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-Project Gutenberg's Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, Volume I, by Various
-
-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: Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, Volume I
- October-March, 1912-13
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Harriet Monroe
-
-Release Date: July 15, 2013 [EBook #43224]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POETRY: A MAGAZINE OF VERSE, VOL I ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Starner, Paul Marshall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-book was produced from images made available by the
-HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Poetry
- A Magazine of Verse
-
-
- VOLUME I.
- October-March, 1912-13
-
-
- Harriet Monroe ~ Editor
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- _Reprinted with the permission
- of the original publisher._
-
- A. M. S. REPRINT CO.
- New York, New York
-
- Copyright
- By HARRIET MONROE
- 1912-1913
-
-
-
-
- Poetry VOL. I
- A Magazine of Verse NO. 1
-
-
- OCTOBER, 1912
-
- POETRY
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- It is a little isle amid bleak seas--
- An isolate realm of garden, circled round
- By importunity of stress and sound,
- Devoid of empery to master these.
- At most, the memory of its streams and bees,
- Borne to the toiling mariner outward-bound,
- Recalls his soul to that delightful ground;
- But serves no beacon toward his destinies.
-
- It is a refuge from the stormy days,
- Breathing the peace of a remoter world
- Where beauty, like the musing dusk of even,
- Enfolds the spirit in its silver haze;
- While far away, with glittering banners furled,
- The west lights fade, and stars come out in heaven.
-
-
- II
-
- It is a sea-gate, trembling with the blast
- Of powers that from the infinite sea-plain roll,
- A whelming tide. Upon the waiting soul
- As on a fronting rock, thunders the vast
- Groundswell; its spray bursts heavenward, and drives past
- In fume and sound articulate of the whole
- Of ocean's heart, else voiceless; on the shoal
- Silent; upon the headland clear at last.
-
- From darkened sea-coasts without stars or sun,
- Like trumpet-voices in a holy war,
- Utter the heralds tidings of the deep.
- And where men slumber, weary and undone,
- Visions shall come, incredible hopes from far,--
- And with high passion shatter the bonds of sleep.
-
- _Arthur Davison Ficke_
-
-
-
-
- I AM THE WOMAN
-
- I am the Woman, ark of the law and its breaker,
- Who chastened her steps and taught her knees to be meek,
- Bridled and bitted her heart and humbled her cheek,
- Parcelled her will, and cried "Take more!" to the taker,
- Shunned what they told her to shun, sought what they bade her seek,
- Locked up her mouth from scornful speaking: now it is open to speak.
-
- I am she that is terribly fashioned, the creature
- Wrought in God's perilous mood, in His unsafe hour.
- The morning star was mute, beholding my feature,
- Seeing the rapture I was, the shame, and the power,
- Scared at my manifold meaning; he heard me call
- "O fairest among ten thousand, acceptable brother!"
- And he answered not, for doubt; till he saw me crawl
- And whisper down to the secret worm, "O mother,
- Be not wroth in the ancient house; thy daughter forgets not at all!"
- I am the Woman, fleër away,
- Soft withdrawer back from the maddened mate,
- Lurer inward and down to the gates of day
- And crier there in the gate,
- "What shall I give for thee, wild one, say!
- The long, slow rapture and patient anguish of life,
- Or art thou minded a swifter way?
- Ask if thou canst, the gold, but oh if thou must,
- Good is the shining dross, lovely the dust!
- Look at me, I am the Woman, harlot and heavenly wife;
- Tell me thy price, be unashamed; I will assuredly pay!"
-
- I am also the Mother: of two that I bore
- I comfort and feed the slayer, feed and comfort the slain.
- Did they number my daughters and sons? I am mother of more!
- Many a head they marked not, here in my bosom has lain,
- Babbling with unborn lips in a tongue to be,
- Far, incredible matters, all familiar to me.
- Still would the man come whispering,
- "Wife!" but many a time my breast
- Took him not as a husband: I soothed him and laid him to rest
- Even as the babe of my body, and knew him for such.
- My mouth is open to speak, that was dumb too much!
- I say to you I am the Mother; and under the sword
- Which flamed each way to harry us forth from the Lord,
- I saw Him young at the portal, weeping and staying the rod,
- And I, even I was His mother, and I yearned as the mother of God.
-
- I am also the Spirit. The Sisters laughed
- When I sat with them dumb in the portals, over my lamp,
- Half asleep in the doors: for my gown was raught
- Off at the shoulder to shield from the wind and the rain
- The wick I tended against the mysterious hour
- When the Silent City of Being should ring with song,
- As the Lord came in with Life to the marriage bower.
- "Look!" laughed the elder Sisters; and crimson with shame
- I hid my breast away from the rosy flame.
- "Ah!" cried the leaning Sisters, pointing, doing me wrong,
- "Do you see?" laughed the wanton Sisters,
- "She will get her lover ere long!"
- And it was but a little while till unto my need
- He was given indeed,
- And we walked where waxing world after world went by;
- And I said to my lover, "Let us begone,
- "Oh, let us begone, and try
- "Which of them all the fairest to dwell in is,
- "Which is the place for us, our desirable clime!"
- But he said, "They are only the huts and the little villages,
- Pleasant to go and lodge in rudely over the vintage-time!"
- Scornfully spake he, being unwise,
- Being flushed at heart because of our walking together.
- But I was mute with passionate prophecies;
- My heart went veiled and faint in the golden weather,
- While universe drifted by after still universe.
- Then I cried, "Alas, we must hasten and lodge therein,
- One after one, and in every star that they shed!
- A dark and a weary thing is come on our head--
- To search obedience out in the bosom of sin,
- To listen deep for love when thunders the curse;
- For O my love, behold where the Lord hath planted
- In every star in the midst His dangerous Tree!
- Still I must pluck thereof and bring unto thee,
- Saying, "The coolness for which all night we have panted;
- Taste of the goodly thing, I have tasted first!"
- Bringing us noway coolness, but burning thirst,
- Giving us noway peace, but implacable strife,
- Loosing upon us the wounding joy and the wasting sorrow of life!
-
- I am the Woman, ark of the Law and sacred arm to upbear it,
- Heathen trumpet to overthrow and idolatrous sword to shear it:
- Yea, she whose arm was round the neck of the morning star at song,
- Is she who kneeleth now in the dust and cries at the secret door,
- "Open to me, O sleeping mother! The gate is heavy and strong.
- "Open to me, I am come at last; be wroth with thy child no more.
- "Let me lie down with thee there in the dark, and be slothful
- with thee as before!"
-
- _William Vaughan Moody_
-
-
-
-
- TO WHISTLER, AMERICAN
-
- _On the loan exhibit of his paintings at the Tate Gallery._
-
- You also, our first great,
- Had tried all ways;
- Tested and pried and worked in many fashions,
- And this much gives me heart to play the game.
-
- Here is a part that's slight, and part gone wrong,
- And much of little moment, and some few
- Perfect as Dürer!
-
- "In the Studio" and these two portraits,[A] if I had my choice!
- And then these sketches in the mood of Greece?
-
- You had your searches, your uncertainties,
- And this is good to know--for us, I mean,
- Who bear the brunt of our America
- And try to wrench her impulse into art.
-
- You were not always sure, not always set
- To hiding night or tuning "symphonies";
- Had not one style from birth, but tried and pried
- And stretched and tampered with the media.
-
- You and Abe Lincoln from that mass of dolts
- Show us there's chance at least of winning through.
-
- _Ezra Pound_
-
-[Footnote A:
-
- "Brown and Gold--de Race."
- "Grenat et Or--Le Petit Cardinal."
-
-]
-
-
-
-
- MIDDLE-AGED
-
- A STUDY IN AN EMOTION
-
- "'Tis but a vague, invarious delight
- As gold that rains about some buried king.
-
- As the fine flakes,
- When tourists frolicking
- Stamp on his roof or in the glazing light
- Try photographs, wolf down their ale and cakes
- And start to inspect some further pyramid;
-
- As the fine dust, in the hid cell beneath
- Their transitory step and merriment,
- Drifts through the air, and the sarcophagus
- Gains yet another crust
- Of useless riches for the occupant,
- So I, the fires that lit once dreams
- Now over and spent,
- Lie dead within four walls
- And so now love
- Rains down and so enriches some stiff case,
- And strews a mind with precious metaphors,
-
- And so the space
- Of my still consciousness
- Is full of gilded snow,
-
- The which, no cat has eyes enough
- To see the brightness of."
-
- _Ezra Pound_
-
-
-
-
- FISH OF THE FLOOD
-
- Fish of the flood, on the bankèd billow
- Thou layest thy head in dreams;
- Sliding as slides thy shifting pillow,
- One with the streams
- Of the sea is thy spirit.
-
- Gean-tree, thou spreadest thy foaming flourish
- Abroad in the sky so grey;
- It not heeding if it thee nourish,
- Thou dost obey,
- Happy, its moving.
-
- So, God, thy love it not needeth me,
- Only thy life, that I blessèd be.
-
- _Emilia Stuart Lorimer_
-
-
-
-
- TO ONE UNKNOWN
-
- I have seen the proudest stars
- That wander on through space,
- Even the sun and moon,
- But not your face.
-
- I have heard the violin,
- The winds and waves rejoice
- In endless minstrelsy,
- Yet not your voice.
-
- I have touched the trillium,
- Pale flower of the land,
- Coral, anemone,
- And not your hand.
-
- I have kissed the shining feet
- Of Twilight lover-wise,
- Opened the gates of Dawn--
- Oh not your eyes!
-
- I have dreamed unwonted things,
- Visions that witches brew,
- Spoken with images,
- Never with you.
-
- _Helen Dudley_
-
-
-
-
- SYMPHONY OF A MEXICAN GARDEN
-
- 1. THE GARDEN _Poco sostenuto_ in A major
- The laving tide of inarticulate air.
-
- _Vivace_ in A major
- The iris people dance.
-
- 2. THE POOL _Allegretto_ in A minor
- Cool-hearted dim familiar of the doves.
-
- 3. THE BIRDS _Presto_ in F major
- I keep a frequent tryst.
-
- _Presto meno assai_
- The blossom-powdered orange-tree.
-
- 4. TO THE MOON _Allegro con brio_ in A major
- Moon that shone on Babylon.
-
-
- TO MOZART
-
- _What junipers are these, inlaid
- With flame of the pomegranate tree?
- The god of gardens must have made
- This still unrumored place for thee
- To rest from immortality,
- And dream within the splendid shade
- Some more elusive symphony
- Than orchestra has ever played._
-
-
- I In A major
- _Poco sostenuto_
-
- The laving tide of inarticulate air
- Breaks here in flowers as the sea in foam,
- But with no satin lisp of failing wave:
- The odor-laden winds are very still.
- An unimagined music here exhales
- In upcurled petal, dreamy bud half-furled,
- And variations of thin vivid leaf:
- Symphonic beauty that some god forgot.
- If form could waken into lyric sound,
- This flock of irises like poising birds
- Would feel song at their slender feathered throats,
- And pour into a grey-winged aria
- Their wrinkled silver fingermarked with pearl;
- That flight of ivory roses high along
- The airy azure of the larkspur spires
- Would be a fugue to puzzle nightingales
- With too-evasive rapture, phrase on phrase.
- Where the hibiscus flares would cymbals clash,
- And the black cypress like a deep bassoon
- Would hum a clouded amber melody.
-
- But all across the trudging ragged chords
- That are the tangled grasses in the heat,
- The mariposa lilies fluttering
- Like trills upon some archangelic flute,
- The roses and carnations and divine
- Small violets that voice the vanished god,
- There is a lure of passion-poignant tone
- Not flower-of-pomegranate--that finds the heart
- As stubborn oboes do--can breathe in air,
- Nor poppies, nor keen lime, nor orange-bloom.
-
- What zone of wonder in the ardent dusk
- Of trees that yearn and cannot understand,
- Vibrates as to the golden shepherd horn
- That stirs some great adagio with its cry
- And will not let it rest?
- O tender trees,
- Your orchid, like a shepherdess of dreams,
- Calls home her whitest dream from following
- Elusive laughter of the unmindful god!
-
-
- _Vivace_
-
- The iris people dance
- Like any nimble faun:
- To rhythmic radiance
- They foot it in the dawn.
- They dance and have no need
- Of crystal-dripping flute
- Or chuckling river-reed,--
- Their music hovers mute.
- The dawn-lights flutter by
- All noiseless, but they know!
- Such children of the sky
- Can hear the darkness go.
- But does the morning play
- Whatever they demand--
- Or amber-barred bourrée
- Or silver saraband?
-
-
- THE POOL
- II. In A minor
- _Allegretto_
-
- Cool-hearted dim familiar of the doves,
- Thou coiled sweet water where they come to tell
- Their mellow legends and rehearse their loves,
- As what in April or in June befell
- And thou must hear of,--friend of Dryades
- Who lean to see where flower should be set
- To star the dusk of wreathed ivy braids,
- They have not left thy trees,
- Nor do tired fauns thy crystal kiss forget,
- Nor forest-nymphs astray from distant glades.
-
- Thou feelest with delight their showery feet
- Along thy mossy margin myrtle-starred,
- And thine the heart of wildness quick to beat
- At imprint of shy hoof upon thy sward:
- Yet who could know thee wild who art so cool,
- So heavenly-minded, templed in thy grove
- Of plumy cedar, larch and juniper?
- O strange ecstatic Pool,
- What unknown country art thou dreaming of,
- Or temple than this garden lovelier?
-
- Who made thy sky the silver side of leaves,
- And poised its orchid like a swan-white moon
- Whose disc of perfect pallor half deceives
- The mirror of thy limpid green lagoon,
- He loveth well thy ripple-feathered moods,
- Thy whims at dusk, thy rainbow look at dawn!
- Dream thou no more of vales Olympian:
- Where pale Olympus broods
- There were no orchid white as moon or swan,
- No sky of leaves, no garden-haunting Pan!
-
-
- THE BIRDS
- III. In F major
- _Presto_
-
- I keep a frequent tryst
- With whirr and shower of wings:
- Some inward melodist
- Interpreting all things
- Appoints the place, the hours.
- Dazzle and sense of flowers,
- Though not the least leaf stir,
- May mean a tanager:
- How rich the silence is until he sings!
-
- The smoke-tree's cloudy white
- Has fire within its breast.
- What winged mere delight
- There hides as in a nest
- And fashions of its flame
- Music without a name?
- So might an opal sing
- If given thrilling wing,
- And voice for lyric wildness unexpressed.
-
- In grassy dimness thatched
- With tangled growing things,
- A troubadour rose-patched,
- With velvet-shadowed wings,
- Seeks a sustaining fly.
- Who else unseen goes by
- Quick-pattering through the hush?
- Some twilight-footed thrush
- Or finch intent on small adventurings?
-
- I have no time for gloom,
- For gloom what time have I?
- The orange is in bloom;
- Emerald parrots fly
- Out of the cypress-dusk;
- Morning is strange with musk.
- The wild canary now
- Jewels the lemon-bough,
- And mocking-birds laugh in the rose's room.
-
-
- THE ORANGE TREE
- In D Major
- _Presto meno assai_
-
- The blossom-powdered orange tree,
- For all her royal speechlessness,
- Out of a heart of ecstasy
- Is singing, singing, none the less!
-
- Light as a springing fountain, she
- Is spray above the wind-sleek turf:
- Dream-daughter of the moon's white sea
- And sister to its showered surf!
-
-
- TO THE MOON
- IV. In A major
- _Allegro con brio_
-
- Moon that shone on Babylon,
- Searching out the gardens there,
- Could you find a fairer one
- Than this garden, anywhere?
- Did Damascus at her best
- Hide such beauty in her breast?
-
- When you flood with creamy light
- Vines that net the sombre pine,
- Turn the shadowed iris white,
- Summon cactus stars to shine,
- Do you free in silvered air
- Wistful spirits everywhere?
-
- Here they linger, there they pass,
- And forget their native heaven:
- Flit along the dewy grass
- Rare Vittoria, Sappho, even!
- And the hushed magnolia burns
- Incense in her gleaming urns.
-
- When the nightingale demands
- Word with Keats who answers him,
- Shakespeare listens--understands--
- Mindful of the cherubim;
- And the South Wind dreads to know
- Mozart gone as seraphs go.
-
- Moon of poets dead and gone,
- Moon to gods of music dear,
- Gardens they have looked upon
- Let them re-discover here:
- Rest--and dream a little space
- Of some heart-remembered place!
-
- _Grace Hazard Conkling_
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL COMMENT
-
- AS IT WAS
-
-Once upon a time, when man was new in the woods of the world, when his
-feet were scarred with jungle thorns and his hands were red with the
-blood of beasts, a great king rose who gathered his neighbors together,
-and subdued the wandering tribes. Strange cunning was his, for he ground
-the stones to an edge together, and bound them with thongs to sticks;
-and he taught his people to pry apart the forest, and beat back the
-ravenous beasts. And he bade them honeycomb the mountainside with caves,
-to dwell therein with their women. And the most beautiful women the king
-took for his own, that his wisdom might not perish from the earth. And
-he led the young men to war and conquered all the warring tribes from
-the mountains to the sea. And when fire smote a great tree out of
-heaven, and raged through the forest till the third sun, he seized a
-burning brand and lit an altar to his god. And there, beside the
-ever-burning fire, he sat and made laws and did justice. And his people
-loved and feared him.
-
-And the king grew old. And for seven journeys of the sun from morn to
-morn he moved not, neither uttered word. And the hearts of the people
-were troubled, but none dared speak to the king's despair; neither wise
-men nor warriors dared cry out unto him.
-
-Now the youngest son of the king was a lad still soft of flesh, who had
-never run to battle not sat in council nor stood before the king. And
-his heart yearned for his father, and he bowed before his mother and
-said, "Give me thy blessing, for I have words within me for the king;
-yea, as the sea sings to the night with waves will my words roll in
-singing unto his grief." And his mother said, "Go, my son; for thou hast
-words of power and soothing, and the king shall be healed."
-
-So the youth went forth and bowed him toward the king's seat. And the
-wise men and warriors laid hands upon him, and said, "Who art thou, that
-thou shouldst go in ahead of us to him who sitteth in darkness?" And the
-king's son rose, and stretched forth his arms, and said, "Unhand me and
-let me go, ye silent ones, who for seven sun-journeys have watched in
-darkness and uttered no word of light! Unhand me, for as a fig-tree with
-fruit, so my heart is rich with words for the king."
-
-Then he put forth his strength and strode on singing softly, and bowed
-him before the king. And he spake the king's great deeds in cunning
-words--his wars and city-carvings and wise laws, his dominion over men
-and beasts and the thick woods of the earth; his greeting of the gods
-with fire.
-
-And lo, the king lifted up his head and stretched forth his arms and
-wept. "Yea, all these things have I done," he said, "and they shall
-perish with me. My death is upon me, and I shall die, and the tribes I
-have welded together shall be broken apart, and the beasts shall win
-back their domain, and the green jungle shall overgrow my mansions. Lo,
-the fire shall go out on the altar of the gods, and my glory shall be as
-a crimson cloud that the night swallows up in darkness."
-
-Then the young man lifted up his voice and cried: "Oh, king, be
-comforted! Thy deeds shall not pass as a cloud, neither shall thy laws
-be strewn before the wind. For I will carve thy glory in rich and
-rounded words--yea, I will string thy deeds together in jewelled beads
-of perfect words that thy sons shall wear on their hearts forever."
-
-"Verily thy words are rich with song," said the king; "but thou shalt
-die, and who will utter them? Like twinkling foam is the speech of man's
-mouth; like foam from a curling wave that vanishes in the sun."
-
-"Nay, let thy heart believe me, oh king my father," said the youth. "For
-the words of my mouth shall keep step with the ripple of waves and the
-beating of wings; yea, they shall mount with the huge paces of the sun
-in heaven, that cease not for my ceasing. Men shall sound them on
-suckling tongues still soft with milk, they shall run into battle to the
-tune of thy deeds, and kindle their fire with the breath of thy wisdom.
-And thy glory shall be ever living, as a jewel of jasper from the
-earth--yea, as the green jewel of jasper carven into a god for the rod
-of thy power, oh king, and of the power of thy sons forever."
-
-The king sat silent till the going-down of the sun. Then lifted he his
-head, and stroked his beard, and spake: "Verily the sun goes down, and
-my beard shines whiter than his, and I shall die. Now therefore stand at
-my right hand, O son of my wise years, child of my dreams. Stand at my
-right hand, and fit thy speech to music, that men may hold in their
-hearts thy rounded words. Forever shalt thou keep thy place, and utter
-thy true tale in the ears of the race. And woe be unto them that hear
-thee not! Verily that generation shall pass as a cloud, and its glory
-shall be as a tree that withers. For thou alone shalt win the flying
-hours to thee, and keep the beauty of them for the joy of men forever."
-
- _H. M._
-
-
-
-
- ON THE READING OF POETRY
-
-In the brilliant pages of his essay on Jean François Millet, Romain
-Rolland says that Millet, as a boy, used to read the Bucolics and the
-Georgics "with enchantment" and was "seized by emotion--when he came to
-the line, 'It is the hour when the great shadows seek the plain.'
-
- Et jam summa procul villarum culmina fumant
- Majoresque cadunt altis de montibus umbrae?"
-
-To the lover and student of poetry, this incident has an especial charm
-and significance. There is something fine in the quick sympathy of an
-artist in one kind, for beauty expressed by the master of another
-medium. The glimpse M. Rolland gives us of one of the most passionate
-art-students the world has ever known, implies with fresh grace a truth
-Anglo-Saxons are always forgetting--that poetry is one of the great
-humanities, that poetry is one of the great arts of expression.
-
-Many of our customs conspire to cause, almost to force, this forgetting.
-Thousands of us have been educated to a dark and often permanent
-ignorance of classic poetry, by being taught in childhood to regard it
-as written for the purpose of illustrating Hadley's Latin, or Goodwin's
-Greek grammar, and composed to follow the rules of versification at the
-end of the book. It seems indeed one of fate's strangest ironies that
-the efforts of these distinguished grammarians to unveil immortal
-masterpieces are commonly used in schools and colleges to enshroud, not
-to say swaddle up, the images of the gods "forever young," and turn them
-into mummies. In our own country, far from perceiving in Vergil's quiet
-music the magnificent gesture of nature that thrilled his Norman
-reader--far from conceiving of epic poetry as the simplest universal
-tongue, one early acquires a wary distrust of it as something one must
-constantly labor over.
-
-Aside from gaining in childhood this strong, practical objection to
-famous poetry, people achieve the deadly habit of reading metrical lines
-unimaginatively. After forming--generally in preparation for entering
-one of our great universities--the habit of blinding the inner eye,
-deafening the inner ear, and dropping into a species of mental coma
-before a page of short lines, it is difficult for educated persons to
-read poetry with what is known as "ordinary human intelligence."
-
-It does not occur to them simply to listen to the nightingale. But
-poetry, I believe, never speaks her beauty--certainly never her scope
-and variety, except on the condition that in her presence one sits down
-quietly with folded hands, and truly listens to her singing voice.
-
- "So for one the wet sail arching through the rainbow round the bow,
- And for one the creak of snow-shoes on the crust."
-
-Many people do not like poetry, in this way, as a living art to be
-enjoyed, but rather as an exact science to be approved. To them poetry
-may concern herself only with a limited number of subjects to be
-presented in a predetermined and conventional manner and form. To such
-readers the word "form" means usually only a repeated literary effect:
-and they do not understand that every "form" was in its first and best
-use an originality, employed not for the purpose of following any rule,
-but because it said truly what the artist wished to express. I suppose
-much of the monotony of subject and treatment observable in modern verse
-is due to this belief that poetry is merely a fixed way of repeating
-certain meritorious though highly familiar concepts of existence--and
-not in the least the infinite music of words meant to speak the little
-and the great tongues of the earth.
-
-It is exhilarating to read the pages of Pope and of Byron, whether you
-agree with them or not, because here poetry does speak the little and
-the great tongues of the earth, and sings satires, pastorals and
-lampoons, literary and dramatic criticism, all manner of fun and
-sparkling prettiness, sweeping judgments, nice discriminations,
-fashions, politics, the ways of gentle and simple--love and desire and
-pain and sorrow, and anguish and death.
-
-The impulse which inspired, and the appreciation which endowed this
-magazine, has been a generous sympathy with poetry as an art. The
-existence of a gallery for poems and verse has an especially attractive
-social value in its power of recalling or creating the beautiful and
-clarifying pleasure of truly reading poetry in its broad scope and rich
-variety. The hospitality of this hall will have been a genuine source of
-happiness if somehow it tells the visitors, either while they are here,
-or after they have gone to other places, what a delight it is to enjoy a
-poem, to realize it, to live in the vivid dream it evokes, to hark to
-its music, to listen to the special magic grace of its own style and
-composition, and to know that this special grace will say as deeply as
-some revealing hour with a friend one loves, something nothing else can
-say--something which is life itself sung in free sympathy beyond the
-bars of time and space.
-
- _E. W._
-
-
-
-
- THE MOTIVE OF THE MAGAZINE
-
-In the huge democracy of our age no interest is too slight to have an
-organ. Every sport, every little industry requires its own corner, its
-own voice, that it may find its friends, greet them, welcome them.
-
-The arts especially have need of each an entrenched place, a voice of
-power, if they are to do their work and be heard. For as the world grows
-greater day by day, as every member of it, through something he buys or
-knows or loves, reaches out to the ends of the earth, things precious to
-the race, things rare and delicate, may be overpowered, lost in the
-criss-cross of modern currents, the confusion of modern immensities.
-
-Painting, sculpture, music are housed in palaces in the great cities of
-the world; and every week or two a new periodical is born to speak for
-one or the other of them, and tenderly nursed at some guardian's
-expense. Architecture, responding to commercial and social demands, is
-whipped into shape by the rough and tumble of life and fostered,
-willy-nilly, by men's material needs. Poetry alone, of all the fine
-arts, has been left to shift for herself in a world unaware of its
-immediate and desperate need of her, a world whose great deeds, whose
-triumphs over matter, over the wilderness, over racial enmities and
-distances, require her ever-living voice to give them glory and
-glamour.
-
-Poetry has been left to herself and blamed for inefficiency, a process
-as unreasonable as blaming the desert for barrenness. This art, like
-every other, is not a miracle of direct creation, but a reciprocal
-relation between the artist and his public. The people must do their
-part if the poet is to tell their story to the future; they must
-cultivate and irrigate the soil if the desert is to blossom as the rose.
