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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The White Sail, by Louise Imogen Guiney
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: The White Sail
- and Other Poems
-
-Author: Louise Imogen Guiney
-
-Release Date: June 14, 2017 [EBook #54907]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WHITE SAIL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif, Emmy, MWS and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE WHITE SAIL
-
- And Other Poems
-
-
-
-
- THE WHITE SAIL
- AND OTHER POEMS. BY
- LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY
-
- [Illustration: colophon]
-
- TICKNOR & COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS, BOSTON
-
-
- _Copyright, 1887_,
- BY TICKNOR AND COMPANY.
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
- University Press:
- JOHN WILSON AND SON, CAMBRIDGE.
-
-
-
-
- _A SALUTE by night, than night’s own heart-beat stiller,
- From the dying to the living. Keats! I lay
- Here against thy moonlit, storm-unshaken pillar,
- My garland of a day._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
-THE WHITE SAIL 11
-
-
-Legends.
-
-TARPEIA 35
-
-THE CALIPH AND THE BEGGAR 40
-
-THE RISE OF THE TIDE 44
-
-CHALUZ CASTLE 48
-
-THE WOOING PINE 51
-
-THE SERPENT’S CROWN 57
-
-MOUSTACHE 62
-
-RANIERI 65
-
-SAINT CADOC’S BELL 68
-
-A CHOUAN 76
-
-
-Lyrics.
-
-YOUTH 83
-
-THE LAST FAUN 85
-
-KNIGHTS OF WEATHER 87
-
-DAYBREAK 90
-
-ON SOME OLD MUSIC 91
-
-LATE PEACE 94
-
-TO A YOUNG POET 97
-
-DE MORTUIS 98
-
-DOWN STREAM 99
-
-THE INDIAN PIPE 103
-
-BROOK FARM 105
-
-‘MY TIMES ARE IN THY HANDS’ 107
-
-GARDEN CHIDINGS 108
-
-FRÉDÉRIC OZANAM 109
-
-BANKRUPT 110
-
-A REASON FOR SILENCE 112
-
-TEMPTATION 113
-
-FOR A CHILD 115
-
-AGLAUS 116
-
-AN AUDITOR 118
-
-THE WATER-TEXT 119
-
-CYCLAMEN 120
-
-A PASSING SONG 124
-
-IN TIME 125
-
-THE WILD RIDE 126
-
-THE LIGHT OF THE HOUSE 128
-
-A LAST WORD ON SHELLEY 129
-
-IMMUNITY 130
-
-PAULA’S EPITAPH 131
-
-JOHN BROWN: A PARADOX 132
-
-
-Sonnets.
-
-APRIL DESIRE 137
-
-TWOFOLD SERVICE 138
-
-IN THE GYMNASIUM 139
-
-A SALUTATION 140
-
-AT A SYMPHONY 141
-
-SLEEP 142
-
-THE ATONING YESTERDAY 143
-
-‘RUSSIA UNDER THE CZARS’ 144
-
-FOUR SONNETS FROM ‘LA VITA NUOVA’ 145
-
-
-
-
- THE WHITE SAIL.
-
-
- HIGH on the lone and wave-scarred porphyry,
- The promontoried porch of Attica,
- Past evenfall, sat he whose reverend hair
- Down-glittered with the breaker’s volleying foam
- Visioned before him in the level dark:
- Ægeus, of wronged Pandion heir, and king.
- And round about his knees, and at his feet,
- In saffrons and sad greens alone bedight,
- Sat, clustered in dim wayward sidelong groups
- Sheer to the ocean’s edge, those liegemen fond
- Who with him wished and wept. As thro’ the hours
- Of ebbing autumn, on a northward hill,
- Lies summer’s russet ruined panoply,
- Knotted and heaped by the fantastic winds
- Hap-hazard, while the first adventuring snow
- Globes itself on the summit; so they clung
- Secure among the rangèd crevices,
- Month after month, and wakeful night on night
- Vigilant; ever neighbored and o’ertopped
- With that white presence, and the boding sky.
-
- And Ægeus prayed: ‘O give me back but him!
- My desert palm, my moorland mid-day fount,
- My leopard-foot, in equal tameless grace
- Swaying suavely down cool garden-paths
- Or into battle’s maw: my lad of Athens!
- With bronze and tangly curls a-toss, to show
- Infancy’s golden-silken underglow;
- The glad eye dusking blue, as is the sea
- Ere fiery sunset tricks it; and the lashes
- In one close sombre file against his cheek,
- Enphalanxed in perpetual trail and droop,
- Wherethro’ gleams laughter as thro’ sorrow’s pale.
- And anger’s self doth tremble maidenly;
- The massy throat; the nostril mobile, smooth;
- The breast full-orbed with arduous large pride,
- As I so oft have marked, when from the chase,
- The witness-dropping knife swung with the bow,
- Heading the burdened company, he came,
- Aye vermeil with the wholesome wind, outwrestler
- Of storms and perils all. High-mettled Theseus!
- Keystone of greatness, bond of expectation,
- Stay of this realm! in his strong-sinewed beauty
- Dear unto men as Tanais bright-sanded
- Whose flood harmonious lapses on the ear,
- And makes for hearts yoke-wearied, thither roaming,
- Thrice feastful holiday. Ah, righteous gods!
- Forasmuch as I love him and await him,
- Who from my youth have been your servitor,
- Yield my old age its boon of vindication:
- Haven the happy ship here, ere I die.’
-
- Still heedlessly the hushed moon bent her bow
- Over the unshorn forest oakenry
- And the dense gladiate leaves of Thoræ’s pine:
- The cold and incommunicable moon,
- Waxing and waning thro’ the barren time
- That brought not Theseus’ self, nor of him sign,
- Nor any waif of rumor out of Crete,
- Whereto, a year nigh gone, the ship had sped
- Forlorn; her decks enshrouded in plucked yew
- Strewn to the mizzen; and her oary props
- And halyards all with blossomed myrtle twined,
- And every sail dark as from looms of hell,
- In token of the universal dole.
- And on her heavèd anchor and spurred keel
- Cheers none, but protest, moans, and ire attended,
- When from the quay, in melancholy weather
- Forward she sobbed on black unwilling wing.
-
- But ere that going drear, one foot ashore,
- Theseus with his mild comrades hand in hand,--
- The seven maids and boys to bondage sealed,
- Lifted his head, and met his father’s eyes,
- And out of morning ardor made this oath:
- ‘My people, stand not for our sakes in tears!
- No shape of ill shall daunt me; I will strike
- And overcome, Heaven’s favor for my shield.
- And when engirt with conquest I return
- (Or never else hies Theseus hitherward),
- That ye may read my heart while yet at sea,
- And know indeed that fate hath used me fair,
- That these your lambs I shepherd and lead home,
- Lo, I will set upon the central mast
- The sky-sail white! white to the hollowing breeze,
- White to that fierce and alien coast, and white
- To your espial, from the horizon’s brink
- Unto the moored fulfilment of your joy.
- Watch: you that keep your faith and love in me.’
-
- And they believed and watched, albeit with dread,
- Steadfastly without plaint, to soothe the king,
- Who, taciturn and close-engarmented,
- From his nocturnal towered station leaned
- Pining against the unresponsive tide.
- And thro’ his brain, with hum processional,
- Wheeled memories of Theseus, deeds of Theseus,
- The race he won of yore, the song he sang;
- His truth, his eloquence, his April moods,
- And all his championship of trodden tribes,
- Since first he lit on Athens, like a star.
-
- For Ægeus, to the low-voiced Meta wed,
- Thereafter to Rhexenor’s daughter spouse,
- Childless, and by his brethren’s guile deposed,
- Led by a last mysterious oracle,
- Once, exiled, to Trœzene wandered down;
- And there, accorded Aphrodite’s grace,
- To whom the sacrificial smoke he raised,
- Atonement and conciliation sweet,
- Begot to Greece her hero; and straightway
- Bereavèd Æthra, of old Pelops’ race
- Forsook, by destined rumor summoned home.
- But with the auroral kiss of parting, he
- In the spring sunshine, on the mellow shore
- Laid his huge blade beneath a caverned rock,
- And both the jewelled sandals from his feet,
- With lofty exhortation: ‘Bid my son,
- When he, with strength inherited of mine
- Can heave this boulder, take the sword and shoon,
- And claim in Athens me his sire. Farewell!’
- And Æthra bided, dreaming, at the court,
- Till from her knee laughed back her own blue eyes.
-
- And the young boy, loosed in sun-dappled groves,
- Defiant, chased the droning harvest-fly,
- Or nicked pomegranates with his ruddy thumb
- Ripe from the bough; nor would his mother chide,
- But with strange awe hang o’er him worshipping,
- As one that turns with passionate-praying lips
- East to the Delian shrine he shall not see:
- Save once, when he a turtle-pigeon pent
- In wicker-work of some swart soldier’s skill,
- With lisping promise aye to nourish it;
- And stroked his plaining bird for one long day,
- But on the morrow ceased his fostering,
- And left his captive caged, the tiny gourd
- Of water unreplenished. Then the child
- Bewailed his darling, lying stiff and mute;
- And Æthra held his innocent hand in hers
- With solemn lessoning; for she foresaw
- Remorse, and irremediable ache,
- And ruin, following him whose manhood swerves
- To the eased byways of forgetfulness.
- She, his hot brows caressing, so besought
- The weeping prince: ‘If thou, O little son!
- Wilt lay hereafter duties on thyself,
- Stand mindful of them; all thy vows observe.
- Be a trust broken but a small, small thing,
- Its possible shadow slaves this world in woe.’
- And ere the dial veered, did Æthra speak
- His vanished father’s name and gave the charge,
- And led him to the rock, and in him fired
- The aspirations of his godlike race.
-
- Lost quite to former pastimes, thenceforth he
- Brooded on her sweet chronicle; and oft
- Burst thro’ arcades and vaporous aisles of dawn,
- And stood, flushed in the rubious dimpling light,
- Straining his thews at sunrise, to cajole
- The granite treasurer of those tokens twain:
- With his young heel intrenched in faithless sand,
- His cloud of yellow hair hanging before,
- Tugged at the flint; or pressed his forward knee
- With obdurate sieges, into its hard side;
- Anon, with restful rosy stretch of limb,
- Plunged to the onset, hound-like, on all fours,
- Beating a moated way about that place
- Where the grim guardian held a fixèd foot;
- And ever, noon on noon, with petulant tears,
- Stole back, o’ervanquished, to his quiet nooks.
- There would he woo his mother’s frequent tale,
- And urge her gentle prophecy, that he
- The kinsman of great Herakles, should too
- Rise, mighty, and o’er earth’s fell odds prevail.
- Wherefore, at waking-time, he plucked up heart
- To wrestle with the pitiless rock anew,
- Season on season, patient. And behold,
- When the tenth summer’s delicate keen dews
- Died from his shoreward path, at last befell
- One sure petrean tremor, one weird shock
- At his tense vigor; and ere twilight failed,
- Clean to the sea’s verge rolled that doughty bulk!
- And Theseus, in his full inheritance,
- In the superb meridian of his youth,
- Sandalled, the great hilt hard against his breast,
- Climbed to his mother’s bower. Æthra laid
- Her lips to his warm cygnet neck, and swooned,
- Thereby apprised the destined hour had come,
- And having sped her boy upon his quest,
- Drooped, like a sun-void lily, and so died.
-
- Then radiant Theseus, journeying overland,
- All robber-plagues infesting those still glens
- Physicianed, and redeemed all realms distressed.
- Phæa, prodigious Crommyonian shape,
- Apt Cercyon of Arcadia, he slew;
- And of his dominant valor overcame
- The smith-god’s son, who with the mortal mace
- Beleaguered travellers in Epidaur;
- Unburied martyrs fitly to avenge,
- He harsh Procrustes bedded; limb from limb
- Rent the Pine-bender on recoiling boughs;
- And him that thrust the lavers of his feet
- Headlong in chasms, Theseus likewise served
- By dint of hospitable precedent;
- Wide Marathonia’s lordly bull he led,
- Engarlanded with hyacinth and rose,
- To the knife’s edge at bland Apollo’s shrine;
- Last, guided to a grove sabbatical,
- Knelt to the chanting white Phytalidæ,
- And in their midst was chrismed, and purified
- From all the bloodshed of his troublous path.
