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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike County Ballads and Other Poems, by Hay
+(#1 in our series by John Hay)
+
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Pike County Ballads and Other Poems
+
+Author: John Hay
+
+Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6062]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 30, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, PIKE COUNTY BALLADS ETC ***
+
+
+
+
+This etext was produced by Les Bowler, St. Ives, Dorset.
+
+
+
+
+PIKE COUNTY BALLADS and other poems by John Hay.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+INTRODUCTION by Henry Morley.
+
+POEMS BY JOHN HAY.
+
+THE PIKE COUNTY BALLADS.
+
+JIM BLUDSO
+LITTLE BREECHES
+BANTY TIM
+THE MYSTERY OF GILGAL
+GOLYER
+THE PLEDGE AT SPUNKY POINT
+
+WANDERLIEDER.
+
+SUNRISE IN THE PLACE DE LA CONCORDE
+THE SPHINX OF THE TUILERIES
+THE SURRENDER OF SPAIN
+THE PRAYER OF THE ROMANS
+THE CURSE OF HUNGARY
+THE MONKS OF BASLE
+THE ENCHANTED SHIRT
+A WOMAN'S LOVE
+ON PITZ LANGUARD
+BOUDOIR PROPHECIES
+A TRIUMPH OF ORDER
+ERNST OF EDELSHEIM
+MY CASTLE IN SPAIN
+SISTER SAINT LUKE
+
+NEW AND OLD.
+
+MILES KEOGH'S HORSE
+THE ADVANCE-GUARD
+LOVE'S PRAYER
+CHRISTINE
+EXPECTATION
+TO FLORA
+A HAUNTED ROOM
+DREAMS
+THE LIGHT OF LOVE
+QUAND MEME
+WORDS
+THE STIRRUP-CUP
+A DREAM OF BRIC-A-BRAC
+LIBERTY
+THE WHITE FLAG
+THE LAW OF DEATH
+MOUNT TABOR
+RELIGION AND DOCTRINE
+SINAI AND CALVARY
+THE VISION OF ST. PETER
+ISRAEL
+THE CROWS AT WASHINGTON
+REMORSE
+ESSE QUAM VIDERI
+WHEN THE BOYS COME HOME
+LESE-AMOUR
+NORTHWARD
+IN THE FIRELIGHT
+IN A GRAVEYARD
+THE PRAIRIE
+CENTENNIAL
+A WINTER NIGHT
+STUDENT-SONG
+HOW IT HAPPENED
+GOD'S VENGEANCE
+TOO LATE
+LOVE'S DOUBT
+LAGRIMAS
+ON THE BLUFF
+UNA
+"THROUGH THE LONG DAYS AND YEARS"
+A PHYLACTERY
+BLONDINE
+DISTICHES
+REGARDANT
+GUY OF THE TEMPLE
+
+TRANSLATIONS.
+
+THE WAY TO HEAVEN
+COUNTESS JUTTA
+A BLESSING
+TO THE YOUNG
+THE GOLDEN CALF
+THE AZRA
+GOOD AND BAD LUCK
+L'AMOUR DU MENSONGE
+AMOR MYSTICUS
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+
+Pike County Ballads and other poems in this volume by Colonel John Hay
+represent in the best manner the spirit of our strong and independent
+sister-land across the Atlantic. Pike County Ballads do full justice to
+the raw material in the United States, and show a loyal temper in the
+rough. The other pieces show how the love of freedom speaks through
+finer spirits of the land, and, dealing with realities, can turn a life
+of action into music.
+
+Colonel Hay has lived always in vigorous relation with the full life of
+the people whose best mind his poems represent. He is descended from a
+Scottish soldier, a John Hay, who, at the beginning of the last century,
+left his country to take service under the Elector-Palatine, and whose
+son went afterwards with his family to settle among the Kentucky
+pioneers. Dr. Charles Hay was the father of John Hay the poet, who was
+born on the 8th of October 1838, in the heart of the United States, at
+Salem in Indiana. When twenty years old he graduated at the
+neighbouring Brown University, where his fellow-students valued his skill
+as a writer. Then he studied for the Bar, and he was called to the Bar
+three years later, at Springfield, Illinois.