-
-The present venture is a modest effort to give to poetry her own place,
-her own voice. The popular magazines can afford her but scant
-courtesy--a Cinderella corner in the ashes--because they seek a large
-public which is not hers, a public which buys them not for their verse
-but for their stories, pictures, journalism, rarely for their
-literature, even in prose. Most magazine editors say that there is no
-public for poetry in America; one of them wrote to a young poet that the
-verse his monthly accepted "must appeal to the barber's wife of the
-Middle West," and others prove their distrust by printing less verse
-from year to year, and that rarely beyond page-end length and
-importance.
-
-We believe that there is a public for poetry, that it will grow, and
-that as it becomes more numerous and appreciative the work produced in
-this art will grow in power, in beauty, in significance. In this belief
-we have been encouraged by the generous enthusiasm of many subscribers
-to our fund, by the sympathy of other lovers of the art, and by the
-quick response of many prominent poets, both American and English, who
-have sent or promised contributions.
-
-We hope to publish in _Poetry_ some of the best work now being done in
-English verse. Within space limitations set at present by the small size
-of our monthly sheaf, we shall be able to print poems longer, and of
-more intimate and serious character, than the popular magazines can
-afford to use. The test, limited by ever-fallible human judgment, is to
-be quality alone; all forms, whether narrative, dramatic or lyric, will
-be acceptable. We hope to offer our subscribers a place of refuge, a
-green isle in the sea, where Beauty may plant her gardens, and Truth,
-austere revealer of joy and sorrow, of hidden delights and despairs, may
-follow her brave quest unafraid.
-
-
-
-
- NOTES AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
-
-In order that the experiment of a magazine of verse may have a fair
-trial, over one hundred subscriptions of fifty dollars annually for five
-years have been promised by the ladies and gentlemen listed below. In
-addition, nearly twenty direct contributions of smaller sums have been
-sent or promised. To all these lovers of the art the editors would
-express their grateful appreciation.
-
- Mr. H. C. Chatfield-Taylor
- Mr. Howard Shaw
- Mr. Arthur T. Aldis
- Mr. Edwin S. Fechheimer
- Mrs. Charles H. Hamill
- [B]Mr. D. H. Burnham
- Mrs. Emmons Blaine (2)
- Mr. Wm. S. Monroe
- Mr. E. A. Bancroft
- Mrs. Burton Hanson
- Mr. John M. Ewen
- Mr. C. L. Hutchinson
- Mrs. Wm. Vaughan Moody
- Hon. Wm. J. Calhoun
- {Miss Anna Morgan
- {Mrs. Edward A. Leicht
- Mrs. Louis Betts
- Mr. Ralph Cudney
- Mrs. George Bullen
- Mrs. P. A. Valentine
- Mr. P. A. Valentine
- Mr. Charles R. Crane
- Mr. Frederick Sargent
- Mrs. Frank G. Logan
- Dr. F. W. Gunsaulus
- Mrs. Emma B. Hodge
- Mr. Wallace Heckman
- Mr. Edward B. Butler (2)
- Miss Elizabeth Ross
- Mrs. Bryan Lathrop
- Mr. Martin A. Ryerson
- Mrs. La Verne Noyes
- Mrs. E. Norman Scott (2)
- Mr. Wm. O. Goodman
- Mrs. Charles Hitchcock
- Hon. John Barton Payne
- Mr. Thomas D. Jones
- Mr. H. H. Kohlsaat
- Mr. Andrew M. Lawrence
- Miss Juliet Goodrich
- Mr. Henry H. Walker
- Mr. Charles Deering
- Mr. Jas. Harvey Peirce
- Mr. Charles L. Freer
- Mrs. W. F. Dummer
- Mr. Jas. P. Whedon
- Mr. Arthur Heun
- Mr. Edward F. Carry
- Mrs. George M. Pullman
- Mr. Cyrus H. McCormick (2)
- Mr. F. Stuyvesant Peabody
- Mrs. F. S. Winston
- Mr. J. J. Glessner
- {Mr. C. C. Curtiss
- {Mrs. Hermon B. Butler
- Mr. Will H. Lyford
- Mr. Horace S. Oakley
- Mr. Eames Mac Veagh
- Mrs. K. M. H. Besly
- Mr. Charles G. Dawes
- Mr. Clarence Buckingham
- Mrs. Potter Palmer
- Mr. Owen F. Aldis
- Mr. Albert B. Dick
- Mr. Albert H. Loeb
- The Misses Skinner
- Mr. Potter Palmer
- Miss Mary Rozet Smith
- Misses Alice E. and Margaret D. Moran
- {Mrs. James B. Waller
- {Mr. John Borden
- Mr. Victor F. Lawson
- {Mrs. H. M. Wilmarth
- {Mrs. Norman F. Thompson
- {Mrs. William Blair
- {Mrs. Clarence I. Peck
- Mr. Clarence M. Woolley
- Mr. Edward P. Russell
- Mrs. Frank O. Lowden
- Mr. John S. Miller
- Miss Helen Louise Birch
- Nine members of the Fortnightly
- Six members of the Friday Club
- Seven members of the Chicago Woman's Club
- Mr. William L. Brown
- Mr. Rufus G. Dawes
- Mr. Gilbert E. Porter
- Mr. Alfred L. Baker
- Mr. George A. McKinlock
- Mr. John S. Field
- Mrs. Samuel Insull
- Mr. William T. Fenton
- Mr. A. G. Becker
- Mr. Honoré Palmer
- Mr. John J. Mitchell
- Mrs. F. A. Hardy
- Mr. Morton D. Hull
- Mr. E. F. Ripley
- Mr. Ernest MacDonald Bowman
- Mr. John A. Kruse
- Mr. Frederic C. Bartlett
- Mr. Franklin H. Head
- Mrs. Wm. R. Linn
-
-[Footnote B: _Deceased._]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Through the generosity of five gentlemen, _Poetry_ will give two hundred
-and fifty dollars in one or two prizes for the best poem or poems
-printed in its pages the first year. In addition a subscriber to the
-fund offers twenty-five dollars for the best epigram.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Maurice Browne, director of the Chicago Little Theatre, offers to
-produce, during the season of 1913-14, the best play in verse published
-in, or submitted to, _Poetry_ during its first year; provided that it
-may be adequately presented under the requirements and limitations of
-his stage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We are fortunate in being able, through the courtesy of the
-Houghton-Mifflin Co., to offer our readers a poem, hitherto unprinted,
-from advance sheets of the complete works of the late William Vaughan
-Moody, which will be published in November. The lamentable death of
-this poet two years ago in the early prime of his great powers was a
-calamity to literature. It is fitting that the first number of a
-magazine published in the city where for years he wrote and taught,
-should contain an important poem from his hand.
-
-Mr. Ezra Pound, the young Philadelphia poet whose recent distinguished
-success in London led to wide recognition in his own country, authorizes
-the statement that at present such of his poetic work as receives
-magazine publication in America will appear exclusively in _Poetry_.
-That discriminating London publisher, Mr. Elkin Mathews, "discovered"
-this young poet from over seas, and published "Personae," "Exultations"
-and "Canzoniere," three small volumes of verse from which a selection
-has been reprinted by the Houghton-Mifflin Co. under the title
-"Provença." Mr. Pound's latest work is a translation from the Italian of
-"Sonnets and Ballate," by Guido Cavalcanti.
-
-Mr. Arthur Davison Ficke, another contributor, is a graduate of Harvard,
-who studied law and entered his father's office in Davenport, Iowa. He
-is the author of "The Happy Princess" and "The Breaking of Bonds," and a
-contributor to leading magazines. An early number of _Poetry_ will be
-devoted exclusively to Mr. Ficke's work.
-
-Mrs. Roscoe P. Conkling is a resident of the state of New York; a young
-poet who has contributed to various magazines.
-
-Miss Lorimer is a young English poet resident in Oxford, who will
-publish her first volume this autumn. The London _Poetry Review_, in its
-August number, introduced her with a group of lyrics which were
-criticized with some asperity in the _New Age_ and praised with equal
-warmth in other periodicals.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Miss Dudley, who is a Chicagoan born and bred, is still younger in the
-art, "To One Unknown" being the first of her poems to be printed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Poetry_ will acknowledge the receipt of books of verse and works
-relating to the subject, and will print brief reviews of those which
-seem for any reason significant. It will endeavor also to keep its
-readers informed of the progress of the art throughout the
-English-speaking world and continental Europe. The American metropolitan
-newspaper prints cable dispatches about post-impressionists, futurists,
-secessionists and other radicals in painting, sculpture and music, but
-so far as its editors and readers are concerned, French poetry might
-have died with Victor Hugo, and English with Tennyson, or at most
-Swinburne.
-
- NOTE.--Eight months after the first general
- newspaper announcement of our efforts to secure a
- fund for a magazine of verse, and three or four
- months after our first use of the title _Poetry_,
- a Boston firm of publishers announced a
- forthcoming periodical of the same kind, to be
- issued under the same name. The two are not to be
- confused.
-
- THE RALPH FLETCHER SEYMOUR COMPANY
- PRINTERS CHICAGO
-
-
-
-
- Poetry VOL. I
- A Magazine of Verse NO. 2
-
-
- NOVEMBER, 1912
-
-
-
-
- THE PIPER
-
- George Borrow in his _Lavengro_
- Tells us of a Welshman, who
- By some excess of mother-wit
- Framed a harp and played on it,
- Built a ship and sailed to sea,
- And steered it home to melody
- Of his own making. I, indeed,
- Might write for Everyman to read
- A thaumalogue of wonderment
- More wonderful, but rest content
- With celebrating one I knew
- Who built his pipes, and played them, too:
- No more.
- Ah, played! Therein is all:
- The hounded thing, the hunter's call;
- The shudder, when the quarry's breath
- Is drowned in blood and stilled in death;
- The marriage dance, the pulsing vein,
- The kiss that must be given again;
- The hope that Ireland, like a rose,
- Sees shining thro' her tale of woes;
- The battle lost, the long lament
- For blood and spirit vainly spent;
- And so on, thro' the varying scale
- Of passion that the western Gael
- Knows, and by miracle of art
- Draws to the chanter from the heart
- Like water from a hidden spring,
- To leap or murmur, weep or sing.
-
- I see him now, a little man
- In proper black, whey-bearded, wan,
- With eyes that scan the eastern hills
- Thro' thick, gold-rimmèd spectacles.
- His hand is on the chanter. Lo,
- The hidden spring begins to flow
- In waves of magic. (He is dead
- These seven years, but bend your head
- And listen.) Rising from the clay
- The Master plays _The Ring of Day_.
- It mounts and falls and floats away
- Over the sky-line ... then is gone
- Into the silence of the dawn!
-
- _Joseph Campbell_
-
-
-
-
- BEYOND THE STARS
-
- Three days I heard them grieve when I lay dead,
- (It was so strange to me that they should weep!)
- Tall candles burned about me in the dark,
- And a great crucifix was on my breast,
- And a great silence filled the lonesome room.
-
- I heard one whisper, "Lo! the dawn is breaking,
- And he has lost the wonder of the day."
- Another came whom I had loved on earth,
- And kissed my brow and brushed my dampened hair.
- Softly she spoke: "Oh that he should not see
- The April that his spirit bathed in! Birds
- Are singing in the orchard, and the grass
- That soon will cover him is growing green.
- The daisies whiten on the emerald hills,
- And the immortal magic that he loved
- Wakens again--and he has fallen asleep."
- Another said: "Last night I saw the moon
- Like a tremendous lantern shine in heaven,
- And I could only think of him--and sob.
- For I remembered evenings wonderful
- When he was faint with Life's sad loveliness,
- And watched the silver ribbons wandering far
- Along the shore, and out upon the sea.
- Oh, I remembered how he loved the world,
- The sighing ocean and the flaming stars,
- The everlasting glamour God has given--
- His tapestries that wrap the earth's wide room.
- I minded me of mornings filled with rain
- When he would sit and listen to the sound
- As if it were lost music from the spheres.
- He loved the crocus and the hawthorn-hedge,
- He loved the shining gold of buttercups,
- And the low droning of the drowsy bees
- That boomed across the meadows. He was glad
- At dawn or sundown; glad when Autumn came
- With her worn livery and scarlet crown,
- And glad when Winter rocked the earth to rest.
- Strange that he sleeps today when Life is young,
- And the wild banners of the Spring are blowing
- With green inscriptions of the old delight."
-
- I heard them whisper in the quiet room.
- I longed to open then my sealèd eyes,
- And tell them of the glory that was mine.
- There was no darkness where my spirit flew,
- There was no night beyond the teeming world.
- Their April was like winter where I roamed;
- Their flowers were like stones where now I fared.
- Earth's day! it was as if I had not known
- What sunlight meant!... Yea, even as they grieved
- For all that I had lost in their pale place,
- I swung beyond the borders of the sky,
- And floated through the clouds, myself the air,
- Myself the ether, yet a matchless being
- Whom God had snatched from penury and pain
- To draw across the barricades of heaven.
- I clomb beyond the sun, beyond the moon;
- In flight on flight I touched the highest star;
- I plunged to regions where the Spring is born,
- Myself (I asked not how) the April wind,
- Myself the elements that are of God.
- Up flowery stairways of eternity
- I whirled in wonder and untrammeled joy,
- An atom, yet a portion of His dream--
- His dream that knows no end....
- I was the rain,
- I was the dawn, I was the purple east,
- I was the moonlight on enchanted nights,
- (Yet time was lost to me); I was a flower
- For one to pluck who loved me; I was bliss,
- And rapture, splendid moments of delight;
- And I was prayer, and solitude, and hope;
- And always, always, always I was love.
- I tore asunder flimsy doors of time,
- And through the windows of my soul's new sight
- I saw beyond the ultimate bounds of space.
- I was all things that I had loved on earth--
- The very moonbeam in that quiet room,
- The very sunlight one had dreamed I lost,
- The soul of the returning April grass,
- The spirit of the evening and the dawn,
- The perfume in unnumbered hawthorn-blooms.
- There was no shadow on my perfect peace,
- No knowledge that was hidden from my heart.
- I learned what music meant; I read the years;
- I found where rainbows hide, where tears begin;
- I trod the precincts of things yet unborn.
-
- Yea, while I found all wisdom (being dead),
- They grieved for me ... I should have grieved for them!
-
- _Charles Hanson Towne_
-
-
-
-
- [Greek: CHORIKOS]
-
- The ancient songs
- Pass deathward mournfully.
-
- Cold lips that sing no more, and withered wreaths,
- Regretful eyes, and drooping breasts and wings--
- Symbols of ancient songs
- Mournfully passing
- Down to the great white surges,
- Watched of none
- Save the frail sea-birds
- And the lithe pale girls,
- Daughters of Okeanos.
-
- And the songs pass
- From the green land
- Which lies upon the waves as a leaf
- On the flowers of hyacinth;
- And they pass from the waters,
- The manifold winds and the dim moon,
- And they come,
- Silently winging through soft Kimmerian dusk,
- To the quiet level lands
- That she keeps for us all,
- That she wrought for us all for sleep
- In the silver days of the earth's dawning--
- Proserpine, daughter of Zeus.
-
- And we turn from the Kuprian's breasts,
- And we turn from thee,
- Phoibos Apollon,
- And we turn from the music of old
- And the hills that we loved and the meads,
- And we turn from the fiery day,
- And the lips that were over-sweet;
- For silently
- Brushing the fields with red-shod feet,
- With purple robe
- Searing the flowers as with a sudden flame,
- Death,
- Thou hast come upon us.
-
- And of all the ancient songs
- Passing to the swallow-blue halls
- By the dark streams of Persephone,
- This only remains:
- That in the end we turn to thee,
- Death,
- That we turn to thee, singing
- One last song.
-
- O Death,
- Thou art an healing wind
- That blowest over white flowers
- A-tremble with dew;
- Thou art a wind flowing
- Over long leagues of lonely sea;
- Thou art the dusk and the fragrance;
- Thou art the lips of love mournfully smiling;
- Thou art the pale peace of one
- Satiate with old desires;
- Thou art the silence of beauty,
- And we look no more for the morning;
- We yearn no more for the sun,
- Since with thy white hands,
- Death,
- Thou crownest us with the pallid chaplets,
- The slim colorless poppies
- Which in thy garden alone
- Softly thou gatherest.
-
- And silently;
- And with slow feet approaching;
- And with bowed head and unlit eyes,
- We kneel before thee:
- And thou, leaning towards us,
- Caressingly layest upon us
- Flowers from thy thin cold hands,
- And, smiling as a chaste woman
- Knowing love in her heart,
- Thou sealest our eyes
- And the illimitable quietude
- Comes gently upon us.
-
- _Richard Aldington_
-
-
-
-
- TO A GREEK MARBLE
-
- [Greek: Photnia, photnia],
- White grave goddess,
- Pity my sadness,
- O silence of Paros.
-
- I am not of these about thy feet,
- These garments and decorum;
- I am thy brother,
- Thy lover of aforetime crying to thee,
- And thou hearest me not.
-
- I have whispered thee in thy solitudes
- Of our loves in Phrygia,
- The far ecstasy of burning noons
- When the fragile pipes
- Ceased in the cypress shade,
- And the brown fingers of the shepherd
- Moved over slim shoulders;
- And only the cicada sang.
-
- I have told thee of the hills
- And the lisp of reeds
- And the sun upon thy breasts,
-
- And thou hearest me not,
- [Greek: Photnia, photnia],
- Thou hearest me not.
-
- _Richard Aldington_
-
-
-
-
- AU VIEUX JARDIN.
-
- I have sat here happy in the gardens,
- Watching the still pool and the reeds
- And the dark clouds
- Which the wind of the upper air
- Tore like the green leafy boughs
- Of the divers-hued trees of late summer;
- But though I greatly delight
- In these and the water-lilies,
- That which sets me nighest to weeping
- Is the rose and white color of the smooth flag-stones,
- And the pale yellow grasses
- Among them.
-
- _Richard Aldington_
-
-
-
-
- UNDER TWO WINDOWS
-
- I. AUBADE
-
- The dawn is here--and the long night through I have
- never seen thy face,
- Though my feet have worn the patient grass at the gate
- of thy dwelling-place.
-
- While the white moon sailed till, red in the west, it found
- the far world-edge,
- No leaflet stirred of the leaves that climb to garland
- thy window ledge.
-
- Yet the vine had quivered from root to tip, and opened
- its flowers again,
- If only the low moon's light had glanced on a moving
- casement pane.
-
- Warm was the wind that entered in where the barrier
- stood ajar,
- And the curtain shook with its gentle breath, white as
- young lilies are;
-
- But there came no hand all the slow night through to draw
- the folds aside,
- (I longed as the moon and the vine-leaves longed!) or to
- set the casement wide.
-
- Three times in a low-hung nest there dreamed his five
- sweet notes a bird,
- And thrice my heart leaped up at the sound I thought
- thou hadst surely heard.
-
- But now that thy praise is caroled aloud by a thousand
- throats awake,
- Shall I watch from afar and silently, as under the moon,
- for thy sake?
-
- Nay--bold in the sun I speak thy name, I too, and I wait
- no more
- Thy hand, thy face, in the window niche, but thy kiss at
- the open door!
-
- II. NOCTURNE
-
- My darling, come!--The wings of the dark have wafted
- the sunset away,
- And there's room for much in a summer night, but no
- room for delay.
-
- A still moon looketh down from the sky, and a wavering
- moon looks up
- From every hollow in the green hills that holds a pool in
- its cup.
-
- The woodland borders are wreathed with bloom--elder,
- viburnum, rose;
- The young trees yearn on the breast of the wind that
- sighs of love as it goes.
-
- The small stars drown in the moon-washed blue but the
- greater ones abide,
- With Vega high in the midmost place, Altair not far aside.
-
- The glades are dusk, and soft the grass, where the flower
- of the elder gleams,
- Mist-white, moth-like, a spirit awake in the dark of forest
- dreams.
-
- Arcturus beckons into the east, Antares toward the south,
- That sendeth a zephyr sweet with thyme to seek for thy
- sweeter mouth.
-
- Shall the blossom wake, the star look down, all night and
- have naught to see?
- Shall the reeds that sing by the wind-brushed pool say
- nothing of thee and me?
-
- --My darling comes! My arms are content, my feet are
- guiding her way;
- There is room for much in a summer night, but no room
- for delay!
-
- _Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer_
-
-
-
-
- THE SINGING PLACE
-
- Cold may lie the day,
- And bare of grace;
- At night I slip away
- To the Singing Place.
-
- A border of mist and doubt
- Before the gate,
- And the Dancing Stars grow still
- As hushed I wait.
- Then faint and far away
- I catch the beat
- In broken rhythm and rhyme
- Of joyous feet,--
- Lifting waves of sound
- That will rise and swell
- (If the prying eyes of thought
- Break not the spell),
- Rise and swell and retreat
- And fall and flee,
- As over the edge of sleep
- They beckon me.
- And I wait as the seaweed waits
- For the lifting tide;
- To ask would be to awake,--
- To be denied.
- I cloud my eyes in the mist
- That veils the hem,--
- And then with a rush I am past,--
- I am Theirs, and of Them!
- And the pulsing chant swells up
- To touch the sky,
- And the song is joy, is life,
- And the song am I!
- The thunderous music peals
- Around, o'erhead--
- The dead would awake to hear
- If there were dead;
- But the life of the throbbing Sun
- Is in the song,
- And we weave the world anew,
- And the Singing Throng
- Fill every corner of space--
-
- Over the edge of sleep
- I bring but a trace
- Of the chants that pulse and sweep
- In the Singing Place.
-
- _Lily A. Long_
-
-
-
-
- IMMURED
-
- Within this narrow cell that I call "me",
- I was imprisoned ere the worlds began,
- And all the worlds must run, as first they ran,
- In silver star-dust, ere I shall be free.
- I beat my hands against the walls and find
- It is my breast I beat, O bond and blind!
-
- _Lily A. Long_
-
-
-
-
- NOGI
-
- Great soldier of the fighting clan,
- Across Port Arthur's frowning face of stone
- You drew the battle sword of old Japan,
- And struck the White Tsar from his Asian throne.
-
- Once more the samurai sword
- Struck to the carved hilt in your loyal hand,
- That not alone your heaven-descended lord
- Should meanly wander in the spirit land.
-
- Your own proud way, O eastern star,
- Grandly at last you followed. Out it leads
- To that high heaven where all the heroes are,
- Lovers of death for causes and for creeds.
-
- _Harriet Monroe_
-
-
-
-
- THE JESTER
-
- I have known great gold Sorrows:
- Majestic Griefs shall serve me watchfully
- Through the slow-pacing morrows:
- I have knelt hopeless where sea-echoing
- Dim endless voices cried of suffering
- Vibrant and far in broken litany:
- Where white magnolia and tuberose hauntingly
- Pulsed their regretful sweets along the air--
- All things most tragical, most fair,
- Have still encompassed me ...
-
- I dance where in the screaming market-place
- The dusty world that watches buys and sells,
- With painted merriment upon my face,
- Whirling my bells,
- Thrusting my sad soul to its mockery.
-
- I have known great gold Sorrows ...
- Shall they not mock me, these pain-haunted ones,
- If it shall make them merry, and forget
- That grief shall rise and set
- With the unchanging, unforgetting suns
- Of their relentless morrows?
-
- _Margaret Widdemer_
-
-
-
-
- THE BEGGARS
-
- The little pitiful, worn, laughing faces,
- Begging of Life for Joy!
-
- I saw the little daughters of the poor,
- Tense from the long day's working, strident, gay,
- Hurrying to the picture-place. There curled
- A hideous flushed beggar at the door,
- Trading upon his horror, eyeless, maimed,
- Complacent in his profitable mask.
- They mocked his horror, but they gave to him
- From the brief wealth of pay-night, and went in
- To the cheap laughter and the tawdry thoughts
- Thrown on the screen; in to the seeking hand
- Covered by darkness, to the luring voice
- Of Horror, boy-masked, whispering of rings,
- Of silks, of feathers, bought--so cheap!--with just
- Their slender starved child-bodies, palpitant
- For Beauty, Laughter, Passion, that is Life:
- (A frock of satin for an hour's shame,
- A coat of fur for two days' servitude;
- "And the clothes last," the thought runs on, within
- The poor warped girl-minds drugged with changeless days;
- "Who cares or knows after the hour is done?")
- --Poor little beggars at Life's door for Joy!
- The old man crouched there, eyeless, horrible,
- Complacent in the marketable mask
- That earned his comforts--and they gave to him!
-
- But ah, the little painted, wistful faces
- Questioning Life for Joy!
-
- _Margaret Widdemer_
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- REVIEWS AND COMMENTS
-
- MOODY'S POEMS
-
-_The Poems and Plays of William Vaughn Moody_ will soon be published in
-two volumes by the Houghton-Mifflin Co. Our present interest is in the
-volume of poems, which are themselves an absorbing drama. Moody had a
-slowly maturing mind; the vague vastness of his young dreams yielded
-slowly to a man's more definite vision of the spiritual magnificence of
-life. When he died at two-score years, he was just beginning to think
-his problem through, to reconcile, after the manner of the great poets
-of the earth, the world with God. Apparently the unwritten poems
-cancelled by death would have rounded out, in art of an austere
-perfection, the record of that reconciliation, for nowhere do we feel
-this passion of high serenity so strongly as in the first act of an
-uncompleted drama, _The Death of Eve_.
-
-Great-minded youth must dream, and modern dreams of the meaning of life
-lack the props and pillars of the old dogmatism. Vagueness, confusion
-and despair are a natural inference from the seeming chaos of evil and
-good, of pain and joy. Moody from the beginning took the whole scheme of
-things for his province, as a truly heroic poet should; there are always
-large spaces on his canvas. In his earlier poetry, both the symbolic
-_Masque of Judgment_ and the shorter poems derived from present-day
-subjects, we find him picturing the confusion, stating the case, so to
-speak, against God. Somewhat in the terms of modern science is his
-statement--the universe plunging on toward its doom of darkness and
-lifelessness, divine fervor of creation lapsing, divine fervor of love
-doubting, despairing of the life it made, sweeping all away with a vast
-inscrutable gesture.
-
-This seems to be the mood of the _Masque of Judgment_, a mood against
-which that very human archangel, Raphael, protests in most appealing
-lines. The poet broods over the earth--
-
- The earth, that has the blue and little flowers--
-
-with all its passionate pageantry of life and love. Like his own angel
-he is
-
- a truant still
- While battle rages round the heart of God.
-
-The lamps are spent at the end of judgment day,
-
- and naked from their seats
- The stars arise with lifted hands, and wait.
