his feet
+ Touch velvet on the turf, and he
+ Is all afoam, alert, and fleet
+ As sunlight glancing on the sea,
+ And full of triumph before men.
+
+ At last she bended some her face,
+ Half leaned, then put him back a pace,
+ And met his eyes.
+ Calm, silently
+ Her eyes looked deep into his eyes,--
+ As maidens down some mossy well
+ Do peer in hope by chance to tell
+ By image there what future lies
+ Before them, and what face shall be
+ The pole-star of their destiny.
+
+ Pure Nature's lover! Loving him
+ With love that made all pathways dim
+ And difficult where he was not,--
+ Then marvel not at form forgot.
+ And who shall chide? Doth priest know aught
+ Of sign, or holy unction brought
+ From over seas, that ever can
+ Make man love maid or maid love man
+ One whit the more, one bit the less,
+ For all his mummeries to bless?
+ Yea, all his blessing or his ban?
+
+ The winds breathed warm as Araby:
+ She leaned upon his breast, she lay
+ A wide-winged swan with folded wing.
+ He drowned his hot face in her hair,
+ He heard her great heart rise and sing;
+ He felt her bosom swell.
+ The air
+ Swooned sweet with perfume of her form.
+ Her breast was warm, her breath was warm,
+ And warm her warm and perfumed mouth
+ As summer journeys through the South.
+
+
+XXX.
+
+ The argent sea surged steep below,
+ Surged languid in a tropic glow;
+ And two great hearts kept surging so!
+
+ The fervid kiss of heaven lay
+ Precipitate on wood and sea.
+ Two great souls glowed with ecstasy,
+ The sea glowed scarce as warm as they.
+
+
+XXXI.
+
+ 'Twas love's low amber afternoon.
+ Two far-off pheasants thrummed a tune,
+ A cricket clanged a restful air.
+ The dreamful billows beat a rune
+ Like heart regrets.
+ Around her head
+ There shone a halo. Men have said
+ 'Twas from a dash of Titian
+ That flooded all her storm of hair
+ In gold and glory. But they knew,
+ Yea, all men know there ever grew
+ A halo round about her head
+ Like sunlight scarcely vanished.
+
+
+XXXII.
+
+ How still she was! She only knew
+ His love. She saw no life beyond.
+ She loved with love that only lives
+ Outside itself and selfishness,--
+ A love that glows in its excess;
+ A love that melts pure gold, and gives
+ Thenceforth to all who come to woo
+ No coins but this face stamped thereon,--
+ Ay, this one image stamped upon
+ Its face, with some dim date long gone.
+
+
+XXXIII.
+
+ They kept the headland high; the ship
+ Below began to chafe her chain,
+ To groan as some great beast in pain;
+ While white fear leapt from lip to lip:
+ "The woods are fire! the woods are flame!
+ Come down and save us, in God's name!"
+
+ He heard! he did not speak or stir,--
+ He thought of her, of only her.
+ While flames behind, before them lay
+ To hold the stoutest heart at bay!
+
+ Strange sounds were heard far up the flood,--
+ Strange, savage sounds that chilled the blood!
+ Then sudden from the dense dark wood
+ Above, about them where they stood
+ A thousand beasts came peering out;
+ And now was thrust a long black snout,
+ And now a tusky mouth. It was
+ A sight to make the stoutest pause.
+
+ "Cut loose the ship!" the black mate cried;
+ "Cut loose the ship!" the crew replied.
+ They drove into the sea. It lay
+ As light as ever middle day.
+
+ The while their half-blind bitch, that sat
+ All slobber-mouthed, and monkish cowled
+ With great, broad, floppy, leathern ears,
+ Amid the men, rose up and howled,
+ And doleful howled her plaintive fears,
+ While all looked mute aghast thereat.
+ It was the grimmest eve, I think,
+ That ever hung on Hades' brink.
+
+ Great broad-winged bats possessed the air,
+ Bats whirling blindly everywhere;
+ It was such troubled twilight eve
+ As never mortal would believe.
+
+
+XXXIV.
+
+ Some say the crazed hag lit the wood
+ In circle where the lovers stood;
+ Some say the gray priest feared the crew
+ Might find at last the hoard of gold
+ Long hidden from the black ship's hold,--
+ I doubt me if men ever knew.
+ But such mad, howling, flame-lit shore
+ No mortal ever saw before.
+
+ Huge beasts above that shining sea,
+ Wild, hideous beasts with shaggy hair,
+ With red mouths lifting in the air,
+ They piteous howled, and plaintively,--
+ The wildest sounds, the weirdest sight
+ That ever shook the walls of night.
+
+ How lorn they howled, with lifted head,
+ To dim and distant isles that lay
+ Wedged tight along a line of red,
+ Caught in the closing gates of day
+ 'Twixt sky and sea and far away,--
+ It was the saddest sound to hear
+ That ever struck on human ear.
+
+ They doleful called; and answered they
+ The plaintive sea-cows far away,--
+ The great sea-cows that called from isles,
+ Away across wide watery miles,
+ With dripping mouths and lolling tongue,
+ As if they called for captured young,--
+
+ The huge sea-cows that called the whiles
+ Their great wide mouths were mouthing moss;
+ And still they doleful called across
+ From isles beyond the watery miles.
+ No sound can half so doleful be
+ As sea-cows calling from the sea.
+
+
+XXXV.
+
+ The drowned sun sank and died. He lay
+ In seas of blood. He sinking drew
+ The gates of sunset sudden to,
+ Where shattered day in fragments lay,
+ And night came, moving in mad flame:
+ The night came, lighted as he came,
+ As lighted by high summer sun
+ Descending through the burning blue.
+ It was a gold and amber hue,
+ And all hues blended into one.
+ The night spilled splendor where she came,
+ And filled the yellow world with flame.
+
+ The moon came on, came leaning low
+ Along the far sea-isles aglow;
+ She fell along that amber flood
+ A silver flame in seas of blood.
+ It was the strangest moon, ah me!
+ That ever settled on God's sea.
+
+
+XXXVI.
+
+ Slim snakes slid down from fern and grass,
+ From wood, from fen, from anywhere;
+ You could not step, you would not pass,
+ And you would hesitate to stir,
+ Lest in some sudden, hurried tread
+ Your foot struck some unbruised head:
+
+ They slid in streams into the stream,--
+ It seemed like some infernal dream;
+ They curved, and graceful curved across,
+ Like graceful, waving sea-green moss,--
+ There is no art of man can make
+ A ripple like a rippling snake!
+
+
+XXXVII.
+
+ Abandoned, lorn, the lovers stood,
+ Abandoned there, death in the air!
+ That beetling steep, that blazing wood,--
+ Red flame! and red flame everywhere!
+ Yet was he born to strive, to bear
+ The front of battle. He would die
+ In noble effort, and defy
+ The grizzled visage of despair.
+
+ He threw his two strong arms full length
+ As if to surely test their strength;
+ Then tore his vestments, textile things
+ That could but tempt the demon wings
+ Of flame that girt them round about,
+ Then threw his garments to the air
+ As one that laughed at death, at doubt,
+ And like a god stood grand and bare.
+
+ She did not hesitate; she knew
+ The need of action; swift she threw
+ Her burning vestments by, and bound
+ Her wondrous wealth of hair that fell
+ An all-concealing cloud around
+ Her glorious presence, as he came
+ To seize and bear her through the flame,--
+ An Orpheus out of burning hell!
+
+ He leaned above her, wound his arm
+ About her splendor, while the noon
+ Of flood-tide, manhood, flushed his face,
+ And high flames leapt the high headland!--
+ They stood as twin-hewn statues stand,
+ High lifted in some storied place.
+
+ He clasped her close, he spoke of death,--
+ Of death and love in the same breath.
+ He clasped her close; her bosom lay
+ Like ship safe anchored in some bay.
+
+
+XXXVIII.
+
+ The flames! They could not stand or stay;
+ Before the beetling steep, the sea!
+ But at his feet a narrow way,
+ A short steep path, pitched suddenly
+ Safe open to the river's beach,
+ Where lay a small white isle in reach,--
+ A small, white, rippled isle of sand
+ Where yet the two might safely land.
+
+ And there, through smoke and flame, behold
+ The priest stood safe, yet all appalled!
+ He reached the cross; he cried, he called;
+ He waved his high-held cross of gold.
+ He called and called, he bade them fly
+ Through flames to him, nor bide and die!
+
+ Her lover saw; he saw, and knew
+ His giant strength would bear her through.
+ And yet he would not start or stir.
+ He clasped her close as death can hold,
+ Or dying miser clasp his gold,--
+ His hold became a part of her.