+
+At Springfield, Abraham Lincoln practised as a barrister. Shrewd,
+lively, earnest, honest, he grudged help to a rogue. In a criminal case,
+when evidence threw unexpected light upon a client's character, Abraham
+Lincoln said suddenly to his junior, "Swett, the man is guilty; you
+defend him, I can't." In another case, when a piece of rascality in his
+client came out, Abraham Lincoln left his junior in possession of the
+case and went to his hotel. To the judge, who sent for him, he replied
+that he had found his hands were very dirty, and had gone away to get
+them clean. Almost immediately after John Hay's call to the Bar at
+Springfield he was chosen by Abraham Lincoln, newly made President, to go
+with him to Washington. At Washington, Hay acted as Assistant-Secretary,
+and was also, in the Civil War, aide-de-camp to President Lincoln.
+Throughout that momentous struggle he was actively employed on the side
+of the North at the headquarters and on the field of battle. He served
+for a time under Generals Hunter and Gillmore, became a Colonel in the
+army of the North, and served also as Assistant Adjutant-General. John
+Hay had in that struggle three brothers and two brothers-in-law serving
+also in the field.
+
+In 1890 there was published, in ten volumes, at New York, by the New York
+Century Company, "Abraham Lincoln, a History: by John G. Nicolay and
+John Hay." This was, with fresh material inserted, a collection of
+chapters that had been published in The Century Magazine from November
+1886 to the beginning of 1890. The friends, who worked equally together
+upon this large record, said, "We knew Mr. Lincoln intimately before his
+election to the Presidency. We came from Illinois to Washington with
+him, and remained at his side and in his service--separately or together-
+-until the day of his death."
+
+Abroad, as at home, Colonel Hay has been active in the service of his
+country. In 1865 he went to Paris as Secretary of Legation, and after
+remaining two years in that office he went as Charge-d'Affaires for the
+United States to Vienna. After a year at Vienna, Colonel Hay went to
+Madrid as Secretary of Legation under General Daniel Sickles. In 1870 he
+returned to the United States, and was for the next five years an
+editorial writer for the New York Tribune. During seven months, when
+Whitelaw Reid was in Europe, Colonel Hay was editor in chief.
+
+It was for The Tribune that Hay wrote "The Pike County Ballads," which
+were first reprinted separately in 1871, and are placed first in the
+collection of his poems. In the same year he published his "Castilian
+Days," inspired by residence in Spain.
+
+In 1876 Colonel Hay removed from New York to Cleveland, Ohio. He then
+ceased to take part in the editing of The Tribune, but continued friendly
+service as a writer. From 1879 to 1881 Colonel Hay served under
+President Hayes as Assistant-Secretary of State in the Government of the
+United States. In 1881 he was President of the International Sanitary
+Congress at Washington. Since that time he has been active, with John G.
+Nicolay, in the preparation and production of the full Memoir of Abraham
+Lincoln, now completed, that will take high rank among the records of a
+war which, in its issues, touched the future of the world, perhaps, more
+nearly than any war since Waterloo, not even excepting the great struggle
+which ended at Sedan.
+
+That is the life of a man, here is its music.
+H. M.
+
+
+
+THE PIKE COUNTY BALLADS.
+
+
+
+JIM BLUDSO, OF THE "PRAIRIE BELLE."
+
+
+
+Wall, no! I can't tell whar he lives,
+ Becase he don't live, you see;
+Leastways, he's got out of the habit
+ Of livin' like you and me.
+Whar have you been for the last three year
+ That you haven't heard folks tell
+How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks
+ The night of the Prairie Belle?
+
+He weren't no saint,--them engineers
+ Is all pretty much alike, -
+One wife in Natchez-under-the-Hill,
+ And another one here, in Pike;
+A keerless man in his talk was Jim,
+ And an awkward hand in a row,
+But he never flunked, and he never lied, -
+ I reckon he never knowed how.