-
-This conflict between love and doubt is the motive also of _Gloucester
-Moors_, _The Daguerreotype_, _Old Pourquoi_--those three noblest,
-perhaps, of the present-day poems--also of _The Brute_ and _The
-Menagerie_, and of that fine poem manqué, the _Ode in Time of
-Hesitation_. _The Fie-Bringer_ is an effort at another
-theme--redemption, light after darkness. But it is not so spontaneous as
-the _Masque_; though simpler, clearer, more dramatic in form, it is
-more deliberate and intellectual, and not so star-lit with memorable
-lines. _The Fire-Bringer_ is an expression of aspiration; the poet longs
-for light, demands it, will wrest it from God's right hand like
-Prometheus. But his triumph is still theory, not experience. The reader
-is hardly yet convinced.
-
-If one feels a grander motive in such poems as the one-act _Death of
-Eve_ and _The Fountain_, or the less perfectly achieved _I Am the
-Woman_, it is not because of the tales they tell but because of the
-spirit of faith that is in them--a spirit intangible, indefinable, but
-indomitable and triumphant. At last, we feel, this poet, already under
-the shadow of death, sees a terrible splendid sunrise, and offers us the
-glory of it in his art.
-
-_The Fountain_ is a truly magnificent expression of spiritual triumph in
-failure, and incidentally of the grandeur of Arizona, that tragic
-wonderland of ancient and future gods. Those Spanish wanderers, dying in
-the desert, in whose half-madness dreams and realities mingle, assume in
-those stark spaces the stature of universal humanity, contending to the
-last against relentless fate. In the two versions of _The Death of Eve_,
-both narrative and dramatic, one feels also this wild, fierce triumph,
-this faith in the glory of life. Especially in the dramatic fragment, by
-its sureness of touch and simple austerity of form, and by the majesty
-of its figure of the aged Eve, Moody's art reached its most heroic
-height. We have here the beginning of great things.
-
-The spirit of this poet may be commended to those facile bards who lift
-up their voices between the feast and the cigars, whose muses dance to
-every vague emotion and strike their flimsy lutes for every
-light-o'-love. Here was one who went to his desk as to an altar,
-resolved that the fire he lit, the sacrifice he offered, should be
-perfect and complete. He would burn out his heart like a taper that the
-world might possess a living light. He would tell once more the grandeur
-of life; he would sing the immortal song.
-
-That such devotion is easy of attainment in this clamorous age who can
-believe? Poetry like some of Moody's, poetry of a high structural
-simplicity, strict and bare in form, pure and austere in ornament,
-implies a grappling with giants and wrestling with angels; it is not to
-be achieved without deep living and high thinking, without intense
-persistent intellectual and spiritual struggle.
-
- _H. M._
-
-
- BOHEMIAN POETRY
-
- _An Anthology of Modern Bohemian Poetry_, translated by
- P. Selver (Henry J. Drane, London).
-
-This is a good anthology of modern Bohemian poetry, accurately
-translated into bad and sometimes even ridiculous English. Great credit
-is due the young translator for his care in research and selection. The
-faults of his style, though deplorable, are not such as to obscure the
-force and beauty of his originals.
-
-One is glad to be thus thoroughly assured that contemporary Bohemia has
-a literature in verse, sensitive to the outer world and yet national.
-Mr. Selver's greatest revelation is Petr Bezruc, poet of the mines.
-
-The poetry of Brezina, Sova and Vrchlicky is interesting, but Bezruc's
-_Songs of Silesia_ have the strength of a voice coming _de profundis_.
-
- A hundred years in silence I dwelt in the pit,
-
- * * * * *
-
- The dust of the coal has settled upon my eyes--
-
- * * * * *
-
- Bread with coal is the fruit that my toiling bore;--
-
-That is the temper of it. Palaces grow by the Danube nourished by his
-blood. He goes from labor to labor, he rebels, he hears a voice mocking:
-
- I should find my senses and go to the mine once more--
-
-And in another powerful invective:
-
- I am the first who arose of the people of Teschen.
-
- * * * * *
-
- They follow the stranger's plough, the slaves fare downwards.
-
-He thanks God he is not in the place of the oppressor, and ends:
-
- Thus 'twas done. The Lord wills it. Night sank o'er my people.
- Our doom was sealed when the night had passed;
- In the night I prayed to the Demon of Vengeance.
- The first Beskydian bard and the last.
-
-This poet is distinctly worth knowing. He is the truth where our
-"red-bloods" and magazine socialists are usually a rather boresome pose.
-
-As Mr. Selver has tried to make his anthology representative of all the
-qualities and tendencies of contemporary Bohemian work it is not to be
-supposed that they are all of the mettle of Bezruc.
-
-One hears with deep regret that Vrchlicky is just dead, after a life of
-unceasing activity. He has been a prime mover in the revival of the
-Czech nationality and literature. He has given them, besides his own
-work, an almost unbelievable number of translations from the foreign
-classics, Dante, Schiller, Leopardi. For the rest I must refer the
-reader to Mr. Selver's introduction.
-
- _Ezra Pound_
-
-
-
-
- "THE MUSIC OF THE HUMAN HEART"
-
-This title-phrase has not been plucked from the spacious lawn of
-_Bartlett's Familiar Quotations_. It grew in the agreeable midland yard
-of Mr. Walt Mason's newspaper verse, and appeared in a tribute of his to
-Mr. James Whitcomb Riley, whose fifty-ninth birthday anniversary,
-falling on the seventh of October, has been widely celebrated in the
-American public libraries and daily press.
-
-Mr. Riley's fine gift to his public, the special happiness his genius
-brings to his readers, cannot, for lack of space, be adequately
-described, or even indicated, here. Perhaps a true, if incomplete,
-impression of the beauty of his service may be conveyed by repeating a
-well-known passage of Mr. Lowes Dickinson's _Letters from John
-Chinaman_--a passage which I can never read without thinking very
-gratefully of James Whitcomb Riley, and of what his art has done for
-American poetry-readers.
-
-Mr. Dickinson says:--
-
- In China our poets and literary men have
- taught their successors for long generations, to
- look for good not in wealth, not in power, not in
- miscellaneous activity, but in a trained, a
- choice, an exquisite appreciation of the most
- simple and universal relations of life. To feel,
- and in order to feel, to express, or at least to
- understand the expression, of all that is lovely
- in nature, of all that is poignant and sensitive
- in man, is to us in itself a sufficient end....
- The pathos of life and death, the long embrace,
- the hand stretched out in vain, the moment that
- glides forever away, with its freight of music
- and light, into the shadow and bush of the
- haunted past, all that we have, all that eludes
- us, a bird on the wing, a perfume escaped on the
- gale--to all these things we are trained to
- respond, and the response is what we call
- literature.
-
-Among Mr. Riley's many distinguished faculties of execution in
-expressing, in stimulating, "an exquisite appreciation of the most
-simple and universal relations of life," one faculty has been, in so far
-as I know, very little mentioned--I mean his mastery in creating
-character. Mr. Riley has expressed, has incarnated in the melodies and
-harmonies of his poems, not merely several living, breathing human
-creatures as they are made by their destinies, but a whole world of his
-own, a vivid world of country-roads, and country-town streets, peopled
-with farmers and tramps and step-mothers and children, trailing clouds
-of glory even when they boast of the superiorities of "Renselaer," a
-world of hardworking women and hard-luck men, and poverty and
-prosperity, and drunkards and raccoons and dogs and grandmothers and
-lovers. To have presented through the medium of rhythmic chronicle, a
-world so sharply limned, so funny, so tragic, so mean, so noble, seems
-to us in itself a striking achievement in the craft of verse.
-
-No mere word of criticism can of course evoke, at all as example can,
-Mr. Riley's genius of identification with varied human experiences, the
-remarkable concentration and lyric skill of his characterization. Here
-are two poems of his on the same general theme--grief in the presence of
-death. We may well speak our pride in the wonderful range of inspiration
-and the poetic endowment which can create on the same subject musical
-stories of the soul as diverse, as searching, as fresh and true, as the
-beloved poems of _Bereaved_ and _His Mother_.
-
-
-
-
- BEREAVED
-
- Let me come in where you sit weeping; aye,
- Let me, who have not any child to die,
- Weep with you for the little one whose love
- I have known nothing of.
-
- The little arms that slowly, slowly loosed
- Their pressure round your neck; the hands you used
- To kiss. Such arms, such hands I never knew.
- May I not weep with you.
-
- Fain would I be of service, say something
- Between the tears, that would be comforting;
- But ah! so sadder than yourselves am I,
- Who have no child to die.
-
-
-
-
- HIS MOTHER
-
- Dead! my wayward boy--my own--
- Not _the Law's_, but mine; the good
- God's free gift to me alone,
- Sanctified by motherhood.
-
- "Bad," you say: well, who is not?
- "Brutal"--"With a heart of stone"--
- And "red-handed." Ah! the hot
- Blood upon your own!
-
- I come not with downward eyes,
- To plead for him shamedly:
- God did not apologize
- When He gave the boy to me.
-
- Simply, I make ready now
- For His verdict. You prepare--
- You have killed us both--and how
- Will you face us There!
-
- _E. W._
-
-
-
-
- THE OPEN DOOR
-
-Fears have been expressed by a number of friendly critics that POETRY
-may become a house of refuge for minor poets.
-
-The phrase is somewhat worn. Paragraphers have done their worst for the
-minor poet, while they have allowed the minor painter, sculptor,
-actor--worst of all, architect--to go scot-free. The world which laughs
-at the experimenter in verse, walks negligently through our streets, and
-goes seriously, even reverently, to the annual exhibitions in our
-cities, examining hundreds of pictures and statues without expecting
-even the prize-winners to be masterpieces.
-
-During the past year a score or more of cash prizes, ranging from one
-hundred to fifteen hundred dollars, were awarded in Pittsburgh, Chicago,
-Washington, New York and Boston for minor works of modern art. No word
-of superlative praise has been uttered for one of them: the first
-prize-winner in Pittsburgh was a delicately pretty picture by a
-second-rate Englishman; in Chicago it was a clever landscape by a
-promising young American. If a single prize-winner in the entire list,
-many of which were bought at high prices by public museums, was a
-masterpiece, no critic has yet dared to say so.
-
-In fact, such a word would be presumptuous, since no contemporary can
-utter the final verdict. Our solicitous critics should remember that
-Coleridge, Shelley, Keats, Burns, were minor poets to the subjects of
-King George the Fourth, Poe and Whitman to the subjects of King
-Longfellow. Moreover, we might remind them that Drayton, Lovelace,
-Herrick, and many another delicate lyrist of the anthologies, whose
-perfect songs show singular tenacity of life, remain minor poets through
-the slightness of their motive; they created little masterpieces, not
-great ones.
-
-The Open Door will be the policy of this magazine--may the great poet we
-are looking for never find it shut, or half-shut, against his ample
-genius! To this end the editors hope to keep free of entangling
-alliances with any single class or school. They desire to print the best
-English verse which is being written today, regardless of where, by
-whom, or under what theory of art it is written. Nor will the magazine
-promise to limit its editorial comments to one set of opinions. Without
-muzzles and braces this is manifestly impossible unless all the critical
-articles are written by one person.
-
-
-
-
- NOTES AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
-
-Mr. Ezra Pound has consented to act as foreign correspondent of POETRY,
-keeping its readers informed of the present interests of the art in
-England, France and elsewhere.
-
-The response of poets on both sides of the Atlantic has been most
-encouraging, so that the quality of the next few numbers is assured. One
-of our most important contributions is Mr. John G. Neihardt's brief
-recently finished tragedy, _The Death of Agrippina_, to which an entire
-number will be devoted within a few months.
-
-Mr. Joseph Campbell is one of the younger poets closely associated with
-the renaissance of art and letters in Ireland. His first book of poems
-was _The Gilly of Christ_; a later volume including these is _The
-Mountainy Singer_ (Maunsel & Co.).
-
-Mr. Charles Hanson Towne, the New York poet and magazine editor, has
-published three volumes of verse, _The Quiet Singer_ (Rickey),
-_Manhattan_, and _Youth and Other Poems_; also five song-cycles in
-collaboration with two composers.
-
-Mr. Richard Aldington is a young English poet, one of the "Imagistes," a
-group of ardent Hellenists who are pursuing interesting experiments in
-_vers libre_; trying to attain in English certain subtleties of cadence
-of the kind which Mallarmé and his followers have studied in French. Mr.
-Aldington has published little as yet, and nothing in America.
-
-Mrs. Van Rensselaer, the well-known writer on art, began comparatively
-late to publish verse in the magazines. Her volume, _Poems_ (Macmillan),
-was issued in 1910.
-
-Miss Long and Miss Widdemer are young Americans, some of whose poems
-have appeared in various magazines.
-
-The last issue of POETRY accredited Mr. Ezra Pound's _Provenca_ to the
-Houghton-Mifflin Co. This was an error; Small, Maynard & Co. are Mr.
-Pound's American publishers.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS RECEIVED
-
- _The Iscariot_, by Eden Phillpotts. John Lane.
- _The Poems of Rosamund Marriott Watson._ John Lane.
- _Lyrical Poems_, by Lucy Lyttelton. Thomas B. Mosher.
- _The Silence of Amor_, by Fiona Macleod, Thomas B. Mosher.
- _Spring in Tuscany and Other Lyrics._ Thomas B. Mosher.
- _Interpretations: A Book of First Poems_, by Zoë Akins.
- Mitchell Kennerley.
- _A Round of Rimes_, by Denis A. MacCarthy. Little, Brown & Co.
- _Voices from Erin and Other Poems_, by Denis A. MacCarthy.
- Little, Brown & Co.
- _Love and The Year and Other Poems_, by Grace Griswold.
- Duffield & Co.
- _Songs and Sonnets_, by Webster Ford. The Rooks Press, Chicago.
- _The Quiet Courage and Other Songs of the Unafraid_,
- by Everard Jack Appleton. Stewart and Kidd Co.
- _In Cupid's Chains and Other Poems_, by Benjamin F. Woodcox.
- Woodcox & Fanner.
- _Maverick_, by Hervey White. Maverick Press.
-
-
-
-
- Poetry VOL. I
- A Magazine of Verse NO. 3
-
-
- DECEMBER, 1912
-
-
-
- THE MOUNTAIN TOMB
-
- Pour wine and dance, if manhood still have pride,
- Bring roses, if the rose be yet in bloom;
- The cataract smokes on the mountain side.
- Our Father Rosicross is in his tomb.
-
- Pull down the blinds, bring fiddle and clarionet,
- Let there be no foot silent in the room,
- Nor mouth with kissing nor the wine unwet.
- Our Father Rosicross is in his tomb.
-
- In vain, in vain; the cataract still cries,
- The everlasting taper lights the gloom,
- All wisdom shut into its onyx eyes.
- Our Father Rosicross sleeps in his tomb.
-
- _William Butler Yeats_
-
-
-
-
- TO A CHILD DANCING UPON THE SHORE
-
- Dance there upon the shore;
- What need have you to care
- For wind or water's roar?
- And tumble out your hair
- That the salt drops have wet;
- Being young you have not known
- The fool's triumph, nor yet
- Love lost as soon as won.
- And he, the best warrior, dead
- And all the sheaves to bind!
- What need that you should dread
- The monstrous crying of wind?
-
- _William Butler Yeats_
-
-
-
-
- FALLEN MAJESTY
-
- Although crowds gathered once if she but showed her face
- And even old men's eyes grew dim, this hand alone,
- Like some last courtier at a gipsy camping place
- Babbling of fallen majesty, records what's gone.
- The lineaments, the heart that laughter has made sweet,
- These, these remain, but I record what's gone. A crowd
- Will gather and not know that through its very street
- Once walked a thing that seemed, as it were, a burning cloud.
-
- _William Butler Yeats_
-
-
-
-
- LOVE AND THE BIRD
-
- The moments passed as at a play,
- I had the wisdom love can bring,
- I had my share of mother wit;
- And yet for all that I could say,
- And though I had her praise for it,
- And she seemed happy as a king,
- Love's moon was withering away.
-
- Believing every word I said
- I praised her body and her mind,
- Till pride had made her eyes grow bright,
- And pleasure made her cheeks grow red,
- And vanity her footfall light;
- Yet we, for all that praise, could find
- Nothing but darkness overhead.
-
- I sat as silent as a stone
- And knew, though she'd not said a word,
- That even the best of love must die,
- And had been savagely undone
- Were it not that love, upon the cry
- Of a most ridiculous little bird,
- Threw up in the air his marvellous moon.
-
- _William Butler Yeats_
-
-
-
-
- THE REALISTS
-
- Hope that you may understand.
- What can books, of men that wive
- In a dragon-guarded land;
- Paintings of the dolphin drawn;
- Sea nymphs, in their pearly waggons,
- Do but wake the hope to live
- That had gone
- With the dragons.
-
- _William Butler Yeats_
-
-
-
-
- SANGAR
-
- TO LINCOLN STEFFENS
-
- Somewhere I read a strange, old, rusty tale
- Smelling of war; most curiously named
- "The Mad Recreant Knight of the West."
- Once, you have read, the round world brimmed with hate,
- Stirred and revolted, flashed unceasingly
- Facets of cruel splendor. And the strong
- Harried the weak ...
- Long past, long past, praise God
- In these fair, peaceful, happy days.
- The Tale:
- Eastward the Huns break border,
- Surf on a rotten dyke;
- They have murdered the Eastern Warder
- (His head on a pike).
- "Arm thee, arm thee, my father!
- "Swift rides the Goddes-bane,
- "And the high nobles gather
- "On the plain!"
-
- "O blind world-wrath!" cried Sangar,
- "Greatly I killed in youth,
- "I dreamed men had done with anger
- "Through Goddes truth!"
- Smiled the boy then in faint scorn,
- Hard with the battle-thrill;
- "Arm thee, loud calls the war-horn
- "And shrill!"
-
- He has bowed to the voice stentorian,
- Sick with thought of the grave--
- He has called for his battered morion
- And his scarred glaive.
- On the boy's helm a glove
- Of the Duke's daughter--
- In his eyes splendor of love
- And slaughter.
-
- Hideous the Hun advances
- Like a sea-tide on sand;
- Unyielding, the haughty lances
- Make dauntless stand.
- And ever amid the clangor,
- Butchering Hun and Hun,
- With sorrowful face rides Sangar
- And his son....
-
- Broken is the wild invader
- (Sullied, the whole world's fountains);
- They have penned the murderous raider
- With his back to the mountains.
- Yet tho' what had been mead
- Is now a bloody lake,
- Still drink swords where men bleed,
- Nor slake.
-
- Now leaps one into the press--
- The Hell 'twixt front and front--
- Sangar, bloody and torn of dress
- (He has borne the brunt).
- "Hold!" cries "Peace! God's Peace!
- "Heed ye what Christus says--"
- And the wild battle gave surcease
- In amaze.
-
- "When will ye cast out hate?
- "Brothers--my mad, mad brothers--
- "Mercy, ere it be too late,
- "These are sons of your mothers.
- "For sake of Him who died on Tree,
- "Who of all Creatures, loved the Least,"--
- "Blasphemer! God of Battles, He!"
- Cried a priest.
-
- "Peace!" and with his two hands
- Has broken in twain his glaive.
- Weaponless, smiling he stands
- (Coward or brave?)
- "Traitor!" howls one rank, "Think ye
- "The Hun be our brother?"
- And "Fear we to die, craven, think ye?"
- The other.
-
- Then sprang his son to his side,
- His lips with slaver were wet,
- For he had felt how men died
- And was lustful yet;
- (On his bent helm a glove
- Of the Duke's daughter,
- In his eyes splendor of love
- And slaughter)--
-
- Shouting, "Father no more of mine!
- "Shameful old man--abhorr'd,
- "First traitor of all our line!"
- Up the two-handed sword.
- He smote--fell Sangar--and then
- Screaming, red, the boy ran
- Straight at the foe, and again
- Hell began ...
-
- Oh, there was joy in Heaven when Sangar came.
- Sweet Mary wept, and bathed and bound his wounds,
- And God the Father healed him of despair,
- And Jesus gripped his hand, and laughed and laughed ...
-
- _John Reed_
-
-
-
-
- A LEGEND OF THE DOVE
-
- Soft from the linden's bough,
- Unmoved against the tranquil afternoon,
- Eve's dove laments her now:
- "Ah, gone! long gone! shall not I find thee soon?"
-
- That yearning in his voice
- Told not to Paradise a sorrow's tale:
- As other birds rejoice
- He sang, a brother to the nightingale.
-
- By twilight on her breast
- He saw the flower sleep, the star awake;
- And calling her from rest,
- Made all the dawn melodious for her sake.
-
- And then the Tempter's breath,
- The sword of exile and the mortal chain--
- The heritage of death
- That gave her heart to dust, his own to pain ...
-
- In Eden desolate
- The seraph heard his lonely music swoon,
- As now, reiterate;
- "Ah gone! long gone! shall not I find thee soon?"
-
- _George Sterling_
-
-
-
-
- AT THE GRAND CAÑON
-
- Thou settest splendors in my sight, O Lord!
- It seems as tho' a deep-hued sunset falls
- Forever on these Cyclopean walls--
- These battlements where Titan hosts have warred,
- And hewn the world with devastating sword,
- And shook with trumpets the eternal halls
- Where seraphim lay hid by bloody palls
- And only Hell and Silence were adored.
-
- Lo! the abyss wherein great Satan's wings
- Might gender tempests, and his dragons' breath
- Fume up in pestilence. Beneath the sun
- Or starry outposts on terrestrial things,
- Is no such testimony unto Death
- Nor altars builded to Oblivion.
-
- _George Sterling_
-
-
-
-
- KINDRED
-
- Musing, between the sunset and the dark,
- As Twilight in unhesitating hands
- Bore from the faint horizon's underlands,
- Silvern and chill, the moon's phantasmal ark,
- I heard the sea, and far away could mark
- Where that unalterable waste expands
- In sevenfold sapphire from the mournful sands,
- And saw beyond the deep a vibrant spark.
-
- There sank the sun Arcturus, and I thought:
- Star, by an ocean on a world of thine,
- May not a being, born like me to die,
- Confront a little the eternal Naught
- And watch our isolated sun decline--
- Sad for his evanescence, even as I?
-
- _George Sterling_
-
-
-
-
- REMEMBERED LIGHT
-
- The years are a falling of snow,
- Slow, but without cessation,
- On hills and mountains and flowers and worlds that were;
- But snow and the crawling night in which it fell
- May be washed away in one swifter hour of flame.
- Thus it was that some slant of sunset
- In the chasms of piled cloud--
- Transient mountains that made a new horizon,
- Uplifting the west to fantastic pinnacles--
- Smote warm in a buried realm of the spirit,
- Till the snows of forgetfulness were gone.
-
- Clear in the vistas of memory,
- The peaks of a world long unremembered,
- Soared further than clouds, but fell not,
- Based on hills that shook not nor melted
- With that burden enormous, hardly to be believed.
- Rent with stupendous chasms,
- Full of an umber twilight,
- I beheld that larger world.
-
- Bright was the twilight, sharp like ethereal wine
- Above, but low in the clefts it thickened,
- Dull as with duskier tincture.
- Like whimsical wings outspread but unstirring,
- Flowers that seemed spirits of the twilight,
- That must pass with its passing--
- Too fragile for day or for darkness,
- Fed the dusk with more delicate hues than its own.
- Stars that were nearer, more radiant than ours,
- Quivered and pulsed in the clear thin gold of the sky.
-
- These things I beheld,
- Till the gold was shaken with flight
- Of fantastical wings like broken shadows,
- Forerunning the darkness;
- Till the twilight shivered with outcry of eldritch voices,
- Like pain's last cry ere oblivion.
-
- _Clark Ashton Smith_
-
-
-
-
- SORROWING OF WINDS
-
- O winds that pass uncomforted
- Through all the peacefulness of spring,
- And tell the trees your sorrowing,
- That they must moan till ye are fled!
-
- Think ye the Tyrian distance holds
- The crystal of unquestioned sleep?
- That those forgetful purples keep
- No veiled, contentious greens and golds?
-
- Half with communicated grief,
- Half that they are not free to pass
- With you across the flickering grass,
- Mourns each vibrating bough and leaf.
-
- And I, with soul disquieted,
- Shall find within the haunted spring
- No peace, till your strange sorrowing
- Is down the Tyrian distance fled.
-
- _Clark Ashton Smith_
-
-
-
-
- AMERICA
-
- _I hear America singing_ ...
- And the great prophet passed,
- Serene, clear and untroubled
- Into the silence vast.
-
- When will the master-poet
- Rise, with vision strong,
- To mold her manifold music
- Into a living song?
-
- _I hear America singing_ ...
- Beyond the beat and stress,
- The chant of her shrill, unjaded,
- Empiric loveliness.
-
- Laughter, beyond mere scorning,
- Wisdom surpassing wit,
- Love, and the unscathed spirit,
- These shall encompass it.
-
- _Alice Corbin_
-
-
-
-
- SYMBOLS
-
- Who was it built the cradle of wrought gold?
- A druid, chanting by the waters old.
- Who was it kept the sword of vision bright?
- A warrior, falling darkly in the fight.
- Who was it put the crown upon the dove?
- A woman, paling in the arms of love.
- Oh, who but these, since Adam ceased to be,
- Have kept their ancient guard about the Tree?
-
- _Alice Corbin_
-
-
-
-
- THE STAR
-
- I saw a star fall in the night,
- And a grey moth touched my cheek;
- Such majesty immortals have,
- Such pity for the weak.
-
- _Alice Corbin_
-
-
-
-
- NODES
-
- The endless, foolish merriment of stars
- Beside the pale cold sorrow of the moon,
- Is like the wayward noises of the world
- Beside my heart's uplifted silent tune.
-
- The little broken glitter of the waves
- Beside the golden sun's intense white blaze,
- Is like the idle chatter of the crowd
- Beside my heart's unwearied song of praise.
-
- The sun and all the planets in the sky
- Beside the sacred wonder of dim space,
- Are notes upon a broken, tarnished lute
- That God will someday mend and put in place.
-
- And space, beside the little secret joy
- Of God that sings forever in the clay,
- Is smaller than the dust we can not see,
- That yet dies not, till time and space decay.
-
- And as the foolish merriment of stars
- Beside the cold pale sorrow of the moon,
- My little song, my little joy, my praise,
- Beside God's ancient, everlasting rune.
-
- _Alice Corbin_
-
-
-
-
- POEMS
-
-
- I
-
-Thou hast made me known to friends whom I knew not. Thou hast given me
-seats in homes not my own. Thou hast brought the distant near and made a
-brother of the stranger. I am uneasy at heart when I have to leave my
-accustomed shelter; I forgot that there abides the old in the new, and
-that there also thou abidest.
-
-Through birth and death, in this world or in others, wherever thou
-leadest me it is thou, the same, the one companion of my endless life
-who ever linkest my heart with bonds of joy to the unfamiliar. When one
-knows thee, then alien there is none, then no door is shut. Oh, grant me
-my prayer that I may never lose the bliss of the touch of the One in the
-play of the many.