-
- On to the gate of Athens Theseus strode,
- Docile to Æthra’s warning, that unnamed,
- And with strict privacy, he should seek his sire;
- For fifty jealous sons of Pallas held
- The city’s sovereignty; and overruled
- Their father’s childless brother, Ægeus old:
- The agile, able, proud Pallantidæ,
- Whose wrath would rise against the tardy heir,
- Tumultuous, and encompass Greece in war.
- Therefore, unheralded, with wary step,
- Chancing upon an open banquet-hall,
- Preceded of his fame, came brave-arrayed
- The stranger hero, but erewhile a boy;
- And straight, along the heaped board glancing down,
- Evil Medea, on her harmful track
- From Corinth unto Colchis, intercepted.
-
- This was Medea of the Fleecemen, late
- Her tender brother’s slayer, whose vile spells
- Had promised Ægeus princes of his blood.
- Stole from him, at the beck of that mock moon,
- Honor, the flood august of all his life:
- For he, distrustful of the oracles,
- Inasmuch as Trœzene flowered no hope,
- Now in the season of his utmost need,
- Subservient to the sorceress and her whims,
- Blasphemed, in slackened faith, and clave to her;
- And strangling conscience, made his thraldom fine
- With golden incident and public pomp,
- Holding by night most sumptuous festival,
- Feasting beside her, restless and unthroned.
- Now Theseus knew that wily woman’s face,
- Who, reading her arraignment in his eyes,
- Shrank close to Ægeus, voluble with fear,
- And urged within his palm a carven bowl,
- That he should bid the young wayfarer drain
- Health to Medea! in one envenomed draught:
- Which Theseus heard, alert, past harp and bell,
- Past intervening hubbub of rich mirth,
- And sprang to cower the temptress with a word.
- But at the instant, sprang her minions too,
- And riot and upbraidings dire began,
- Conflict, and scorn, and drunken challenging.
- Then leaped quicksilvered Theseus thro’ the fray,
- With love’s suspicion kindling in his veins,
- And gained that space before the startled host
- Whence from her couch Medea shrieked away:
- Limned beautiful and clear from front to feet,
- Shod with the shoon Ægean; and his arm
- Sabred with the one sword that Ægeus knew!
- Who, blanching ’neath roused memory’s ebb and flow,
- Among the wrangling merry-makers all,
- Clarioned ‘My own!’ and strained him to his breast.
-
- Theseus, in those fresh days of his return,
- Tarried not idle; but with warlike haste
- Bore down on the usurping lords of state,
- Juniors and kin of his discrownèd sire;
- Them, ere the morrow dwindled, he beheld
- Scattered as chaff from off the threshing-floor,
- And Ægeus, o’er the wreckage of their reign
- Exalted, with calm brows indiademed.
- Then was the sacred and sequestered prime
- Of liberation, benison, and peace;
- When the round heaven, in summer’s ministrance
- Rolled on its choral axle; till, at end
- Like to a cloudlet that assails the blue,
- Comely and yet with rains ingerminate,
- Minos the Cretan unto Athens sent
- His nimble princeling. In a fortnight’s span,
- The island lad, competing in the games,
- Won fairly; whereupon the envious mob
- Made rude revolt, and took upon itself
- The barbarous dishonor of his death.
- And vengeful Minos sailed, and razed the town,
- Laying the bitter forfeit in this wise:
- ‘Athens shall yearly proffer unto me
- Her virgin tribute of patrician seed,
- Seven youths, and maidens seven, as by lot,
- Wherewith to feed the ravenous Minotaur.’
- Athens the peerless bowed her ashen head.
-
- So dragged the dreadful twelvemonth thro’ the realm,
- Aye of its dearest blood depopulate,
- And losing grasp on life. The fourth weak year,
- Youngest of all departed, full thirteen
- Faltered aboard the deck calamitous;
- And with them Theseus, best-belovèd Theseus,
- The king’s sole-born, whom last the doom befell.
- But as no sister-galley e’er set out
- To dolorous ports predestined, in due lapse
- Returning with her steersman, went this ship,
- Not hopeless; now her bravest made his vaunt
- To thread the maze Dædalian, and destroy
- The pampered monster, holding harm at bay
- From the frail flock of Athens; and to flash
- Homeward, to chime of oar-compellèd waves,
- Signalling with the white exultant sail!
- ‘So that I live, this thing,’ he said, ‘is sworn:
- Watch! you that keep your faith and love in me.’
-
- Such tales of Theseus’ youth his father’s mind
- Rehearsed, while at his vigil in the night,
- Deep pondering on each noble circumstance,
- As a man shifteth, thro’ an idle hour,
- Anon with hand in light, anon in shade,
- The lustres of his one memorial gem.
- And oft the king, with a foreboding throe
- Called, urging eld’s unserviceable sight:
- ‘Shines the white sail yet?’ Spake the murmurous ring:
- ‘Nay; but fantastic clouds low-wandering on.’
- Then the fond voice of Ægeus, askingly:
- ‘Alcamenes! yield my sad heart a song.’
-
- Rose kind Alcamenes, who from his birth
- The king had cherished, from a mossy seat,
- The anxious faces turned his happy way;
- And with his pose quiescent, lyre in arm,
- Breathed forth a simple ditty, sweet-sustained
- Against the diapason of the sea.
-
- ‘Thy voice is like the moon, revealed by stealthy paces,
- Thy silver-margined voice like the ample moon and free:
- Ah, beautiful! ah, mighty! the stars fall on their faces,
- The warring world is silent, for love and awe of thee.
-
- ‘My soul is but a sailor, to whom thy wonder-singing
- Is anchorage, and haven, and unimagined day!
- And who, in angry ocean, to thine enchantment clinging,
- Forgets the helm for rapture, and drifts to doom away.’
-
- But the king hid his brow in both wan hands,
- Sighing: ‘That song at her beguiling feet,
- Out of my brief enslavement, did I make
- The year that Theseus on our revels stole.
- It sears me like a brand with fires o’erpast:
- Be silent, my Alcamenes! spare it me.
- Thou rather, Theron, sing! Engird my pain
- With some thrice-gallant catch, some madrigal
- That sets the dull blood dancing.’ Theron smiled,
- Masking suspense (for he was Theseus’ friend),
- Half-prone beneath his damask cloak, with chin
- Hand-propped; and fixed his dark eyes on the king,
- In trolling of an agitated lay.
-
- ‘I drowse in the grass, to the crickets’ elfin strings,
- With boughs and the sun about, with bowl and book,
- At the flood-tide of my youth, in the pearl of springs,
- Cydippe’s hand in my hair.... Ah, horrible thrill!
- Once I was rash, once I was wrong. Quick, look,
- My heart! in thy tremor, over the herded hill,
- In clefts of the moss, in swirls of the sliding brook:
- Somewhere the Vengeance lurks to defile and kill!
- My arrow back to me somewhere hisses and sings,
- Aye, justly; aye, bitterly, justly. Steady, heart! there.
- See, I laugh as I lie: on the brink of the jar yet clings
- Sweet foam; and I kiss Cydippe’s hand thro’ my hair.’
-
- Again, with swift uneasy gesturing
- Turned Ægeus, chiding, and protested ere
- The whipped-up courage of that roundel’s close:
- ‘Cease, Theron! this is but an ominous song,
- A song of retribution.’ For he thought:
- ‘So retribution dogs my bruisèd age;
- Still, still Medea’s soft and deadly name
- Stings all the leafy splendor of my life,
- And daunts the morrow’s bud. And if there be
- A reckoning I must pay for follies past,
- Must it be--O not that, not now, not here!’
- And drawing to his height, he cried: ‘The sail?
- Comes the sail from the south?’ They chorused ‘Naught
- Save argent flutterings of the shoreward gull.’
- And Ægeus, craving solace, urged once more:
- ‘Rhodalus! sing thou what shall heal my soul,
- In numbers honey-clear.’ Now Rhodalus
- The poet, too, was loyal sentinel;
- A fiery patriot, wont to domineer
- The moods of Athens; very potent he,
- And flexile-throated as the nightingale.
- With all his fingers knit about his knee,
- And head against a hoary pillar raised,
- Dream-locked, upon the lowest sprayey ledge,
- Riddling the unintelligible space,--
- Void thrones, and filmy wakes of fugitives,
- And interstellar agonies of midnight;
- To him the king’s voice throbbed a second time:
- ‘Rhodalus! sing thou what shall heal my soul.’
- Who, grave with poesy’s most candid mien,
- Answered the summons softly: ‘Sire, I cannot.
- The music of my brothers is amiss,
- So mine would be. Our strings are jangled, wrested
- From their discreet and silvern vassalage,
- Snapped quite with languishment for Theseus’ sake.
- I cannot sing. But O you holy stars!
- Stretching to us your tendrils of high glory;
- Tacit compellers of our wayward spirits;
- You domèd guardians of this tear-bound earth,
- You rich-wrought visions, charioted thousands
- Hale rank on rank, thro’ warless cities riding!
- Young semispheric moon, O burning Seven,
- Hesper and Phosphor! blue hour-measuring orbs
- That elsewhere look on Theseus! Speed his pinnace,
- Bide thro’ the watches with us; shine; exhale not!’
- And the dense quiet bound them.
-
- Cautiously,
- In his far corner, one behind the king
- At the dumb bursting-point of that weird hush,
- With nervous finger twitched his neighbor’s sleeve,
- And strove to whisper him with palsied tongue,
- And straight relaxed, and smiled; but new-convinced
- Towards twilight’s gracious advent, crept in awe
- With arm extended, to his fellow’s side;
- And the two thrilled alike, immovable,
- Each palm down-roofed above the frantic eye,
- Froze at their posts: which eager Theron marked,
- Piloting his keen sight across the main,
- And smote his bosom with quick-smothered groan,
- And, breathless, gazed and gazed. By twos and threes
- The apprehensive company dropped aghast
- Out on the reeling ragged precipice
- Sparkled and shelled with the oncoming tide:
- Till Ægeus, slow-divining dupe of hope,
- Awoke, and knelt him down against his throne,
- Faint with thanksgiving. And the moments creaked
- In gyral passage, like Ixion’s wheel,
- Spoke on accursèd spoke, portending woe.
- But he, athwart his lonely pinnacle
- Called like a ghost from walled eternity:
- ‘What of the sail? What cheer?’ Their lips congealed
- Nothing replied. The cruel hour rolled on.
- Intolerable arid east-blown wave
- Vaulting on wave thro’ all her caverns loud,
- Far upon Oliaros boomed the sea.
-
- Then bearded Rhodalus, compassionate,
- Spied leaning o’er the crags the frenzied king,
- Rending his garment to the paling moon;
- And yet evasive of those pleading eyes,
- Knotting his arms against his breast, downcast,
- Adjured him: ‘O most reverend, O most dear!
- The heart of life is rotten; prayer is vain.
- Stay up thy soul: for lo! the sail is black.’
- And all the trancèd host burst into moan.
-
- Old Ægeus, like a dreamer, muttered ‘Aye,’
- Passive; and from his brain the fever fell,
- And more than Zeus himself, he things unseen
- Saw, and to unheard choirings lent his ear.
- Theseus, truth-speaking, vowed the sky-sail white;
- The sail was black: therefore was Theseus dead
- In untriumphant state; his comrades, dead;
- Dead, the emprise of Greece; her dynasty
- Ungendered, dead; the very gods were dead!
- And he alive, alive? a wind-worn leaf
- All winter gibbeted upon that bough
- Whence the last fruit was reft? O mockery!
- Inert, of his own broken heart impelled,
- From the steep, solitary trysting-place,
- King Ægeus, like a stone, dropped in the sea.
-
- A wraith of smoke, fast-driven against a flame,
- Yon by the crimsoning east the dark ship moved,
- Her herald noises strangely borne ashore:
- ‘Joy, joy!’ and interlinked: ‘O joy, O joy,
- Athens our mother! joy to all thy gates!’