+
+ He would not give her up! He would
+ Not bear her waveward though he could!
+ That height was heaven; the wave was hell.
+ He clasped her close,--what else had done
+ The manliest man beneath the sun?
+ Was it not well? was it not well?
+
+ O man, be glad! be grandly glad,
+ And kinglike walk thy ways of death!
+ For more than years of bliss you had
+ That one brief time you breathed her breath.
+ Yea, more than years upon a throne
+ That one brief time you held her fast,
+ Soul surged to soul, vehement, vast,--
+ True breast to breast, and all your own.
+
+ Live me one day, one narrow night,
+ One second of supreme delight
+ Like that, and I will blow like chaff
+ The hollow years aside, and laugh
+ A loud triumphant laugh, and I,
+ King-like and crowned, will gladly die.
+
+ Oh, but to wrap my love with flame!
+ With flame within, with flame without!
+ Oh, but to die like this, nor doubt--
+ To die and know her still the same!
+ To know that down the ghostly shore
+ Snow-white she waits me evermore!
+
+
+XXXIX.
+
+ He poised her, held her high in air,--
+ His great strong limbs, his great arm's length!--
+ Then turned his knotted shoulders bare
+ As birth-time in his splendid strength,
+ And strode, strode with a lordly stride
+ To where the high and wood-hung edge
+ Looked down, far down upon the molten tide.
+ The flames leapt with him to the ledge,
+ The flames leapt leering at his side.
+
+
+XL.
+
+ He leaned above the ledge. Below
+ He saw the black ship idly cruise,--
+ A midge below, a mile below.
+ His limbs were knotted as the thews
+ Of Hercules in his death-throe.
+
+ The flame! the flame! the envious flame!
+ She wound her arms, she wound her hair
+ About his tall form, grand and bare,
+ To stay the fierce flame where it came.
+
+ The black ship, like some moonlit wreck,
+ Below along the burning sea
+ Crept on and on all silently,
+ With silent pygmies on her deck.
+
+ That midge-like ship far, far below;
+ That mirage lifting from the hill!
+ His flame-lit form began to grow,--
+ To grow and grow more grandly still.
+ The ship so small, that form so tall,
+ It grew to tower over all.
+
+ A tall Colossus, bronze and gold,
+ As if that flame-lit form were he
+ Who once bestrode the Rhodian sea,
+ And ruled the watery world of old:
+ As if the lost Colossus stood
+ Above that burning sea of wood.
+
+ And she, that shapely form upheld,
+ Held high, as if to touch the sky,
+ What airy shape, how shapely high,--
+ A goddess of the seas of eld!
+
+ Her hand upheld, her high right hand,
+ As if she would forget the land;
+ As if to gather stars, and heap
+ The stars like torches there to light
+ Her Hero's path across the deep
+ To some far isle that fearful night.
+
+ It was as if Colossus came,
+ Came proudly reaching from the flame
+ Above the sea in sheen of gold,
+ His sea-bride leaping from his hold;
+ The lost Colossus, and his bride
+ In bronze perfection at his side:
+ As if the lost Colossus came
+ Companioned from the past, his bride
+ With torch all faithful at his side:
+
+ With star-tipped torch that reached and rolled
+ Through cloud-built corridors of gold:
+ His bride, austere and stern and grand,--
+ Bartholdi's goddess by the sea,
+ Far lifting, lighting Liberty
+ From prison seas to Freedom's land.
+
+
+XLI.
+
+ The flame! the envious flame, it leapt
+ Enraged to see such majesty,
+ Such scorn of death; such kingly scorn.
+ Then like some lightning-riven tree
+ They sank down in that flame--and slept
+ And all was hushed above that steep
+ So still, that they might sleep and sleep;
+ As still as when a day is born.
+
+ At last! from out the embers leapt
+ Two shafts of light above the night,--
+ Two wings of flame that lifting swept
+ In steady, calm, and upward flight;
+ Two wings of flame against the white
+ Far-lifting, tranquil, snowy cone;
+ Two wings of love, two wings of light,
+ Far, far above that troubled night,
+ As mounting, mounting to God's throne.
+
+
+XLII.
+
+ And all night long that upward light
+ Lit up the sea-cow's bed below:
+ The far sea-cows still calling so
+ It seemed as they must call all night.
+ All night! there was no night. Nay, nay,
+ There was no night. The night that lay
+ Between that awful eve and day,--
+ That nameless night was burned away.
+
+
+
+
+THE RHYME OF THE GREAT RIVER.
+
+PART I.
+
+
+ Rhyme on, rhyme on in reedy flow,
+ O river, rhymer ever sweet!
+ The story of thy land is meet,
+ The stars stand listening to know.
+
+ Rhyme on, O river of the earth!
+ Gray father of the dreadful seas,
+ Rhyme on! the world upon its knees
+ Shall yet invoke thy wealth and worth.
+
+ Rhyme on, the reed is at thy mouth,
+ O kingly minstrel, mighty stream!
+ Thy Crescent City, like a dream,
+ Hangs in the heaven of my South.
+
+ Rhyme on, rhyme on! these broken strings
+ Sing sweetest in this warm south wind;
+ I sit thy willow banks and bind
+ A broken harp that fitful sings.
+
+
+I.
+
+ And where is my city, sweet blossom-sown town?
+ And what is her glory, and what has she done?
+ By the Mexican seas in the path of the sun
+ Sit you down: in the crescent of seas sit you down.
+
+ Ay, glory enough by my Mexican seas!
+ Ay, story enough in that battle-torn town,
+ Hidden down in the crescent of seas, hidden down
+ 'Mid mantle and sheen of magnolia-strown trees.
+
+ But mine is the story of souls; of a soul
+ That bartered God's limitless kingdom for gold,--
+ Sold stars and all space for a thing he could hold
+ In his palm for a day, ere he hid with the mole.
+
+ O father of waters! O river so vast!
+ So deep, so strong, and so wondrous wild,--
+ He embraces the land as he rushes past,
+ Like a savage father embracing his child.
+
+ His sea-land is true and so valiantly true,
+ His leaf-land is fair and so marvellous fair,
+ His palm-land is filled with a perfumed air
+ Of magnolia blooms to its dome of blue.
+
+ His rose-land has arbors of moss-swept oak,--
+ Gray, Druid old oaks; and the moss that sways
+ And swings in the wind is the battle-smoke
+ Of duellists, dead in her storied days.
+
+ His love-land has churches and bells and chimes;
+ His love-land has altars and orange flowers;
+ And that is the reason for all these rhymes,--
+ These bells, they are ringing through all the hours!
+
+ His sun-land has churches, and priests at prayer,
+ White nuns, as white as the far north snow;
+ They go where danger may bid them go,--
+ They dare when the angel of death is there.
+
+ His love-land has ladies so fair, so fair,
+ In the Creole quarter, with great black eyes,--
+ So fair that the Mayor must keep them there
+ Lest troubles, like troubles of Troy, arise.
+
+ His love-land has ladies, with eyes held down,--
+ Held down, because if they lifted them,
+ Why, you would be lost in that old French town,
+ Though you held even to God's garment hem.
+
+ His love-land has ladies so fair, so fair,
+ That they bend their eyes to the holy book
+ Lest you should forget yourself, your prayer,
+ And never more cease to look and to look.
+
+ And these are the ladies that no men see,
+ And this is the reason men see them not.
+ Better their modest sweet mystery,--
+ Better by far than the battle-shot.
+
+ And so, in this curious old town of tiles,
+ The proud French quarter of days long gone,
+ In castles of Spain and tumble-down piles
+ These wonderful ladies live on and on.
+
+ I sit in the church where they come and go;
+ I dream of glory that has long since gone,
+ Of the low raised high, of the high brought low,
+ As in battle-torn days of Napoleon.
+
+ These piteous places, so rich, so poor!
+ One quaint old church at the edge of the town
+ Has white tombs laid to the very church door,--
+ White leaves in the story of life turned down.
+
+ White leaves in the story of life are these,
+ The low white slabs in the long strong grass,
+ Where Glory has emptied her hour-glass
+ And dreams with the dreamers beneath the trees.
+
+ I dream with the dreamers beneath the sod,
+ Where souls pass by to the great white throne;
+ I count each tomb as a mute milestone
+ For weary, sweet souls on their way to God.
+
+ I sit all day by the vast, strong stream,
+ 'Mid low white slabs in the long strong grass
+ Where Time has forgotten for aye to pass,
+ To dream, and ever to dream and to dream.