-
-
- II
-
-No more noisy, loud words from me, such is my master's will. Henceforth
-I deal in whispers. The speech of my heart will be carried on in
-murmurings of a song.
-
-Men hasten to the King's market. All the buyers and sellers are there.
-But I have my untimely leave in the middle of the day, in the thick of
-work.
-
-Let then the flowers come out in my garden, though it is not their time,
-and let the midday bees strike up their lazy hum.
-
-Full many an hour have I spent in the strife of the good and the evil,
-but now it is the pleasure of my playmate of the empty days to draw my
-heart on to him, and I know not why is this sudden call to what useless
-inconsequence!
-
-
- III
-
-On the day when the lotus bloomed, alas, my mind was straying, and I
-knew it not. My basket was empty and the flower remained unheeded.
-
-Only now and again a sadness fell upon me, and I started up from my
-dream and felt a sweet trace of a strange smell in the south wind.
-
-That vague fragrance made my heart ache with longing, and it seemed to
-me that it was the eager breath of the summer seeking for its
-completion.
-
-I knew not then that it was so near, that it was mine, and this perfect
-sweetness had blossomed in the depth of my own heart.
-
-
- IV
-
-By all means they try to hold me secure who love me in this world. But
-it is otherwise with thy love, which is greater than theirs, and thou
-keepest me free. Lest I forget them they never venture to leave me
-alone. But day passes by after day and thou are not seen.
-
-If I call not thee in my prayers, if I keep not thee in my heart--thy
-love for me still waits for my love.
-
-
- V
-
-I was not aware of the moment when I first crossed the threshold of this
-life. What was the power that made me open out into this vast mystery
-like a bud in the forest at midnight? When in the morning I looked upon
-the light I felt in a moment that I was no stranger in this world, that
-the inscrutable without name and form had taken me in its arms in the
-form of my own mother. Even so, in death the same unknown will appear as
-ever known to me. And because I love this life, I know I shall love
-death as well. The child cries out when from the right breast the mother
-takes it away to find in the very next moment its consolation in the
-left one.
-
-
- VI
-
-Thou art the sky and thou art the nest as well. Oh, thou beautiful,
-there in the nest it is thy love that encloses the soul with colours and
-sounds and odours. There comes the morning with the golden basket in her
-right hand bearing the wreath of beauty, silently to crown the earth.
-And there comes the evening over the lonely meadows deserted by herds,
-through trackless paths, carrying cool draughts of peace in her golden
-pitcher from the western ocean of rest.
-
-But there, where spreads the infinite sky for the soul to take her
-flight in, reigns the stainless white radiance. There is no day nor
-night, nor form nor colour, and never never a word.
-
- _Rabindranath Tagore_
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL COMMENT
-
- A PERFECT RETURN
-
-
-It is curious that the influence of Poe upon Baudelaire, Verlaine, and
-Mallarmé, and through them upon English poets, and then through these
-last upon Americans, comes back to us in this round-about and indirect
-way. We have here an instance of what Whitman calls a "perfect return."
-We have denied Poe, we do not give him his full meed of appreciation
-even today, and yet we accept him through the disciples who have
-followed or have assimilated his tradition. And now that young
-Englishmen are beginning to feel the influence of Whitman upon French
-poetry, it may be that he too, through the imitation of _vers libre_ in
-America, will begin to experience a "perfect return."
-
-Must we always accept American genius in this round-about fashion? Have
-we no true perspective that we applaud mediocrity at home, and look
-abroad for genius, only to find that it is of American origin?
-
- * * * * *
-
-This bit of marginalia, extracted from a note-book of 1909, was relieved
-of the necessity of further elaboration by supplementary evidence
-received in one day from two correspondents. One, a brief sentence from
-Mr. Allen Upward: "It is much to be wished that America should learn to
-honor her sons without waiting for the literary cliques of London."
-
-The other, the following "news note" from Mr. Paul Scott Mowrer in
-Paris. The date of Léon Bazalgette's translation, however, is hardly so
-epochal as it would seem, since Whitman has been known for many years in
-France, having been partly translated during the nineties.
-
-Mr. Mowrer writes:
-
-"It is significant of American tardiness in the development of a
-national literary tradition that the name of Walt Whitman is today a
-greater influence with the young writers of the continent than with our
-own. Not since France discovered Poe has literary Europe been so moved
-by anything American. The suggestion has even been made that
-'Whitmanism' is rapidly to supersede 'Nietzscheism' as the dominant
-factor in modern thought. Léon Bazalgette translated _Leaves of Grass_
-into French in 1908. A school of followers of the Whitman philosophy and
-style was an almost immediate consequence. Such of the leading reviews
-as sympathize at all with the strong 'young' movement to break the
-shackles of classicism which have so long bound French prosody to the
-heroic couplet, the sonnet, and the alexandrine, are publishing not only
-articles on 'Whitmanism' as a movement, but numbers of poems in the new
-flexible chanting rhythms. In this regard _La Nouvelle Revue Francaise_,
-_La Renaissance Contemporaine_, and _L'Effort Libre_ have been
-preëminently hospitable.
-
-"The new poems are not so much imitations of Whitman as inspirations
-from him. Those who have achieved most success in the mode thus far are
-perhaps Georges Duhamel, a leader of the 'Jeunes,' whose plays are at
-present attracting national notice; André Spire, who writes with
-something of the apostolic fervor of his Jewish ancestry; Henri Franck,
-who died recently, shortly after the publication of his volume, _La
-Danse Devant l'Arche_; Charles Vildrac, with _Le Livre d'Amour_; Philéas
-Lebesgue, the appearance in collected form of whose _Les Servitudes_ is
-awaited with keen interest; and finally, Jean Richard Bloch, editor of
-_L'Effort Libre_, whose prose, for example in his book of tales entitled
-_Levy_, is said to be directly rooted in Whitmanism.
-
-"In Germany, too, the rolling intonations of the singer of democracy
-have awakened echoes. The _Moderne Weltdichtung_ has announced itself,
-with Whitman as guide, and such apostles as Wilhelm Schmidtbonn, in
-_Lobegesang des Lebens_, and Ernst Lissauer in _Der Acker_ and _Der
-Strom_.
-
-"What is it about Whitman that Europe finds so inspiriting? First, his
-acceptance of the universe as he found it, his magnificently shouted
-comradeship with all nature and all men. Such a doctrine makes an
-instant though hardly logical appeal in nations where socialism is the
-political order of the day. And next, his disregard of literary
-tradition. Out of books more books, and out of them still more, with the
-fecundity of generations. But in this process of literary propagation
-thought, unfortunately, instead of arising like a child ever fresh and
-vigorous as in the beginning, grows more and more attenuated, paler,
-more sickly. The acclaim of Whitman is nothing less than the inevitable
-revolt against the modern flood of book-inspired books. Write from
-nature directly, from the people directly, from the political meeting,
-and the hayfield, and the factory--that is what the august American
-seems to his young disciples across the seas to be crying to them.
-
-"Perhaps it is because America already holds as commonplaces these
-fundamentals seeming so new to Europe that the Whitman schools have
-sprung up stronger on the eastern side of the Atlantic than on the
-western."
-
-It is not that America holds as commonplaces the fundamentals expressed
-in Whitman that there have been more followers of the Whitman method in
-Europe than in America, but that American poets, approaching poetry
-usually through terms of feeling, and apparently loath to apply an
-intellectual whip to themselves or others, have made no definite
-analysis of the rhythmic units of Whitman. We have been content to
-accept the English conception of the "barbaric yawp" of Whitman. The
-curious mingling of the concrete and the spiritual, which is what
-certain modern painters, perhaps under the Whitman suggestion, are
-trying to achieve, was so novel as to be disconcerting, and the vehicle
-so original as to appear uncouth--uncadenced, unmusical. The
-hide-bound, antiquated conception of English prosody is responsible for
-a great deal of dead timber. It is a significant fact that the English
-first accepted the spirit of Whitman, the French his method. The
-rhythmic measure of Whitman has yet to be correctly estimated by English
-and American poets. It has been sifted and weighed by the French poets,
-and though Whitman's influence upon modern French poetry has been
-questioned by English critics, the connection between his varied
-rhythmic units and modern _vers libre_ is too obvious to be discounted.
-There may be an innate necessity sufficient to cause a breaking-up of
-forms in a poetic language, but there is no reason to believe that
-Paris, the great clearing-house of all the arts, would not be quick to
-adopt a suggestion from without. English poets, certainly, have not been
-loath to accept suggestions from Paris.
-
-At any rate this international acceptance of the two greatest American
-poets, and the realization of their international influence upon us, may
-awaken us to a new sense of responsibility. It would be a valuable
-lesson, if only we could learn to turn the international eye, in
-private, upon ourselves. If the American poet can learn to be less
-parochial, to apply the intellectual whip, to visualize his art, to
-separate it and see it apart from himself; we may learn then to
-appreciate the great poet when he is "in our midst." and not wait for
-the approval of English or French critics.
-
- _A. C. H._
-
-
-
-
- TAGORE'S POEMS
-
-The appearance of the poems of Rabindranath Tagore, translated by
-himself from Bengali into English, is an event in the history of English
-poetry and of world poetry. I do not use these terms with the looseness
-of contemporary journalism. Questions of poetic art are serious, not to
-be touched upon lightly or in a spirit of bravura.
-
-Bengal is a nation of fifty million people. The great age of Bengali
-literature is this age in which we live. And the first Bengali whom I
-heard singing the lyrics of Tagore said, as simply as one would say it
-is four o'clock, "Yes, we speak of it as the Age of Rabindranath."
-
-The six poems now published were chosen from a hundred lyrics about to
-appear in book form. They might just as well have been any other six,
-for they do not represent a summit of attainment but an average.
-
-These poems are cast, in the original, in metres perhaps the most
-finished and most subtle of any known to us. If you refine the art of
-the troubadours, combine it with that of the Pleiade, and add to that
-the sound-unit principle of the most advanced artists in _vers libre_,
-you would get something like the system of Bengali verse. The sound of
-it when spoken is rather like good Greek, for Bengali is daughter of
-Sanscrit, which is a kind of uncle or elder brother of the Homeric
-idiom.
-
-All this series of a hundred poems are made to music, for "Mr." Tagore
-is not only the great poet of Bengal, he is also their great musician.
-He teaches his songs, and they are sung throughout Bengal more or less
-as the troubadours' songs were sung through Europe in the twelfth
-century.
-
-And we feel here in London, I think, much as the people of Petrarch's
-time must have felt about the mysterious lost language, the Greek that
-was just being restored to Europe after centuries of deprivation. That
-Greek was the lamp of our renaissance and its perfections have been the
-goal of our endeavor ever since.
-
-I speak with all seriousness when I say that this beginning of our more
-intimate intercourse with Bengal is the opening of another period. For
-one thing the content of this first brief series of poems will destroy
-the popular conception of Buddhism, for we in the Occident are apt to
-regard it as a religion negative and anti-Christian.
-
-The Greek gave us humanism; a belief in _mens sana in corpore sano_, a
-belief in proportion and balance. The Greek shows us man as the sport of
-the gods; the sworn foe of fate and the natural forces. The Bengali
-brings to us the pledge of a calm which we need overmuch in an age of
-steel and mechanics. It brings a quiet proclamation of the fellowship
-between man and the gods; between man and nature.
-
-It is all very well to object that this is not the first time we have
-had this fellowship proclaimed, but in the arts alone can we find the
-inner heart of a people. There is a deeper calm and a deeper conviction
-in this eastern expression than we have yet attained. It is by the arts
-alone that one people learns to meet another far distant people in
-friendship and respect.
-
-I speak with all gravity when I say that world-fellowship is nearer for
-the visit of Rabindranath Tagore to London.
-
- _Ezra Pound_
-
-
-
-
- REVIEWS
-
- _The Poems of Rosamund Marriott Watson_ (John Lane.)
-
-This English poet, whose singing ceased a year ago, had a real lyric
-gift, though a very slight one. The present volume is a collection of
-all her poems, from the first girlish sheaf _Tares_, to _The Lamp and
-the Lute_, which she was preparing for publication when she died.
-
-Through this whole life-record her poetry ripples along as smoothly and
-delicately as a meadow rill, with never a pause nor a flurry nor a
-thrill. She sings prettily of everyone, from the _Last Fairy_ to William
-Ernest Henley, and of everything, from _Death and Justice_ to the
-_Orchard of the Moon_, but she has nothing arresting or important to say
-of any of these subjects, and no keen magic of phrase to give her
-warbling that intense vitality which would win for her the undying fame
-prophesied by her loyal husband in his preface.
-
-Nevertheless, her feeling is genuine, her touch light, and her tune a
-quiet monotone of gentle soothing music which has a certain soft appeal.
-Perhaps the secret of it is the fine quality of soul which breathes
-through these numerous lyrics, a soul too reserved to tell its whole
-story, and too preoccupied with the little things around and within her
-to pay much attention to the thinking, fighting, ever-moving world
-without.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A big-spirited, vital, headlong narrative poem is _The Adventures of
-Young Maverick_, by Hervey White, who runs a printing press at
-Woodstock, N. Y., and bravely publishes _The Wild Hawk_, his own little
-magazine. The poem has as many moods as _Don Juan_, which is plainly,
-though not tyrannically, its model.
-
-The poem is long for these days--five cantos and nearly six hundred
-Spenserian stanzas. Yet the most casual reader, one would think, could
-scarcely find it tedious, even though the satirical passages run heavily
-at times. The hero is a colt of lofty Arabian lineage, and the poem
-becomes eloquently pictorial in setting forth his beauty:
-
- Young Maverick in the upland pastures lay
- Woven as in the grass, while star-like flowers,
- Shaking their petals down in sweet array
- Dappled his flanks with gentle breathless showers.
- The thread green stems, tangled in bending bowers,
- Their pollen plumes of dust closed over him,
- Enwoofing through the drowse of summer hours,
- The pattern of his body, head and limb;
- His color of pale gold glowed as with sunshine dim.
-
-The spirit of the West is in this poem, its freedom, spaciousness,
-strong sunshine; also its careless good humor and half sardonic fun. The
-race between the horse and the Mexican boy is as swift, vivid and
-rhythmical as a mountain stream; and the Mexican family, even to the fat
-old Gregorio, are characterized to the life, with a sympathy only too
-rare among writers of the Anglo-Saxon race.
-
-Certain other characterizations are equally incisive, this for example:
-
- Sometimes I peep into a modern poet
- Like Arthur Symons, vaguely beautiful,
- Who loves but love, not caring who shall know it;
- I wonder that he never finds it dull.
-
-Mr. White is so profoundly a democrat, and so wholeheartedly a poet of
-the broad, level average American people, that both social and artistic
-theories sit very lightly upon him. He achieves beauty as by chance now
-and then, because he can not help it, but always he achieves a warm
-vitality, the persuasive illusion of life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_The Iscariot_, by Eden Phillpotts (John Lane), is the ingenious effort
-of a theorist in human nature to unroll the convolutions of the immortal
-traitor's soul. And it is as ineffectual as any such effort must be to
-remould characters long fixed in literary or historic tradition. In the
-art of the world Judas is Judas; anyone who tries to make him over into
-a pattern of misguided loyalty has his labor for his pains.
-
-The blank verse in which the monologue is uttered is accurately measured
-and sufficiently sonorous.
-
- _H. M._
-
-
-
-
-_Interpretations: A Book of First Poems_, by Zoë Akins (Mitchell
-Kennerley).
-
-The poems in this volume are creditable in texture, revealing a
-conscious sense of artistic workmanship which it is a pleasure to find
-in a book of first poems by a young American. A certain rhythmic
-monotony may be mentioned as an impression gained from a consecutive
-reading, and a prevailing twilight mood, united, in the longer poems,
-with a vein of the emotionally feminine.
-
-Two short lyrics, however, _I Am the Wind_ and _The Tragedienne_, stand
-apart in isolated perfection, even as the two Greek columns in the
-ruined theater at Arles; an impression recalled by the opening stanza of
-_The Tragedienne_:
-
- Upon a hill in Thessaly
- Stand broken columns in a line
- About a cold forgotten shrine
- Beneath a moon in Thessaly.
-
-This is the first of the monthly volumes of poetry to be issued by Mr.
-Kennerley. It awakens pleasant anticipation of those to follow.
-
-
-_Lyrical Poems_, By Lucy Lyttelton. (Thomas B. Mosher.)
-
-The twilight mood also prevails in the poems of Lucy Lyttelton, although
-the crest of a fine modern impulse may be traced in _A Vision_, _The
-Japanese Widow_, _The Black Madonna_, and _A Song of Revolution_.
-
- "Where is Owen Griffiths?" Broken and alone
- Crushed he lies in darkness beneath Festiniog stone.
- "Bring his broken body before me to the throne
- For a crown.
-
- "Oftentimes in secret in prayer he came to me,
- Now to men and angels I know him openly.
- I that was beside him when he came to die
- Fathoms down.
-
- "And, Evan Jones, stand forward, whose life was shut in gloom,
- And a narrow grave they gave you 'twixt marble tomb and tomb.
- But now the great that trod you shall give you elbow room
- And renown."
-
-These poems unite delicacy and strength. They convince us of sincerity
-and intensity of vision.
-
- _A. C. H._
-
-
-
-
- NOTES AND ANNOUNCEMENTS.
-
-It is hardly necessary to introduce to the lovers of lyric and dramatic
-verse Mr. William Butler Yeats, who honors the Christmas number of
-_Poetry_ by his presence. A score or more of years have passed since his
-voice, perfect in quality, began to speak and sing in high loyalty to
-the beauty of poetic art, especially the ancient poetic art of his own
-Irish people. His influence, reinforced by the prompt allegiance of Lady
-Gregory, Mr. Douglass Hyde, the late J. M. Synge, and many other Irish
-men and women of letters, has sufficed to lift the beautiful old Gaelic
-literature out of the obscurity of merely local recognition into a
-position of international importance. This fact alone is a sufficient
-acknowledgment of Mr. Yeats' genius, and of the enthusiasm which his
-leadership has inspired among the thinkers and singers of his race.
-
-Mr. George Sterling, of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, is well known to
-American readers of poetry through his two books of verse, _Wine of
-Wizardry_ and _The House of Orchids_.
-
-Mr. Clark Ashton Smith, also of California, is a youth whose talent has
-been acclaimed quite recently by a few newspapers of his own state, and
-recognized by one or two eastern publications.
-
-Mr. John Reed, of New York, and Alice Corbin, the wife of William P.
-Henderson, the Chicago painter, are Americans. The latter has
-contributed verse and prose to various magazines. The former is a young
-journalist, born in 1887, who has published little verse as yet.
-
-Rabindranath Tagore, the poet of Bengal, is sufficiently introduced by
-Mr. Pound's article.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS RECEIVED
-
- _The Vaunt of Man and Other Poems_, by William Ellery Leonard.
- B. W. Huebsch.
- _Romance, Vision and Satire_: English Alliterative Poems of
- the XIV Century, Newly Rendered in the Original Metres,
- by Jessie L. Weston. Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _Etain The Beloved_, by James H. Cousins. Maunsel & Co.
- _Uriel and Other Poems_, by Percy MacKaye. Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _The Unconquered Air_, by Florence Earle Coates.
- Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass_, by Amy Lowell.
- Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _The Lure of the Sea_, by J. E. Patterson. George H. Doran Co.
- _The Roadside Fire_, by Amelia Josephine Burr. George H. Doran Co.
- _By the Way._ Verses, Fragments and Notes, by William Allingham.
- Arranged by Helen Allingham. Longmans, Green & Co.
- _Gabriel_, A Pageant of Vigil, by Isabelle Howe Fiske.
- Thomas B. Mosher.
- _Pilgrimage to Haunts of Browning_, by Pauline Leavens.
- The Bowrons, Chicago.
- _The Wind on the Heath_, Ballads and Lyrics, by May Byron.
- George H. Doran.
- _Valley Song and Verse_, by William Hutcheson.
- Fraser, Asher & Co.
- _The Queen of Orplede_, by Charles Wharton Stork. Elkin Mathews.
- _Pocahontas_, A Pageant, by Margaret Ullman. The Poet Lore Co.
- _Poems_, by Robert Underwood Johnson. The Century Co.
- _Songs Before Birth_, Isabelle Howe Fiske. Thomas B. Mosher.
- _Book Titles From Shakespeare_, by Volney Streamer.
- Thomas B. Mosher.
- _A Bunch of Blossoms_, Little Verses for Little Children,
- by E. Gordon Browne. Longmans, Green & Co.
- _June on the Miami_, by William Henry Venable. Stewart & Kidd.
- _The Tragedy of Etarre_, A Poem, by Rhys Carpenter.
- Sturgis & Walton Co.
- _In Other Words_, by Franklin P. Adams. Doubleday, Page & Co.
- _Verses and Sonnets_, by Julia Stockton Dinsmore.
- Doubleday, Page & Co.
- _Anna Marcella's Book of Verses_, by Cyrenus Cole.
- Printed for Personal Distribution.
- _Atala_, An American Idyl, by Anna Olcott Commelin.
- E. P. Dutton & Co.
- _Spring in Tuscany_, an Authology. Thos. B. Mosher.
-
-
-
-
- Poetry VOL. I
- A Magazine of Verse NO. 4
-
-
- JANUARY, 1913
-
-
-
-
- GENERAL WILLIAM BOOTH ENTERS INTO HEAVEN
-
- (_To be sung to the tune of_ THE BLOOD OF THE LAMB _with indicated
- instruments_.)
-
- [Sidenote: Bass drums]
-
- Booth led boldly with his big bass drum.
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
- The saints smiled gravely, and they said, "He's come,"
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
- Walking lepers followed, rank on rank,
- Lurching bravos from the ditches dank,
- Drabs from the alleyways and drug-fiends pale--
- Minds still passion-ridden, soul-powers frail!
- Vermin-eaten saints with mouldy breath,
- Unwashed legions with the ways of death--
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
-
- Every slum had sent its half-a-score
- The round world over--Booth had groaned for more.
- Every banner that the wide world flies
-
- [Sidenote: Banjo]
-
- Bloomed with glory and transcendent dyes.
- Big-voiced lasses made their banjos bang!
- Tranced, fanatical, they shrieked and sang,
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
- Hallelujah! It was queer to see
- Bull-necked convicts with that land make free!
- Loons with bazoos blowing blare, blare, blare--
- On, on, upward through the golden air.
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
-
- [Sidenote: Bass drums slower and softer]
-
- Booth died blind, and still by faith he trod,
- Eyes still dazzled by the ways of God.
- Booth led boldly and he looked the chief:
- Eagle countenance in sharp relief,
- Beard a-flying, air of high command
- Unabated in that holy land.
-
- [Sidenote: Flutes]
-
- Jesus came from out the Court-House door,
- Stretched his hands above the passing poor.
- Booth saw not, but led his queer ones there
- Round and round the mighty Court-House square.
- Yet in an instant all that blear review
- Marched on spotless, clad in raiment new.
- The lame were straightened, withered limbs uncurled
- And blind eyes opened on a new sweet world.
-
- [Sidenote: Bass drums louder and faster]
-
- Drabs and vixens in a flash made whole!
- Gone was the weasel-head, the snout, the jowl;
- Sages and sibyls now, and athletes clean.
- Rulers of empires, and of forests green!
-
- [Sidenote: Grand Chorus--tambourines--all instruments in full blast]
-
- The hosts were sandalled and their wings were fire--
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
- But their noise played havoc with the angel-choir.
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
- Oh, shout Salvation! it was good to see
- Kings and princes by the Lamb set free.
- The banjos rattled, and the tambourines
- Jing-jing-jingled in the hands of queens!
-
- [Sidenote: Reverently sung--no instruments]
-
- And when Booth halted by the curb for prayer
- He saw his Master through the flag-filled air.
- Christ came gently with a robe and crown
- For Booth the soldier while the throng knelt down.
- He saw King Jesus--they were face to face,
- And he knelt a-weeping in that holy place.
- _Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_
-
- _Nicholas Vachel Lindsay_
-
-
-
-
- WASTE LAND
-
- Briar and fennel and chincapin,
- And rue and ragweed everywhere;
- The field seemed sick as a soul with sin,
- Or dead of an old despair,
- Born of an ancient care.
-
- The cricket's cry and the locust's whirr,
- And the note of a bird's distress,
- With the rasping sound of the grasshopper,
- Clung to the loneliness
- Like burrs to a trailing dress.
-
- So sad the field, so waste the ground,
- So curst with an old despair,
- A woodchuck's burrow, a blind mole's mound,
- And a chipmunk's stony lair,
- Seemed more than it could bear.
-
- So lonely, too, so more than sad,
- So droning-lone with bees--
- I wondered what more could Nature add
- To the sum of its miseries ...
- And _then_--I saw the trees.
-
- Skeletons gaunt that gnarled the place,
- Twisted and torn they rose--
- The tortured bones of a perished race
- Of monsters no mortal knows,
- They startled the mind's repose.
-
- And a man stood there, as still as moss,
- A lichen form that stared;
- With an old blind hound that, at a loss,
- Forever around him fared
- With a snarling fang half bared.
-
- I looked at the man; I saw him plain;
- Like a dead weed, gray and wan,
- Or a breath of dust. I looked again--
- And man and dog were gone,
- Like wisps of the graying dawn....
-
- Were they a part of the grim death there--
- Ragweed, fennel, and rue?
- Or forms of the mind, an old despair,
- That there into semblance grew
- Out of the grief I knew?
-
- _Madison Cawein_
-
-
-
-
- MY LADY OF THE BEECHES
-
- Here among the beeches
- Winds and wild perfume,
- That the twilight pleaches
- Into gleam and gloom,
- Build for her a room.
-
- Her, whose Beauty cometh,
- Misty as the morn,
- When the wild bee hummeth,
- At its honey-horn,
- In the wayside thorn.
-
- As the wood grows dimmer,
- With the drowsy night,
- Like a moonbeam glimmer
- Here she walks in white,
- With a firefly-light.
-
- Moths around her flitting,
- Like a moth she goes;
- Here a moment sitting
- By this wilding rose,
- With my heart's repose.
-
- Every bough that dances
- Has assumed the grace
- Of her form: and Fancies,
- Flashed from eye and face,
- Brood about the place.
-
- And the water, shaken
- In its plunge and poise,
- To itself has taken
- Quiet of her voice,
- And restrains its joys.
-
- Would that these could tell me
- What and whence she is;
- She, who doth enspell me,
- Fill my soul with bliss
- Of her spirit kiss.
-
- Though the heart beseech her,
- And the soul implore,
- Who is it may reach her--
- Safe behind the door
- Of all woodland lore?