+
+And this was all the religion he had, -
+ To treat his engine well;
+Never be passed on the river;
+ To mind the pilot's bell;
+And if ever the Prairie Belle took fire, -
+ A thousand times he swore,
+He'd hold her nozzle agin the bank
+ Till the last soul got ashore.
+
+All boats has their day on the Mississip,
+ And her day come at last, -
+The Movastar was a better boat,
+ But the Belle she WOULDN'T be passed.
+And so she come tearin' along that night -
+ The oldest craft on the line -
+With a nigger squat on her safety-valve,
+ And her furnace crammed, rosin and pine.
+
+The fire bust out as she clared the bar,
+ And burnt a hole in the night,
+And quick as a flash she turned, and made
+ For that willer-bank on the right.
+There was runnin' and cursin', but Jim yelled out,
+ Over all the infernal roar,
+"I'll hold her nozzle agin the bank
+ Till the last galoot's ashore."
+
+Through the hot, black breath of the burnin' boat
+ Jim Bludso's voice was heard,
+And they all had trust in his cussedness,
+ And knowed he would keep his word.
+And, sure's you're born, they all got off
+ Afore the smokestacks fell, -
+And Bludso's ghost went up alone
+ In the smoke of the Prairie Belle.
+
+He weren't no saint,--but at jedgment
+ I'd run my chance with Jim,
+'Longside of some pious gentlemen
+ That wouldn't shook hands with him.
+He seen his duty, a dead-sure thing, -
+ And went for it thar and then;
+And Christ ain't a-going to be too hard
+ On a man that died for men.
+
+
+
+LITTLE BREECHES.
+
+
+
+I don't go much on religion,
+ I never ain't had no show;
+But I've got a middlin' tight grip, sir,
+ On the handful o' things I know.
+I don't pan out on the prophets
+ And free-will, and that sort of thing, -
+But I b'lieve in God and the angels,
+ Ever sence one night last spring.
+
+I come into town with some turnips,
+ And my little Gabe come along, -
+No four-year-old in the county
+ Could beat him for pretty and strong,
+Peart and chipper and sassy,
+ Always ready to swear and fight, -
+And I'd larnt him to chaw terbacker
+ Jest to keep his milk-teeth white.
+
+The snow come down like a blanket
+ As I passed by Taggart's store;
+I went in for a jug of molasses
+ And left the team at the door.
+They scared at something and started, -
+ I heard one little squall,
+And hell-to-split over the prairie
+ Went team, Little Breeches and all.
+
+Hell-to-split over the prairie!
+ I was almost froze with skeer;
+But we rousted up some torches,
+ And searched for 'em far and near.
+At last we struck hosses and wagon,
+ Snowed under a soft white mound,
+Upsot, dead beat,--but of little Gabe
+ No hide nor hair was found.
+
+And here all hope soured on me,
+ Of my fellow-critters' aid, -
+I jest flopped down on my marrow-bones,
+ Crotch-deep in the snow, and prayed.
+
+ . . . .
+
+By this, the torches was played out,
+ And me and Isrul Parr
+Went off for some wood to a sheepfold
+ That he said was somewhar thar.
+
+We found it at last, and a little shed
+ Where they shut up the lambs at night.
+We looked in and seen them huddled thar,
+ So warm and sleepy and white;
+And thar sot Little Breeches and chirped,
+ As peart as ever you see,
+"I want a chaw of terbacker,
+ And that's what's the matter of me."
+
+How did he git thar? Angels.
+ He could never have walked in that storm;
+They jest scooped down and toted him
+ To whar it was safe and warm.
+And I think that saving a little child,
+ And fotching him to his own,
+Is a derned sight better business
+ Than loafing around The Throne.
+
+
+
+BANTY TIM.
+
+
+
+REMARKS OF SERGEANT TILMON JOY TO THE WHITE MAN'S COMMITTEE OF SPUNKY
+POINT, ILLINOIS.
+
+I reckon I git your drift, gents, -
+ You 'low the boy sha'n't stay;
+This is a white man's country;
+ You're Dimocrats, you say;
+And whereas, and seein', and wherefore,
+ The times bein' all out o' j'int,
+The nigger has got to mosey
+ From the limits o' Spunky P'int!