+
+ This quaint old church with its dead to the door,
+ By the cypress swamp at the edge of the town,
+ So restful seems that you want to sit down
+ And rest you, and rest you for evermore.
+
+ And one white tomb is a lowliest tomb,
+ That has crept up close to the crumbling door,--
+ Some penitent soul, as imploring room
+ Close under the cross that is leaning o'er.
+
+ 'Tis a low white slab, and 'tis nameless, too--
+ Her untold story, why, who should know?
+ Yet God, I reckon, can read right through
+ That nameless stone to the bosom below.
+
+ And the roses know, and they pity her, too;
+ They bend their heads in the sun or rain,
+ And they read, and they read, and then read again,
+ As children reading strange pictures through.
+
+ Why, surely her sleep it should be profound;
+ For oh the apples of gold above!
+ And oh the blossoms of bridal love!
+ And oh the roses that gather around!
+
+ The sleep of a night, or a thousand morns?
+ Why what is the difference here, to-day?
+ Sleeping and sleeping the years away
+ With all earth's roses, and none of its thorns.
+
+ Magnolias white and the roses red--
+ The palm-tree here and the cypress there:
+ Sit down by the palm at the feet of the dead,
+ And hear a penitent's midnight prayer.
+
+
+II.
+
+ The old churchyard is still as death,
+ A stranger passes to and fro
+ As if to church--he does not go--
+ The dead night does not draw a breath.
+
+ A lone sweet lady prays within.
+ The stranger passes by the door--
+ Will he not pray? Is he so poor
+ He has no prayer for his sin?
+
+ Is he so poor! His two strong hands
+ Are full and heavy, as with gold;
+ They clasp, as clasp two iron bands
+ About two bags with eager hold.
+
+ Will he not pause and enter in,
+ Put down his heavy load and rest,
+ Put off his garmenting of sin,
+ As some black burden from his breast?
+
+ Ah, me! the brave alone can pray.
+ The church-door is as cannon's mouth
+ To sinner North, or sinner South,
+ More dreaded than dread battle day.
+
+ Now two men pace. They pace apart,
+ And one with youth and truth is fair;
+ The fervid sun is in his heart,
+ The tawny South is in his hair.
+
+ Ay, two men pace, pace left and right--
+ The lone, sweet lady prays within--
+ Ay, two men pace: the silent night
+ Kneels down in prayer for some sin.
+
+ Lo! two men pace; and one is gray,
+ A blue-eyed man from snow-clad land,
+ With something heavy in each hand,--
+ With heavy feet, as feet of clay.
+
+ Ay, two men pace; and one is light
+ Of step, but still his brow is dark
+ His eyes are as a kindled spark
+ That burns beneath the brow of night!
+
+ And still they pace. The stars are red,
+ The tombs are white as frosted snow;
+ The silence is as if the dead
+ Did pace in couples, to and fro.
+
+
+III.
+
+ The azure curtain of God's house
+ Draws back, and hangs star-pinned to space;
+ I hear the low, large moon arouse,
+ I see her lift her languid face.
+
+ I see her shoulder up the east,
+ Low-necked, and large as womanhood,--
+ Low-necked, as for some ample feast
+ Of gods, within yon orange-wood.
+
+ She spreads white palms, she whispers peace,--
+ Sweet peace on earth for evermore;
+ Sweet peace for two beneath the trees,
+ Sweet peace for one within the door.
+
+ The bent stream, like a scimitar
+ Flashed in the sun, sweeps on and on,
+ Till sheathed like some great sword new-drawn
+ In seas beneath the Carib's star.
+
+ The high moon climbs the sapphire hill,
+ The lone sweet lady prays within;
+ The crickets keep a clang and din--
+ They are so loud, earth is so still!
+
+ And two men glare in silence there!
+ The bitter, jealous hate of each
+ Has grown too deep for deed or speech--
+ The lone, sweet lady keeps her prayer.
+
+ The vast moon high through heaven's field
+ In circling chariot is rolled;
+ The golden stars are spun and reeled,
+ And woven into cloth of gold.
+
+ The white magnolia fills the night
+ With perfume, as the proud moon fills
+ The glad earth with her ample light
+ From out her awful sapphire hills.
+
+ White orange blossoms fill the boughs
+ Above, about the old church door,--
+ They wait the bride, the bridal vows,--
+ They never hung so fair before.
+
+ The two men glare as dark as sin!
+ And yet all seems so fair, so white,
+ You would not reckon it was night,--
+ The while the lady prays within.
+
+
+IV.
+
+ She prays so very long and late,--
+ The two men, weary, waiting there,--
+ The great magnolia at the gate
+ Bends drowsily above her prayer.
+
+ The cypress in his cloak of moss,
+ That watches on in silent gloom,
+ Has leaned and shaped a shadow-cross
+ Above the nameless, lowly tomb.
+
+ What can she pray for? What her sin?
+ What folly of a maid so fair?
+ What shadows bind the wondrous hair
+ Of one who prays so long within?
+
+ The palm-trees guard in regiment,
+ Stand right and left without the gate;
+ The myrtle-moss trees wait and wait;
+ The tall magnolia leans intent.
+
+ The cypress trees, on gnarled old knees,
+ Far out the dank and marshy deep
+ Where slimy monsters groan and creep,
+ Kneel with her in their marshy seas.
+
+ What can her sin be? Who shall know?
+ The night flies by,--a bird on wing;
+ The men no longer to and fro
+ Stride up and down, or anything.
+
+ For one so weary and so old
+ Has hardly strength to stride or stir;
+ He can but hold his bags of gold,--
+ But hug his gold and wait for her.
+
+ The two stand still,--stand face to face.
+ The moon slides on; the midnight air
+ Is perfumed as a house of prayer--
+ The maiden keeps her holy place.
+
+ Two men! And one is gray, but one
+ Scarce lifts a full-grown face as yet:
+ With light foot on life's threshold set,--
+ Is he the other's sun-born son?
+
+ And one is of the land of snow,
+ And one is of the land of sun;
+ A black-eyed burning youth is one,
+ But one has pulses cold and slow:
+
+ Ay, cold and slow from clime of snow
+ Where Nature's bosom, icy bound,
+ Holds all her forces, hard, profound,--
+ Holds close where all the South lets go.
+
+ Blame not the sun, blame not the snows;
+ God's great schoolhouse for all is clime,
+ The great school-teacher, Father Time;
+ And each has borne as best he knows.
+
+ At last the elder speaks,--he cries,--
+ He speaks as if his heart would break;
+ He speaks out as a man that dies,--
+ As dying for some lost love's sake:
+
+ "Come, take this bag of gold, and go!
+ Come, take one bag! See, I have two!
+ Oh, why stand silent, staring so,
+ When I would share my gold with you?
+
+ "Come, take this gold! See how I pray!
+ See how I bribe, and beg, and buy,--
+ Ay, buy! buy love, as you, too, may
+ Some day before you come to die.
+
+ "God! take this gold, I beg, I pray!
+ I beg as one who thirsting cries
+ For but one drop of drink, and dies
+ In some lone, loveless desert way.
+
+ "You hesitate? Still hesitate?
+ Stand silent still and mock my pain?
+ Still mock to see me wait and wait,
+ And wait her love, as earth waits rain?"
+
+
+V.
+
+ O broken ship! O starless shore!
+ O black and everlasting night,
+ Where love comes never any more
+ To light man's way with heaven's light.
+
+ A godless man with bags of gold
+ I think a most unholy sight;
+ Ah, who so desolate at night
+ Amid death's sleepers still and cold?
+
+ A godless man on holy ground
+ I think a most unholy sight.
+ I hear death trailing like a hound
+ Hard after him, and swift to bite.
+
+
+VI.
+
+ The vast moon settles to the west:
+ Two men beside a nameless tomb,
+ And one would sit thereon to rest,--
+ Ay, rest below, if there were room.
+
+ What is this rest of death, sweet friend?
+ What is the rising up,--and where?
+ I say, death is a lengthened prayer,
+ A longer night, a larger end.
+
+ Hear you the lesson I once learned:
+ I died; I sailed a million miles
+ Through dreamful, flowery, restful isles,--
+ She was not there, and I returned.
+
+ I say the shores of death and sleep
+ Are one; that when we, wearied, come
+ To Lethe's waters, and lie dumb,
+ 'Tis death, not sleep, holds us to keep.
+
+ Yea, we lie dead for need of rest
+ And so the soul drifts out and o'er
+ The vast still waters to the shore
+ Beyond, in pleasant, tranquil quest:
+
+ It sails straight on, forgetting pain,
+ Past isles of peace, to perfect rest,--
+ Now were it best abide, or best
+ Return and take up life again?