- And thunderous firm acclaim of minstrelsy,
- Laughter, and antheming, and salvos wild
- Outran the racing prow. But mute they lay,
- The blinded watchers, spent beyond desire,
- Wounded beyond this wonder’s balsaming.
-
- Yet ever, thro’ the trembling lovely light,
- Known voice on voice re-echoed, face on face
- Uprose in resurrection. They were safe,
- And Athens, hark! from her long thraldom free!
- And Theseus, victor, sang and sailed with them,
- The pale unsistered Phædra for his bride,
- For whom was constant Ariadne cast
- On Naxos, where a god did comfort her.
- Theseus! who when his bark the shallows grazed,
- Leaped in the gentle waves for boyish glee,
- Gained the thronged highway, crossed it at a bound,
- Scaling the cliffs; and stood among them there,
- Clausus, and his dear Theron, and the rest,
- Nodding upon the clamorous crowd below;
- But they, as soon, had turned them blunt away,
- In hot resentment of that false one. He,
- O’erbrimming with frank welcomes, in dismay,
- Stricken with sight of unresponsive hands,
- Scenting disaster, reining up his tongue,
- Asked sharply for the king.
-
- He understood
- After mad struggle and bewilderment,
- And gloomy gazing on the absent deeps.
- Down on the penitential rock he sank,
- All his fair body palpitant with shame,
- Syllabing agony: ‘Ægeus, Ægeus! ah,
- Glory of Hellas! dead for trust in me.
- Life-giver, irrecoverable friend,
- My father! ah, ah, loving father mine,
- Ah, dear my father!... I forgot the sail.’
-
- And the great morn burst. On a hundred hills
- The marigold unbarred her casement bright.
-
-
-
-
- LEGENDS
-
-
-
-
- TARPEIA.
-
-
- WOE: lightly to part with one’s soul as the sea with its foam!
- Woe to Tarpeia, Tarpeia, daughter of Rome!
-
- Lo, now it was night, with the moon looking chill as she went:
- It was morn when the innocent stranger strayed into the tent.
-
- The hostile Sabini were pleased, as one meshing a bird;
- She sang for them there in the ambush: they smiled as they heard.
-
- Her sombre hair purpled in gleams, as she leaned to the light;
- All day she had idled and feasted, and now it was night.
-
- The chief sat apart, heavy-browed, brooding elbow on knee;
- The armlets he wore were thrice royal, and wondrous to see:
-
- Exquisite artifice, whorls of barbaric design,
- Frost’s fixèd mimicry; orbic imaginings fine
-
- In sevenfold coils: and in orient glimmer from them,
- The variform voluble swinging of gem upon gem.
-
- And the glory thereof sent fever and fire to her eye.
- ‘I had never such trinkets!’ she sighed,--like a lute was her sigh.
-
- ‘Were they mine at the plea, were they mine for the token, all told,
- Now the citadel sleeps, now my father the keeper is old,
-
- ‘If I go by the way that I know, and thou followest hard,
- If yet at the touch of Tarpeia the gates be unbarred?’
-
- The chief trembled sharply for joy, then drew rein on his soul:
- ‘Of all this arm beareth I swear I will cede thee the whole.’
-
- And up from the nooks of the camp, with hoarse plaudit outdealt,
- The bearded Sabini glanced hotly, and vowed as they knelt,
-
- Bare-stretching the wrists that bore also the glowing great boon:
- ‘Yea! surely as over us shineth the lurid low moon,
-
- ‘Not alone of our lord, but of each of us take what he hath!
- Too poor is the guerdon, if thou wilt but show us the path.’
-
- Her nostril upraised, like a fawn’s on the arrowy air,
- She sped; in a serpentine gleam to the precipice stair,
-
- They climbed in her traces, they closed on their evil swift star:
- She bent to the latches, and swung the huge portal ajar.
-
- Repulsed where they passed her, half-tearful for wounded belief,
- ‘The bracelets!’ she pleaded. Then faced her the leonine chief,
- And answered her: ‘Even as I promised, maid-merchant, I do.’
- Down from his dark shoulder the baubles he sullenly drew.
-
- ‘This left arm shall nothing begrudge thee. Accept. Find it sweet.
- Give, too, O my brothers!’ The jewels he flung at her feet,
-
- The jewels hard, heavy; she stooped to them, flushing with dread,
- But the shield he flung after: it clanged on her beautiful head.
-
- Like the Apennine bells when the villagers’ warnings begin,
- Athwart the first lull broke the ominous din upon din;
-
- With a ‘Hail, benefactress!’ upon her they heaped in their zeal
- Death: agate and iron; death: chrysoprase, beryl and steel.
-
- ’Neath the outcry of scorn, ’neath the sinewy tension and hurl,
- The moaning died slowly, and still they massed over the girl
- A mountain of shields! and the gemmy bright tangle in links,
- A torrent-like gush, pouring out on the grass from the chinks,
-
- Pyramidal gold! the sumptuous monument won
- By the deed they had loved her for, doing, and loathed her for, done.
-
- Such was the wage that they paid her, such the acclaim:
- All Rome was aroused with the thunder that buried her shame.
-
- On surged the Sabini to battle. O you that aspire!
- Tarpeia the traitor had fill of her woman’s desire.
-
- Woe: lightly to part with one’s soul as the sea with its foam!
- Woe to Tarpeia, Tarpeia, daughter of Rome!
-
-
-
-
- THE CALIPH AND THE BEGGAR.
-
-
- I.
-
- SCORNER of the pleading faces,
- In the first year of his reign,
- From the lean crowd and its traces
-
- Down the open orchard-lane
- Walked young Mahmoud in his glory,
- In his pomp and his disdain
-
- And beyond all oratory,
- Music’s sweetness, ocean’s might,
- Fell a voice from branches hoary:
-
- ‘He whose heart is at life’s height,
- Who has wisdom, love, and riches,
- Islam’s greatest, dies this night.’
-
- And he crossed the rampart ditches
- Blinded, and confused, and slow;
- High in palaced nooks and niches
-
- Clanged his fathers’ shields a-row;
- And their turrets triple-jointed
- Shook with tempests of his woe.
-
- Long past midnight, disanointed,
- Prone upon his breast he lay,
- Warring on that hour appointed:
-
- But behold! at break of day,--
- As if heaven itself had spoken,--
- Blown across the bannered bay,
-
- Over mart and mosque outbroken,
- Came the silver-solemn chime
- For some parted spirit’s token!
-
- Mahmoud, with free breath sublime,
- Summoned one whose snow-locks heaving
- Made the vision of hoar Time;
-
- And the red tides of thanksgiving
- On his lifted brow, he said:
- ‘In my city of the living,
-
- Which, proclaimed of bells, is dead?’
- And the gray beard answered: ‘Master,
- One who yesternight for bread
-
- At thy gateway’s bronze pilaster
- Begged in vain: blind Selim, he,
- Victim of the old disaster.’
-
- And the vassal suddenly
- Looked on his hard lord with wonder,
- For those tears were strange to see.
-
-
- II.
-
- Yet again, where boughs asunder
- Held the wavy orchard-tent,
- Sun-empurpled clusters under
-
- In changed mood the Caliph went;
- And anew heard sounds upgather,
- (Chidings with caressings blent,
-
- As the voice once of his father):
- ‘Haughty heart! not thou wert wise,
- Rich, belovèd; Selim, rather,
-
- ‘Islam’s prince in Allah’s eyes!
- Even the meek, in his great station,
- Freehold had of Paradise.’
-
-
- III.
-
- When the plague-wind’s desolation
- Pierced Bassora’s burning wall,
- Circled with a kneeling nation
-
- Whom his mercies held in thrall,
- Died the Caliph, whispering tender
- Counsel to his liegemen tall:
-
- ‘One last service, children! render
- Me, whose pride the Lord forgave:
- Not by our supreme Defender,
-
- ‘Not beside the holy wave,
- Not in places where my race is
- Lay me! but in Selim’s grave.’
-
-
-
-
- THE RISE OF THE TIDE.
-
-
- A FISHERMAN gray, one night of yore,
- His nets upgathered, plied the oar,
- Right merrily heading for a haven,
- While summer winds blew blithe before.
-
- He sat beneath his pennon white;
- His arms were brown, his eye was bright;
- Twice twenty years his breast had carried
- A ribbon from Lepanto’s fight.
-
- A cove he spied at sunset’s edge,
- With pleasant trees and margin-sedge;
- And barefoot went by stakes down-driven
- Thro’ shallows wading from the ledge,
-
- The boat drawn after; but behold!
- A check fell on his venture bold:
- He stood imprisoned, vainly leading
- The ropes in whitening fingers old.
-
- Within that black and marshy sound
- His weight had sunken; he was bound
- Knee-deep! and as he beat and struggled,
- The mocking ripples danced around.
-
- Long since the wood-thrush ceased her song;
- The summer wind grew fierce and strong;
- The shuddering moon went into hiding;
- Down came the storm to wreak him wrong.
-
- Against the prow he leaned his chin,
- Thinking of all his strength had been;
- Then turned, and laughed with courage steady:
- ‘O ho! what straits we twain are in!’
-
- And strove anew, unterrified,
- But lastly, wearied wholly, cried
- For succor, since his laden wherry
- Rocked ever on the coming tide.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘I hear a cry of anguish sore!’
- But straight his love had barred the door:
- ‘Bide here; the night bodes naught but danger.’
- Loud beat the waves along the shore.
-
- A bedded child made soft behest:
- ‘So loud the voice I cannot rest.’
- ‘It is the rain, dear, in the garden.’
- The cruel water binds his breast.
-
- ‘A lamp, a lamp! some traveller’s lost!’
- But thro’ the tavern roared the host:
- ‘Nay, only thunder rude and heavy.’
- Close to his lips the foam is tossed.
-
- ‘O listen well, my liege and king!
- Hark from gay halls this grievous thing!’
- ‘Strange how the wild wind drowns our music!’
- About his head the eddies swing.
-
- At stroke of three the abbot meek
- Moved out among his flock to speak
- This word, with tears of doubt and wonder:
- ‘I had a dream; come forth and seek.’
-
- With torch and flagon, forth they sped:
- The fisher glared from the harbor-bed!
- The tide, from his white hair down-fallen,
- All kindly ebbed, now he was dead.
-
- Lepanto’s star shone fast and good;
- The sea-kelp wrapped him like a hood;
- His arms were stretched in woe to heaven;
- The boat had drifted: so he stood.
-
- The Unavenged he seemed to be!
- Then fell each monk upon his knee:
- ‘Lord Christ!’ the abbot sang, awe-stricken:
- ‘Rest my old rival’s soul!’ sang he.
-
-
-
-
- CHALUZ CASTLE.
-
-
- THERE sped, at hint of treasure
- Dug from the garden-mould,
- Word to the doughty vassal:
- ‘Thy sovereign claims the gold!’
- ‘Nay, Richard, come and wrest it!’
- Said Vidomar the bold.
-
- Uprose the Lionhearted,
- He locked his armor on:
- And over seas that morrow
- Around his gonfalon,
- The crash and hiss of battle
- Blazed up, and mocked the sun.
-
- King Richard led his bowmen
- By Chaluz dark and high;
- Like rain and rack they followed
- His flashing storm-blue eye:
- Forth peered Bertrand de Gourdon
- From the turret stair thereby.
-
- Thro’ morris-pikes and halberds
- The king rode out and in,
- His horse in gaudy trappings,
- His sabre drawn and thin:
- Down knelt Bertrand de Gourdon
- His strongbow at his chin.
-
- O shrill that arrow quivered!
- And fierce and awful broke
- Acclaim in billowy thunder
- From all the foreign folk,
- At mighty Richard fallen
- Beneath a foreign oak!
-
- Then leaped his English barons,
- Converging from afar,
- And loosed the flood of slaughter
- To the gates of Vidomar;
- And seized Bertrand de Gourdon,
- As clouds enmesh a star.
-
- They brought the bright-cheeked archer
- Who scoffed not, neither feared,
- To the tent ringed in with faces
- That menaced in their beard;
- But the king’s face lay before him
- In the lamplight semisphered.