-
- _Madison Cawein_
-
-
-
-
- THE WAYFARERS
-
- Earth, I dare not cling to thee
- Lest I should lose my precious soul.
-
- _'Tis not more wondrous than the fluff
- Within the milkweed's autumn boll._
-
- Earth, shall my sacred essences
- But sink into thy senseless dust?
-
- _The springtide takes its way with them--
- And blossoms blow as blossoms must._
-
- Earth, I swear with solemn vow,
- I feel a greatness in my breath!
-
- _The grass-seed hath its dream of God,
- Its visioning of life and death._
-
- _Anita Fitch_
-
-
-
-
- _LES CRUELS AMOUREUX_
-
- Two lovers wakened in their tombs--
- They had been dead a hundred years--
- And in the _langue_ of old Provence
- They spoke of ancient tears.
-
- "_M'amour_," she called, "I've pardoned you;"
- (How sad her dreaming seemed to be!)
- "When I had kissed your dead face once
- Love's sweet returned to me."
-
- "_M'amour_," he called, "it was too late."
- (How dreary seemed his ghostly sighs!)
- "Blessed the soul that love forgives,"
- He whispered, "ere it dies."
-
- And then they turned again and slept
- With must and mold in ancient way;
- And so they'll sleep and wake, 'tis told,
- Until the Judgment Day.
-
- ENVOI
-
- _O damoiseau et damoiselle_,
- Guard ye your loving while ye live!
- Sin not against love's sacred flame--
- While yet ye may, forgive.
-
- _Anita Fitch_
-
-
-
-
- LOVE-SONGS OF THE OPEN ROAD
-
- MORNING
-
- The morning wind is wooing me; her lips have swept my brow.
- Was ever dawn so sweet before? the land so fair as now?
- The wanderlust is luring to wherever roads may lead,
- While yet the dew is on the hedge. So how can I but heed?
-
- The forest whispers of its shades; of haunts where we have been,--
- And where may friends be better made than under God's green inn?
- Your mouth is warm and laughing and your voice is calling low,
- While yet the dew is on the hedge. So how can I but go?
-
- NOON
-
- The bees are humming, humming in the clover;
- The bobolink is singing in the rye;
- The brook is purling, purling in the valley,
- And the river's laughing, radiant, to the sky!
-
- The buttercups are nodding in the sunlight;
- The winds are whispering, whispering to the pine;
- The joy of June has found me; as an aureole it's crowned me
- Because, oh best belovèd, you are mine!
-
- NIGHT
-
- In Arcady by moonlight,
- (Where only lovers go),
- There is a pool where only
- The fairest roses grow.
-
- Why are the moonlit roses
- So sweet beyond compare?
- Among their purple shadows
- My love is waiting there.
-
- * * * * *
-
- To Arcady by moonlight
- The roads are open wide,
- But only joy can enter
- And only joy abide.
-
- There is the peace unending
- That perfect faith can know--
- In Arcady by moonlight,
- Where only lovers go.
-
- _Kendall Banning_
-
-
-
-
- SYMPATHY
-
- As one within a moated tower,
- I lived my life alone;
- And dreamed not other granges' dower,
- Nor ways unlike mine own.
- I thought I loved. But all alone
- As one within a moated tower
- I lived. Nor truly knew
- One other mortal fortune's hour.
- As one within a moated tower,
- One fate alone I knew.
- Who hears afar the break of day
- Before the silvered air
- Reveals her hooded presence gray,
- And she, herself, is there?
- I know not how, but now I see
- The road, the plain, the pluming tree,
- The carter on the wain.
- On my horizon wakes a star.
- The distant hillsides wrinkled far
- Fold many hearts' domain.
- On one the fire-worn forests sweep,
- Above a purple mountain-keep
- And soar to domes of snow.
- One heart has swarded fountains deep
- Where water-lilies blow:
- And one, a cheerful house and yard,
- With curtains at the pane,
- Board-walks down lawns all clover-starred,
- And full-fold fields of grain.
- As one within a moated tower
- I lived my life alone;
- And dreamed not other granges' dower
- Nor ways unlike mine own.
- But now the salt-chased seas uncurled
- And mountains trooped with pine
- Are mine. I look on all the world
- And all the world is mine.
-
- _Edith Wyatt_
-
-
-
-
- A SONG OF HAPPINESS
-
- Ah Happiness:
- Who called you "Earandel"?
- (Winter-star, I think, that is);
- And who can tell the lovely curve
- By which you seem to come, then swerve
- Before you reach the middle-earth?
- And who is there can hold your wing,
- Or bind you in your mirth,
- Or win you with a least caress,
- Or tear, or kiss, or anything--
- Insensate happiness?
-
- Once I thought to have you
- Fast there in a child:
- All her heart she gave you,
- Yet you would not stay.
- Cruel, and careless,
- Not half reconciled,
- Pain you cannot bear;
- When her yellow hair
- Lay matted, every tress;
- When those looks of hers,
- Were no longer hers,
- You went: in a day
- She wept you all away.
-
- Once I thought to give
- You, plighted, holily--
- No more fugitive,
- Returning like the sea:
- But they that share so well
- Heaven must portion Hell
- In their copartnery:
- Care, ill fate, ill health,
- Came we know not how
- And broke our commonwealth.
- Neither has you now.
-
- Some wait you on the road,
- Some in an open door
- Look for the face you show'd
- Once there--no more.
- You never wear the dress
- You danced in yesterday;
- Yet, seeming gone, you stay,
- And come at no man's call:
- Yet, laid for burial,
- You lift up from the dead
- Your laughing, spangled head.
-
- Yes, once I did pursue
- You, unpursuable;
- Loved, longed for, hoped for you--
- Blue-eyed and morning brow'd.
- Ah, lovely happiness!
- Now that I know you well,
- I dare not speak aloud
- Your fond name in a crowd;
- Nor conjure you by night,
- Nor pray at morning-light,
- Nor count at all on you:
-
- But, at a stroke, a breath,
- After the fear of death,
- Or bent beneath a load;
- Yes, ragged in the dress,
- And houseless on the road,
- I might surprise you there.
- Yes: who of us shall say
- When you will come, or where?
- Ask children at their play,
- The leaves upon the tree,
- The ships upon the sea,
- Or old men who survived,
- And lived, and loved, and wived.
- Ask sorrow to confess
- Your sweet improvidence,
- And prodigal expense
- And cold economy,
- Ah, lovely happiness!
-
- _Ernest Rhys_
-
-
-
-
- HELEN IS ILL
-
- When she is ill my laughter cowers;
- An exile with a broken rhyme,
- My head upon the breast of time,
- I hear the heart-beat of the hours;
- I close my eyes without a sigh;
- The vision of her flutters by
- As glints the light of Mary's eyes
- Upon the lakes in Paradise.
-
- I seem to reach an olden town
- And enter at the sunset gate;
- And as the streets I hurry down,
- I find the men are all elate,
- As if an angel of the Lord
- Had passed with dearest word and nod,
- Remembered like a yearning chord
- Of songs the people sing to God;
- I come upon the sunrise gate--
- As silent as her listless room--
- There seven beggers sing and wait
- And this the song that breaks the gloom:
-
- God a 'mercy is most kind;
- She the fairest passed this way;
- We the lowest were not blind;
- God a 'mercy bless the day.
-
- _Roscoe W. Brink_
-
-
-
-
- VERSES, TRANSLATIONS, AND REFLECTIONS
- FROM "THE ANTHOLOGY"
-
-
-
-
- HERMES OF THE WAYS
-
- The hard sand breaks,
- And the grains of it
- Are clear as wine.
-
- Far off over the leagues of it,
- The wind,
- Playing on the wide shore,
- Piles little ridges,
- And the great waves
- Break over it.
-
- But more than the many-foamed ways
- Of the sea,
- I know him
- Of the triple path-ways,
- Hermes,
- Who awaiteth.
-
- Dubious,
- Facing three ways,
- Welcoming wayfarers,
- He whom the sea-orchard
- Shelters from the west,
- From the east
- Weathers sea-wind;
- Fronts the great dunes.
-
- Wind rushes
- Over the dunes,
- And the coarse, salt-crusted grass
- Answers.
-
- Heu,
- It whips round my ankles!
-
- II
-
- Small is
- This white stream,
- Flowing below ground
- From the poplar-shaded hill,
- But the water is sweet.
-
- Apples on the small trees
- Are hard,
- Too small,
- Too late ripened
- By a desperate sun
- That struggles through sea-mist.
-
- The boughs of the trees
- Are twisted
- By many bafflings;
- Twisted are
- The small-leafed boughs.
-
- But the shadow of them
- Is not the shadow of the mast head
- Nor of the torn sails.
-
- Hermes, Hermes,
- The great sea foamed,
- Gnashed its teeth about me;
- But you have waited,
- Where sea-grass tangles with
- Shore-grass.
-
- _H. D._
-
-
-
-
- PRIAPUS
-
- _Keeper-of-Orchards_
-
- I saw the first pear
- As it fell.
- The honey-seeking, golden-banded,
- The yellow swarm
- Was not more fleet than I,
- (Spare us from loveliness!)
- And I fell prostrate,
- Crying,
- Thou hast flayed us with thy blossoms;
- Spare us the beauty
- Of fruit-trees!
-
- The honey-seeking
- Paused not,
- The air thundered their song,
- And I alone was prostrate.
-
- O rough-hewn
- God of the orchard,
- I bring thee an offering;
- Do thou, alone unbeautiful
- (Son of the god),
- Spare us from loveliness.
-
- The fallen hazel-nuts,
- Stripped late of their green sheaths,
- The grapes, red-purple,
- Their berries
- Dripping with wine,
- Pomegranates already broken,
- And shrunken fig,
- And quinces untouched,
- I bring thee as offering.
-
- _H. D._
-
-
-
-
- EPIGRAM
-
- (_After the Greek_)
-
- The golden one is gone from the banquets;
- She, beloved of Atimetus,
- The swallow, the bright Homonoea:
- Gone the dear chatterer;
- Death succeeds Atimetus.
-
- _H. D._,
- "_Imagiste_."
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL COMMENT
-
- STATUS RERUM
-
- _London, December 10, 1912_
-
-The state of things here in London is, as I see it, as follows:
-
-I find Mr. Yeats the only poet worthy of serious study. Mr. Yeats' work
-is already a recognized classic and is part of the required reading in
-the Sorbonne. There is no need of proclaiming him to the American
-public.
-
-As to his English contemporaries, they are food, sometimes very good
-food, for anthologies. There are a number of men who have written a
-poem, or several poems, worth knowing and remembering, but they do not
-much concern the young artist studying the art of poetry.
-
-The important work of the last twenty-five years has been done in Paris.
-This work is little likely to gain a large audience in either America or
-England, because of its tone and content. There has been no "man with a
-message," but the work has been excellent and the method worthy of our
-emulation. No other body of poets having so little necessity to speak
-could have spoken so well as these modern Parisians and Flemings.
-
-There has been some imitation here of their manner and content. Any
-donkey can imitate a man's manner. There has been little serious
-consideration of their _method_. It requires an artist to analyze and
-apply a method.
-
-Among the men of thirty here, Padraic Colum is the one whom we call most
-certainly a poet, albeit he has written very little verse--and but a
-small part of that is worthy of notice. He is fairly unconscious of such
-words as "aesthetics," "technique" and "method." He is at his best in
-_Garadh_, a translation from the Gaelic, beginning:
-
- O woman, shapely as a swan,
- On your account I shall not die.
- The men you've slain--a trivial clan--
- Were less than I:
-
-and in _A Drover_. He is bad whenever he shows a trace of reading. I
-quote the opening of _A Drover_, as I think it shows "all Colum" better
-than any passage he has written. I think no English-speaking writer now
-living has had the luck to get so much of himself into twelve lines.
-
- To Meath of the pastures,
- From wet hills by the sea,
- Through Leitrim and Longford
- Go my cattle and me.
-
- I hear in the darkness
- Their slipping and breathing.
- I name them the bye-ways
- They're to pass without heeding.
-
- Then the wet, winding roads,
- Brown bogs with black water;
- And my thoughts on white ships
- And the King o' Spain's daughter.
-
-I would rather talk about poetry with Ford Madox Hueffer than with any
-man in London. Mr. Hueffer's beliefs about the art may be best explained
-by saying that they are in diametric opposition to those of Mr. Yeats.
-
-Mr. Yeats has been subjective; believes in the glamour and associations
-which hang near the words. "Works of art beget works of art." He has
-much in common with the French symbolists. Mr. Hueffer believes in an
-exact rendering of things. He would strip words of all "association" for
-the sake of getting a precise meaning. He professes to prefer prose to
-verse. You would find his origins in Gautier or in Flaubert. He is
-objective. This school tends to lapse into description. The other tends
-to lapse into sentiment.
-
-Mr. Yeats' method is, to my way of thinking, very dangerous, for
-although he is the greatest of living poets who use English, and though
-he has sung some of the moods of life immortally, his art has not
-broadened much in scope during the past decade. His gifts to English art
-are mostly negative; i. e., he has stripped English poetry of many of
-its faults. His "followers" have come to nothing. Neither Synge, Lady
-Gregory nor Colum can be called his followers, though he had much to do
-with bringing them forth, yet nearly every man who writes English verse
-seriously is in some way indebted to him.
-
-Mr. Hueffer has rarely "come off." His touch is so light and his
-attitude so easy that there seems little likelihood of his ever being
-taken seriously by anyone save a few specialists and a few of his
-intimates. His last leaflet, _High Germany_, contains, however, three
-poems from which one may learn his quality. They are not Victorian. I do
-not expect many people to understand why I praise them. They are _The
-Starling_, _In the Little Old Market-Place_ and _To All the Dead_.
-
-The youngest school here that has the nerve to call itself a school is
-that of the _Imagistes_. To belong to a school does not in the least
-mean that one writes poetry to a theory. One writes poetry when, where,
-because, and as one feels like writing it. A school exists when two or
-three young men agree, more or less, to call certain things good; when
-they prefer such of their verses as have certain qualities to such of
-their verses as do not have them.
-
-Space forbids me to set forth the program of the _Imagistes_ at length,
-but one of their watchwords is Precision, and they are in opposition to
-the numerous and unassembled writers who busy themselves with dull and
-interminable effusions, and who seem to think that a man can write a
-good long poem before he learns to write a good short one, or even
-before he learns to produce a good single line.
-
-Among the very young men, there seems to be a gleam of hope in the work
-of Richard Aldington, but it is too early to make predictions.
-
-There are a number of men whose names are too well known for it to seem
-necessary to tell them over. America has already found their work in
-volumes or anthologies. Hardy, Kipling, Maurice Hewlett, Binyon, Robert
-Bridges, Sturge Moore, Henry Newbolt, McKail, Masefield, who has had the
-latest cry; Abercrombie, with passionate defenders, and Rupert Brooke,
-recently come down from Cambridge.
-
-There are men also, who are little known to the general public, but who
-contribute liberally to the "charm" or the "atmosphere" of London:
-Wilfred Scawen Blunt, the grandest of old men, the last of the great
-Victorians; great by reason of his double sonnet, beginning--
-
- He who has once been happy is for aye
- Out of destruction's reach;
-
-Ernest Rhys, weary with much editing and hack work, to whom we owe gold
-digged in Wales, translations, transcripts, and poems of his own, among
-them the fine one to Dagonet; Victor Plarr, one of the "old" Rhymers'
-Club, a friend of Dowson and of Lionel Johnson. His volume, _In The
-Dorian Mood_, has been half forgotten, but not his verses _Epitaphium
-Citharistriae_. One would also name the Provost of Oriel, not for
-original work, but for his very beautiful translations from Dante.
-
-In fact one might name nearly a hundred writers who have given pleasure
-with this or that matter in rhyme. But it is one thing to take pleasure
-in a man's work and another to respect him as a great artist.
-
- _Ezra Pound_
-
-
-
-
- REVIEWS
-
-_The Lyric Year_, Mr. Kennerley's new annual, contains among its hundred
-contributions nearly a score of live poems, among which a few excite the
-kind of keen emotion which only art of real distinction can arouse.
-
-Among the live poems the present reviewer would count none of the
-prize-winners, not even Mr. Sterling's, the best of the three, whose
-rather stiff formalities in praise of Browning are, however, lit now and
-then by shining lines, as--
-
- Drew as a bubble from old infamies....
- The shy and many-colored soul of man.
-
-The other two prize-poems must have been measured by some academic
-foot-rule dug up from the eighteenth century. Orrick Johns' _Second
-Avenue_ is a _Grays Elegy_ essay of prosy moralizing, without a finely
-poetic line in it, or any originality of meaning or cadence. And the
-second prize went to an ode still more hopelessly academic. Indeed, _To
-a Thrush_, by Thomas Augustine Daly, is one of the most stilted poems in
-the volume, a far-away echo of echoes, full of the approved "poetic"
-words--_throstle_, _pregnant_, _vernal_, _cerulean_, _teen_, _chrysmal_,
-even _paraclete_--and quite guiltless of inspiration.
-
-But one need not linger with these. As we face the other way one poem
-outranks the rest and ennobles the book. This is _The Renascence_, said
-to be by Edna St. Vincent Millay, who, according to the editor, is only
-twenty years old. This poem is the daring flight of a wide-winged
-imagination, and the art of it, though not faultless, is strong enough
-to carry us through keen emotions of joy and agony to a climax of
-spiritual serenity. Though marred by the last twelve lines, which should
-be struck out for stating the thesis too explicitly, this poem arouses
-high hopes of its youthful author.
-
-Among the other live poems--trees, saplings or flowers--are various
-species. _Kisa-Gotami_, by Arthur Davison Ficke, tells its familiar
-story of the Buddha in stately cadences which sustain the beauty of the
-tale. _Jetsam_, a "_Titanic_" elegy by Herman Montagu Donner, carries
-the dread and dangerous subject without violating its terrors and
-sanctities with false sentiment or light rhythm. Ridgeley Torrence's
-_Ritual for a Funeral_ is less sure of its ground, sometimes escaping
-into vapors, but on the whole noble in feeling and flute-like in
-cadence. Mrs. Conkling's bird ode has now and then an airy delicacy, and
-Edith Wyatt's _City Swallow_ gives the emotion of flight above the roofs
-and smoke of a modern town.
-
-Of the shorter poems who could ignore Harry Kemp's noble lyric dialogue,
-_I Sing the Battle_; _The Forgotten Soul_ by Margaret Widdemer, _Selma_,
-by Willard H. Wright; _Comrades_ by Fannie Stearns Davis, or Nicholas
-Vachel Lindsay's tribute to O. Henry, a more vital elegy than Mr.
-Sterling's? These are all simple and sincere--straight modern talk
-which rises into song without the aid of worn-out phrases. _Paternity_,
-by William Rose Benét, _To My Vagrant Love_, by Elouise Briton, and
-_Dedication_, by Pauline Florence Brower, are delicate expressions of
-intimate emotion; and _Martin_, by Joyce Kilmer, touches with grace a
-lighter subject.
-
-To have gathered such as these together is perhaps enough, but more may
-be reasonably demanded. As a whole the collection, like the prizes, is
-too academic; Georgian and Victorian standards are too much in evidence.
-The ambition of _The Lyric Year_ is to be "an annual Salon of American
-poetry;" to this end poets and their publishers are invited to
-contribute gratis the best poems of the year, without hope of reward
-other than the three prizes. That so many responded to the call, freely
-submitting their works to anonymous judges, shows how eager is the
-hitherto unfriended American muse to seize any helping hand.
-
-However, if this annual is to speak with any authority as a Salon, it
-should take a few lessons from art exhibitions. Mr. Earle's position as
-donor, editor and judge, is as if Mr. Carnegie should act as hanging
-committee at the Pittsburg show, and help select the prize-winners. And
-Messrs. Earle, Braithwaite and Wheeler, this year's jury of awards, are
-not, even though all have written verse, poets of recognized distinction
-in the sense that Messrs. Chase, Alexander, Hassam, Duveneck, and other
-jurymen in our various American Salons, are distinguished painters.
-
-In these facts lie the present weaknesses of _The Lyric Year_. However,
-the remedy for them is easy and may be applied in future issues.
-Meantime the venture is to be welcomed; at last someone, somewhere, is
-trying to do something for the encouragement of the art in America.
-_Poetry_, which is embarked in the same adventure, rejoices in
-companionship.
-
- _H. M._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Already many books of verses come to us, of which a few are poetry.
-Sometimes the poetry is an aspiration rather than an achievement; but in
-spite of crude materials and imperfect artistry one may feel the beat of
-wings and hear the song. Again one searches in vain for the magic touch,
-even though the author has interesting things to say in creditable and
-more or less persuasive rhymed eloquence.
-
-Of recent arrivals Mr. John Hall Wheelock has the most searching vision
-and appealing voice. In _The Human Fantasy_ (Sherman, French & Co.) his
-subject is New York, typified in the pathetic little love-affair of two
-young starvelings, which takes its course through a stirring, exacting
-milieu to a renunciation that leaves the essential sanctities intact.
-The poet looks through the slang and shoddy of the lovers, and the dust
-and glare of the city, to the divine power of passion in both. In _The
-Beloved Adventure_ the emotion is less poignant; or, rather, the poet
-has included many indifferent pieces which obscure the quality of finer
-lyrics. More rigorous technique and resolute use of the waste-basket
-would make more apparent the fact that we have here a true poet, one
-with a singing voice, and a heart deeply moved by essential spiritual
-beauty in the common manifestations of human character. At his best he
-writes with immense concentration and unflagging vigor; and his hearty
-young appetite for life in all its manifestations helps him to transmute
-the repellant discords of the modern town into harmony. The fantasy of
-_Love in a City_ is a "true thing" and a vital.
-
-Mr. Hermann Hagedorn is also a true poet, capable of lyric rapture, but
-sometimes, when he seems least aware, his muse escapes him. _The
-Infidel_, the initial poem of his _Poems and Ballads_ (Houghton Mifflin
-Co.), recalls his _Woman of Corinth_, and others in this book remind one
-of this and of his Harvard class poem, _The Troop of the Guard_, in that
-the words do not, like colored sands, dance inevitably into the absolute
-shape determined by the wizardry of sound. He is still somewhat hampered
-by the New England manner, a trend toward an external formalism not
-dependent on interior necessity. This influence makes for academic and
-lifeless work, and it must be deeply rooted since it casts its chill
-also over the Boston school of painters.
-
-But now and then Mr. Hagedorn frees himself; perhaps in the end he may
-escape altogether. In such poems as _Song_, _Doors_, _Broadway_,
-_Discovery_, _The Wood-Gatherer_, _The Crier in the Night_ and _A Chant
-on the Terrible Highway_, we feel that he begins to speak for himself,
-to sing with his own voice. Such poems are a challenging note that
-should arrest the attention of all seekers after sincere poetic
-expression.
-
-Mr. Percy MacKaye, in _Uriel and Other Poems_ (Houghton Mifflin Co.),
-shows also the Boston influence, but perhaps it is difficult to escape
-the academic note in such poems for occasions as these. With fluent
-eloquence and a ready command of verse forms he celebrates dead poets,
-addresses noted living persons, and contributes to a number of
-ceremonial observances. The poems in which he is most freely lyric are
-perhaps _In the Bohemian Redwoods_ and _To the Fire-Bringer_, the
-shorter of his elegies in honor of Moody, his friend.
-
-In two dramatic poems, _The Tragedy of Etarre_, by Rhys Carpenter
-(Sturgis & Walton Co.), and _Gabriel, a Pageant of Vigil_, by Mrs.
-Isabelle Howe Fiske (Mosher), the academic note is confidently insisted
-on. The former shows the more promise of ultimate freedom. It is an
-Arthurian venture of which the prologue is the strongest part. In
-firm-knit iambics Mr. Carpenter strikes out many effective lines and
-telling situations. Indeed, they almost prompt the profane suggestion
-that, simplified and compressed, they might yield a psychological
-libretto for some "advanced" composer.
-
-Mrs. Fiske's venture is toward heaven itself; but her numerous
-archangels are of the earth earthy.
-
-In _The Unconquered Air and Other Poems_ (Houghton Mifflin Co.), Mrs.
-Florence Earle Coates shows not inspiration but wide and humane
-sympathies. Her verse is typical of much which has enough popular appeal
-and educative value to be printed extensively in the magazines; verse in
-which subjects of modern interest and human sentiment are expressed in
-the kind of rhymed eloquence which passes for poetry with the great
-majority.
-
-These poets may claim the justification of illustrious precedent. The
-typical poem of this class in America, the most famous verse rhapsody
-which stops short of lyric rapture, is Lowell's _Commemoration Ode_.
-
-
-
-
- NOTES
-
-Our poets this month play divers instruments. The audience may listen to
-H. D.'s flute, the 'cello of Mr. Rhys, the big bass drum of Mr. Lindsay,
-and so on through the orchestra, fitting each poet to his special
-strain. Some of these performers are well known, others perhaps will be.
-
-Mr. Ernest Rhys is of Welsh descent. In 1888-9 he lectured in America,
-and afterward returned to London, where he has published _A London
-Rose_, Arthurian plays and poems, and Welsh ballads, and edited
-_Everyman's Library_.
-
-Mr. Madison Cawein, the well-known Kentucky poet resident in Louisville,
-scarcely needs an introductory word. His is landscape poetry chiefly,
-but sometimes, as in Wordsworth, figures blend with the scene and
-become a part of nature. A volume of his own selections from his
-various books has recently been published by The MacMillan Company.
-
-Mr. Nicholas Vachel Lindsay is the vagabond poet who loves to tramp
-through untravelled country districts without a cent in his pocket,
-exchanging "rhymes for bread" at farmers' hearths. The magazines have
-published engaging articles by him, but in verse he has been usually his
-own publisher as yet.
-
-"H. D., _Imagiste_," is an American lady resident abroad, whose identity
-is unknown to the editor. Her sketches from the Greek are not offered as
-exact translations, or as in any sense finalities, but as experiments in
-delicate and elusive cadences, which attain sometimes a haunting beauty.
-
-Mr. Kendall Banning is an editor and writer of songs. "The Love Songs of
-the Open Road," with music by Lena Branscord, will soon be published by
-Arthur Schmidt of Boston.
-
-Mrs. Anita Fitch of New York has contributed poems to various magazines.
-
-The February number of POETRY will be devoted to the work of two poets,
-Messrs. Arthur Davison Ficke and Witter Bynner.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS RECEIVED
-
- _The Lyric Year._ Mitchell Kennerley.
- _Poems and Ballads_, by Hermann Hagedorn. Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _Shadows of the Flowers_, by T. B. Aldrich. Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _Poems and Plays_, by William Vaughn Moody. Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _Nimrod_, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler. Lothrop, Lee and Shepard.