+
+ And that is all of death there is,
+ Believe me. If you find your love
+ In that far land, then like the dove
+ Abide, and turn not back to this.
+
+ But if you find your love not there;
+ Or if your feet feel sure, and you
+ Have still allotted work to do,--
+ Why, then return to toil and care.
+
+ Death is no mystery. 'Tis plain
+ If death be mystery, then sleep
+ Is mystery thrice strangely deep,--
+ For oh this coming back again!
+
+ Austerest ferryman of souls!
+ I see the gleam of solid shores,
+ I hear thy steady stroke of oars
+ Above the wildest wave that rolls.
+
+ O Charon, keep thy sombre ships!
+ We come, with neither myrrh nor balm,
+ Nor silver piece in open palm,
+ But lone white silence on our lips.
+
+
+VII.
+
+ She prays so long! she prays so late!
+ What sin in all this flower-land
+ Against her supplicating hand
+ Could have in heaven any weight?
+
+ Prays she for her sweet self alone?
+ Prays she for some one far away,
+ Or some one near and dear to-day,
+ Or some poor, lorn, lost soul unknown?
+
+ It seems to me a selfish thing
+ To pray forever for one's self;
+ It seems to me like heaping pelf
+ In heaven by hard reckoning.
+
+ Why, I would rather stoop, and bear
+ My load of sin, and bear it well
+ And bravely down to burning hell,
+ Than ever pray one selfish prayer!
+
+
+VIII.
+
+ The swift chameleon in the gloom--
+ This silence it is so profound!--
+ Forsakes its bough, glides to the ground,
+ Then up, and lies across the tomb.
+
+ It erst was green as olive-leaf,
+ It then grew gray as myrtle moss
+ The time it slid the moss across;
+ But now 'tis marble-white with grief.
+
+ The little creature's hues are gone;
+ Here in the pale and ghostly light
+ It lies so pale, so panting white,--
+ White as the tomb it lies upon.
+
+ The two men by that nameless tomb,
+ And both so still! You might have said
+ These two men, they are also dead,
+ And only waiting here for room.
+
+ How still beneath the orange-bough!
+ How tall was one, how bowed was one!
+ The one was as a journey done,
+ The other as beginning now.
+
+ And one was young,--young with that youth
+ Eternal that belongs to truth;
+ And one was old,--old with the years
+ That follow fast on doubts and fears.
+
+ And yet the habit of command
+ Was his, in every stubborn part;
+ No common knave was he at heart,
+ Nor his the common coward's hand.
+
+ He looked the young man in the face,
+ So full of hate, so frank of hate;
+ The other, standing in his place,
+ Stared back as straight and hard as fate.
+
+ And now he sudden turned away,
+ And now he paced the path, and now
+ Came back, beneath the orange-bough
+ Pale-browed, with lips as cold as clay.
+
+ As mute as shadows on a wall,
+ As silent still, as dark as they,
+ Before that stranger, bent and gray,
+ The youth stood scornful, proud, and tall.
+
+ He stood, a tall palmetto-tree
+ With Spanish daggers guarding it;
+ Nor deed, nor word, to him seemed fit
+ While she prayed on so silently.
+
+ He slew his rival with his eyes;
+ His eyes were daggers piercing deep,--
+ So deep that blood began to creep
+ From their deep wounds and drop wordwise:
+
+ His eyes so black, so bright that they
+ Might raise the dead, the living slay,
+ If but the dead, the living, bore
+ Such hearts as heroes had of yore:
+
+ Two deadly arrows barbed in black,
+ And feathered, too, with raven's wing;
+ Two arrows that could silent sting,
+ And with a death-wound answer back.
+
+ How fierce he was! how deadly still
+ In that mesmeric, hateful stare
+ Turned on the pleading stranger there
+ That drew to him, despite his will:
+
+ So like a bird down-fluttering,
+ Down, down, beneath a snake's bright eyes,
+ He stood, a fascinated thing,
+ That hopeless, unresisting, dies.
+
+ He raised a hard hand as before,
+ Reached out the gold, and offered it
+ With hand that shook as ague-fit,--
+ The while the youth but scorned the more.
+
+ "You will not touch it? In God's name
+ Who are you, and what are you, then?
+ Come, take this gold, and be of men,--
+ A human form with human aim.
+
+ "Yea, take this gold,--she must be mine
+ She shall be mine! I do not fear
+ Your scowl, your scorn, your soul austere,
+ The living, dead, or your dark sign.
+
+ "I saw her as she entered there;
+ I saw her, and uncovered stood:
+ The perfume of her womanhood
+ Was holy incense on the air.
+
+ "She left behind sweet sanctity,
+ Religion lay the way she went;
+ I cried I would repent, repent!
+ She passed on, all unheeding me.
+
+ "Her soul is young, her eyes are bright
+ And gladsome, as mine own are dim;
+ But, oh, I felt my senses swim
+ The time she passed me by to-night!--
+
+ "The time she passed, nor raised her eyes
+ To hear me cry I would repent,
+ Nor turned her head to hear my cries,
+ But swifter went the way she went,--
+
+ "Went swift as youth, for all these years!
+ And this the strangest thing appears,
+ That lady there seems just the same,--
+ Sweet Gladys-- Ah! you know her name?
+
+ "You hear her name and start that I
+ Should name her dear name trembling so?
+ Why, boy, when I shall come to die
+ That name shall be the last I know.
+
+ "That name shall be the last sweet name
+ My lips shall utter in this life!
+ That name is brighter than bright flame,--
+ That lady is my wedded wife!
+
+ "Ah, start and catch your burning breath!
+ Ah, start and clutch your deadly knife!
+ If this be death, then be it death,--
+ But that loved lady is my wife!
+
+ "Yea, you are stunned! your face is white,
+ That I should come confronting you,
+ As comes a lorn ghost of the night
+ From out the past, and to pursue.
+
+ "You thought me dead? You shake your head,
+ You start back horrified to know
+ That she is loved, that she is wed,
+ That you have sinned in loving so.
+
+ "Yet what seems strange, that lady there,
+ Housed in the holy house of prayer,
+ Seems just the same for all her tears,--
+ For all my absent twenty years.
+
+ "Yea, twenty years to-night, to-night,
+ Just twenty years this day, this hour,
+ Since first I plucked that perfect flower,
+ And not one witness of the rite.
+
+ "Nay, do not doubt,--I tell you true!
+ Her prayers, her tears, her constancy
+ Are all for me, are all for me,--
+ And not one single thought for you!
+
+ "I knew, I knew she would be here
+ This night of nights to pray for me!
+ And how could I for twenty year
+ Know this same night so certainly?
+
+ "Ah me! some thoughts that we would drown
+ Stick closer than a brother to
+ The conscience, and pursue, pursue
+ Like baying hound to hunt us down.
+
+ "And then, that date is history;
+ For on that night this shore was shelled,
+ And many a noble mansion felled,
+ With many a noble family.
+
+ "I wore the blue; I watched the flight
+ Of shells like stars tossed through the air
+ To blow your hearth-stones--anywhere,
+ That wild, illuminated night.
+
+ "Nay, rage befits you not so well:
+ Why, you were but a babe at best,
+ Your cradle some sharp bursted shell
+ That tore, maybe, your mother's breast!
+
+ "Hear me! We came in honored war.
+ The risen world was on your track!
+ The whole North-land was at our back,
+ From Hudson's bank to the North star!
+
+ "And from the North to palm-set sea
+ The splendid fiery cyclone swept.
+ Your fathers fell, your mothers wept,
+ Their nude babes clinging to the knee.
+
+ "A wide and desolated track:
+ Behind, a path of ruin lay;
+ Before, some women by the way
+ Stood mutely gazing, clad in black.
+
+ "From silent women waiting there
+ Some tears came down like still small rain;
+ Their own sons on the battle plain
+ Were now but viewless ghosts of air.
+
+ "Their own dear daring boys in gray,--
+ They should not see them any more;
+ Our cruel drums kept telling o'er
+ The time their own sons went away.
+
+ "Through burning town, by bursting shell--
+ Yea, I remember well that night;
+ I led through orange-lanes of light,
+ As through some hot outpost of hell!
+
+ "That night of rainbow-shot and shell
+ Sent from your surging river's breast
+ To waken me, no more to rest,--
+ That night I should remember well!
+
+ "That night amid the maimed and dead,--
+ A night in history set down
+ By light of many a burning town,
+ And written all across in red,--
+
+ "Her father dead, her brothers dead,
+ Her home in flames,--what else could she
+ But fly all helpless here to me,
+ A fluttered dove, that night of dread?