-
- The king’s self, stern and pallid
- Gazed on the lad that day,
- And as if dreams were on him
- Besought him gently: ‘Say,
- Bertrand de Gourdon! wherefore
- Thou tak’st my life away?’
-
- ‘To venge my martyr-father,
- My foster-brethren three:
- In the name of thy dead foemen
- This thing I did to thee!’
- And Richard perished, sighing:
- ‘Forgive him. Set him free!’
-
- Alas for that late loving
- By seneschals betrayed!
- While yet upon his lashes
- The holy tear delayed,
- They bound Bertrand de Gourdon,
- They slew him in the glade.
-
- Alas for noble spirits
- Whom fates perverse befall!
- Whence David in his beauty
- Gave healing unto Saul,
- The jeering wind beats ever
- On Chaluz castle wall.
-
-
-
-
- THE WOOING PINE.
-
-
- THERE was a lady, starshine in her look,
- Of lineage fierce, yet tremulous and kind
- As the field-gossamer, that down the wind
- Floats gleamingly from some enthistled nook;
- And wayward as her beauty was her mind
- That evermore bright errant journeys took.
-
- Her father’s houndish lords she moved among,
- From feud and uproar dewily distraught;
- Winnowed her harp of its least pain; and brought
- Delight’s full freshet to a beggar’s tongue,
- Or spun amid her maids with chapel-thought
- That on a crystal pivot burned and swung.
-
- But night on night, an exile from sleek rest,
- She nestled warm before her hearth-fire low,
- To watch its little wind-born planets go
- Orbing; and from the martyr-oak’s charred breast,
- In spirit-blue flame, in quintuple wild glow,
- The tossing leaves prolong their summer zest.
-
- And ailingly, she needs must often sigh,
- Perplexèd out of her rich wonted glee,
- Whereof some unseen warder kept the key,
- And quell the dark defiance of her eye
- In patience, as a torch dips in the sea.
- And so, in brooding, went the white days by.
-
- Unto the horsemen brave in war’s array
- She waved no token from her latticed house,
- Nor yet of princelings bare upon her brows
- Love’s salutation; but from such as they
- Turned, as a shy brook wheels from jutting boughs,
- And in a sidelong glimmer sobs away
-
- Her sealèd sense beheld no man, nor heard,
- Nor lent its troth to any mortal bond,
- But lived heart-full of vital light beyond,
- And with miraculous tides of being stirred,
- Lingering tho’ eager, till the forest fond
- Winged to its own pure peace this homing bird.
-
- For, sad with rains of unrevealed desire,
- And heavy with predestined glory’s beam,
- She to the water-girdled wood’s extreme
- Stole from her suitors’ pleas, her father’s ire,
- Far from their brambly ways to sit and dream,
- And make sweet plaint, in daylight’s dying fire;
-
- When, one with lilt of her own veins, there rose
- Across remote and jasmine-pillared space,
- A voice of so persuasive, piteous grace
- That all her globèd sorrow did unclose
- To fragrant helpfulness in that still place,
- And sought, in tears, the breather of such woes.
-
- And peering, of the level-shafted sun
- Evasive, listening from a mossy knoll,
- To kindling quiet sank her gentle soul,
- In awe at some high venture to be done,
- As when outpeals from Fame’s coercive pole,
- Too soon, on ears too weak, her clarion.
-
- Burst in the golden air a wide and deep
- Torrent of harmony, that with clang and shock
- Might wreck a pinnace on an Afric rock,
- And on the ruin foamily o’erheap
- Bright reparation: ’twas a strength to mock
- Itself with swoons, and idle sobs, and sleep.
-
- A splendor-hoary pine, of kingliest cheer,
- Enrooted ’neath her thrilling footfall, stood;
- Suffused with youth and gracious hardihood,
- Sown of the wind from heaven’s memorial sphere,
- With the red might of centuries in his blood,
- Unscarred and straight against the battling year,
-
- From whose great heart those noble accents flowed,
- And from the melancholy arms outspread
- Whereon the aching winter long had snowed:
- ‘Come, sister! spouse! whom Love hath strangely led
- From bondage, come!’ And her most blessèd head
- She laid upon his breast as her abode.
-
- O wonderful to hearing, touch, and gaze!
- This was of soul’s unrest and spirit’s scar
- Solving and healing; this the late full star
- Superillumining the hither ways,
- And the old blind allegiance set ajar
- Like a dark door, against its flooded rays.
-
- All intertangled fell their dusky hair
- In tender twilight’s bowery recess;
- And that fair bride of her heart-heaviness
- Was disenthralled in love’s Lethean air,
- Where orchids hung upon the wind’s caress,
- And the first tawny lily made her lair.
-
- Dear minions served them in the covert green:
- The squirrel coy, the beetle in his mail,
- The moth, the bee, the throbbing nightingale,
- And the gaunt wolf, their vassal; to them e’en
- The widowed serpent, on her vengeful trail,
- Upcast an iridescent eye serene.
-
- The last tired envoy from the realm bereaved
- Blew at the drawbridge, riding castlewards;
- The fisher-folk along the beachen shards
- Pierced, calling, the cool thickets silvern leaved;
- And grandams meagre, and road-roaming bards
- Shared her sad theme, for whom men vainly grieved.
-
- But lad and lass, with parted mouth a-bloom,
- Who strayed thereby in April’s misty prime,
- A vision freshening to the after-time
- Caught thro’ the rifts of uninvaded gloom,--
- A maiden, honey-lipped as Tuscan rhyme,
- And her young hunter, with his sombre plume.
-
- For dynasties tho’ passing-bells be tolled,
- Theirs is the midmost ecstasy of June,
- Her music, her imperishable moon;
- While Time, that elsewhere is so rough and cold,
- Like a soft child, flower-plucking all forenoon,
- Gathers the ages from this garden old.
-
- Calm housemates with them in their forest lone
- Do Freedom, Innocence and Joy, abide:
- And aye as one who into Heaven hath died
- Thro’ mortal aisleways of melodious moan,
- The boatman sees, at dusk, from Arno’s tide,
- The Everlasting Lover with his own!
-
-
-
-
- THE SERPENT’S CROWN.
-
-
- SAID he:
-
- ‘O diligent rover! browned under many a heaven,
- Treasure and trophy you carry, spoils from the east and the west;
- Yet I fear that you passed it over, the chief clime out of the seven,
- My wonder-land and my island, where the chance of a knight is best.
-
- ‘There from the black mid-forest, past hemlock guards in waiting
- (Heard you not of the legend?), when the wide sun winks at noon,
- On the rock-ways sharpest, hoarest, warily undulating,
- A star-dappled serpent hurries, with the odorous grace of June.
-
- ‘Over her human forehead, reared among glens abysmal,
- Glitters a crown gold-gossamer; only a moment’s arc
- Crosses the creature torrid, flexile, palpitant, prismal,
- Then breaks on the earth, a terror spiralling into the dark.
-
- ‘Every to-day and to-morrow, as the foreign old belfries tremble
- With the hammer-hard heels of noon, just that instant, nor more nor less,
- In the blue witch-reptile’s furrow her shape stands to dissemble,
- And the barbed tongue tempts and entices, and the fire-eyes acquiesce.
-
- ‘Once she was a wily woman, whose glory the gods have finished,
- Whose handicraft still is ruin, whose glee is to snare and kill,
- Defier of spearman and bowman, her empery undiminished;
- But whoso can overcome her, shall bend the world to his will!
-
- ‘Therefore the knights importune to spur thro’ the jungles fruity,
- Many a lad and a hunter and a dreamer there ventureth;
- For the king tends power and fortune to the slayer of that demon-beauty,
- And awards him her crown thrice-charmèd whose captor can outwit Death,
-
- ‘Aye, ride above storm and censure, and lord it o’er time and distance,
- In the maddening-sweet assurance of bliss like a rose-rain shed,
- All for a wood-path venture, a gallant alert resistance,
- And a stroke of the steel in circle about that exquisite head!
-
- ‘A task for your young drilled muscle!’
- But the other, in soft derision
-
- Answered him:
-
- ‘Oh, I had once some wild schemes under my hat:
- Some thrill for this same snake-tussle, and the heirdom of life Elysian,
- Long peace, long loving, long praises: but I’ve kindled
- and cooled on that!
-
- ‘Ten years have I been a ranger, I have hewn all dread to the centre;
- I have learned to sift out values; my soul is at rest and free.
- If that be your boon for danger, on a dull safe youth to enter,
- Tho’ some may covet the guerdon, ’tis a poor enough thing to me.
-
- ‘I choose, might I come and return so, to a cause, a friend and a foeman
- Staunch, to endure for the rest but as a moth, or a marigold!
- Let the philosophers yearn so, the king bribe squire and yeoman!
- Not for my lease immortal the serpent shall be cajoled.
-
- ‘To strike her down avenges her slain; but is evil ended?
- The fashion dies; the function abides, and has fresher scope.
- What is to be won? He cringes who would seize, were the choice extended,
- For the risk elsewhere of living, here only survival’s hope!
-
- ‘I would keep my lot mine purely, cast in with men’s forever;
- Their transient tempest sooner than these Sybaritic calms;
- Tho’ against the cobra, surely, I would pit my soul’s endeavor,
- Her crown and its lonely meaning I would scorn to take in alms.
-
- ‘Rather than ease unshaken, durance that sloth unhallows,
- Once and for all, in honor, an end: what’s the forfeit crown
- If the chance of my short term taken run plump on the axe or the gallows,
- So one brother’s fetter be loosened, or one tyrant trampled down?
-
- ‘Why, see! this diadem’s pleasure a Turk might sigh to inherit,--
- Heart-beats thrumming; a torpid and solitary cheer;
- No call to arms, no measure of progress! Well, let him wear it
- Unquestioned ... I spurned the bauble when I killed your snake
- last year.’
-
-
-
-
- MOUSTACHE.
-
-
- A FRIENDLESS pup that heard the fife
- Sprang to the column thro’ the clearing,
- And on to Switzerland and strife
- Went grenadiering.
-
- Much he endured, and much he dared
- The long hot doomsday of the nations:
- He wore a trooper’s scars; he shared
- A trooper’s rations;
-
- Warned pickets, seized the Austrian spies,
- Bore the despatches; thro’ the forces
- From fallen riders, prompt and wise,
- Led back the horses;
-
- Served round the tents or in the van,
- Quick-witted, tireless as a treadle:
- ‘This private wins,’ said Marshal Lannes,
- ‘Ribbon and medal.’
-
- (‘Moustache, a brave French dog,’ it lay
- Graven on silver, like a scholar’s;
- ‘Who lost a leg on Jena day,
- But saved the colors!’)
-
- At Saragossa he was slain;
- They buried him, and fired a volley:
- End of Moustache. Nay, that were strain
- Too melancholy.
-
- His immortality was won,
- His most of rapture came to bless him,
- When, plumed and proud, Napoleon
- Stooped to caress him.
-
- His Emperor’s hand upon his head!
- How, since, shall lesser honors suit him?
- Yet ever, in that army’s stead,
- Love will salute him.
-
- And since not every cause enrolls
- Such little, fond, sagacious henchmen,
- Write this dog’s moral on your scrolls,
- Soldiers and Frenchmen!
-
- As law is law, can be no waste
- Of faithfulness, of worth and beauty;
- Lord of all time the slave is placed
- Who doth his duty.
-
- No virtue fades to thin romance
- But Heaven to use eternal moulds it:
- Mark! Some firm pillar of new France,
- Moustache upholds it.
-
-
-
-
- RANIERI.
-
-
- TO the lute Ranieri played,
- Once beneath the jasmine shade
- In a June-bright bower imprisoned,
- Many a Pisan beauty listened,
- Velvet-eyed, with head propped under
- Her gold hair’s uncoifed wonder;
- Like the rich sun-blooded roses
- Whom the wind o’ertakes in poses
- Of some marble-still delight,
- On the dewy verge of night.
-
- ‘Merrily and loud sang he,
- With the fairest at his knee,
- Sky-ringed in that garden nest!
- Who, save sorcerers, had guessed
- Whither sylph and minstrel came
- From the awful Archer’s aim?
- Or that, glossy-pined below,
- Lay the city in her woe,
- For her sins, as it was written,
- Desolate and fever-smitten?