- _The Shadow Garden and Other Plays_, by Madison Cawein.
- G. P. Putman's Sons.
- _Via Lucis_, by Alice Harper. M. E. Church South,
- Nashville, Tenn.
- _Songs of Courage and Other Poems_, by Bertha F. Gordon.
- The Baker & Taylor Co.
- _Narrative Lyrics_, by Edward Lucas White. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
- _The Dance of Dinwiddie_, by Marshall Moreton. Stewart & Kidd Co.
- _The Three Visions and Other Poems_, by John A. Johnson.
- Stewart & Kidd Co.
- _Hands Across The Equator_, by Alfred Ernest Keet.
- Privately printed.
- _Songs Under Open Skies_, by M. Jay Flannery. Stewart & Kidd Co.
- _Denys Of Auxerre_, by James Barton. Christophers, London.
-
- _Songs in Many Moods_, by Charles Washburn Nichols.
- L. H. Blackmer Press.
- _The Lord's Prayer._ A Sonnet Sequence by Francis Howard Williams.
- George W. Jacobs & Co.
- _The Buccaneers_, by Don C. Seitz. Harper & Bros.
- _The Tale of a Round-House_, by John Masefield. The MacMillan Co.
- _XXXIII Love Sonnets_, by Florence Brooks. John Marone.
- _The Poems of Ida Ahlborn Weeks._ Published By Her Friends,
- Sabula, Iowa.
- _The Poems of LeRoy Titus Weeks._ Published by the author.
- _Ripostes_, by Ezra Pound. Stephen Swift.
- _The Spinning Woman of the Sky_, by Alice Corbin.
- The Ralph Fletcher Seymour Co.
- _The Irish Poems of Alfred Perceval Graves._ Maunsel & Co.
- _Welsh Poetry Old and New, in English Verse_,
- by Alfred Perceval Graves. Longmans, Green & Co.
-
-
-
-
- Poetry VOL. I
- A Magazine of Verse NO. 5
-
-
- FEBRUARY, 1913
-
-
- POEMS
- BY
- ARTHUR DAVISON FICKE
-
-
-
-
- SWINBURNE, AN ELEGY
-
- I
-
- The autumn dusk, not yearly but eternal,
- Is haunted by thy voice.
- Who turns his way far from the valleys vernal
- And by dark choice
- Disturbs those heights which from the low-lying land
- Rise sheerly toward the heavens, with thee may stand
- And hear thy thunders down the mountains strown.
- But none save him who shares thy prophet-sight
- Shall thence behold what cosmic dawning-light
- Met thy soul's own.
-
- II
-
- Master of music! unmelodious singing
- Must build thy praises now.
- Master of vision! vainly come we, bringing
- Words to endow
- Thy silence,--where, beyond our clouded powers,
- The sun-shot glory of resplendent hours
- Invests thee of the Dionysiac flame.
- Yet undissuaded come we, here to make
- Not thine enrichment but our own who wake
- Thy echoing fame.
-
- III
-
- Not o'er thy dust we brood,--we who have never
- Looked in thy living eyes.
- Nor wintry blossom shall we come to sever
- Where thy grave lies.
- Let witlings dream, with shallow pride elate,
- That they approach the presence of the great
- When at the spot of birth or death they stand.
- But hearts in whom thy heart lives, though they be
- By oceans sundered, walk the night with thee
- In alien land.
-
- IV
-
- For them, grief speaks not with the tidings spoken
- That thou art of the dead.
- No lamp extinguished when the bowl is broken,
- No music fled
- When the lute crumbles, art thou nor shalt be;
- But as a great wave, lifted on the sea,
- Surges triumphant toward the sleeping shore,
- Thou fallest, in splendor of irradiant rain,
- To sweep resurgent all the ocean plain
- Forevermore.
-
- V
-
- The seas of earth with flood tides filled thy bosom;
- The sea-winds to thy voice
- Lent power; the Grecian with the English blossom
- Twined, to rejoice
- Upon thy brow in chaplets of new bloom;
- And over thee the Celtic mists of doom
- Hovered to give their magics to thy hand;
- And past the moon, where Music dwells alone,
- She woke, and loved, and left her starry zone
- At thy command.
-
- VI
-
- For thee spake Beauty from the shadowy waters;
- For thee Earth garlanded
- With loveliness and light her mortal daughters;
- Toward thee was sped
- The arrow of swift longing, keen delight,
- Wonder that pierces, cruel needs that smite,
- Madness and melody and hope and tears.
- And these with lights and loveliness illume
- Thy pages, where rich Summer's faint perfume
- Outlasts the years.
-
- VII
-
- Outlasts, too well! For of the hearts that know thee
- Few know or dare to stand
- On thy keen chilling heights; but where below thee
- Thy lavish hand
- Has scattered brilliant jewels of summer song
- And flowers of passionate speech, there grope the throng
- Crying--"Behold! this bauble, this is he!"
- And of their love or hate, the foolish wars
- Echo up faintly where amid lone stars
- Thy soul may be.
-
- VIII
-
- But some, who find in thee a word exceeding
- Even thy power of speech--
- To whom each song,--like an oak-leaf crimson, bleeding,
- Fallen,--can teach
- Tidings of that high forest whence it came
- Where the wooded mountain-slope in one vast flame
- Burns as the Autumn kindles on its quest--
- These rapt diviners gather close to thee:--
- Whom now the Winter holds in dateless fee
- Sealèd of rest.
-
- IX
-
- Strings never touched before,--strange accents chanting,--
- Strange quivering lambent words,--
- A far exalted hope serene or panting
- Mastering the chords,--
- A sweetness fierce and tragic,--these were thine,
- O singing lover of dark Proserpine!
- O spirit who lit the Maenad hills with song!
- O Augur bearing aloft thy torch divine,
- Whose flickering lights bewilder as they shine
- Down on the throng.
-
- X
-
- Not thy deep glooms, but thine exceeding glory
- Maketh men blind to thee.
- For them thou hast no evening fireside story.
- But to be free--
- But to arise, spurning all bonds that fold
- The spirit of man in fetters forged of old--
- This was the mighty trend of thy desire;
- Shattering the Gods, teaching the heart to mould
- No longer idols, but aloft to hold
- The soul's own fire.
-
- XI
-
- Yea, thou didst burst the final gates of capture;
- And thy strong heart has passed
- From youth, half-blinded by its golden rapture,
- Into the vast
- Desolate bleakness of life's iron spaces;
- And there found solace, not in faiths, or faces,
- Or aught that must endure Time's harsh control.
- In the wilderness, alone, when skies were cloven,
- Thou hast thy garment and thy refuge woven
- From thine own soul.
-
- XII
-
- The faiths and forms of yesteryear are waning,
- Dropping, like leaves.
- Through the wood sweeps a great wind of complaining
- As Time bereaves
- Pitiful hearts of all that they thought holy.
- The icy stars look down on melancholy
- Shelterless creatures of a pillaged day:
- A day of disillusionment and terror,
- A day that yields no solace for the error
- It takes away.
-
- XIII
-
- Thee with no solace, but with bolder passion
- The bitter day endowed.
- As battling seas from the frail swimmer fashion
- At last the proud
- Indomitable master of their tides,
- Who with exultant power splendidly rides
- The terrible summit of each whelming wave,--
- So didst thou reap, from fields of wreckage, gain;
- Harvesting the wild fruit of the bitter main,
- Strength that shall save.
-
- XIV
-
- Here where old barks upon new headlands shatter,
- And worlds seem torn apart,
- Amid the creeds now vain to shield or flatter
- The mortal heart,
- Where the wild welter of strange knowledge won
- From grave and engine and the chemic sun
- Subdues the age to faith in dust and gold:
- The bardic laurel thou hast dowered with youth,
- In living witness of the spirit's truth,
- Like prophets old.
-
- XV
-
- Thee shall the future time with joy inherit.
- Hast thou not sung and said:
- "Save its own light, none leads the mortal spirit,
- None ever led"?
- Time shall bring many, even as thy steps have trod,
- Where the soul speaks authentically of God,
- Sustained by glories strange and strong and new.
- Yet these most Orphic mysteries of thy heart
- Only to kindred can thy speech impart;
- And they are few.
-
- XVI
-
- Few men shall love thee, whom fierce powers have lifted
- High beyond meed of praise.
- But as some bark whose seeking sail has drifted
- Through storm of days,
- We hail thee, bearing back thy golden flowers
- Gathered beyond the Western Isles, in bowers
- That had not seen, till thine, a vessel's wake.
- And looking on thee from our land-built towers
- Know that such sea-dawn never can be ours
- As thou sawest break.
-
- XVII
-
- Now sailest thou dim-lighted, lonelier water.
- By shores of bitter seas
- Low is thy speech with Ceres' ghostly daughter,
- Whose twined lilies
- Are not more pale than thou, O bard most sweet,
- Most bitter;--for whose brow sedge-crowns were mete
- And crowns of splendid holly green and red;
- Who passest from the dust of careless feet
- To lands where sunrise thou hast sought shall greet
- Thy holy head.
-
- XVIII
-
- Thou hast followed after him whose hopes were greatest,--
- That meteor-soul divine;
- Near whom divine we hail thee: thou the latest
- Of that bright line
- Of flame-lipped masters of the spell of song,
- Enduring in succession proud and long,
- The banner-bearers in triumphant wars:
- Latest; and first of that bright line to be,
- For whom thou also, flame-lipped, spirit-free,
- Art of the stars.
-
-
-
-
- TO A CHILD--TWENTY YEARS HENCE
-
- You shall remember dimly,
- Through mists of far-away,
- Her whom, our lips set grimly,
- We carried forth today.
-
- But when, in days hereafter,
- Unfolding time shall bring
- Knowledge of love and laughter
- And trust and triumphing,--
-
- Then from some face the fairest,
- From some most joyous breast,
- Garner what there is rarest
- And happiest and best,--
-
- The youth, the light the rapture
- Of eager April grace,--
- And in that sweetness, capture
- Your mother's far-off face.
-
- And all the mists shall perish
- That have between you moved.
- You shall see her you cherish;
- And love, as we have loved.
-
-
-
-
- PORTRAIT OF AN OLD WOMAN
-
- She limps with halting painful pace,
- Stops, wavers, and creeps on again;
- Peers up with dim and questioning face
- Void of desire or doubt or pain.
-
- Her cheeks hang gray in waxen folds
- Wherein there stirs no blood at all.
- A hand like bundled cornstalks holds
- The tatters of a faded shawl.
-
- Where was a breast, sunk bones she clasps;
- A knot jerks where were woman-hips;
- A ropy throat sends writhing gasps
- Up to the tight line of her lips.
-
- Here strong the city's pomp is poured ...
- She stands, unhuman, bleak, aghast:
- An empty temple of the Lord
- From which the jocund Lord has passed.
-
- He has builded him another house,
- Whenceforth his flame, renewed and bright,
- Shines stark upon these weathered brows
- Abandoned to the final night.
-
-
-
-
- THE THREE SISTERS
-
- Gone are the three, those sisters rare
- With wonder-lips and eyes ashine.
- One was wise and one was fair,
- And one was mine.
-
- Ye mourners, weave for the sleeping hair
- Of only two your ivy vine.
- For one was wise and one was fair,
- But one was mine.
-
-
-
-
- AMONG SHADOWS
-
- In halls of sleep you wandered by,
- This time so indistinguishably
- I cannot remember aught of it,
- Save that I know last night we met.
- I know it by the cloudy thrill
- That in my heart is quivering still;
- And sense of loveliness forgot
- Teases my fancy out of thought.
- Though with the night the vision wanes
- Its haunting presence still may last--
- As odour of flowers faint remains
- In halls where late a queen has passed.
-
-
-
-
- A WATTEAU MELODY
-
- Oh, let me take your lily hand,
- And where the secret star-beams shine
- Draw near, to see and understand
- Pierrot and Columbine.
-
- Around the fountains, in the dew,
- Where afternoon melts into night,
- With gracious mirth their gracious crew
- Entice the shy birds of delight.
-
- Of motley dress and maskèd face,
- Of sparkling unrevealing eyes,
- They track in gentle aimless chase
- The moment as it flies.
-
- Their delicate beribboned rout,
- Gallant and fair, of light intent,
- Weaves through the shadows in and out
- With infinite artful merriment.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Dear Lady of the lily hand,
- Do then our stars so clearly shine
- That we, who do not understand,
- May mock Pierrot and Columbine?
-
- Beyond this garden-grove I see
- The wise, the noble and the brave
- In ultimate futility
- Go down into the grave.
-
- And all they dreamed and all they sought,
- Crumbled and ashen grown, departs;
- And is as if they had not wrought
- These works with blood from out their hearts.
-
- The nations fall, the faiths decay,
- The great philosophies go by,--
- And life lies bare, some bitter day,
- A charnel that affronts the sky.
-
- The wise, the noble and the brave,--
- They saw and solved, as we must see
- And solve, the universal grave,
- The ultimate futility.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Look, where beside the garden-pool
- A Venus rises in the grove,
- More suave, more debonair, more cool
- Than ever burned with Paphian love.
-
- 'Twas here the delicate ribboned rout
- Of gallants and the fair ones went
- Among the shadows in and out
- With infinite artful merriment.
-
- Then let me take your lily hand,
- And let us tread, where starbeams shine,
- A dance; and be, and understand
- Pierrot and Columbine.
-
- _Arthur Davison Ficke_
-
-
-
-
- POEMS
- BY
- WITTER BYNNER
-
-
-
-
- APOLLO TROUBADOUR
-
- When a wandering Italian
- Yesterday at noon
- Played upon his hurdy-gurdy
- Suddenly a tune,
- There was magic in my ear-drums:
- Like a baby's cup and spoon
- Tinkling time for many sleigh-bells,
- Many no-school, rainy-day-bells,
- Cow-bells, frog-bells, run-away-bells,
- Mingling with an ocean medley
- As of elemental people
- More emotional than wordy,--
- Mermaids laughing off their tantrums,
- Mermen singing loud and sturdy,--
- Silver scales and fluting shells,
- Popping weeds and gurgles deadly,
- Coral chime from coral steeple,
- Intermittent deep-sea bells
- Ringing over floating knuckles,
- Buried gold and swords and buckles,
- And a thousand bubbling chuckles,
- Yesterday at noon,--
- Such a melody as star-fish,
- And all fish that really are fish,
- In a gay, remote battalion
- Play at midnight to the moon!
-
- Could any playmate on our planet,
- Hid in a house of earth's own granite,
- Be so devoid of primal fire
- That a wind from this wild crated lyre
- Should find no spark and fan it?
- Would any lady half in tears,
- Whose fashion, on a recent day
- Over the sea, had been to pay
- Vociferous gondoliers,
- Beg that the din be sent away
- And ask a gentleman, gravely treading
- As down the aisle at his own wedding,
- To toss the foreigner a quarter
- Bribing him to leave the street;
- That motor-horns and servants' feet
- Familiar might resume, and sweet
- To her offended ears,
- The money-music of her peers!
-
- Apollo listened, took the quarter
- With his hat off to the buyer,
- Shrugged his shoulder small and sturdy,
- Led away his hurdy-gurdy
- Street by street, then turned at last
- Toward a likelier piece of earth
- Where a stream of chatter passed,
- Yesterday at noon;
- By a school he stopped and played
- Suddenly a tune....
- What a melody he made!
- Made in all those eager faces,
- Feet and hands and fingers!
- How they gathered, how they stayed
- With smiles and quick grimaces,
- Little man and little maid!--
- How they took their places,
- Hopping, skipping, unafraid,
- Darting, rioting about,
- Squealing, laughing, shouting out!
- How, beyond a single doubt,
- In my own feet sprang the ardour
- (Even now the motion lingers)
- To be joining in their paces!
- Round and round the handle went,--
- Round their hearts went harder;--
- Apollo urged the happy rout
- And beamed, ten times as well content
- With every son and daughter
- As though their little hands had lent
- The gentleman his quarter.--
- (You would not guess--nor I deny--
- That that same gentleman was I!)
- No gentleman may watch a god
- With proper happiness therefrom;
- So street by street again I trod
- The way that we had come.
- He had not seen me following
- And yet I think he knew;
- For still, the less I heard of it,
- The more his music grew:
- As if he made a bird of it
- To sing the distance through....
- And, O Apollo, how I thrilled,
- You liquid-eyed rapscallion,
- With every twig and twist of Spring,
- Because your music rose and filled
- Each leafy vein with dew,--
- With melody of olden sleigh-bells,
- Over-the-sea-and-far-away-bells,
- And the heart of an Italian,
- And the tinkling cup and spoon,--
- Such a melody as star-fish,
- And all fish that really are fish,
- In a gay remote battalion
- Play at midnight to the moon!
-
-
-
-
- ONE OF THE CROWD
-
- Oh I longed, when I went in the woods today,
- To see the fauns come out and play,
- To see a satyr try to seize
- A dryad's waist--and bark his knees,
- To see a river-nymph waylay
- And shock him with a dash of spray!--
- And I teased, like a child, by brooks and trees:
- "Come back again! We need you! _Please!_
- Come back and teach us how to play!"
- But nowhere in the woods were they.
-
- I found, when I went in the town today,
- A thousand people on their way
- To offices and factories--
- And never a single soul at ease;
- And how could I help but sigh and say:
- "What can it profit them, how can it pay
- To strain the eye with rivalries
- Until the dark is all it sees?--
- Or to manage, more than others may,
- To store the wasted gain away?"
-
- But one of the crowd looked up today,
- With pointed brows. I heard him say:
- "Out of the meadows and rivers and trees
- We fauns and many companies
- Of nymphs have come. And we are these,
- These people, each upon his way,
- Looking for work, working for pay--
- And paying all our energies
- To earn true love ... For, seeming gay,
- "Once we were sad," I heard him say.
-
-
-
-
- NEIGHBORS
-
- Neighbors are not neighborly
- Who close the windows tight,--
- Nor those who fix a peeping eye
- For finding things not right.
-
- Let me have faith, is what I pray,
- And let my faith be strong!--
- But who am I, is what I say,
- To think my neighbor wrong?
-
- And though my neighbor may deny
- That faith could be so slight,
- May call me wrong, yet who am I
- To think my neighbor right?
-
- Perhaps we wisely by and by
- May learn it of each other,
- That he is right and so am I--
- And save a lot of bother.
-
-
-
-
- THE HILLS OF SAN JOSÉ
-
- I look at the long low hills of golden brown
- With their little wooded canyons
- And at the haze hanging its beauty in the air--
- And I am caught and held, as a ball is caught and held by a player
- Who leaps for it in the field.
- And as the heart in the breast of the player beats toward the ball,
- And as the heart beats in the breast of him who shouts
- toward the player,
- So my heart beats toward the hills that are playing ball with the sun,
- That leap to catch the sun
- And to throw it to other hills--
- Or to me!
-
-
-
-
- GRIEVE NOT FOR BEAUTY
-
- Grieve not for the invisible, transported brow
- On which like leaves the dark hair grew,
- Nor for the lips of laughter that are now
- Laughing inaudibly in sun and dew,
- Nor for those limbs that, fallen low
- And seeming faint and slow,
- Shall yet pursue
- More ways of swiftness than the swallow dips
- Among ... and find more winds than ever blew
- The straining sails of unimpeded ships!
- Mourn not!--yield only happy tears
- To deeper beauty than appears!
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTIC
-
- By seven vineyards on one hill
- We walked. The native wine
- In clusters grew beside us two,
- For your lips and for mine,
-
- When, "Hark!" you said,--"Was that a bell
- Or a bubbling spring we heard?"
- But I was wise and closed my eyes
- And listened to a bird;
-
- For as summer leaves are bent and shake
- With singers passing through,
- So moves in me continually
- The wingèd breath of you.
-
- You tasted from a single vine
- And took from that your fill--
- But I inclined to every kind,
- All seven on one hill.
-
-
-
-
- PASSING NEAR
-
- I had not till today been sure,
- But now I know:
- Dead men and women come and go
- Under the pure
- Sequestering snow.
-
- And under the autumnal fern
- And carmine bush,
- Under the shadow of a thrush,
- They move and learn;
- And in the rush
-
- Of all the mountain-brooks that wake
- With upward fling
- To brush and break the loosening cling
- Of ice, they shake
- The air with Spring!
-
- I had not till today been sure,
- But now I know:
- Dead youths and maidens come and go
- Below the lure
- And undertow
-
- Of cities, under every street
- Of empty stress,
- Or heart of an adulteress:
- Each loud retreat
- Of lovelessness.
-
- For only by the stir we make
- In passing near
- Are we confused, and cannot hear
- The ways they take
- Certain and clear.
-
- Today I happened in a place
- Where all around
- Was silence; until, underground,
- I heard a pace,
- A happy sound.
-
- And people whom I there could see
- Tenderly smiled,
- While under a wood of silent, wild
- Antiquity
- Wandered a child,
-
- Leading his mother by the hand,
- Happy and slow,
- Teaching his mother where to go
- Under the snow.
- Not even now I understand--
- I only know.
-
- _Witter Bynner_
-
-
-
-
- REVIEWS AND COMMENTS
-
- _The Story of a Round House and other Poems_,
-
- by JOHN MASEFIELD (Macmillan)
-
-Not long ago I chanced to see upon a well-known page, reflective and
-sincere, these words: "The invisible root out of which the poetry
-deepest in and dearest to humanity grows is Friendship."
-
-A recent volume may well serve as a distinguished illustration of the
-saying's truth. Few persons, I think, will read _The Story of a Round
-House and other Poems_ without a sense that the invisible root of its
-deep poetry is that fine power which Whitman called Friendship, the
-genius of sympathetic imagination.
-
-This is the force that knits the sinews of the chief, the life-size
-figure of the book. _Dauber_ is the tale of a man and his work. It is
-the story of an artist in the making. The heroic struggles of an English
-farmer's son of twenty-one to become a painter of ships and the ocean,
-form the drama of the poem. The scene is a voyage around the Horn, the
-ship-board and round-house of a clipper where Dauber spends cruel,
-grinding months of effort to become an able seaman on the road of his
-further purpose--
-
- Of beating thought into the perfect line.
-
-
-His fall from the yard-arm toward the close of the conquered horrors of
-his testing voyage; the catastrophe of his death after
-
- He had emerged out of the iron time
- And knew that he could compass his life's scheme--
-
-these make the end of the tragedy.
-
-Tragedy? Yes. But a tragedy of the same temper as that of the great
-Dane, where the pursuit of a mortal soul's intention is more, far more,
-than his mortality. Unseen forever by the world, part of its unheard
-melodies, are all the lines and colors of the Dauber's dreaming. At
-Elsinore rules Fortinbras, the foe: the fight is lost; the fighter has
-been slain. These are great issues, hard, unjust and wrong. But the
-greatest issue of all is that men should be made of the stuff of
-magnificence. You close the poem, you listen to the last speech of its
-deep sea-music, thinking: Here is death, the real death we all must die;
-here is futility, and who knows what we all are here for? But here is
-glory.
-
-Only less powerful than the impression of the strain of Dauber's
-endeavor, is the impression of its loneliness. The sneers of the
-reefers, their practical jokes, the dulness, the arrogance, the smugness
-and endless misunderstanding, the meanness of man on the apprentice
-journey, has a keener tooth than the storm-wind.
-
-The verities of _Dauber_ are built out of veracities. The reader must
-face the hardship of labor at sea. He must face the squalors, the
-miseries. If he cannot find poetry in a presentment of the cruel,
-dizzying reality of a sailor's night on a yard-arm in the icy gale off
-Cape Horn, then he will not perhaps feel in the poem the uncompromising
-raciness inherent in romances that are true. For the whole manner of
-this sea-piece is that of bold, free-hand drawing of things as they are.
-Its final event presents a genuinely epic subject from our contemporary
-history--the catastrophic character of common labor, and one of its
-multitudinous fatalities.
-
-Epic rather than lyric, the verse of _Dauber_ has an admirable and
-refreshing variety in its movement. It speaks the high, wild cry of an
-eagle:
-
- --the eagle's song
- Screamed from her desolate screes and splintered scars.
-
-It speaks thick-crowding discomforts on the mast with a slapping, frozen
-sail:
-
- His sheath-knife flashed,
- His numb hand hacked with it to clear the strips;
- The flying ice was salt upon his lips.
- The ice was caking on his oil-skins; cold
- Struck to his marrow, beat upon him strong,
- The chill palsied his blood, it made him old;
- The frosty scatter of death was being flung.
-
-Some of the lines, such as--
-
- The blackness crunched all memory of the sun--
-
-have the hard ring, the thick-packed consonantal beauty of stirring
-Greek.
-
-_Dauber_ will have value to American poetry-readers if only from its
-mere power of revealing that poetry is not alone the mellow lin-lan-lone
-of evening bells, though it be that also, but may have music of
-innumerable kinds.
-
-_Biography_, the next poem in the book, sings with a different voice and
-sees from a different point of view, the difficulty of re-creating in
-expression--here expression through words, not through colors--
-
- This many-pictured world of many passions.
-
-_Biography_, too, rises from the invisible root of friendship and bears
-with wonderfully vivid arborescence an appreciative tale of the fine
-contribution of different companionships to a life.
-
-Among the two-score shorter lyrics of the collection are songs of the
-sea or of the country-side; chants of coast-town bells and ports, marine
-ballads, and love-poems. This is, however, the loosest entitling of
-their kinds; nothing but the work itself in its entirety, can ever tell
-the actual subject of any true poem. Of these kinds it is not to the
-marine ballads that one turns back again and again, not to the story of
-"Spanish Waters" nor to any of the jingling-gold, the clinking-glass,
-the treasure-wreck verses of the book. Their tunes are spirited, but not
-a tenth as spirited as those of "The Pirates of Penzance." Indeed, to
-the conventionally villainous among fictive sea-faring persons of song,
-Gilbert and Sullivan seem to have done something that cannot now ever be
-undone.
-
-The poems in the volume one does turn back to again and again are those
-with the great singing tones, that pour forth with originality, with
-inexpressible free grace and native power. Again and again you will read
-_A Creed_, _C. L. M._, _Born for Nought Else_, _Roadways_, _Truth_, _The
-Wild Duck_, _Her Heart_, and--
-
- But at the falling of the tide
- The golden birds still sing and gleam.
- The Atlanteans have not died,
- Immortal things still give us dream.
-
- The dream that fires man's heart to make,
- To build, to do, to sing or say
- A beauty Death can never take,
- An Adam from the crumbled clay.
-
-Wonderful, wonderful it is that in the hearing of our own generation,
-one great voice after another has called and sung to the world from the
-midst of the sea-mists of England. From the poetry of Swinburne, of
-Rudyard Kipling, of John Masefield immortal things still give us dream.