+
+ "Short time, hot time had I to woo
+ Amid the red shells' battle-chime;
+ But women rarely reckon time,
+ And perils speed their love when true.
+
+ "And then I wore a captain's sword;
+ And, too, had oftentime before
+ Doffed cap at her dead father's door,
+ And passed a soldier's pleasant word.
+
+ "And then--ah, I was comely then!
+ I bore no load upon my back,
+ I heard no hounds upon my track,
+ But stood the tallest of tall men.
+
+ "Her father's and her mother's shrine,
+ This church amid the orange wood,
+ So near and so secure it stood,
+ It seemed to beckon as a sign.
+
+ "Its white cross seemed to beckon me:
+ My heart was strong, and it was mine
+ To throw myself upon my knee,
+ To beg to lead her to this shrine.
+
+ "She did consent. Through lanes of light
+ I led through that church-door that night--
+ Let fall your hand! Take back your face
+ And stand,--stand patient in your place!
+
+ "She loved me; and she loves me still.
+ Yea, she clung close to me that hour
+ As honey-bee to honey-flower,--
+ And still is mine, through good or ill.
+
+ "The priest stood there. He spake the prayer;
+ He made the holy, mystic sign.
+ And she was mine, was wholly mine,--
+ Is mine this moment I will swear!
+
+ "Then days, then nights, of vast delight,--
+ Then came a doubtful, later day;
+ The faithful priest, now far away,
+ Watched with the dying in the fight:
+
+ "The priest amid the dying, dead,
+ Kept duty on the battle-field,--
+ That midnight marriage unrevealed
+ Kept strange thoughts running through my head.
+
+ "At last a stray ball struck the priest:
+ This vestibule his chancel was.
+ And now none lived to speak her cause,
+ Record, or champion her the least.
+
+ "Hear me! I had been bred to hate
+ All priests, their mummeries and all.
+ Ah, it was fate,--ah, it was fate
+ That all things tempted me to fall!
+
+ "And then the rattling songs we sang
+ Those nights when rudely revelling,--
+ The songs that only soldiers sing,--
+ Until the very tent-poles rang!
+
+ "What is the rhyme that rhymers say
+ Of maidens born to be betrayed
+ By epaulettes and shining blade,
+ While soldiers love and ride away?
+
+ "And then my comrades spake her name
+ Half taunting, with a touch of shame;
+ Taught me to hold that lily-flower
+ As some light pastime of the hour.
+
+ "And then the ruin in the land,
+ The death, dismay, the lawlessness!
+ Men gathered gold on every hand,--
+ Heaped gold: and why should I do less?
+
+ "The cry for gold was in the air,
+ For Creole gold, for precious things;
+ The sword kept prodding here and there
+ Through bolts and sacred fastenings.
+
+ "'Get gold! get gold!' This was the cry.
+ And I loved gold. What else could I
+ Or you, or any earnest one
+ Born in this getting age have done?
+
+ "With this one lesson taught from youth,
+ And ever taught us, to get gold,--
+ To get and hold, and ever hold,--
+ What else could I have done, forsooth?
+
+ "She, seeing how I sought for gold,--
+ This girl, my wife, one late night told
+ Of treasures hidden close at hand,
+ In her dead father's mellow land:
+
+ "Of gold she helped her brothers hide
+ Beneath a broad banana tree,
+ The day the two in battle died,--
+ The night she dying fled to me.
+
+ "It seemed too good; I laughed to scorn
+ Her trustful tale. She answered not;
+ But meekly on the morrow morn
+ Two massive bags of bright gold brought.
+
+ "And when she brought this gold to me,
+ Red Creole gold, rich, rare, and old,--
+ When I at last had gold, sweet gold,
+ I cried in very ecstasy!
+
+ "Red gold! rich gold! two bags of gold!
+ The two stout bags of gold she brought
+ And gave with scarce a second thought,--
+ Why, her two hands could hardly hold!
+
+ "Now I had gold! two bags of gold!
+ Two wings of gold to fly, and fly
+ The wide world's girth; red gold to hold
+ Against my heart for aye and aye!
+
+ "My country's lesson: 'Gold! get gold!'
+ I learned it well in land of snow;
+ And what can glow, so brightly glow,
+ Long winter nights of Northern cold?
+
+ "Ay, now at last, at last I had
+ The one thing, all fair things above
+ My land had taught me most to love!
+ A miser now! and I grew mad.
+
+ "With those two bags of gold my own,
+ I then began to plan that night
+ For flight, for far and sudden flight,--
+ For flight; and, too, for flight alone.
+
+ "I feared! I feared! My heart grew cold,--
+ Some one might claim this gold of me!
+ I feared her,--feared her purity,
+ Feared all things but my bags of gold.
+
+ "I grew to hate her face, her creed,--
+ That face the fairest ever yet
+ That bowed o'er holy cross or bead,
+ Or yet was in God's image set.
+
+ "I fled,--nay, not so knavish low
+ As you have fancied, did I fly;
+ I sought her at that shrine, and I
+ Told her full frankly I should go.
+
+ "I stood a giant in my power,--
+ And did she question or dispute?
+ I stood a savage, selfish brute,--
+ She bowed her head, a lily-flower.
+
+ "And when I sudden turned to go,
+ And told her I should come no more,
+ She bowed her head so low, so low,
+ Her vast black hair fell pouring o'er.
+
+ "And that was all; her splendid face
+ Was mantled from me, and her night
+ Of hair half hid her from my sight
+ As she fell moaning in her place.
+
+ "And there, 'mid her dark night of hair,
+ She sobbed, low moaning through her tears,
+ That she would wait, wait all the years,--
+ Would wait and pray in her despair.
+
+ "Nay, did not murmur, not deny,--
+ She did not cross me one sweet word!
+ I turned and fled: I thought I heard
+ A night-bird's piercing low death-cry!"
+
+
+
+
+THE RHYME OF THE GREAT RIVER.
+
+PART II.
+
+
+ How soft this moonlight of the South!
+ How sweet my South in soft moonlight!
+ I want to kiss her warm sweet mouth
+ As she lies sleeping here to-night.
+
+ How still! I do not hear a mouse.
+ I see some bursting buds appear;
+ I hear God in His garden,--hear
+ Him trim some flowers for His house.
+
+ I hear some singing stars; the mouth
+ Of my vast river sings and sings,
+ And pipes on reeds of pleasant things,--
+ Of splendid promise for my South:
+
+ My great South-woman, soon to rise
+ And tiptoe up and loose her hair;
+ Tiptoe, and take from all the skies
+ God's stars and glorious moon to wear!
+
+
+I.
+
+ The poet shall create or kill,
+ Bid heroes live, bid braggarts die.
+ I look against a lurid sky,--
+ My silent South lies proudly still.
+
+ The lurid light of burning lands
+ Still climbs to God's house overhead;
+ Mute women wring white withered hands;
+ Their eyes are red, their skies are red.
+
+ Poor man! still boast your bitter wars!
+ Still burn and burn, and burning die.
+ But God's white finger spins the stars
+ In calm dominion of the sky.
+
+ And not one ray of light the less
+ Comes down to bid the grasses spring;
+ No drop of dew nor anything
+ Shall fail for all your bitterness.
+
+ The land that nursed a nation's youth,
+ Ye burned it, sacked it, sapped it dry.
+ Ye gave it falsehoods for its truth,
+ And fame was fashioned from a lie.
+
+ If man grows large, is God the less?
+ The moon shall rise and set the same,
+ The great sun spill his splendid flame
+ And clothe the world in queenliness.
+
+ And from that very soil ye trod
+ Some large-souled seeing youth shall come
+ Some day, and he shall not be dumb
+ Before the awful court of God.
+
+
+II.
+
+ The weary moon had turned away,
+ The far North-Star was turning pale
+ To hear the stranger's boastful tale
+ Of blood and flame that battle day.
+
+ And yet again the two men glared,
+ Close face to face above that tomb;
+ Each seemed as jealous of the room
+ The other eager waiting shared.
+
+ Again the man began to say,--
+ As taking up some broken thread,
+ As talking to the patient dead,--
+ The Creole was as still as they:
+
+ "That night we burned yon grass-grown town,--
+ The grasses, vines are reaching up;
+ The ruins they are reaching down,
+ As sun-browned soldiers when they sup.
+
+ "I knew her,--knew her constancy.
+ She said, this night of every year
+ She here would come, and kneeling here,
+ Would pray the live-long night for me.
+
+ "This praying seems a splendid thing!
+ It drives old Time the other way;
+ It makes him lose all reckoning
+ Of years that pagans have to pay.