-
- ‘Apt Ranieri was, and young,
- Love’s persuasion on his tongue;
- And his high-erected glance,
- Softened into dalliance,
- Laughed along its haughty level:
- Foremost in all skill and revel,
- Steeled against the laws that seemed
- Monkish figments idly dreamed,
- Early dipping his wild wing
- In the pools of rioting,
- With the moaning world shut out,
- With the damosels about;
- Crimson-girdled, in the sun
- Regnant, as if he were one
- For whom Death himself was mute;--
- So he sat, and twanged his lute.’
- (Placid, in her novice veil,
- Sister Claudia told the tale.)
-
- ‘When, across the air of June,
- Like a mist half-risen at noon,
- Or a fragrance barely noted,
- A Judæan Vision floated!
- Who, midway of music’s burst,
- Pleadingly, as if athirst,
- Long athirst, and long unsated,
- Sighed: “Ranieri!” sighed and waited.
-
- ‘Ah, the Prodigal that heard
- Fell to ashes at the word!
- But with broken murmurings
- Putting by the wreathèd strings,--
- From the safe and craven places,
- From the fond, bewildered faces,
- Trembling with the rush of thought,
- With contrition overwrought,
- At a royal gesture, down
- Straight to the dismantled town;
- Girt with justice, chaste and tender,
- To all risks himself to render,
- Of all sorrows rude and froward
- To be prop and cure henceforward;
- By no lapse of irksome duty
- Swerving from the Only Beauty,
- By no olden lure enticed;--
- Saint Ranieri followed Christ!’
- (Said the little nun: ‘Amen:
- Christ who calleth, now as then.’)
-
-
-
-
- SAINT CADOC’S BELL.
-
-
- I.
-
- SAILOR! with wonder thou hearest me,
- Moored where the roots of thine anchors be,
- Tolling and wailing, bursting and failing, afar in the heart of the sea.
-
- A bell was I of Pagan lands
- Forged and welded in might and beauty,
- But captured by Christian chivalry,
- And set in a belfry by godly hands,
- With chrisms and benedictions three,
- For a fourfold consecrated duty:
- To summon to pray, to peal for the fray,
- To measure the hours, to moan for the dead;
- To moan for the dead, ah me! ah me!
- Where the wild gold parasites suck and spread,
- Where the sea-flower rears her dreamy head;
- In the grots of immortality
- The cool weird singing mermaids dwell in;
- In the still city, with its empurpled air
- Shaken upon the eye from bastions fair
- Of coral, and pearl, and unbought jasper’s glisten,
- I toll and wail, I burst and fail, ah, listen!
- I, the holy bell, the gift of the Lord Llewellyn,
- Now the keel of a Cornish ship looms over my prison,
- Call from the underworld in mine old despair.
-
-
- II.
-
- They brought me in my virgin fame
- To the carven minster wonder-high,
- Close to the glorious sun and sky,
- With song, and jubilee, and acclaim:
- The fountains brimming with wine sprayed out on the crowd;
- In the chapel-porches the viols and harps clanged loud,
- And the slim maids danced a solemn measure, ever and aye the same,
- Singing: ‘Behold, we hang our bell in
- The freedom of spring, in the golden weather,
- The gift of the Lord Llewellyn,
- Redeemed from heathenry and strange shame,
- The lion-strong bell, for our service at last led hither,
- Flower-woven, caressed, and in Christ made willing and tame.’
- But ere the pleased stir of the people had died,
- Llewellyn, fresh home from the wars, with his soldierly stride
- Climbed, bearded and splendid in mail, and his only young child
- Held up from his shoulder in sight of them all; till they cried
- Peal on peal of delight when the rosy babe turned, and her lip
- Laid sweetly upon me in benison mild.
- Yea, sailor! and thou that hearest my voice from thy ship,
- Thou knowest my sorrow’s beginning, thou knowest, ah me!
- Whence my tolling and wailing, my breaking and failing, afar
- in the heart of the sea.
-
-
- III.
-
- I served the Lord ten years and a day,
- In Saint Cadoc’s church by the surging bay;
- And housed with the gathering webs and must,
- ’Mid whirring of velvety wings outside,
- In calm and in wind, brooding over the tide,
- And the bright massed roofs, and the crags’ array,
- My strong life, innocent and just,
- Fell of a sudden to ashes and dust,
- And on my neck hotly the demon laid the bare rod of his sway!
-
- How it befell, I know not yet,
- (Sailor, with wonder thou hearest me),
- Save that a passionate sharp regret,
- An exile’s longing, o’ermastered not,
- Seared thought like a pestilential spot,
- And sent my day-dreams traitorously
- Back to the place where my life began,
- To the long blue mornings, blown and wet,
- To the pyre by the sacred rivulet,
- And the chanting Cappadocian.
- No more a Christian bell was I!
- For all became, which seemed so good,
- Vile thraldom, in my bitter mood
- That thrust the old conformance by.
- Sullen and harsh, to the acolyte
- I answered of a Sabbath night,
- And sprang on the organ’s withdrawing peal
- To shatter its pomp, like a charge of steel.
- The good monks puzzled and prayed, I trow:
- But against their Heaven I set my brow.
-
-
- IV.
-
- To me, by the ancient, triple-roped,
- Lone, tortuous stair, whereby I made
- A tingling silence, a heavy concentric shade,
- The twelve-years’ child of the Lord Llewellyn groped:
- With May-wreaths laden, the loving strange child came!
- And my pulses that throbbed at sight of her, ten years gone,
- Chilled and recoiled at her delicate finger-touch, guessing
- Along my brazen-wrought margin, the laud and the blessing
- Traced, thro’ the vine, thro’ the tangle of star and of sun,
- By her dead father’s name, by Llewellyn’s magnificent name.
- And even as she stood in the dark, the doom and the horror rushed on me;
- (I had weakened my soul, and they won me!)
- I felt the desire at my vitals, the unbearable joy that is pain:
- With one mad tigerish spring against the dim rafter,
- I smote the sweet child in my rage, I smote her with laughter,
- And a sound like the rain
- Whirled east on the casement, died after:
- And I knew that the life in her brain
- I had quenched at the stroke, and flung even my darling of yore
- Down the resonant, tottering stair, down, down to the centuried door!
- Then the swift hurricane,
- The clamoring army thronged up from below, my
- allegiance to claim!
- Lean goblins, brown-flecked like a toad, the gnomic horned ghosts,
- Imps flickering, quarry-sprites grim, all the din of the dolorous hosts,
- All the glory and glee of the cursèd hissed round me and round,
- as a flame.
- And they loosened my hold from the tower, and my hope from the hem
- Of the garment of Him who could save, as they jeered! and with speed
- Crashed down past the rocks and the wrecks; and the horrible deed
- Was done. I was theirs; and I gave up my spirit to them.
-
-
- V.
-
- In a mossy minaret
- Fathoms under, I am set.
- All the sea-shapes undulating
- At my gates forlorn are waiting,
- All the dreary faint-eyed people
- Watch me in my hollow steeple,
- While the glass-clear city heaves
- Oft beneath its earthy eaves.
- So in sorrow, sorrow, sorrow
- Yestereven and to-morrow,
- Thro’ the æons, in a cell
- Hangs Saint Cadoc’s loveless bell,
- Orbèd, like a mortal’s tear,
- On the moony atmosphere,
- Bearing, the refrain of time,
- Memory, and unrest, and crime.
- Thou that hast the world sublime!
- I that was free, I am lost, I am damned, I am here!
- And whenever a child among men by a blow is dead,
- Docile for aye from the deeps must I lift my head,
- And from the heathen heart of me that breaks,
- The unextinguishable music wakes,
- Naught availing, naught deterred.
- And the sailor heareth me,
- Even as thou, alas! hast heard,
- Fallen in awe upon thy knee,
- Tolling and wailing, bursting and failing, afar in the ominous sea.
-
-
-
-
- A CHOUAN.
-
-
- FROM the school-porch at Vannes
- Weaponed, the children ran;
- One little voice began,
- Lark-like ascended:
-
- ‘Treason is on the wing,
- Black vows, and menacing:
- March, boys! God save the King!’
- Allio ended.
-
- Singing, with sunny head,
- Battleward straight he led,
- Stones for his captain’s bed,
- Herbs for his diet:
-
- He and his legion brave,
- Trouble enough they gave!
- Ere the Blues’ bullets drave
- Them into quiet.
-
- Spared, with a few as bold,
- Once the storm over-rolled,
- Allio, twelve years old,
- Crept from the clamor;
-
- Came, when the days were brief,
- To the old desk in grief,
- Thumbing anew the leaf
- Of the old grammar.
-
- Kings out!... rang the chime,
- Kings in!... answered Time.
- In his ignoring clime,
- Silent, he studied;
-
- Till, ere his youth was done,
- For him, the chosen one,
- Shepherd disclaimed of none,
- Aaron’s rod budded.
-
- Long, in unbroken round,
- Peace on his paths he found;
- Saw the glad Breton ground
- Husbanded, quarried:
-
- Blessed it, the record saith,
- All the years he had breath,
- Till the dim eightieth
- Snowed on his forehead.
-
- President!... Emperor!...
- President!... On the floor
- Spake a sharp Senator
- Widening his ranges:
-
- ‘From Paris I impeach
- Vannes for disloyal speech;
- Send thither troops to teach,
- How the world changes!’
-
- Down on the peasants then
- Rode the Republic’s men,
- Trampling the corn again,
- Miring the flowers;
-
- Hewed thro’ the rebels nigh,
- Scoffed at the women’s cry,
- Set the tricolor high
- On the church towers.
-
- Pale in his cot that day,
- Dying, the pastor lay,
- Where still his eye could stray
- Up valleys gleaming;
-
- Watchers were at his side;
- Prayer unto prayer replied:
- Hush! what was that he spied,
- Pinnacle-streaming?
-
- (Nothing was he aware
- In his deaf Breton air,--
- So gray traditions there
- Throve unforgotten,--
-
- That, by a final chance,
- Kings all were led a dance;
- Long since, in fickle France,
- Sceptres were rotten!)
-
- Sprang the old lion, still
- Live with prodigious will,
- To his stone casement-sill;
- Foolish and true one!
-
- Snatched up the blade he bore,
- Rough with its rust of yore,
- Kissed it, a saint no more--
- Only a Chouan!
-
- Barred from the charging mass
- In the choked market-pass,
- All he could do, alas!
- Now, was to clang it:
-
- Nay, more:--‘God save the King!’
- With a last clarion ring,
- Shot ere he ceased to sing,
- Allio sang it.
-
-
-
-
- LYRICS
-
-
-
-
- YOUTH.
-
-
- LET us hymn thee for our silent brothers,
- Freely as the wild impellent wind blows,
- Briefly, rudely, in the smoky pauses
- Of a battle, in the stress and scourging
- Of the sail apast thy heavenly margin;
- Let us hymn thee, while the gallant pulses
- In high heart and limbs one kingliest instant,
- Boom and flash thy name and their allegiance;
- ‘Once, and for one only,’ let us hymn thee,
- O Delight, O Sunrise, O sole Answer,
- Empery unbought, supreme Adventure,
- Youth, ah, Youth! all men’s desire and sorrow.
-
- Let us hymn thee, we, the passing, dying,
- Out of bondage by a vision lifted,
- Since by chance sublime, in secret places,
- Goddess! we, Aktaion-like, have seen thee.
- Tho’ our voice as a spent eagle’s voice is,
- Let us hymn thee, while the doom is forging;
- Holding, losing, thro’ one first last moment,
- One mad moment worth dull life forever,
- Triumphing in anguish, let us hymn thee!
- Thine, beholden Beauty, thine this heart-break,
- Thine, O Hope forsworn! this salutation,
- Youth, ah, Youth! all men’s desire and sorrow.
-
-
-
-
- THE LAST FAUN.
-
-
- HOW hath he stumbled hither, in search of love and praise,
- A tardy comer and goer across the world’s highways,
- A kind shape from the thicket, a wanderer all his days?
-
- He finds a rocky seat where the moiling town recedes:
- The altered shepherds flout him; but O he little heeds!