-
-Among the poems of this new book, more than one appear as incarnations
-of the beauty Death can never take. Of these, perhaps, none is more
-characteristic of the poet, nor will any more fittingly evince his
-volume's quality than _Truth_.
-
- Man with his burning soul
- Has but an hour of breath
- To build a ship of Truth
- In which his soul may sail,
- Sail on the sea of death.
- For death takes toll
- Of beauty, courage, youth,
- Of all but Truth.
-
- Life's city ways are dark,
- Men mutter by, the wells
- Of the great waters moan.
- O death, O sea, O tide,
- The waters moan like bells.
- No light, no mark,
- The soul goes out alone
- On seas unknown.
-
- Stripped of all purple robes,
- Stripped of all golden lies,
- I will not be afraid.
- Truth will preserve through death;
- Perhaps the stars will rise,
- The stars like globes.
- The ship my striving made
- May see night fade.
-
- _Edith Wyatt_
-
- _Présences_, par P. J. Jouve: Georges Crès, Paris.
-
-I take pleasure in welcoming, in Monsieur Jouve, a contemporary. He
-writes the new jargon and I have not the slightest doubt that he is a
-poet.
-
-Whatever may be said against automobiles and aeroplanes and the
-modernist way of speaking of them, and however much one may argue that
-this new sort of work is mannered, and that its style will pass, still
-it is indisputable that the vitality of the time exists in such work.
-
-Here is a book that you can read without being dead sure of what you
-will find on the next page, or at the end of the next couplet. There is
-no doubt that M. Jouve sees with his own eyes and feels with his own
-nerves. Nothing is more boresome than an author who pretends to know
-less about things than he really does know. It is this silly sort of
-false naïveté that rots the weaker productions of Maeterlinck. Thank
-heaven the advance guard is in process of escaping it.
-
-It is possible that the new style will grow as weak in the future in the
-hands of imitators as has, by now, the Victorian manner, but for the
-nonce it is refreshing. Work of this sort can not be produced by the
-yard in stolid imitation of dead authors.
-
-I defy anyone to read it without being forced to think, immediately,
-about life and the nature of things. I have perused this volume twice,
-and I have enjoyed it.
-
- _E. P._
-
-
-
-
- THE POETRY SOCIETY OF AMERICA
-
-The Poetry Society of America, organized in 1910, was a natural
-response, perhaps at the time unconscious, to the reawakened interest in
-poetry, now so widely apparent.
-
-There seemed no reason why poetry, one of the noblest of the arts,
-should not take to itself visible organization as well as its sister
-arts of music and painting, since it was certain that such organization
-contributed much to their advancement and appreciation. Poetry alone
-remained an isolated art, save through the doubtful value of coteries
-dedicated to the study of some particular poet. In the sense of
-fellowship, of the creative sympathy of contact, of the keener
-appreciation which must follow the wider knowledge of an art, poetry
-stood alone, detached from these avenues open from the beginning to
-other arts.
-
-The Society was therefore founded, with a charter membership of about
-fifty persons, which included many of the poets doing significant work
-to-day, together with critics and representatives of other arts, the
-purpose from the outset being to include the appreciators of poetry as
-well as its producers. It has grown to nearly two hundred members,
-distributed from coast to coast, and eventually it will probably resolve
-itself into branch societies, with the chief organization, as now, in
-New York. Such societies should have a wide influence upon their
-respective communities in stimulating interest in the work of living
-poets, to which the Poetry Society as an organization is chiefly
-addressed.
-
-Since the passing of the nineteenth-century poets, the art of poetry,
-like the art of painting, has taken on new forms and become the vehicle
-of a new message. The poet of to-day speaks through so different a
-medium, his themes are so diverse from those of the elder generation,
-that he cannot hope to find his public in their lingering audience. He
-must look to his contemporaries, to those touched by the same issues and
-responsive to the same ideals. To aid in creating this atmosphere for
-the poet, to be the nucleus of a movement for the wider knowledge of
-contemporaneous verse, the Poetry Society of America took form and in
-its brief period has, I think, justified the idea of its promoters.
-
-Its meetings are held once a month at the National Arts Club in New
-York, with which it is affiliated, and are given chiefly to the reading
-and discussion of poetry, both of recently published volumes and of
-poems submitted anonymously. This feature has proved perhaps the most
-attractive, and while criticism based upon one hearing of a poem cannot
-be taken as authoritative, it is often constructive and valuable.
-
-The Society is assembling an interesting collection of books, a
-twentieth century library of American poetry. Aside from its own
-collection, it is taking steps to promote a wider representation of
-modern poets in public libraries.
-
- _Jessie B. Rittenhouse._
-
-
-
-
- NOTES
-
- "THAT MASS OF DOLTS"
-
-Mr. Pound's phrase in his poem _To Whistler, American_, has aroused more
-or less resentment, some of it quite emphatic. Apparently we of "these
-states" have no longing for an Ezekiel; our prophets must give us, not
-the bitter medicine which possibly we need, but the sugar-and-water of
-compliment which we can always swallow with a smile.
-
-Perhaps we should examine our consciences a little, or at least step
-down from our self-erected pedestals long enough to listen to this
-accusation. What has become of our boasted sense of humor if we cannot
-let our young poets rail, or our sense of justice if we cannot cease
-smiling and weigh their words? In certain respects we Americans are a
-"mass of dolts," and in none more than our huge stolid, fundamental
-indifference to our own art. Mr. Pound is not the first American poet
-who has stood with his back to the wall, and struck out blindly with
-clenched fists in a fierce impulse to fight. Nor is he the first whom
-we, by this same stolid and indifferent rejection, have forced into
-exile and rebellion.
-
-After a young poet has applied in vain to the whole list of American
-publishers and editors, and learned that even though he were a genius of
-the first magnitude they could not risk money or space on his poetry
-because the public would not buy it--after a series of such rebuffs our
-young aspirant goes abroad and succeeds in interesting some London
-publisher. The English critics, let us say, praise his book, and echoes
-of their praises reach our astonished ears. Thereupon the poet in exile
-finds that he has thus gained a public, and editorial suffrages, in
-America, and that the most effective way of increasing that public and
-those suffrages is, to remain in exile and guard his foreign reputation.
-
-Meantime it is quite probable that a serious poet will have grown weary
-of such open and unashamed colonialism, that he will prefer to stay
-among people who are seriously interested in aesthetics and who know
-their own minds. For nothing is so hard to meet as indifference; blows
-are easier for a live man to endure than neglect. The poet who cries out
-his message against a stone wall will be silenced in the end, even
-though he bear a seraph's wand and speak with the tongues of angels.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One phase of our colonialism in art, the singing of opera in foreign
-languages, has been persistently opposed by Eleanor E. Freer, who has
-set to music of rare distinction many of the finest English lyrics, old
-and new. She writes:
-
- In the Basilikon Doron, King James I of
- England writes to his son: "And I would, also,
- advise you to write in your own language; for
- there is nothing left to be said in Greek and
- Latin already--and besides that, it best becometh
- a King to purify and make famous his own tongue."
- Might we add, it best becometh the kings of art
- in America and England to sing their own language
- and thus aid in the progress of their national
- music and poetry?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Messrs. Arthur Davison Ficke and Witter Bynner belong to the younger
-group of American poets, both having been born since 1880, the former in
-Davenport, Iowa, and the latter in Brooklyn. Both were graduated from
-Harvard early in this century, after which Mr. Ficke was admitted to the
-bar, and Mr. Bynner became assistant editor of McClure's.
-
-Mr. Ficke has published _From the Isles_, _The Happy Princess_, _The
-Earth Passion_ and _The Breaking of Bonds_; also _Mr. Faust_, a dramatic
-poem, and a series of poems called _Twelve Japanese Painters_, will be
-published this year. Mr. Bynner has published _An Ode to Harvard and
-Other Poems_, and _An Immigrant_. His play, _His Father's House_, was
-recently produced in California.
-
-The March number of _Poetry_ will contain _The Silent House_, a one-act
-play, by Agnes Lee, and poems by Alice Meynell, Alfred Noyes, Fannie
-Stearns Davis and others.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS RECEIVED
-
- _Bugle Notes of Courage and Love_, by Althea A. Ogden.
- Unity Publishing Co.
- _Altar-Side Messages_, by Evelyn H. Walker. Unity Publishing Co.
- _Dream Harbor_, by J. W. Vallandingham. Privately printed.
- _Hopeful Thoughts_, by Eleanor Hope. Franklin Hudson Publishing Co.
- _The Youth Replies_, by Louis How. Sherman, French & Co.
- _Songs of the Love Unending_, A Sonnet Sequence,
- by Kendall Banning. Brothers of the Book.
- _William Allingham_, The Golden Treasury Series. The Macmillan Co.
- _Idylls Beside the Strand_, by Franklin F. Phillips.
- Sherman, French & Co.
- _The Minstrel with the Self-Same Song_, by Charles A. Fisher.
- The Eichelberger Book Co.
- _The Wife of Potiphar_, with Other Poems, by Harvey M. Watts.
- The John C. Winston Co.
- _A Scroll of Seers_, A Wall Anthology. Peter Paul & Son.
-
-
-
-
- Poetry VOL. I
- A Magazine of Verse NO. 6
-
-
- MARCH, 1913
-
-
-
-
- THE SILENT HOUSE
-
- _David._ [_Re-reading a letter._] How may a letter bring
- such darkness down--
- With this: "She dallied with your love too long!"
- And this: "It is the word of all the town:
- "Corinna has no soul, for all her song!"
-
- _Martha._ [_Entering with flowers._] O sir, I bring you
- flaming bergamot,
- And early asters, for your window-sill.
- And where I found them? Now you'll guess it not.
- I visited the garden on the hill,
- And gathered till my arms could hold no more.
-
- _David._ The garden of the little silent house!
-
- _Martha._ The city lured her from her viny door.
- But see, the flowers have stayed!
-
- _David._ They seem to drowse
- And dream of one they lost, a paler-blown.
- How fares the house upon the hill?
-
- _Martha._ The blinds
- Are fast of late, and all are intergrown
- With weedy havoc tossed by searching winds.
-
- _David._ How somber suddenly the sky! A shower
- Is in the air.
-
- _Martha._ I'll light the lamps.
-
- _David._ Not yet.
- Leave me the beauty of the twilit hour.
-
- _Martha._ Hear the wind rising! How the moorings fret!
- More than a shower is on its way through space.
- I would not be aboard of yonder barque.
- [_She goes out._]
- _David._ Corinna! Now may I recall her face.
- It is my light to think by in the dark.
- Yes, all my years of study, all the will
- Tenacious to achieve, the tempered strife,
- The victories attained through patient skill,
- Lie at the door of one dear human life.
- And yet ... the letter ...
- Often have I read
- How love relumes the flowers and the trees.
- True! For my world is newly garmented:
- Rewards seem slight, and slighter penalties.
- Daily companionship is more and more.
- To make one little good more viable,
- To lift one load, is worth the heart's outpour.
- And she--she has made all things wonderful.
- And yet ... the letter ...
- O to break a spell
- Wherein the stars are crumbling unto dust!
- There never was a hope--I know it well,
- And struggle on, and love because I must.
- Never a hope? Shall ever any scheme,
- Her silence, or alarm of written word,
- Or voiced asseveration, shake my dream?
- She loves me! By love's anguish, I have heard!
- We two from our soul-towers across a vale
- Are calling each to each, alert, aware.
- Shall one of us one day the other hail,
- And no reply be borne upon the air?
- Corinna, come to light my heart's dim place!
- O come to me, Belovèd and Besought,
- O'er grief, o'er gladness,--even o'er death apace,--
- For I could greet your phantom, so it brought
- Love's own reality!...
- A song of hers
- Seems striving hither, a faint villanelle
- Half smothered by the gale's mad roisterers.
- She used to sing it in the bracken dell.
- Here is the rain against the window beating
- In heavy drops that presage wilder storm.
- The lake is lost within a lurid sheeting;
- The house upon the hill has changed its form.
- The melancholy pine-trees weep in rocking.
- And what's that clamor at the outer door?
- Martha! O Martha! Somebody is knocking! [_Calling._]
-
- _Martha._ [_Re-entering._] You hear the rills that down
- the gutters roar.
-
- _David._ And are you deaf? The door--go open it!
- This is no night to leave a man outside!
-
- _Martha._ [_Muttering and going toward the door._] And
- is it I am growing deaf a bit,
- And blind a bit, with other ill-betide!
- Well, I can see to thread a needle still,
- And I can hear the ticking of the clock,
- And I can fetch a basket from the mill.
- But hallow me if ever I heard knock!
- [_She throws the door open. David starts up and rushes
- forward with outstretched arms._]
- _David._ Corinna! You, Corinna! Drenched and cold!
- At last, at last! But how in all the rain!
- Martha!
- [_Martha stands motionless, unseeing._]
- Good Martha, you are growing old!
- Draw fast the shades--shut out the hurricane.
- Here, take the dripping cloak from out the room;
- Bring cordial from the purple damson pressed,
- And light the lamps, the candles--fire the gloom.
- Why stand you gaping? See you not the guest?
-
- _Martha._ I opened wide the door unto the storm.
- But never heard I step upon the sill.
- All the black night let in no living form.
- I see no guest. Look hard as e'er I will,
- I see none here but you and my poor self.
-
- _David._ The room that was my mother's room prepare.
- Spread out warm garments on the oaken shelf--
- Her gown, the little shawl she used to wear.
- [_Martha, wide-eyed, bewildered, lights the lamps and
- candles and goes out, raising her hands._]
- _Corinna._ The moments I may tarry fade and press.
- Something impelled me hither, some clear flame.
- They said I had no soul! O David, yes,
- They said I had no soul! And so I came.
- I have been singing, singing, all the way,
- O, singing ever since the darkness grew
- And I grew chill and followed the small ray.
- Lean close, and let my longing rest in you!
-
- _David._ Dear balm of light, I never thought to win
- From out the pallid hours for ever throbbing!
- How did you know the sorrow I was in?
-
- _Corinna._ A flock of leaves came sobbing, sobbing, sobbing.
-
- _David._ O, now I hold you fast, my love, my own,
- My festival upleaping from an ember!
- But, timid child, how could you come alone
- Across the pathless woods?
-
- _Corinna._ Do you remember?--
- Over the summer lake one starry, stilly,
- Sweet night, when you and I were drifting, dear,
- I frighted at the shadow of a lily!
- It is all strange, but now I have no fear.
-
- _David._ Your eyes are weary, drooping. Sleep, then, sleep.
-
- _Corinna._ I must go over to the silent house.
-
- _David._ The dwelling stands forsaken up the steep,
- With never beast nor human to arouse!
-
- _Corinna._ Soon will the windows gleam with many lamps.
- Hark!--heavy wheels are toiling to the north.
-
- _David._ I will go with you where the darkness ramps.
-
- _Corinna._ Strong arms are in the storm to bear me forth.
-
- _David._ Not in these garments dripping as the trees!
- Not in these clinging shadows!
-
- _Corinna._ Ah, good-night!
- Dear love, dear love, I must go forth in these.
- Tomorrow you shall see me all in white.
-
- _Agnes Lee_
-
-
-
-
- THE ORACLE
-
- (_To the New Telescope on Mt. Wilson_)
-
- Of old sat one at Delphi brooding o'er
- The fretful earth;--ironically wise,
- Veiling her prescience in dark replies,
- She shaped the fates of men with mystic lore.
- The oracle is silent now. No more
- Fate parts the cloud that round omniscience lies.
- But thou, O Seer, dost tease our wild surmise
- With portents passing all the wealth of yore.
- For thou shalt spell the very thoughts of God!
- Before thy boundless vision, world on world
- Shall multiply in glit'ring sequence far;
- And all the little ways which men have trod
- Shall be as nothing by His star-dust whirled
- Into the making of a single star.
-
-
-
-
- A GARGOYLE ON NOTRE DAME
-
- With angel's wings and brutish-human form,
- Weathered with centuries of sun and storm,
- He crouches yonder on the gallery wall,
- Monstrous, superb, indifferent, cynical:
- And all the pulse of Paris cannot stir
- Her one immutable philosopher.
-
- _Edmund Kemper Broadus_
-
-
-
-
- SANTA BARBARA BEACH
-
- Now while the sunset offers,
- Shall we not take our own:
- The gems, the blazing coffers,
- The seas, the shores, the throne?
-
- The sky-ships, radiant-masted,
- Move out, bear low our way.
- Oh, Life was dark while it lasted,
- Now for enduring day.
-
- Now with the world far under,
- To draw up drowning men
- And show them lands of wonder
- Where they may build again.
-
- There earthly sorrow falters,
- There longing has its wage;
- There gleam the ivory altars
- Of our lost pilgrimage.
-
- --Swift flame--then shipwrecks only
- Beach in the ruined light;
- Above them reach up lonely
- The headlands of the night.
-
- A hurt bird cries and flutters
- Her dabbled breast of brown;
- The western wall unshutters
- To fling one last rose down.
-
- A rose, a wild light after--
- And life calls through the years,
- "Who dreams my fountains' laughter
- Shall feed my wells with tears."
-
- _Ridgely Torrence_
-
-
-
-
- MATERNITY
-
- One wept, whose only babe was dead,
- New-born ten years ago.
- "Weep not; he is in bliss," they said.
- She answered, "Even so.
-
- "Ten years ago was born in pain
- A child, not now forlorn;
- But oh, ten years ago in vain
- A mother, a mother was born."
-
- _Alice Meynell_
-
-
-
-
- PROFITS
-
- Yes, stars were with me formerly.
- (I also knew the wind and sea;
- And hill-tops had my feet by heart.
- Their shaggéd heights would sting and start
- When I came leaping on their backs.
- I knew the earth's queer crooked cracks,
- Where hidden waters weave a low
- And druid chant of joy and woe.)
-
- But stars were with me most of all.
- I heard them flame and break and fall.
- Their excellent array, their free
- Encounter with Eternity,
- I learned. And it was good to know
- That where God walked, I too might go.
-
- Now, all these things are passed. For I
- Grow very old and glad to die.
- What did they profit me, say you,
- These distant bloodless things I knew?
- Profit? What profit hath the sea
- Of her deep-throated threnody?
- What profit hath the sun, who stands
- Staring on space with idle hands?
- And what should God Himself acquire
- From all the aeons' blood and fire?
-
- My profit is as theirs: to be
- Made proof against mortality:
- To know that I have companied
- With all that shines and lives, amid
- So much the years sift through their hands,
- Most mortal, windy, worthless sands.
-
- This day I have great peace. With me
- Shall stars abide eternally!
-
-
-
-
- TWO SONGS OF CONN THE FOOL
-
- MOON FOLLY
-
- I will go up the mountain after the Moon:
- She is caught in a dead fir-tree.
- Like a great pale apple of silver and pearl,
- Like a great pale apple is she.
-
- I will leap and will clasp her in quick cold hands
- And carry her home in my sack.
- I will set her down safe on the oaken bench
- That stands at the chimney-back.
- And then I will sit by the fire all night,
- And sit by the fire all day.
- I will gnaw at the Moon to my heart's delight,
- Till I gnaw her slowly away.
-
- And while I grow mad with the Moon's cold taste,
- The World may beat on my door,
- Crying "Come out!" and crying "Make haste!
- And give us the Moon once more!"
- But I will not answer them ever at all;
- I will laugh, as I count and hide
- The great black beautiful seeds of the Moon
- In a flower-pot deep and wide.
- Then I will lie down and go fast asleep,
- Drunken with flame and aswoon.
- But the seeds will sprout, and the seeds will leap:
- The subtle swift seeds of the Moon.
-
- And some day, all of the world that beats
- And cries at my door, shall see
- A thousand moon-leaves sprout from my thatch
- On a marvellous white Moon-tree!
- Then each shall have moons to his heart's desire:
- Apples of silver and pearl:
- Apples of orange and copper fire,
- Setting his five wits aswirl.
- And then they will thank me, who mock me now:
- "Wanting the Moon is he!"
- Oh, I'm off to the mountain after the Moon,
- Ere she falls from the dead fir-tree!
-
-
-
-
- WARNING
-
- You must do nothing false
- Or cruel-lipped or low;
- For I am Conn the Fool,
- And Conn the Fool will know.
-
- I went by the door
- When Patrick Joyce looked out.
- He did not wish for me
- Or any one about.
-
- He thought I did not see
- The fat bag in his hand.
- But Conn heard clinking gold,
- And Conn could understand.
-
- I went by the door
- Where Michael Kane lay dead.
- I saw his Mary tie
- A red shawl round her head.
-
- I saw a dark man lean
- Across her garden-wall.
- They did not know that Conn
- Walked by at late dusk-fall.
-
- You must not scold or lie,
- Or hate or steal or kill,
- For I shall tell the wind
- That leaps along the hill;
-
- And he will tell the stars
- That sing and never lie;
- And they will shout your sin
- In God's face, bye and bye.
-
- And God will not forget,
- For all He loves you so.--
- He made me Conn the Fool,
- And bade me always know!
-
-
-
-
- STORM DANCE
-
- The water came up with a roar,
- The water came up to me.
- There was a wave with tusks of a boar,
- And he gnashed his tusks on me.
- I leaned, I leapt, and was free.
- He snarled and struggled and fled.
- Foaming and blind he turned to the sea,
- And his brothers trampled him dead.
-
- The water came up with a shriek,
- The water came up to me.
- There was a wave with a woman's cheek,
- And she shuddered and clung to me.
- I crouched, I cast her away.
- She cursed me and swooned and died.
- Her green hair tangled like sea-weed lay
- Tossed out on the tearing tide.
-
- Challenge and chase me, Storm!
- Harry and hate me, Wave!
- Wild as the wind is my heart, but warm,
- Sudden and merry and brave.
- For the water comes up with a shout,
- The water comes up to me.
- And oh, but I laugh, laugh out!
- And the great gulls laugh, and the sea!
-
- _Fannie Stearns Davis_
-
-
-
-
- DIRGE FOR A DEAD ADMIRAL
-
- What woman but would be
- Rid of thy mastery,
- Thou bully of the sea?
-
- No more the gray sea's breast
- Need answer thy behest;
- No more thy sullen gun
- Shall greet the risen sun,
- Where the great dreadnaughts ride
- The breast of thy cold bride;
- Thou hast fulfilled thy fate:
- Need trade no more with hate!
-
- Nay, but I celebrate
- Thy long-to-be-lorn mate,
- Thy mistress and her state,
- Thy lady sea's lorn state.
- She hath her empery
- Not only over thee
- But o'er _our_ misery.
-
- Hark, doth she mourn for thee?
-
- Nay, what hath she of grief?
- She knoweth not the leaf
- That on her bosom falls,
- Thou last of admirals!
-
- Under the winter moon
- She singeth that fierce tune,
- Her immemorial rune;
- Knoweth not, late or soon,
- Careth not
- Any jot
- For her withholden boon
- To all thy spirit's pleas
- For infinite surcease!
-
- If, on this winter night,
- O thou great admiral
- That in thy sombre pall
- Liest upon the land,
- Thy soul should take his flight
- And leave the frozen sand,
- And yearn above the surge,
- Think'st thou that any dirge,
- Grief inarticulate
- From thy bereaved mate,
- Would answer to thy soul
- Where the waste waters roll?
-
- Nay, thou hast need of none!
- Thy long love-watch is done!
-
-
-
-
- SPRING-SONG
-
- Early some morning in May-time
- I shall awaken
- When the breeze blowing in at the window
- Shall bathe me
- With the delicate scents
- Of the blossoms of apples,
- Filling my room with their coolness
- And beauty and fragrance--
- As of old, as of old,
- When your spirit dwelt with me,
- My heart shall be pure
- As the heart that you gave me.
-
-
-
-
- A SWEETHEART: THOMPSON STREET
-
- Queen of all streets, Fifth Avenue
- Stretches her slender limbs
- From the great Arch of Triumph, on,--
- On, where the distance dims
-
- The splendors of her jewelled robes,
- Her granite draperies;
- The magic, sunset-smitten walls
- That veil her marble knees;
-
- For ninety squares she lies a queen,
- Superb, bare, unashamed,
- Yielding her beauty scornfully
- To worshippers unnamed.
-
- But at her feet her sister glows,
- A daughter of the South:
- Squalid, immeasurably mean,--
- But oh! her hot, sweet mouth!
-
- My Thompson Street! a Tuscan girl,
- Hot with life's wildest blood;
- Her black shawl on her black, black hair,
- Her brown feet stained with mud;
-
- A scarlet blossom at her lips,
- A new babe at her breast;
- A singer at a wine-shop door,
- (Her lover unconfessed).
-
- Listen! a hurdy-gurdy plays--
- Now alien melodies:
- She smiles, she cannot quite forget
- The mother over-seas.
-
- But she no less is mine alone,
- Mine, mine!... Who may I be?
- Have _I_ betrayed her from her home?
- I am called Liberty!
-
-
-
-
- THE OFF-SHORE WIND
-
- The skies are sown with stars tonight,
- The sea is sown with light,
- The hollows of the heaving floor
- Gleam deep with light once more,
- The racing ebb-tide flashes past
- And seeks the vacant vast,
- A wind steals from a world asleep
- And walks the restless deep.
-
- It walks the deep in ecstasy,
- It lives! and loves to free
- Its spirit to the silent night,
- And breathes deep in delight;
- Above the sea that knows no coast,
- Beneath the starry host,
- The wind walks like the souls of men
- Who walk with God again.
-
- The souls of men who walk with God!
- With faith's firm sandals shod,
- A lambent passion, body-free,
- Fain for eternity!
- O spirit born of human sighs,
- Set loose 'twixt sea and skies,
- Be thou an Angel of mankind,
- Thou night-unfettered wind!
-
- Bear thou the dreams of weary earth,
- Bear thou Tomorrow's birth,
- Take all our longings up to Him
- Until His stars grow dim;
- A moving anchorage of prayer,
- Thou cool and healing air,
- Heading off-shore till shoreless dawn
- Breaks fair and night is gone.
-
- _Samuel McCoy_
-
-
-
-
- "THE HILL-FLOWERS"
-
- "_I will lift up mine eyes to the hills._"
-
- I
-
- _Moving through the dew, moving through the dew,
- Ere I waken in the city--Life, thy dawn makes all things new!
- And up a fir-clad glen, far from all the haunts of men,
- Up a glen among the mountains, oh my feet are wings again!_
-
- Moving through the dew, moving through the dew,
- O mountains of my boyhood, I come again to you,
- By the little path I know, with the sea far below,
- And above, the great cloud-galleons with their sails of rose and snow;
-
- As of old, when all was young, and the earth a song unsung
- And the heather through the crimson dawn its Eden incense flung
- From the mountain-heights of joy, for a careless-hearted boy,
- And the lavrocks rose like fountain sprays of bliss
- that ne'er could cloy,
-
- From their little beds of bloom, from the golden gorse and broom,
- With a song to God the Giver, o'er that waste of wild perfume;
- Blowing from height to height, in a glory of great light,
- While the cottage-clustered valleys held the lilac last of night,
-
- So, when dawn is in the skies, in a dream, a dream, I rise,
- And I follow my lost boyhood to the heights of Paradise.