+
+ "This praying seems a splendid thing!
+ It makes me stronger as she prays--
+ But oh the bitter, bitter days
+ When I became a banished thing!
+
+ "I fled, took ship,--I fled as far
+ As far ships drive tow'rd the North-Star;
+ For I did hate the South, the sun
+ That made me think what I had done.
+
+ "I could not see a fair palm-tree
+ In foreign land, in pleasant place,
+ But it would whisper of her face
+ And shake its keen sharp blades at me.
+
+ "Each black-eyed woman would recall
+ A lone church-door, a face, a name,
+ A coward's flight, a soldier's shame:
+ I fled from woman's face, from all.
+
+ "I hugged my gold, my precious gold,
+ Within my strong, stout, buckskin vest.
+ I wore my bags against my breast
+ So close I felt my heart grow cold.
+
+ "I did not like to see it now;
+ I did not spend one single piece.
+ I travelled, travelled without cease
+ As far as Russian ship could plow.
+
+ "And when my own scant hoard was gone,
+ And I had reached the far North-land,
+ I took my two stout bags in hand
+ As one pursued, and journeyed on.
+
+ "Ah, I was weary! I grew gray;
+ I felt the fast years slip and reel
+ As slip black beads when maidens kneel
+ At altars when out-door is gay.
+
+ "At last I fell prone in the road,--
+ Fell fainting with my cursed load.
+ A skin-clad cossack helped me bear
+ My bags, nor would one shilling share.
+
+ "He looked at me with proud disdain,--
+ He looked at me as if he knew;
+ His black eyes burned me thro' and thro';
+ His scorn pierced like a deadly pain.
+
+ "He frightened me with honesty;
+ He made me feel so small, so base,
+ I fled, as if the fiend kept chase,--
+ The fiend that claims my company!
+
+ "I bore my load alone; I crept
+ Far up the steep and icy way;
+ And there, before a cross there lay
+ A barefoot priest, who bowed and wept.
+
+ "I threw my gold right down and sped
+ Straight on. And oh my heart was light!
+ A spring-time bird in spring-time flight
+ Flies not so happy as I fled.
+
+ "I felt somehow this monk would take
+ My gold, my load from off my back;
+ Would turn the fiend from off my track,
+ Would take my gold for sweet Christ's sake!
+
+ "I fled; I did not look behind;
+ I fled, fled with the mountain wind.
+ At last; far down the mountain's base
+ I found a pleasant resting-place.
+
+ "I rested there so long, so well,
+ More grateful than all tongues can tell.
+ It was such pleasant thing to hear
+ That valley's voices calm and clear:
+
+ "That valley veiled in mountain air,
+ With white goats on the hills at morn;
+ That valley green with seas of corn,
+ With cottage islands here and there.
+
+ "I watched the mountain girls. The hay
+ They mowed was not more sweet than they;
+ They laid brown hands in my white hair;
+ They marvelled at my face of care.
+
+ "I tried to laugh; I could but weep.
+ I made these peasants one request,--
+ That I with them might toil or rest,
+ And with them sleep the long, last sleep.
+
+ "I begged that I might battle there,
+ For that fair valley-land, for those
+ Who gave me cheer when girt with foes,
+ And have a country, loved and fair.
+
+ "Where is that spot that poets name
+ Our country? name the hallowed land?
+ Where is that spot where man must stand
+ Or fall when girt with sword and flame?
+
+ "Where is that one permitted spot?
+ Where is the one place man must fight?
+ Where rests the one God-given right
+ To fight, as ever patriots fought?
+
+ "I say 'tis in that holy house
+ Where God first set us down on earth:
+ Where mother welcomed us at birth,
+ And bared her breasts, a happy spouse.
+
+ "But when some wrong, some deed of shame,
+ Shall make that land no more our own--
+ Ah! hunger for that holy name
+ My country, I have truly known!
+
+ "The simple plough-boy from his field
+ Looks forth. He sees God's purple wall
+ Encircling him. High over all
+ The vast sun wheels his shining shield.
+
+ "This King, who makes earth what it is,--
+ King David bending to his toil!
+ O lord and master of the soil,
+ How envied in thy loyal bliss!
+
+ "Long live the land we loved in youth,--
+ That world with blue skies bent about,
+ Where never entered ugly doubt!
+ Long live the simple, homely truth!
+
+ "Can true hearts love some far snow-land,
+ Some bleak Alaska bought with gold?
+ God's laws are old as love is old;
+ And Home is something near at hand.
+
+ "Yea, change yon river's course; estrange
+ The seven sweet stars; make hate divide
+ The full moon from the flowing tide,--
+ But this old truth ye cannot change.
+
+ "I begged a land as begging bread;
+ I begged of these brave mountaineers
+ To share their sorrows, share their tears;
+ To weep as they wept, with their dead.
+
+ "They did consent. The mountain town
+ Was mine to love, and valley lands.
+ That night the barefoot monk came down
+ And laid my two bags in my hands!
+
+ "On! On! And oh the load I bore!
+ Why, once I dreamed my soul was lead;
+ Dreamed once it was a body dead!
+ It made my cold, hard bosom sore.
+
+ "I dragged that body forth and back--
+ O conscience, what a baying hound!
+ Nor frozen seas nor frosted ground
+ Can throw this bloodhound from his track.
+
+ "In farthest Russia I lay down
+ A dying man, at last to rest;
+ I felt such load upon my breast
+ As seamen feel, who sinking drown.
+
+ "That night, all chill and desperate,
+ I sprang up, for I could not rest;
+ I tore the two bags from my breast,
+ And dashed them in the burning grate.
+
+ "I then crept back into my bed;
+ I tried, I begged, I prayed to sleep;
+ But those red, restless coins would keep
+ Slow dropping, dropping, and blood red.
+
+ "I heard them clink and clink and clink,--
+ They turned, they talked within that grate.
+ They talked of her; they made me think
+ Of one who still must pray and wait.
+
+ "And when the bags burned crisp and black,
+ Two coins did start, roll to the floor,--
+ Roll out, roll on, and then roll back,
+ As if they needs must journey more.
+
+ "Ah, then I knew nor change nor space,
+ Nor all the drowning years that rolled
+ Could hide from me her haunting face,
+ Nor still that red-tongued talking gold.
+
+ "Again I sprang forth from my bed!
+ I shook as in an ague fit;
+ I clutched that red gold, burning red,
+ I clutched, as if to strangle it.
+
+ "I clutched it up--you hear me, boy?--
+ I clutched it up with joyful tears!
+ I clutched it close, with such wild joy
+ I had not felt for years and years!
+
+ "Such joy! for I should now retrace
+ My steps, should see my land, her face;
+ Bring back her gold this battle day,
+ And see her, see her, hear her pray!
+
+ "I brought it back--you hear me, boy?--
+ I clutch it, hold it, hold it now:
+ Red gold, bright gold that giveth joy
+ To all, and anywhere or how;
+
+ "That giveth joy to all but me,--
+ To all but me, yet soon to all.
+ It burns my hands, it burns! but she
+ Shall ope my hands and let it fall.
+
+ "For oh I have a willing hand
+ To give these bags of gold; to see
+ Her smile as once she smiled on me
+ Here in this pleasant, warm palm-land!"
+
+ He ceased, he thrust each hard-clenched fist,
+ He threw his gold hard forth again,
+ As one impelled by some mad pain
+ He would not or could not resist.
+
+ The creole, scorning, turned away,
+ As if he turned from that lost thief,--
+ The one that died without belief
+ That awful crucifixion day.
+
+
+III.
+
+ Believe in man, nor turn away.
+ Lo! man advances year by year;
+ Time bears him upward, and his sphere
+ Of life must broaden day by day.
+
+ Believe in man with large belief;
+ The garnered grain each harvest-time
+ Hath promise, roundness, and full prime
+ For all the empty chaff and sheaf.
+
+ Believe in man with proud belief:
+ Truth keeps the bottom of her well,
+ And when the thief peeps down, the thief
+ Peeps back at him, perpetual.
+
+ Faint not that this or that man fell;
+ For one that falls a thousand rise
+ To lift white Progress to the skies:
+ Truth keeps the bottom of her well.
+
+ Fear not for man, nor cease to delve
+ For cool sweet truth, with large belief.
+ Lo! Christ himself chose only twelve,
+ Yet one of these turned out a thief.
+
+
+IV.
+
+ Down through the dark magnolia leaves
+ Where climbs the rose of Cherokee
+ Against the orange-blossomed tree,
+ A loom of moonlight weaves and weaves,--
+
+ A loom of moonlight, weaving clothes
+ From snow-white rose of Cherokee,
+ And bridal blooms of orange-tree,
+ For fairy folk in fragrant rose.