- Incredulous he swings there, and drones upon his reeds.
-
- He stamps his cloven heel, and he laughs adown the wind,
- With eye that wanes and waxes at doings of mankind.
- Slow, slow creeps the invader upon that happy mind.
-
- The apple breasts his fellow; doves wheel by two and three,
- And ever dance in circle the shallops on the sea;
- The goats and deer are many; but playmate none hath he,
- Nor nymph nor child to follow upon his signals rude;
- He smiles: there is no frolic; he snarls: there is no feud.
- He feels his poor heart sinking at every interlude.
-
- His shaggy ear and freakish resents the wail and din;
- Earth’s rumors chill his veins with their ghostly gliding in;
- He aches to slip these tethers, and be where he hath been.
-
- Elsewhere is waking glory, and here the dream, the thrall.
- Hush! hear the sunless waters, the wrestling leaves that call!
- He lops the grass, and whistles; and while he cheats them all,
-
- Obeys, is gone, gone wholly. From alien air too cold,
- The Faun, with garlands flying, with sylvan ditties trolled,
- Being homesick, being patient, regains his greenwood old.
-
-
-
-
- KNIGHTS OF WEATHER.
-
-
- WHEN down the filmy lanes
- The too wise sun goes grieving,
- A wake of splendor leaving
- Upbillowed from the ground;
- When at the window-panes
- The hooded chestnuts rattle,
- And there is clash of battle
- New England’s oaks around:
- Oh, then we knights of weather,
- We birds of sober feather,
- Fill up the woods with revel
- That summer’s pomp is slain;
- And make a mighty shouting
- For King October’s outing,
- The Saracen October
- Astride the hurricane!
-
- When dappled butterflies
- Have crept away to cover,
- And one persistent plover
- Is coaxing from the fen;
- When apples show the skies
- Their bubbly lush vermilion,
- And from a rent pavilion
- Laugh down on maids and men:
- Oh, then we knights of weather,
- We birds of sober feather,
- Fill up the woods with revel
- That summer’s pomp is slain;
- And make a mighty shouting
- For King October’s outing,
- The Saracen October
- Astride the hurricane!
-
- When pricks the winy air;
- When o’er the meadows clamber
- Cloud-masonries of amber;
- When brooks are silver-clear;
- When conquering colors dare
- The hills and cliffy places,
- To hold, with braggart graces,
- High wassail of the year:
- Oh, then we knights of weather,
- We birds of sober feather,
- Fill up the woods with revel
- That summer’s pomp is slain;
- And make a mighty shouting
- For King October’s outing,
- The Saracen October
- Astride the hurricane!
-
-
-
-
- DAYBREAK.
-
-
- THE young sun rides the mists anew; his cohorts follow from the sea.
- Let Aztec children shout and sue, the Persian lend a thankful knee:
- Those glad auroral eyes shall beam not anywhere henceforth on me.
-
- Up with the banners on the height, set every matin bell astir!
- The tree-top choirs carouse in light; the dew’s on phlox and lavender:
- Ah, mockery! for, worlds away, the heart of morning beats with her.
-
-
-
-
- ON SOME OLD-MUSIC.
-
-
- TO lie beside a stream, upon the sod
- At ease, while weary shepherds homeward plod,
- And feel benignly by, as daylight mellows,
- The mountains in their weathering period;
- Aye so, with silence shod
- To lie in depth of grass with man’s meek fellows,
- The cattle large and calm, aware of God,
-
- And, keen as if to flesh the spirit sprang,
- To hear,--O but to hear that silvern clang
- Of young hale melody! and hither rally
- The thrill, the aspiration, and the pang
- Again, as once it rang
- Sovereign and clear thro’ all the Saco valley,
- Whose slaves were we that heard, and he that sang!
-
- Happy the spot, the hour, the spanning strain
- Precious and far, the rainbow of the rain,
- The seal of patience, dark endeavor’s summing,
- The heaven-bright close of Pergolese’s pain!
- Sighs bid it back in vain,
- Nor win its peer, till craftsmen aftercoming
- Lost art, lost heart, from shipwrecked years regain.
-
- How, like an angel, it effaced the crime,
- The moil and heat of our tempestuous time,
- And brought from dewier air, to us who waited,
- The breath of peace, the healing breath sublime!
- As falls, at midnight’s chime
- To an old pilgrim, plodding on belated,
- The thought of Love’s remote sunshining prime.
-
- There flits upon the wind’s wing, as we gaze,
- Our northern springtime, virgin-green three days;
- The racy water shallowing, the glory
- Of jonquils strewn, the wafted apple-sprays:
- O let it be thy praise,
- Child-song too lovely and too transitory!
- Thou art as they; thy feet have gone their ways.
-
- O beauty unassailable! O bride
- Of memory! while yet thou didst abide
- The yester joy was ours, the joy to-morrow,
- Life’s brimming whole: and since to earth denied,
- Soft ebbed thy dreamy tide,
- To us the first, the full, the only sorrow,
- Wild as when Abel out of Eden died.
-
-
-
-
- LATE PEACE.
-
-
- AS a pool beset with lilies
- In the May-green copses hid,
- Far from wayfarers and wrongers,
- Clangors, rumors, disillusions,
- Neighbored by the wild-grape only,
- By the hemlock’s dreamy host,
- By the Rhodian nightingale,
- O remote, remote, O lonely!--
- So thy life is.
-
- Whence and wherefore is it
- Never peace may be co-dweller
- With my lakelet
- Too belovèd and too sheltered,
- That, secure from broil of cities,
- From a secret regnant spring
- To its own wild depth awaking,
- Makes but moaning and resistance,
- Undiminishable protest;
- Mimicking with pain and fury
- Of humanity the struggle;
- Fretting, foaming, pacing ever
- Round and round its fragrant cloister,
- All within itself perplexèd,
- Every heart-vein bruised but eager;
- And its clear soul, doubt-o’erladen,
- ’Neath the stirred and floating foulness,
- Long abased, long dumb, ah! long?--
- So thy life is.
-
- Comes the respite, comes the guerdon;
- The perfect truce arrives
- In the honey-dropping twilight,
- The southwestering pallid sunshine,
- The magian clouds a-fire,
- The mooring galleon-wind:
- At whose spell,
- Potent daily,
- The lulled water is beguiled
- Back to saneness, back to sweetness.
- All its arrowy hissing atoms
- Gather from the chase forsaken;
- The sphered galaxy of bubbles,
- Fragments, motes, the lees unrestful,
- Disunite, as to heard music,
- Like weird dancers, from their wreathings
- Each to its cool grotto swaying;
- Till there follows, on their fervor,
- Depth, and crystal clarity.
- So thy life is, so thy life!
- Darkling to beatitude,
- Shaken in the saving change.
- And the spirit made wise, not weary
- By the throes that youth endureth,
- When old age falls, evening-placid,
- On the mystery unriddled,
- Yet in empire, yet in honor,
- In submission not ignoble,
- Glistens to a central quiet,
- Leal to the most lovely moon.
-
-
-
-
- TO A YOUNG POET.
-
-
- SIGH not to be remembered, dear,
- Nor for Time’s fickle graces strive;
- Vex not thy spirit’s songful cheer
- With the sick ardor to survive.
-
- But be content, thou quick bright thing
- A while than lasting stars more fair:
- A lone high-flashing skylark’s wing
- Across obliterating air.
-
- O rich in immortality!
- Not thee Fame’s graven stones benight;
- But ever, to some world-worn eye,
- All Heaven is bluer for thy flight.
-
-
-
-
- DE MORTUIS.
-
-
- THE skilfullest of mankind!
- So praise him, reckoning
- By shot in the sea-gull’s wing,
- By doubts in boyhood’s mind.
-
-
-
-
- DOWN STREAM.
-
-
- SCARRED hemlock roots,
- Oaks in mail, and willow-shoots
- Spring’s first-knighted;
- Clinging aspens grouped between,
- Slender, misty-green,
- Faintly affrighted:
-
- Far hills behind,
- Sombre growth, with sunlight lined,
- On their edges;
- Banks hemmed in with maiden-hair,
- And the straight and fair
- Phalanx of sedges:
-
- Wee wings and eyes,
- Wild blue gemmy dragon-flies,
- Fearless rangers;
- Drowsy turtles in a tribe
- Diving, with a gibe
- Muttered at strangers;
-
- Wren, bobolink,
- Robin, at the grassy brink;
- Great frogs jesting;
- And the beetle, for no grief
- Half-across his leaf
- Sighing and resting;
-
- In the keel’s way,
- Unwithdrawing bream at play,
- Till from branches
- Chestnut-blossoms, loosed aloft,
- Graze them with their soft
- Full avalanches!
-
- This is very odd!
- Boldly sings the river-god:
- ‘Pilgrim rowing!
- From the Hyperborean air
- Wherefore, and O where
- Should man be going?’
-
- Slave to a dream,
- Me no urgings and no theme
- Can embolden;
- Now no more the oars swing back,
- Drip, dip, till black
- Waters froth golden.
-
- Musketaquid!
- I have loved thee, all unbid,
- Earliest, longest;
- Thou hast taught me thine own thrift:
- Here I sit, and drift
- Where the wind’s strongest.
-
- If, furthermore,
- There be any pact ashore,
- I forget it!
- If, upon a busy day
- Beauty make delay,
- Once over, let it!
-
- Only,--despite
- Thee, who wouldst unnerve me quite
- Like a craven,--
- Best the current be not so,
- Heart and I must row
- Into our haven!
-
-
-
-
- THE INDIAN PIPE.
-
-(TO R. L. S.)
-
-
- YOUR bays shall all men bring,
- And flowers the children strew you.
- Once, as I stood in a thick west wood,
- I took from a fissure a precious thing,
- The homage whereof be to you!
-
- A thing pearl-pale, yet stung
- With fire, as the morning’s beam is;
- Hid underground thro’ a solar round,
- Hardy and fragile, antique and young,
- More exquisite than a dream is.
-
- No rose had so bright birth;
- No gem of romance surpassed it,
- By a minstrel-knight, for his maid’s delight,
- Borne from the moon-burnt marge of the earth,
- Where Paynim breakers cast it.
-
- Rude-named, memorial, quaint,
- The dews and the darkness mould it:
- Scarce twice in an age is our heritage
- This glory and mystery without taint.
- Dear Stevenson, do you hold it
-
- A text of grace, ah! much
- Beyond what the praising throng say:
- Only your art is its peer at heart,
- Only your touch is a wonder such,
- My wild little loving song says!
-
-
-
-
- BROOK FARM.
-
-
- DOWN the long road bent and brown,
- Youth, that dearly loves a vision,
- Ventures to the gates Elysian,
- As a palmer from the town,
-
- Coming not so late, so far,
- Rocks and birches! for your story,
- Nor to prate of vanished glory
- Where of old was quenched a star;
-
- Where, of old, in lapse of toil,
- Time, that has for weeds a dower,
- Bade the supersensual flower
- Starve in our New England soil.
-
- But to Youth, whose radiant eyes
- Shatter mists of grief and daunting,
- Lost glad voices still are chanting
- ’Neath those unremaining skies;
- Still the dreams of fellowship
- Beat their wings of aspiration;
- And a smile of soft elation
- Trembles from his haughty lip,
-
- If another dare deride
- Hopes heroic snapped and parted,
- Disillusion so high-hearted,
- All success is mean beside!
-
-
-
-
- ‘MY TIMES ARE IN THY HANDS.’
-
-
- ‘MY times are in Thy hands!’
- It rumbles from the sea;
- It jingles ever, inland far,
- From the reddening rowan-tree.
-
- Let me not sit inert,
- Let me not be afraid!
- Teach me to dare and to resist
- Like the first mortal made,
-
- To whom of fate’s dread strength
- No sickening rumors ran;
- Who with whatever grim event
- Grappled, as man with man.
-
- Seal to my utmost age
- What now my youth hath known:
- ‘My times are in Thy hands,’ O most!
- When wholly in my own.
-
-
-
-
- GARDEN CHIDINGS.
-
-
- THE spring being at her blessed carpentry,
- This morning makes a stem, this noon a leaf,
- And jewels her sparse greenery with a bud;
- Fostress of happy growth is she. But thou,
- O too disdainful spirit, or too shy!