- Life, thy dawn makes all things new! Hills of Youth, I come to you,
- Moving through the dew, moving through the dew.
-
- II
-
- Moving through the dew, moving through the dew,
- Floats a brother's face to meet me! Is it you? Is it you?
- For the night I leave behind keeps these dazzled eyes still blind!
- But oh, the little hill-flowers, their scent is wise and kind;
-
- And I shall not lose the way from the darkness to the day,
- While dust can cling as their scent clings to memory for aye;
- And the least link in the chain can recall the whole again,
- And heaven at last resume its far-flung harvests, grain by grain.
-
- To the hill-flowers clings my dust, and tho' eyeless Death may thrust
- All else into the darkness, in their heaven I put my trust;
- And a dawn shall bid me climb to the little spread of thyme
- Where first I heard the ripple of the fountain-heads of rhyme.
-
- And a fir-wood that I know, from dawn to sunset-glow,
- Shall whisper to a lonely sea, that swings far, far below.
- Death, thy dawn makes all things new. Hills of Youth, I come to you,
- Moving through the dew, moving through the dew.
-
- _Alfred Noyes_
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIAL COMMENT
-
- THE SERVIAN EPIC
-
-Poetry as the inspiration of the Balkan war was the theme of a recent
-talk given by Madame Slavko Grouitch before the Friday Club in Chicago,
-and elsewhere, during her brief sojourn in her native country. Madame
-Grouitch was a student at the American School of Archaeology in Athens
-when she married the young Servian diplomat who now represents his
-nation in London.
-
-According to the speaker, the Servian national songs have kept alive the
-heroic spirit of the people during more than four centuries of Turkish
-oppression. Through them each generation of the illiterate peasantry has
-fought once more the ancient wars, and followed once more the ancient
-leaders even to the final tragedy of the battle of Kossovo, where in
-1377 they made their last brave stand against the Mohammedan invader.
-Whenever a few people assemble for a festival, some local bard, perhaps
-an old shepherd or soldier, a blind beggar or reformed brigand, will
-chant the old songs to the monotonous music of the _gusle_, while the
-people dance the _Kolo_.
-
-"There are thousands of songs in the Servian epic," says Mme. Grouitch,
-"and each has many variants according to whether it is sung in Bosnia,
-Herzegovina, Montenegro, Dalmatia, Servia, Bulgaria or Macedonia; for
-all these political divisions are peopled by the Servian race descended
-from the heroes whose deeds are the theme of such unwearied narration.
-The bard is called the Guslar from his one-stringed instrument, whose
-melancholy cadence--a sighing-forth of sound--affects the emotions and
-increases the pathos of the words. For the story is usually sad, even
-when it proclaims the triumph of great deeds."
-
-These songs invariably begin:
-
- Once it was so; now it is told.
-
-And they as invariably end:
-
- From me the song; from God health to you.
-
-A number of poems were read from Mme. Mijatovich's rather uninspired
-translation of the Kossovo series, published in London in 1881. Extreme
-simplicity and vividness characterize the old epic, which follows the
-hopeless struggle of the noble Czar Lazar against the foe without, and
-suspicions, dissensions, blunders, even treacheries, within. Certain
-characters stand out with the uncompromising exactness of some biblical
-story: the Czar himself; his over-zealous Vojvode; Milosh Obilich, whose
-murder of Sultan Murad precipitated the disaster; and certain haughty
-and passionate women, like the Empress Militza and her two daughters.
-Also "Marko, the King's son," whose half-mythical figure is of the race
-of Achilles.
-
-"There was one thing," said Mme. Grouitch, "which the Turk could not
-take away from the Serb--the heavenly gift of poetry; that continued to
-dwell hidden in the breast of the southern Slav. His body was enslaved,
-but his soul was not; his physical life was oppressed, but his spiritual
-being remained free. In the eighteenth century Europe re-discovered the
-Servian national poetry, and became conscious that the race survived as
-well as its ideals. Then Serb and Bulgar again appeared in current
-history, and began to retrace the ancient boundaries.
-
-"All the conferences of all the powers can never diminish the hopes, nor
-eclipse the glory of the Serb race in the minds of the Balkan peoples;
-because the Guslar, who is their supreme national leader, is forever
-telling them of that glory, and urging them to concerted action against
-all outside foes. It was the Guslar who led the Montenegrin Serbs from
-one heroic victory to another, so that 'their war annals,' as Gladstone
-said, 'are more glorious than those of all the rest of the world.' It
-was the Guslar who inspired Kara George and his heroic band of Servian
-peasants to keep up their battle until free Servia was born.
-
-"Amid the roar of cannon at Lule Burgas and Monastir, I could hear the
-mighty voice of the Guslar reminding Serb and Bulgar that their fight
-was for 'the honored cross and golden liberty.' And they obeyed because
-it was the voice of their nation. It is this irresistible national
-spirit which leads their armies, and beside it the spirit of German
-training behind the Turk is a lifeless shadow. The Ottoman power in
-Europe is in ruins now, a wreck in the path of a national earthquake
-which the Guslar has prophesied for five hundred years. The Guslar has
-done his duty, and he stands today in a blaze of glory at the head of
-the united and victorious nations of the Balkans."
-
-The speaker told of an impressive ceremony at the Servian legation in
-London. Young Servians, recalled home for military service last autumn,
-met there on the eve of departure. Wine being served, the minister and
-his young patriots rose with lifted glasses, and chanted the ancient
-summons of Czar Lazar to his people:
-
- Whoever born of Serbian blood or kin
- Comes not to fight the Turk on Kossovo,
- To him be never son or daughter born,
- No child to heir his lands or bear his name!
- For him no grape grow red, no corn grow white;
- In his hands nothing prosper!
- May he live
- Alone, unloved! and die unmourned, alone!
-
- _H. M._
-
-
-
-
- IMAGISME[C]
-
-Some curiosity has been aroused concerning _Imagisme_, and as I was
-unable to find anything definite about it in print, I sought out an
-_imagiste_, with intent to discover whether the group itself knew
-anything about the "movement." I gleaned these facts.
-
-[Footnote C: Editor's Note--In response to many requests for information
-regarding _Imagism_ and the _Imagistes_, we publish this note by Mr.
-Flint, supplementing it with further exemplification by Mr. Pound. It
-will be seen from these that _Imagism_ is not necessarily associated
-with Hellenic subjects, or with _vers libre_ as a prescribed form.]
-
-The _imagistes_ admitted that they were contemporaries of the Post
-Impressionists and the Futurists; but they had nothing in common with
-these schools. They had not published a manifesto. They were not a
-revolutionary school; their only endeavor was to write in accordance
-with the best tradition, as they found it in the best writers of all
-time,--in Sappho, Catullus, Villon. They seemed to be absolutely
-intolerant of all poetry that was not written in such endeavor,
-ignorance of the best tradition forming no excuse. They had a few rules,
-drawn up for their own satisfaction only, and they had not published
-them. They were:
-
- 1. Direct treatment of the "thing," whether subjective
- or objective.
- 2. To use absolutely no word that did not contribute
- to the presentation.
- 3. As regarding rhythm: to compose in sequence of
- the musical phrase, not in sequence of a metronome.
-
-By these standards they judged all poetry, and found most of it wanting.
-They held also a certain 'Doctrine of the Image,' which they had not
-committed to writing; they said that it did not concern the public, and
-would provoke useless discussion.
-
-The devices whereby they persuaded approaching poetasters to attend
-their instruction were:
-
- 1. They showed him his own thought already
- splendidly expressed in some classic (and the school
- musters altogether a most formidable erudition).
- 2. They re-wrote his verses before his eyes, using
- about ten words to his fifty.
-
-Even their opponents admit of them--ruefully--"At least they do keep bad
-poets from writing!"
-
-I found among them an earnestness that is amazing to one accustomed to
-the usual London air of poetic dilettantism. They consider that Art is
-all science, all religion, philosophy and metaphysic. It is true that
-_snobisme_ may be urged against them; but it is at least _snobisme_ in
-its most dynamic form, with a great deal of sound sense and energy
-behind it; and they are stricter with themselves than with any outsider.
-
- _F. S. Flint_
-
-
-
-
- A FEW DONT'S BY AN IMAGISTE
-
-An "Image" is that which presents an intellectual and emotional complex
-in an instant of time. I use the term "complex" rather in the technical
-sense employed by the newer psychologists, such as Hart, though we might
-not agree absolutely in our application.
-
-It is the presentation of such a "complex" instantaneously which gives
-that sense of sudden liberation; that sense of freedom from time limits
-and space limits; that sense of sudden growth, which we experience in
-the presence of the greatest works of art.
-
-It is better to present one Image in a lifetime than to produce
-voluminous works.
-
-All this, however, some may consider open to debate. The immediate
-necessity is to tabulate A LIST OF DONT'S for those beginning to write
-verses. But I can not put all of them into Mosaic negative.
-
-To begin with, consider the three rules recorded by Mr. Flint, not as
-dogma--never consider anything as dogma--but as the result of long
-contemplation, which, even if it is some one else's contemplation, may
-be worth consideration.
-
-Pay no attention to the criticism of men who have never themselves
-written a notable work. Consider the discrepancies between the actual
-writing of the Greek poets and dramatists, and the theories of the
-Graeco-Roman grammarians, concocted to explain their metres.
-
-
-
-
- LANGUAGE
-
-Use no superfluous word, no adjective, which does not reveal something.
-
-Don't use such an expression as "dim lands _of peace_." It dulls the
-image. It mixes an abstraction with the concrete. It comes from the
-writer's not realizing that the natural object is always the _adequate_
-symbol.
-
-Go in fear of abstractions. Don't retell in mediocre verse what has
-already been done in good prose. Don't think any intelligent person is
-going to be deceived when you try to shirk all the difficulties of the
-unspeakably difficult art of good prose by chopping your composition
-into line lengths.
-
-What the expert is tired of today the public will be tired of tomorrow.
-
-Don't imagine that the art of poetry is any simpler than the art of
-music, or that you can please the expert before you have spent at least
-as much effort on the art of verse as the average piano teacher spends
-on the art of music.
-
-Be influenced by as many great artists as you can, but have the decency
-either to acknowledge the debt outright, or to try to conceal it.
-
-Don't allow "influence" to mean merely that you mop up the particular
-decorative vocabulary of some one or two poets whom you happen to
-admire. A Turkish war correspondent was recently caught red-handed
-babbling in his dispatches of "dove-gray" hills, or else it was
-"pearl-pale," I can not remember.
-
-Use either no ornament or good ornament.
-
-
-
-
- RHYTHM AND RHYME
-
-Let the candidate fill his mind with the finest cadences he can
-discover, preferably in a foreign language so that the meaning of the
-words may be less likely to divert his attention from the movement;
-e.g., Saxon charms, Hebridean Folk Songs, the verse of Dante, and the
-lyrics of Shakespeare--if he can dissociate the vocabulary from the
-cadence. Let him dissect the lyrics of Goethe coldly into their
-component sound values, syllables long and short, stressed and
-unstressed, into vowels and consonants.
-
-It is not necessary that a poem should rely on its music, but if it does
-rely on its music that music must be such as will delight the expert.
-
-Let the neophyte know assonance and alliteration, rhyme immediate and
-delayed, simple and polyphonic, as a musician would expect to know
-harmony and counterpoint and all the minutiae of his craft. No time is
-too great to give to these matters or to any one of them, even if the
-artist seldom have need of them.
-
-Don't imagine that a thing will "go" in verse just because it's too dull
-to go in prose.
-
-Don't be "viewy"--leave that to the writers of pretty little philosophic
-essays. Don't be descriptive; remember that the painter can describe a
-landscape much better than you can, and that he has to know a deal more
-about it.
-
-When Shakespeare talks of the "Dawn in russet mantle clad" he presents
-something which the painter does not present. There is in this line of
-his nothing that one can call description; he presents.
-
-Consider the way of the scientists rather than the way of an advertising
-agent for a new soap.
-
-The scientist does not expect to be acclaimed as a great scientist until
-he has _discovered_ something. He begins by learning what has been
-discovered already. He goes from that point onward. He does not bank on
-being a charming fellow personally. He does not expect his friends to
-applaud the results of his freshman class work. Freshmen in poetry are
-unfortunately not confined to a definite and recognizable class room.
-They are "all over the shop." Is it any wonder "the public is
-indifferent to poetry?"
-
-Don't chop your stuff into separate _iambs_. Don't make each line stop
-dead at the end, and then begin every next line with a heave. Let the
-beginning of the next line catch the rise of the rhythm wave, unless you
-want a definite longish pause.
-
-In short, behave as a musician, a good musician, when dealing with that
-phase of your art which has exact parallels in music. The same laws
-govern, and you are bound by no others.
-
-Naturally, your rhythmic structure should not destroy the shape of your
-words, or their natural sound, or their meaning. It is improbable that,
-at the start, you will be able to get a rhythm-structure strong enough
-to affect them very much, though you may fall a victim to all sorts of
-false stopping due to line ends and caesurae.
-
-The musician can rely on pitch and the volume of the orchestra. You can
-not. The term harmony is misapplied to poetry; it refers to simultaneous
-sounds of different pitch. There is, however, in the best verse a sort
-of residue of sound which remains in the ear of the hearer and acts more
-or less as an organ-base. A rhyme must have in it some slight element of
-surprise if it is to give pleasure; it need not be bizarre or curious,
-but it must be well used if used at all.
-
-Vide further Vildrac and Duhamel's notes on rhyme in "_Technique
-Poetique_."
-
-That part of your poetry which strikes upon the imaginative _eye_ of the
-reader will lose nothing by translation into a foreign tongue; that
-which appeals to the ear can reach only those who take it in the
-original.
-
-Consider the definiteness of Dante's presentation, as compared with
-Milton's rhetoric. Read as much of Wordsworth as does not seem too
-unutterably dull.
-
-If you want the gist of the matter go to Sappho, Catullus, Villon, Heine
-when he is in the vein, Gautier when he is not too frigid; or, if you
-have not the tongues, seek out the leisurely Chaucer. Good prose will do
-you no harm, and there is good discipline to be had by trying to write
-it.
-
-Translation is likewise good training, if you find that your original
-matter "wobbles" when you try to rewrite it. The meaning of the poem to
-be translated can not "wobble."
-
-If you are using a symmetrical form, don't put in what you want to say
-and then fill up the remaining vacuums with slush.
-
-Don't mess up the perception of one sense by trying to define it in
-terms of another. This is usually only the result of being too lazy to
-find the exact word. To this clause there are possibly exceptions.
-
-The first three simple proscriptions[D] will throw out nine-tenths of
-all the bad poetry now accepted as standard and classic; and will
-prevent you from many a crime of production.
-
-" ... _Mais d'abord il faut etre un poete_," as MM. Duhamel and Vildrac
-have said at the end of their little book, "_Notes sur la Technique
-Poetique_"; but in an American one takes that at least for granted,
-otherwise why does one get born upon that august continent!
-
- _Ezra Pound_
-
-[Footnote D: Noted by Mr. Flint.]
-
-
-
-
- NOTES
-
-Agnes Lee (Mrs. Otto Freer) who has lived much in Boston, but is now a
-resident of Chicago, is known as the author of various books of poetry,
-the most representative, perhaps, being _The Border of the Lake_,
-published about two years ago by Sherman, French & Co. She has
-translated Gautier's _Emaux et Camees_ into English poetry; and has
-contributed to the magazines. Her long poem, _The Asphodel_, which
-appeared in _The North American Review_ several years ago, attracted
-wide attention.
-
-Mr. Edmund Kemper Broadus is a member of the faculty of the University
-of Alberta, Canada.
-
-Miss Fannie Stearns Davis is a young American who has written many songs
-and lyrics, a collection of which is to be published this spring. She
-was born in Cleveland, Ohio, but now lives in the East.
-
-Mrs. Meynell, who is the wife of Mr. Wilfrid Meynell, editor of one of
-the leading English Catholic reviews, hardly needs an introduction in
-America, where her exquisite art is well known. Her small volumes of
-essays--_The Rhythm of Life_, _The Color of Life_, _The Children_, etc.,
-and her _Poems_ are published by The John Lane Company.
-
-Mr. Ridgely Torrence is the author of _El Dorado_, _A Tragedy_, _Abelard
-and Eloise_, a poetic drama, and _Rituals for The Events of Life_. He
-contributes infrequently to the magazines, several of his longer poems
-having never been republished. He lives in New York.
-
-Mr. Samuel McCoy was born, thirty-one years ago, at Burlington, Iowa. He
-now lives at Indianapolis, and devotes himself wholly to literary work.
-He was educated at Princeton, and from 1906 to 1908 was associate editor
-of _The Reader_. A collection of Mr. McCoy's poems will be issued in
-book form this year by the Bobbs-Merrill Company.
-
-Mr. Alfred Noyes, a young English poet, is a well known contributor to
-English and American magazines, and has published many books of poetry.
-_The Loom of Years_; _The Flower of Old Japan_; _Poems_; _The Forest
-of Wild Thyme_; _Drake, English An Epic_; _Forty Singing Seamen_, and
-_The Enchanted Island_ are among the titles of his published works; and
-a new volume, _The Tales of the Mermaid Tavern_, is to be published this
-spring by the Frederick A. Stokes Co.
-
-Early numbers of Poetry will contain poems by John G. Neihardt, Ezra
-Pound, Harriet Monroe, William Carlos Williams, Allen Upward, and
-others.
-
-
-
-
- BOOKS RECEIVED
-
- _Songs of a Syrian Lover_, by Clinton Scollard. Elkin Mathews.
- _Annatese of Song_, by George M. P. Baird. Privately Printed.
- _Pearls of Thought, A Collection of Original Poems_,
- by Samuel M. Fleishman. Privately Printed.
- _The Summons of the King, A Play_, by Philip Becker Goetz.
- The MacDowell Press.
- _Drake, An English Epic_, by Alfred Noyes. Frederick A. Stokes Co.
- _Sherwood, or Robin Hood and the Three Kings, A Play in Five Acts_,
- by Alfred Noyes. Frederick A. Stokes Co.
- _The Enchanted Island and Other Poems_, by Alfred Noyes.
- Frederick A Stokes Co.
- _Songs of the City_, by DeCamp Leland. The Westende Publishing Co.
- _In Vivid Gardens_, by Marguerite Wilkinson. Sherman, French & Co.
- _A Book of Verse_, by Alice Hathaway Cunningham.
- Cochrane Publishing Co.
- _Chilhowee, A Legend of the Great Smoky Mountains_,
- by Henry V. Maxwell. Knoxville Printing Co.
- _Sappho, And the Island of Lesbos_, by Mary Mills Patrick.
- Houghton Mifflin Co.
- _Harp of Milan_, by Sister M. Fidés Shepperson.
- J. H. Yewdale & Sons.
- _Two Legends, A Souvenir of Sodus Bay_, by Mrs. B. C. Rude.
- Privately Printed.
- _Moods_, by David M. Cory. The Poet Lore Co.
- _Poems_, by Charles D. Platt. Charles D. Platt, Dover. New Jersey.
- _Poems, Old and New_, by A. H. Beesly. Longmans, Green & Co.
- _Paroles devant la Vie_, par Alexandre Mercereau. E. Figuière
- _Alexandre Mercereau_, par Jean Metzinger. E. Figuiére, Paris.
- _Anthologie-Critique_, par Florian-Parmentier.
- Gastien-Serge, Paris.
-
-
-
-
- PERIODICALS
-
- _The Wild Hawk_, Hervey White. The Maverick Press,
- Woodstock, N. Y.
- _The Bibelot_, Thos. B. Mosher, Portland, Maine.
- _The Idler_, Robert J. Shores, New York City.
- _The Century_, New York City.
- _The Forum_, New York City.
- _The Conservator_, Horace Traubel, Philadelphia.
- _The Nation_, New York City.
- _The Poetry Review_, Harold Munro, London.
- _The Poetry Review_ (New Series), Stephen Phillips, London.
- _The Literary Digest_, New York City.
- _Current Opinion_, New York City.
- _The International_, New York City.
- _The Dial_, Chicago.
- _The Survey_, New York City.
- _The Nation_, New York City.
- _The Music News_, Chicago.
- _Mercure de France_, 26 Rue de Condé, Paris.
- _L'Effort Libre_, Galerie Vildrac, 11 Rue de Seine, Paris.
- _Les Poétes_, E. Basset, 3 Rue Dante, Paris.
- (This number devoted to poems selected from the work of
- Nicolas Beauduin, _Paroxyste_.)
- _L'Ile Sonnante_, 21 Rue Rousselet, Paris.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS OF VOL. I
-
- VERSE
- PAGE
-
- _Aldington, Richard_:
- CHORIKOS 39
- To a Greek Marble 42
- Au Vieux Jardin 43
-
- _Banning, Kendall_:
- Love Songs of the Open Road 110
-
- _Brink, Roscoe W._:
- Helen Is Ill 117
-
- _Broadus, Edmund Kemper_:
- The Oracle 179
- A Gargoyle on Notre Dame 179
-
- _Bynner, Witter_:
- Apollo Troubadour 150
- One of the Crowd 153
- Neighbors 155
- The Hills of San José 156
- Grieve Not for Beauty 156
- The Mystic 157
- Passing Near 158
-
- _Campbell, Joseph_:
- The Piper 33
-
- _Conkling, Grace Hazard_:
- Symphony of a Mexican Garden 11
-
- _Cawein, Madison_:
- Waste Land 104
- My Lady of the Beeches 106
-
- _Corbin, Alice_:
- America 81
- Symbols 82
- The Star 82
- Nodes 87
-
- _Davis, Fannie Stearns_:
- Profits 182
- Two Songs of Conn the Fool 183
- Storm Dance 186
-
- _Dudley, Helen_:
- To One Unknown 10
-
- _Ficke, Arthur Davison_:
- Poetry 1
- Swinburne, An Elegy 137
- To a Child--Twenty Years Hence 144
- Portrait of an Old Woman 145
- The Three Sisters 146
- Among Shadows 147
- A Watteau Melody 147
-
- _Fitch, Anita_:
- The Wayfarers 108
- Les Cruels Amoureux 109
-
- _H. D. "Imagiste"_:
- Verses, Translations and Reflections from
- "The Anthology" 118
-
- _Lee, Agnes_:
- The Silent House 173
-
- _Lindsay, Nicholas Vachel_:
- General Booth Enters into Heaven 101
-
- _Long, Lily A._:
- The Singing Place 47
- Immured 49
-
- _Lorimer, Emilia Stuart_:
- Fish of the Flood 9
-
- _McCoy, Samuel_:
- Dirge for a Dead Admiral 187
- Spring Song 189
- A Sweetheart: Thompson Street 189
- Off-shore Wind 190
-
- _Meynell, Alice_:
- Maternity 181
-
- _Monroe, Harriet_:
- Nogi 50
-
- _Moody, William Vaughn_:
- I Am the Woman 3
-
- _Noyes, Alfred_:
- The Hill Flowers 192
-
- _Pound, Ezra_:
- To Whistler, American 7
- Middle-aged 8
-
- _Reed, John_:
- Sangar 71
-
- _Rensselaer, Mrs. Schuyler Van_:
- Under Two Windows 44
-
- _Rhys, Ernest_:
- A Song of Happiness 114
-
- _Smith, Clark Ashton_:
- Remembered Light 77
- Sorrowing of Winds 78
-
- _Sterling, George_:
- A Legend of the Dove 75
- At the Grand Cañon 76
- Kindred 77
-
- _Tagore, Rabindranath_:
- Poems 84
-
- _Torrence, Ridgely_:
- Santa Barbara Beach 180
-
- _Towne, Charles Hanson_:
- Beyond the Stars 35
-
- _Widdemer, Margaret_:
- The Jester 51
- The Beggars 52
-
- _Wyatt, Edith_:
- Sympathy 112
-
- _Yeats, William Butler_:
- The Mountain Tomb 67
- To a Child Dancing upon the Shore 68
- Fallen Majesty 68
- Love and the Bird 69
- The Realists 70
-
-
-
-
- PROSE ARTICLES
-
- As It Was, _H. M._, 19
- On the Reading of Poetry, _E. W._, 22
- The Motive of the Magazine, _H. M._, 26
- Moody's Poems, _H. M._, 54
- Bohemian Poetry, _Ezra Pound_, 57
- "The Music of the Human Heart," _E. W._, 59
- The Open Door, 62
- A Perfect Return, _A. C. H._, 87
- Tagore's Poems, _Ezra Pound_, 92
-
- Reviews:
- _The Poems of Rosamund Marriott Watson_, 94
- _The Adventures of Young Maverick_, by Hervey White, 95
- _The Iscariot_, by Eden Phillpotts, 96
- _Interpretations_, by Zoë Akins, 97
- _Lyrical Poems_, by Lucy Lyttelton, 97
- Status Rerum, _Ezra Pound_, 123
-
- Reviews:
- _The Lyric Year_, 128
- _The Human Fantasy_, and
- _The Beloved Adventure_, by John Hall Wheelock, 131
- _Poems and Ballads_, by Hermann Hagedorn, 132
- _Uriel and Other Poems_, by Percy MacKaye, 133
- _The Tragedy of Etarre_, by Rhys Carpenter, 133
- _Gabriel_, by Isabelle Howe Fiske, 133
- _The Unconquered Air_, by Florence Earle Coates, 133
- _The Story of a Round House and Other Poems_,
- by John Masefield, 160
- _Présences_, by P. J. Jouve, 165
-
- The Poetry Society of America,
- _Jessie B. Rittenhouse_, 166
- "That Mass of Dolts", 168
- The Servian Epic, _H. M._, 195
- Imagisme, _F. S. Flint_, 199
- A Few Don'ts by an Imagiste, _Ezra Pound_, 202
- Notes, 29,64,99,134,168,206
-
-
-
-
- _Editor_ HARRIET MONROE
-
- _Advisory Committee_ HENRY B. FULLER
- EDITH WYATT
- H. C. CHATFIELD-TAYLOR
-
- _Foreign Correspondent_ EZRA POUND
-
- _Administration Committee_ WILLIAM T. ABBOTT
- CHARLES H. HAMIL
-
-
-
-
-
- TO HAVE GREAT POETS THERE MUST
- BE GREAT AUDIENCES TOO
-
- _Whitman_
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, Volume I, by Various
-
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