+
+ Down through the mournful myrtle crape,
+ Through moving moss, through ghostly gloom,
+ A long white moonbeam takes a shape
+ Above a nameless, lowly tomb;
+
+ A long white finger through the gloom
+ Of grasses gathered round about,--
+ As God's white finger pointing out
+ A name upon that nameless tomb.
+
+
+V.
+
+ Her white face bowed in her black hair,
+ The maiden prays so still within
+ That you might hear a falling pin,--
+ Ay, hear her white unuttered prayer.
+
+ The moon has grown disconsolate,
+ Has turned her down her walk of stars:
+ Why, she is shutting up her bars,
+ As maidens shut a lover's gate.
+
+ The moon has grown disconsolate;
+ She will no longer watch and wait.
+ But two men wait; and two men will
+ Wait on till morning, mute and still:
+
+ Still wait and walk among the trees,
+ Quite careless if the moon may keep
+ Her walk along her starry steep
+ Above the Southern pearl-sown seas.
+
+ They know no moon, or set or rise
+ Of stars, or anything to light
+ The earth or skies, save her dark eyes,
+ This praying, waking, watching night.
+
+ They move among the tombs apart,
+ Their eyes turn ever to that door;
+ They know the worn walks there by heart--
+ They turn and walk them o'er and o'er.
+
+ They are not wide, these little walks
+ For dead folk by this crescent town.
+ They lie right close when they lie down,
+ As if they kept up quiet talks.
+
+
+VI.
+
+ The two men keep their paths apart;
+ But more and more begins to stoop
+ The man with gold, as droop and droop
+ Tall plants with something at their heart.
+
+ Now once again with eager zest
+ He offers gold with silent speech;
+ The other will not walk in reach,
+ But walks around, as round a pest.
+
+ His dark eyes sweep the scene around,
+ His young face drinks the fragrant air,
+ His dark eyes journey everywhere,--
+ The other's cleave unto the ground.
+
+ It is a weary walk for him,
+ For oh he bears a weary load!
+ He does not like that narrow road
+ Between the dead--it is so dim:
+
+ It is so dark, that narrow place,
+ Where graves lie thick, like yellow leaves:
+ Give us the light of Christ and grace,
+ Give light to garner in the sheaves.
+
+ Give light of love; for gold is cold,
+ And gold is cruel as a crime;
+ It gives no light at such sad time
+ As when man's feet wax weak and old.
+
+ Ay, gold is heavy, hard, and cold!
+ And have I said this thing before?
+ Well, I will tell it o'er and o'er,
+ 'Twere need be told ten thousand fold.
+
+ "Give us this day our daily bread,"--
+ Get this of God, then all the rest
+ Is housed in thine own honest breast,
+ If you but lift a lordly head.
+
+
+VII.
+
+ Oh, I have seen men, tall and fair,
+ Stoop down their manhood with disgust,
+ Stoop down God's image to the dust,
+ To get a load of gold to bear;
+
+ Have seen men selling day by day
+ The glance of manhood that God gave:
+ To sell God's image as a slave
+ Might sell some little pot of clay!
+
+ Behold! here in this green graveyard
+ A man with gold enough to fill
+ A coffin, as a miller's till;
+ And yet his path is hard, so hard!
+
+ His feet keep sinking in the sand,
+ And now so near an opened grave!
+ He seems to hear the solemn wave
+ Of dread oblivion at hand.
+
+ The sands, they grumble so, it seems
+ As if he walks some shelving brink.
+ He tries to stop, he tries to think,
+ He tries to make believe he dreams:
+
+ Why, he is free to leave the land,
+ The silver moon is white as dawn;
+ Why, he has gold in either hand,
+ Has silver ways to walk upon.
+
+ And who should chide, or bid him stay?
+ Or taunt, or threat, or bid him fly?
+ The world's for sale, I hear men say,
+ And yet this man has gold to buy.
+
+ Buy what? Buy rest? He could not rest!
+ Buy gentle sleep? He could not sleep,
+ Though all these graves were wide and deep
+ As their wide mouths with the request.
+
+ Buy Love, buy faith, buy snow-white truth?
+ Buy moonlight, sunlight, present, past?
+ Buy but one brimful cup of youth
+ That calm souls drink of to the last?
+
+ O God! 'tis pitiful to see
+ This miser so forlorn and old!
+ O God! how poor a man may be
+ With nothing in this world but gold!
+
+
+VIII.
+
+ The broad magnolia's blooms are white;
+ Her blooms are large, as if the moon
+ Had lost her way some lazy night,
+ And lodged here till the afternoon.
+
+ Oh, vast white blossoms breathing love!
+ White bosom of my lady dead,
+ In your white heaven overhead
+ I look, and learn to look above.
+
+
+IX.
+
+ All night the tall magnolia kept
+ Kind watch above the nameless tomb:
+ Two shapes kept waiting in the gloom
+ And gray of morn, where roses wept.
+
+ The dew-wet roses wept; their eyes
+ All dew, their breath as sweet as prayer.
+ And as they wept, the dead down there
+ Did feel their tears and hear their sighs.
+
+ The grass uprose as if afraid
+ Some stranger foot might press too near;
+ Its every blade was like a spear,
+ Its every spear a living blade.
+
+ The grass above that nameless tomb
+ Stood all arrayed, as if afraid
+ Some weary pilgrim seeking room
+ And rest, might lay where she was laid.
+
+
+X.
+
+ 'Twas morn, and yet it was not morn;
+ 'Twas morn in heaven, not on earth,--
+ A star was singing of a birth,
+ Just saying that a day was born.
+
+ The marsh hard by that bound the lake,--
+ The great low sea-lake, Ponchartrain,
+ Shut off from sultry Cuban main,--
+ Drew up its legs, as half awake:
+
+ Drew long stork legs, long legs that steep
+ In slime where alligators creep,--
+ Drew long green legs that stir the grass,
+ As when the late lorn night-winds pass.
+
+ Then from the marsh came croakings low,
+ Then louder croaked some sea-marsh beast;
+ Then, far away against the east,
+ God's rose of morn began to grow.
+
+ From out the marsh, against that east,
+ A ghostly moss-swept cypress stood;
+ With ragged arms above the wood
+ It rose, a God-forsaken beast.
+
+ It seemed so frightened where it rose!
+ The moss-hung thing it seemed to wave
+ The worn-out garments of the grave,--
+ To wave and wave its old grave-clothes.
+
+ Close by, a cow rose up and lowed
+ From out a palm-thatched milking-shed.
+ A black boy on the river road
+ Fled sudden, as the night had fled:
+
+ A nude black boy, a bit of night
+ That had been broken off and lost
+ From flying night, the time it crossed
+ The surging river in its flight:
+
+ A bit of darkness, following
+ The sable night on sable wing,--
+ A bit of darkness stilled with fear,
+ Because that nameless tomb was near.
+
+ Then holy bells came pealing out;
+ Then steamboats blew, then horses neighed;
+ Then smoke from hamlets round about
+ Crept out, as if no more afraid.
+
+ Then shrill cocks here, and shrill cocks there,
+ Stretched glossy necks and filled the air.
+ How many cocks it takes to make
+ A country morning well awake!
+
+ Then many boughs, with many birds,--
+ Young boughs in green, old boughs in gray,--
+ These birds had very much to say
+ In their soft, sweet, familiar words.
+
+ And all seemed sudden glad; the gloom
+ Forgot the church, forgot the tomb;
+ And yet like monks with cross and bead
+ The myrtles leaned to read and read.
+
+ And oh the fragrance of the sod!
+ And oh the perfume of the air!
+ The sweetness, sweetness everywhere,
+ That rose like incense up to God!
+
+ I like a cow's breath in sweet spring,
+ I like the breath of babes new-born;
+ A maid's breath is a pleasant thing,--
+ But oh the breath of sudden morn!
+
+ Of sudden morn, when every pore
+ Of mother earth is pulsing fast
+ With life, and life seems spilling o'er
+ With love, with love too sweet to last:
+
+ Of sudden morn beneath the sun,
+ By God's great river wrapped in gray,
+ That for a space forgets to run,
+ And hides his face as if to pray.
+
+
+XI.
+
+ The black-eyed Creole kept his eyes
+ Turned to the door, as eyes might turn
+ To see the holy embers burn
+ Some sin away at sacrifice.
+
+ Full dawn! but yet he knew no dawn,
+ Nor song of bird, nor bird on wing,
+ Nor breath of rose, nor anything
+ Her fair face lifted not upon.