- Passive dost thou inhabit, like a mole,
- The porch elect of darkness; for thy trade
- Is underground, a barren industry,
- Shivering true ardor on the nether air,
- Shaping the thousandth tendril, and all year
- Webbing the silver nothings to and fro.
- What wonder if the gardener think thee dead,
- When every punctual neighbor-root now goes
- Adventurously skyward for a flower?
- Up, laggard! climb thine inch; thyself fulfil;
- Thou only hast no sign, no pageantry,
- Save these fine gropings: soon from thy small plot
- The seasonable sunshine steals away.
-
-
-
-
- FRÉDÉRIC OZANAM.
-
-
- UNTO the constant heart whom saints befriend
- Afar in peace, what were our gaudy praise?
- His course is ended, and his faith is kept.
- Honor in silence to that memory! sweet
- Equally in the forum of the schools,
- And in the sufferer’s hovel. His, threefold,
- The lowliness of Isai’s chosen son,
- And zeal that fired the warring Macchabee,
- About him like a wedding-garment, worn
- The day of his acceptance; and we know
- That for the sake of some such soul as this,--
- So brave, so clean, compassionate and just,
- Alert in its most meek security,--
- Love beareth yet with all that stains the world.
-
-
-
-
- BANKRUPT.
-
-
- PAST the cold gates, a wraith without a name,
- Sullen and withered, like a thing half-tame
- Still for its jungle moaning, came by night,
- Before the Judgment’s awful Angel came.
-
- ‘Answer, Immortal! at my high decree
- Glory or shame shall flood thee as the sea:
- What of the power, the skill, the graciousness,
- The star-strong soul the Lord hath lent to thee?’
-
- But the lone spectre raised a mournful hand:
- ‘Call me not that! Release me from this land!
- What words are Heaven and Hell? They fall on me
- As on a sphere the fooled and slipping sand.
-
- ‘Discerning, thou the good mayst yet belie,
- By some last test, the sinner sanctify.
- My guilt is neutral-safe, like innocence:
- No boon nor bane of deathless days gain I,
-
- ‘Whose life is hollow shell and broken bowl,
- Of all which was its treasury, the whole
- Utterly, vilely squandered. O most Just!
- Put down thy scales: for I have spent my soul.’
-
-
-
-
- A REASON FOR SILENCE.
-
-
- YOU sang, you sang! you mountain brook
- Scarce by your tangly banks held in,
- As running from a rocky nook,
- You leaped the world, the sea to win,
- Sun-bright past many a foamy crook,
- And headlong as a javelin.
-
- Now men do check and still your course
- To serve a village enterprise,
- And wheelward drive your sullen force,
- What wonder, slave! that in no wise
- Breaks from you, pooled ’mid reeds and gorse,
- The voice you had in Paradise?
-
-
-
-
- TEMPTATION.
-
-
- I COME where the wry road leads
- Thro’ the pines and the alder scents,
- Sated of books, with a start,
- Sharp on the gang to-day:
- Scarce see the Romany steeds,
- Scarce hear the flap of the tents,
- When hillo! my heart, my heart
- Is out of its leash, and away.
-
- Gypsies, gypsies, the whole
- Tatterdemalion crew!
- Brown and sly and severe
- With curious trades in hand.
- A string snaps in my soul,
- The one high answer due
- If an exile chance to hear
- The songs of his fatherland.
-
-... To be abroad with the rain,
- And at home with the forest hush,
- With the crag, and the flower-urn,
- And the wan sleek mist upcurled;
- To break the lens and the plane,
- To burn the pen and the brush,
- And, clean and alive, return
- Into the old wild world!...
-
- How is it? O wind that bears
- The arrow from its mark,
- The sea-bird from the sea,
- The moth from his midnight lamp,
- Fate’s self, thou mocker of prayers!
- Whirl up from the mighty dark,
- And even so, even me
- Blow far from the gypsy camp!
-
-
-
-
- FOR A CHILD.
-
- Schumann’s ‘Erinnerung: Novbr. 4, 1847.’
-
-
- IN memory of dear Mendelssohn, the loving song I made
- Fain would I sing for you, my own, but that I am afraid,
- Aye, truly, sore afraid:
-
- For sweet as was its every tone, once freed to mortal ears,
- In memory of dear Mendelssohn, the ghostly wand of tears
- Would yet be strong to break my song,
- Thro’ all these after-years!
-
-
-
-
- AGLAUS.
-
-
- THE ash hath no perfidious mind;
- The open fields are just and kind;
- Tho’ loves betray, I hear this way
- The feathery step of the faithful wind.
-
- Thorn-apple, bayberry and rose
- Around me, talismanic, close:
- The frosty flakes, the thunder-quakes,
- Are bulwarks twain of my year’s repose.
-
- No struggle, no delight, no moan,
- But at my hearthstone I have known!
- All thoughts that pass, as in a glass
- The gods have bared to me for mine own.
-
- Wisdom, the sought and unpossessed,
- Hath of her own will been my guest;
- Not smoking feud, but quietude
- My heart hath chosen, at her behest.
-
- ‘This is of men the happiest man
- Who hath his plot Arcadian,’
- Apollo cried, my gates beside,
- ‘Nor ever wanders beyond its span.’
-
- Now, like my sheep, I seek the fold;
- My hair is shaken in the cold;
- The night is nigh; but ere I die,
- Bear witness, brothers! that young and old,
-
- My name I wear without regret:
- The Home-Keeper am I, and yet
- At every inn my feet have been,
- Above all travellers I am set.
-
- Tho’ ocean currents by me purled,
- The sails of my desire were furled.
- What pilgrims crave, three acres gave;
- And I, Aglaus, have seen the world!
-
-
-
-
- AN AUDITOR.
-
-
- WHY chide me that mutely I listen, ah, jester?
- For either thou knowest
- Too much, or thou knowest not aught of this aching vexed
- planet down-whirling:
- Thou knowest?--Thy wit is but fortitude; would’st have me
- laugh in its presence?
- Thou knowest not?--Laugh I can never, for innocence also is sacred.
-
-
-
-
- THE WATER-TEXT.
-
-
- WATCHING my river marching overland,
- By mighty tides, transfigured and set free,--
- My river, lapped in idle-hearted mirth,
- Made at a touch a glory to the earth,
- And leaving, wheresoever falls his hand,
- The balm and benediction of the sea,--
-
- O soon, I know, the hour whereof we dreamed,
- The saving hour miraculous, arrives!
- When, ere to darkness winds our sordid course,
- Some glad, new, potent, consecrating force
- Shall speed us, so uplifted, so redeemed,
- Along the old worn channel of our lives.
-
-
-
-
- CYCLAMEN.
-
-
- ON me, thro’ joy’s eclipse, and inward dark,
- First fell thy beauty like a star new-lit;
- To thee my carol now! albeit no lark
- Hath for thy praise a throat too exquisite.
- O would that song might fit
- These harsh north slopes for thine inhabiting,
- Or shelter lend thy loveliest laggard wing,
- Thou undefiled estray of earth’s o’ervanished spring!
-
- Here is the sunless clime, the fallen race;
- Down our green dingles is no peer of thee:
- Why art thou such, dear outcast, who hadst place
- With shrine, and bower, and olive-silvery
- Peaked islets in mid-sea?
- Thou seekest thine Achaian dews in vain,
- And osiered nooks jocose, at summer’s wane,
- With gossip spirit-fine of chill and widening rain.
-
- Thou wert among Thessalia’s hoofy host,
- Their radiant shepherd stroked thee with a sigh;
- When falchioned Perseus spied the Æthiop coast,
- Unto his love’s sad feet thy cheek was nigh;
- And all thy blood beat high
- With woodland Rhœcus at the brink of bliss;
- Thy leaf the Naiad plucked by Thyamis,
- And she, the straying maid, the bride beguiled of Dis.
-
- These, these are gone. The air is wan and cold,
- The choric gladness of the woods is fled:
- But thou, aye dove-like, rapt in memories old,
- Inclinest to the ground thy fragile head,
- In ardor and in dread.
- Searcher of yesternight! how wilt thou find
- In any dolven aisle or cavern blind,
- In any ocean-hall, the glory left behind?
-
- June’s butterfly, poised o’er his budded sweet,
- Is scarce so quiet-winged, betimes, as thou.
- Fail twilight’s thrill, and noonday’s wavy heat
- To kiss the fever from thy downcast brow.
- Ah, cease that vigil now!
- No west nor east thine unhoused vision keeps,
- Nor yet in heaven’s pale purpureal deeps
- Of worlds unnavigate, the dream of childhood sleeps.
-
- Flower of the joyous realm! thy rivers lave
- Their once proud valleys with forgetful moan;
- Thy kindred nod on many a trodden grave
- Among marmorean altars overthrown;
- For thou art left alone,
- Alone and dying, duped for love’s extreme:
- Hope not! thy Greece is over, as a dream;
- Stay not! but follow her down Time’s star-lucent stream.
-
- Less art thou of the earth than of the air,
- A frail outshaken splendor of the morn;
- Dimmest desire, the softest throb of prayer,
- Impels thee out of bondage to thy bourn:
- Ere thou art half forlorn,
- Farewell, farewell! for from thy golden stem
- Thou slippest like a wild enchanter’s gem.
- Swift are the garden-ghosts, and swiftest thou of them!
-
- Yea, speed thy freeborn life no doubts debar,
- O blossom-breath of that which was delight!
- In cooling whirl and undulation far
- The wind shall be thy bearer all the night
- Thro’ ether trembling-white:
- And I that clung with thee, as exiles may
- Whose too slight roots in every zephyr sway,
- Thy little soul salute along her homeward way!
-
-
-
-
- A PASSING SONG.
-
-
- WHERE thrums the bee and the honeysuckle hovers,
- Gather, golden lasses, to a roundelay;
- Dance, dance, yokefellows and lovers,
- Headlong down the garden, in the heart of May!
- Youth is slipping, dripping, pearl on pearl, away.
-
- Dance! what if last year Winnie’s cheek were rounder?
- Dance! tho’ that foot, Hal, were nimbler yesterday.
- Spread the full sail! for soon the ship must founder;
- Flaunt the red rose! soon the canker-worm has sway:
- Youth is slipping, dripping, pearl on pearl, away.
-
- See the dial shifting, hear the night-birds calling!
- Dance, you starry striplings! round the fountain-spray;
- With its mellow music out of sunshine falling,
- With its precious waters trickling into clay,
- Youth is slipping, dripping, pearl on pearl, away!
-
-
-
-
- IN TIME.
-
-
- HER little dumb child, for whom hope was none
- In any mind, she watched from sun to sun,
- Until three years her mighty faith had run;
-
- Then, in an agony of love, laid by
- The bright head from her breast, and went to lie
- ’Neath cedarn shadows, and the wintry sky,
-
- Not having, for her long desire and prayer,
- One sign from those shut lips, so rosy-fair
- It seemed all eloquence must nestle there.
-
- That day, to her near grave, thro’ frost and sleet,
- He, following from his toys on truant feet,
- Cried: ‘Mother, mother!’ joyous and most sweet.
-
- And as their souls ached in them at the word,
- The father lifted his new-wakened bird
- With one rapt tear, that now at last she heard!
-
-
-
-
- THE WILD RIDE.
-
-
- _I HEAR in my heart, I hear in its ominous pulses,
- All day, the commotion of sinewy, mane-tossing horses;
- All night, from their cells, the importunate tramping and neighing._
-
- Cowards and laggards fall back; but alert to the saddle,
- Straight, grim, and abreast, vault our weather-worn, galloping legion,
- With a stirrup-cup each to the one gracious woman that loves him.
-
- The road is thro’ dolor and dread, over crags and morasses;
- There are shapes by the way, there are things that appal or entice us:
- What odds? We are knights, and our souls are but bent on the riding!
-
- _I hear in my heart, I hear in its ominous pulses,
- All day, the commotion of sinewy, mane-tossing horses;
- All night, from their cells, the importunate tramping and neighing._
-
- We spur to a land of no name, out-racing the storm-wind;
- We leap to the infinite dark, like the sparks from the anvil.