+
+ And yet he taller stood with morn;
+ His bright eyes, brighter than before,
+ Burned fast against that fastened door,
+ His proud lips lifting up with scorn,--
+
+ With lofty, silent scorn for one
+ Who all night long had plead and plead,
+ With none to witness but the dead
+ How he for gold must be undone.
+
+ Oh, ye who feed a greed for gold,
+ And barter truth, and trade sweet youth
+ For cold hard gold, behold, behold!
+ Behold this man! behold this truth!
+
+ Why, what is there in all God's plan
+ Of vast creation, high or low,
+ By sea or land, by sun or snow,
+ So mean, so miserly as man?
+
+ Lo, earth and heaven all let go
+ Their garnered riches, year by year!
+ The treasures of the trackless snow,
+ Ah, hast thou seen how very dear?
+
+ The wide earth gives, gives golden grain,
+ Gives fruits of gold, gives all, gives all!
+ Hold forth your hand, and these shall fall
+ In your full palm as free as rain.
+
+ Yea, earth is generous. The trees
+ Strip nude as birth-time without fear,
+ And their reward is year by year
+ To feel their fulness but increase.
+
+ The law of Nature is to give,
+ To give, to give! and to rejoice
+ In giving with a generous voice,
+ And so trust God and truly live.
+
+ But see this miser at the last,--
+ This man who loves, grasps hold of gold,
+ Who grasps it with such eager hold,
+ To hold forever hard and fast:
+
+ As if to hold what God lets go;
+ As if to hold, while all around
+ Lets go, and drops upon the ground
+ All things as generous as snow.
+
+ Let go your greedy hold, I say!
+ Let go your hold! Do not refuse
+ 'Till death comes by and shakes you loose,
+ And sends you shamed upon your way.
+
+ What if the sun should keep his gold?
+ The rich moon lock her silver up?
+ What if the gold-clad buttercup
+ Became a miser, mean and old?
+
+ Ah, me! the coffins are so true
+ In all accounts, the shrouds so thin,
+ That down there you might sew and sew,
+ Nor ever sew one pocket in.
+
+ And all that you can hold of lands
+ Down there, below the grass, down there,
+ Will only be that little share
+ You hold in your two dust-full hands.
+
+
+XII.
+
+ She comes! she comes! The stony floor
+ Speaks out! And now the rusty door
+ At last has just one word this day,
+ With mute religious lips, to say.
+
+ She comes! she comes! And lo, her face
+ Is upward, radiant, fair as prayer!
+ So pure here in this holy place,
+ Where holy peace is everywhere.
+
+ Her upraised face, her face of light
+ And loveliness, from duty done,
+ Is like a rising orient sun
+ That pushes back the brow of night.
+
+ How brave, how beautiful is truth!
+ Good deeds untold are like to this.
+ But fairest of all fair things is
+ A pious maiden in her youth:
+
+ A pious maiden as she stands
+ Just on the threshold of the years
+ That throb and pulse with hopes and fears,
+ And reaches God her helpless hands.
+
+ How fair is she! How fond is she!
+ Her foot upon the threshold there.
+ Her breath is as a blossomed tree,--
+ This maiden mantled in her hair!
+
+ Her hair, her black, abundant hair,
+ Where night, inhabited all night
+ And all this day, will not take flight,
+ But finds content and houses there.
+
+ Her hands are clasped, her two small hands;
+ They hold the holy book of prayer
+ Just as she steps the threshold there,
+ Clasped downward where she silent stands.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+ Once more she lifts her lowly face,
+ And slowly lifts her large, dark eyes
+ Of wonder; and in still surprise
+ She looks full forward in her place.
+
+ She looks full forward on the air
+ Above the tomb, and yet below
+ The fruits of gold, the blooms of snow,
+ As looking--looking anywhere.
+
+ She feels--she knows not what she feels;
+ It is not terror, is not fear,
+ But there is something that reveals
+ A presence that is near and dear.
+
+ She does not let her eyes fall down,
+ They lift against the far profound:
+ Against the blue above the town
+ Two wide-winged vultures circle round.
+
+ Two brown birds swim above the sea,--
+ Her large eyes swim as dreamily
+ And follow far, and follow high,
+ Two circling black specks in the sky.
+
+ One forward step,--the closing door
+ Creaks out, as frightened or in pain;
+ Her eyes are on the ground again--
+ Two men are standing close before.
+
+ "My love," sighs one, "my life, my all!"
+ Her lifted foot across the sill
+ Sinks down,--and all things are so still
+ You hear the orange blossoms fall.
+
+ But fear comes not where duty is,
+ And purity is peace and rest;
+ Her cross is close upon her breast,
+ Her two hands clasp hard hold of this.
+
+ Her two hands clasp cross, book, and she
+ Is strong in tranquil purity,--
+ Ay, strong as Samson when he laid
+ His two hands forth, and bowed and prayed.
+
+ One at her left, one at her right,
+ And she between, the steps upon,--
+ I can but see that Syrian night,
+ The women there at early dawn
+
+ 'Tis strange, I know, and may be wrong,
+ But ever pictured in my song;
+ And rhyming on, I see the day
+ They came to roll the stone away.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+ The sky is like an opal sea,
+ The air is like the breath of kine,
+ But oh her face is white, and she
+ Leans faint to see a lifted sign,--
+
+ To see two hands lift up and wave
+ To see a face so white with woe,
+ So ghastly, hollow, white as though
+ It had that moment left the grave.
+
+ Her sweet face at that ghostly sign,
+ Her fair face in her weight of hair,
+ Is like a white dove drowning there,--
+ A white dove drowned in Tuscan wine.
+
+ He tries to stand, to stand erect.
+ 'Tis gold, 'tis gold that holds him down!
+ And soul and body both must drown,--
+ Two millstones tied about his neck.
+
+ Now once again his piteous face
+ Is raised to her face reaching there.
+ He prays such piteous, silent prayer
+ As prays a dying man for grace.
+
+ It is not good to see him strain
+ To lift his hands, to gasp, to try
+ To speak. His parched lips are so dry
+ Their sight is as a living pain.
+
+ I think that rich man down in hell
+ Some like this old man with his gold,--
+ To gasp and gasp perpetual
+ Like to this minute I have told.
+
+
+XV.
+
+ At last the miser cries his pain,--
+ A shrill, wild cry, as if a grave
+ Just ope'd its stony lips and gave
+ One sentence forth, then closed again.
+
+ "'Twas twenty years last night, last night!"
+ His lips still moved, but not to speak;
+ His outstretched hands so trembling weak
+ Were beggar's hands in sorry plight.
+
+ His face upturned to hers, his lips
+ Kept talking on, but gave no sound;
+ His feet were cloven to the ground;
+ Like iron hooks his finger-tips.
+
+ "Ay, twenty years," she sadly sighed:
+ "I promised mother every year
+ That I would pray for father here,
+ As she had prayed, the night she died:
+
+ "To pray as she prayed, fervidly;
+ As she had promised she would pray
+ The sad night of her marriage day,
+ For him, wherever he might be."
+
+ Then she was still; then sudden she
+ Let fall her eyes, and so outspake
+ As if her very heart would break,
+ Her proud lips trembling piteously:
+
+ "And whether he come soon or late
+ To kneel beside this nameless grave,
+ May God forgive my father's hate
+ As I forgive, as she forgave!"
+
+ He saw the stone; he understood
+ With that quick knowledge that will come
+ Most quick when men are made most dumb
+ With terror that stops still the blood.
+
+ And then a blindness slowly fell
+ On soul and body; but his hands
+ Held tight his bags, two iron bands,
+ As if to bear them into hell.
+
+ He sank upon the nameless stone
+ With oh such sad, such piteous moan
+ As never man might seek to know
+ From man's most unforgiving foe.
+
+ He sighed at last, so long, so deep,
+ As one heart breaking in one's sleep,--
+ One long, last, weary, willing sigh,
+ As if it were a grace to die.
+
+ And then his hands, like loosened bands,
+ Hung down, hung down on either side;
+ His hands hung down and opened wide:
+ He rested in the orange lands.
+
+
+
+
+University Press: John Wilson & Son, Cambridge.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE.
+
+The following emendations have been made to the text:
+
+ "You will not touch it? In God's name
+ for
+ 'You will not touch it? In God's name
+
+ "That night of rainbow-shot and shell
+ for
+ That night of rainbow-shot and shell
+
+ "That night amid the maimed and dead,--
+ for
+ That night amid the maimed and dead,--
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Songs of the Mexican Seas, by Joaquin Miller
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