- Thou leadest, O God! All’s well with Thy troopers that follow.
-
-
-
-
- THE LIGHT OF THE HOUSE.
-
-
- BEYOND the cheat of Time, here where you died, you live;
- You pace the garden-walks secure and sensitive;
- You linger on the stair: Love’s lonely pulses leap!
- The harpsichord is shaken, the dogs look up from sleep.
-
- Years after, and years after, you keep your heirdom still,
- Your winning youth about you, your joyous force and skill,
- Unvexed, unapprehended, with waking sense adored;
- And still the house is happy that hath so dear a lord.
-
- To every quiet inmate, strong in the cheer you brought,
- Your name is as a spell midway of speech and thought;
- And unto whoso knocks, an awe-struck visitor,
- The sunshine that was you floods all the open door!
-
-
-
-
- A LAST WORD ON SHELLEY.
-
-
- EACH ninth hierarchal wave, a league of sound,
- To phantom shreds the hostile crags confound,
- To wreck on wreck forlorn. The crags remain.
-
- Smile at the storm for our safe poet’s sake!
- Not ever this ordainèd world shall break
- That mounting, foolish, foam-bright heart again.
-
-
-
-
- IMMUNITY.
-
-
- LEAF of the deep-leaved holly-tree,
- Long spared the weather-god’s disdain,
- Have not thy brothers borne for thee
- June’s inavertible raging rain?
-
- And they are beautiful and hale,
- Those sun-veined revellers; and thou
- Still crippled, still afraid and pale,
- Sole discord of the singing bough!
-
-
-
-
- PAULA’S EPITAPH.
-
-
- GO you by with gentle tread.
- This was Paula, who is dead:
- Eyes dark-lustrous to the look
- As a leaf-pavilioned brook,
- Voice upon the ear to cling
- Sweeter than the cithern-string;
- Whose shy spirit, unaware
- Loosed into refreshful air,
- With it took for talisman,
- Climbing past the starry van,
- Names to which the heavens do ope,
- Candor, Chastity, and Hope.
-
-
-
-
- JOHN BROWN: A PARADOX.
-
-
- COMPASSIONATE eyes had our brave John Brown,
- And a craggy stern forehead, a militant frown;
- He, the storm-bow of peace. Give him volley on volley,
- The fool who redeemed us once of our folly,
- And the smiter that healed us, our right John Brown!
-
- Too vehement, verily, was John Brown!
- For waiting is statesmanlike; his the renown
- Of the holy rash arm, the equipper and starter
- Of freedmen; aye, call him fanatic and martyr:
- He can carry both halos, our plain John Brown.
-
- A scandalous stumbling-block was John Brown,
- And a jeer; but ah! soon from the terrified town,
- In his bleeding track made over hilltop and hollow,
- Wise armies and councils were eager to follow,
- And the children’s lips chanted our lost John Brown.
-
- Star-led for us, stumbled and groped John Brown,
- Star-led, in the awful morasses to drown;
- And the trumpet that rang for a nation’s upheaval,
- From the thought that was just, thro’ the deed that was evil,
- Was blown with the breath of this dumb John Brown!
-
- Bared heads and a pledge unto mad John Brown!
- Now the curse is allayed, now the dragon is down,
- Now we see, clear enough, looking back at the onset,
- Christianity’s flood-tide and Chivalry’s sunset
- In the old broken heart of our hanged John Brown!
-
-
-
-
- SONNETS
-
-
-
-
- APRIL DESIRE.
-
-
- WHILE in these spacious fields is my sojourn,
- Needs must I bless the blossomy outbreak
- Of earth’s pent beauty, and for old love’s sake
- Trembling, the bees’ on-coming chant discern;
- Hail the rash hyacinth, the ambushed fern,
- High-bannered boughs that green defiance make,
- And watch from sheathing ice the brave Spring take
- Her broad, bright river-blade. Ah! then, in turn
- Long-hushèd forces stir in me; I feel
- All the most sharp unrest of the young year;
- Fain would my spirit, too, like idling steel
- Be snatched from its dull scabbard, for a strife
- With cold oppressions! straightway, if not here,
- In consummated freedom, ampler life.
-
-
-
-
- TWOFOLD SERVICE.
-
-
- CHAMPIONS of men with brawny fist and lung,
- You righteous! with eyes oped and utterance terse,
- Whose greed of energies would fain disperse
- Ere any mould be cast, or roundel sung,
- Your gentler brothers still at play among
- The smirch and jangle of the universe,
- Mere fool-blind trespassers for you to curse,
- The Sabbath-breakers, the unchristened young;--
- Peace! These, too, know: these are as ye employed,
- Nor of laborious help and value void,
- Living; who, faithful to their fellows’ need,
- Fling life away for truth, art, fatherland,
- Like a gold largess from a princely hand,
- Without one trading thought of heavenly meed.
-
-
-
-
- IN THE GYMNASIUM.
-
-
- I LEAN against a pillar in the sun,
- The sandals loose on mine arrested feet,
- While from their paths orbicular the fleet
- Slim racers drop like stars. O loveliest one,
- Lender of sixfold wings the while I run,
- Whose tortoise-lyre saves yet for me its sweet
- Cyllenic suasions old, to thy dim seat
- Glory and grace! the votive rites are done.
- Thy sole rememberer honey hath, nor palm,
- Libation none, nor lamb to lead to thee,
- Ah, Maia’s son! once god, and once aye-living.
- Here stood thy shrine: here chants my heart in calm
- Sad as the centralmost weird wave’s at sea,
- Hermes! thy last June pæan and thanksgiving.
-
-
-
-
- A SALUTATION.
-
-
- HIGH-HEARTED Surrey! I do love your ways,
- Venturous, frank, romantic, vehement,
- All with inviolate honor sealed and blent,
- To the axe-edge that cleft your soldier-bays:
- I love your youth, your friendships, whims, and frays;
- Your strict, sweet verse, with its imperious bent,
- Heard as in dreams from some old harper’s tent,
- And stirring in the listener’s brain for days.
- Good father-poet! if to-night there be
- At Framlingham none save the north-wind’s sighs,
- No guard but moonlight’s crossed and trailing spears,
- Smile yet upon the pilgrim named like me,
- Close at your gates, whose fond and weary eyes
- Sought not one other down three hundred years!
-
-
-
-
- AT A SYMPHONY.
-
-
- OH, I would have these tongues oracular
- Dip into silence, tease no more, let be!
- They madden, like some choral of the free
- Gusty and sweet against a prison-bar.
- To earth the boast that her gold empires are,
- The menace of delicious death to me,
- Great Undesign, strong as by God’s decree,
- Piercing the heart with beauty from afar!
- Music too winning to the sense forlorn!
- Of what angelic lineage was she born,
- Bred in what rapture?--These her sires and friends:
- Censure, Denial, Gloom, and Hunger’s throe.
- Praised be the Spirit that thro’ thee, Schubert! so
- Wrests evil unto wholly heavenly ends.
-
-
-
-
- SLEEP.
-
-
- O GLORIOUS tide, O hospitable tide
- On whose moon-heaving breast my head hath lain,
- Lest I, all eased of wounds and washed of stain
- Thro’ holy hours, be yet unsatisfied,
- Loose me betimes! for in my soul abide
- Urgings of memory; and exile’s pain
- Weighs on me, as the spirit of one slain
- May throb for the old strife wherein he died.
-
- Often and evermore, across the sea
- Of dark and dreams, to fatherlands of day
- O speed me! like that outworn king erewhile
- From kind Phæacia shoreward borne; for me,
- Thy loving healèd Greek, thou too shall lay
- Beneath the olive boughs of mine own isle.
-
-
-
-
- THE ATONING YESTERDAY.
-
-
- YE daffodilian days, whose fallen towers
- Shielded our paradisal prime from ill,
- Fair past, fair motherhood! let come what will,
- We, being yours, defy the anarch powers.
- For us the happy tidings fell, in showers
- Enjewelling the wind from every hill;
- We drained the sun against the winter’s chill;
- Our ways were barricadoed in with flowers:
-
- And if from skyey minsters now unhoused,
- Earth’s massy workings at the forge we hear,
- The black roll of the congregated sea,
- And war’s live hoof: O yet, last year, last year
- We were the lark-lulled shepherdlings, that drowsed
- Grave-deep, at noon, in grass of Arcady!
-
-
-
-
- ‘RUSSIA UNDER THE CZARS.’
-
-
- OF thraldom and the accursèd diadem
- In that vast snow-land, shout the passionate tale;
- Touch graybeards in the mart, bid braggarts quail,
- And rouse the student lone from his old phlegm
- To breathe the self-same sacred air with them,
- Spirits supreme, our brothers! whose avail
- Is sacrifice. Nay, make no woman’s wail:
- Rome is re-born! whom kings dare not contemn.
- On Neva’s shore-streets tho’ high blood be spent,
- There this lorn world’s renascent hopes are meeting:
- In camp is Mucius, at the bridge, Horatius;
- Regulus walks in gyves, magnificent;
- And thence men hear--O sound sublime and gracious!
- The unquelled heart of Cæsar’s Brutus beating.
-
-
-
-
- FOUR SONNETS FROM ‘LA VITA NUOVA.’
-
-
- I.
-
- ‘_Io mi sentii svegliar dentro allo core._’
-
- WITHIN my bosom, from long apathy,
- Love’s mood of tenderness extreme awoke,
- And spying him far off, mine eye bespoke
- Love’s self, so joyous scarce it seemèd he,
- Crying: ‘Now, verily, pay thy vows to me!’
- And bright thro’ every word his smile outbroke.
- Then stood we twain, I in my liege lord’s yoke,
- Watching the path he came by, soon to see
- The Lady Joan and Lady Beatrice
- Nearing our very nook, each marvel close
- Following her peer, all beauty else above;
- And Love said, in a voice like Memory’s:
- ‘The first is Spring; but she that with her goes,
- My counterpart, bears my own name of Love!’
-
-
- II.
-
- ‘_Tanto gentile e tanto onesta pare._’
-
- SO chaste, so noble looks that lady mine
- Saluting on her way, that tongues of some
- Are mute a-tremble, and the eyes that clomb
- High as her eyes, abashed, their gaze decline.
- Thro’ perils of heard praise she moves benign,
- Armored in her own meekness, as if come
- Hither from Heaven, to give our Christendom
- Even of a miracle the vouch divine.
- So with beholders doth her worth avail,
- It sheds, thro’ sight, a sweetness on the soul,
- (Alas! how told to one that felt it never?)
- And from her presence seemeth to exhale
- A breath half-solace and of love the whole,
- That saith to the bowed spirit ‘Sigh!’ forever.
-
-
- III.
-
- ‘_Era venuta nella mente mia._’
-
- THERE came upon my mind remembrances
- Of my lost lady, who for her reward
- Is now set safe, by Heaven’s Most Highest Lord,
- In kingdoms of the meek, where Mary is.
- And Love, whose own are her dear memories,
- Called to the sighs in my heart’s wreckage stored:
- ‘Go!’ whereby outwardly, with one accord,
- Not having ever other vent than this,
- Plaining athwart my breast they flocked to air,
- With speech that, oft recalled, draws unaware
- The darkened tears into my mournful eyes;
- And those that came in greatest anguish thence
- Sang: ‘O most glorious Intelligence!
- Thou art one year this day in Paradise.’
-
-
- IV.
-
- ‘_Deh peregrini, che pensosi andate._’
-
- YE pilgrims, who with pensive aspect go
- Thinking, perhaps, of bygone things and dear,
- Come you from lands so very far from here
- As unto us who watch your port would show?
- For that you weep not outright, filing slow
- Thro’ the mid-highway of this city drear,
- You even as gentle stranger-folk appear,
- Who of the common sorrow nothing know!
- Would you but linger, would you but be told,
- Pledge with its thousand sighs my soul doth give
- That you, likewise, should travel on heart-broken:
- Ah, we have lost our Beatrice! Behold,
- What least soever word be of her spoken,
- The tears must follow now from all that live.
-
- University Press: John Wilson and Son, Cambridge.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The White Sail, by Louise Imogen Guiney
-
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