+
+Le's reason the thing a minute:
+ I'm an old-fashioned Dimocrat too,
+Though I laid my politics out o' the way
+ For to keep till the war was through.
+But I come back here, allowin'
+ To vote as I used to do,
+Though it gravels me like the devil to train
+ Along o' sich fools as you.
+
+Now dog my cats ef I kin see,
+ In all the light of the day,
+What you've got to do with the question
+ Ef Tim shill go or stay.
+And furder than that I give notice,
+ Ef one of you tetches the boy,
+He kin check his trunks to a warmer clime
+ Than he'll find in Illanoy.
+
+Why, blame your hearts, jest hear me!
+ You know that ungodly day
+When our left struck Vicksburg Heights, how ripped
+ And torn and tattered we lay.
+When the rest retreated I stayed behind,
+ Fur reasons sufficient to me, -
+With a rib caved in, and a leg on a strike,
+ I sprawled on that cursed glacee.
+
+Lord! how the hot sun went for us,
+ And br'iled and blistered and burned!
+How the Rebel bullets whizzed round us
+ When a cuss in his death-grip turned!
+Till along toward dusk I seen a thing
+ I couldn't believe for a spell:
+That nigger--that Tim--was a crawlin' to me
+ Through that fire-proof, gilt-edged hell!
+
+The Rebels seen him as quick as me,
+ And the bullets buzzed like bees;
+But he jumped for me, and shouldered me,
+ Though a shot brought him once to his knees;
+But he staggered up, and packed me off,
+ With a dozen stumbles and falls,
+Till safe in our lines he drapped us both,
+ His black hide riddled with balls.
+
+So, my gentle gazelles, thar's my answer,
+ And here stays Banty Tim:
+He trumped Death's ace for me that day,
+ And I'm not goin' back on him!
+You may rezoloot till the cows come home,
+ But ef one of you tetches the boy,
+He'll wrastle his hash to-night in hell,
+ Or my name's not Tilmon Joy!
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF GILGAL.
+
+
+
+The darkest, strangest mystery
+I ever read, or heern, or see,
+Is 'long of a drink at Taggart's Hall, -
+ Tom Taggart's of Gilgal.
+
+I've heern the tale a thousand ways,
+But never could git through the maze
+That hangs around that queer day's doin's;
+ But I'll tell the yarn to youans.
+
+Tom Taggart stood behind his bar,
+The time was fall, the skies was fa'r,
+The neighbours round the counter drawed,
+ And ca'mly drinked and jawed.
+
+At last come Colonel Blood of Pike,
+And old Jedge Phinn, permiscus-like,
+And each, as he meandered in,
+ Remarked, "A whisky-skin."
+
+Tom mixed the beverage full and fa'r,
+And slammed it, smoking, on the bar.
+Some says three fingers, some says two, -
+ I'll leave the choice to you.
+
+Phinn to the drink put forth his hand;
+Blood drawed his knife, with accent bland,
+"I ax yer parding, Mister Phinn -
+ Jest drap that whisky-skin."
+
+No man high-toneder could be found
+Than old Jedge Phinn the country round.
+Says he, "Young man, the tribe of Phinns
+ Knows their own whisky-skins!"
+
+He went for his 'leven-inch bowie-knife: -
+"I tries to foller a Christian life;
+But I'll drap a slice of liver or two,
+ My bloomin' shrub, with you."
+
+They carved in a way that all admired,
+Tell Blood drawed iron at last, and fired.
+It took Seth Bludso 'twixt the eyes,
+ Which caused him great surprise.
+
+Then coats went off, and all went in;
+Shots and bad language swelled the din;
+The short, sharp bark of Derringers,
+ Like bull-pups, cheered the furse.
+
+They piled the stiffs outside the door;
+They made, I reckon, a cord or more.
+Girls went that winter, as a rule,
+ Alone to spellin'-school.
+
+I've searched in vain, from Dan to Beer-
+Sheba, to make this mystery clear;
+But I end with HIT as I did begin, -
+ "WHO GOT THE WHISKY-SKIN?"
+
+
+
+GOLYER.
+
+
+
+Ef the way a man lights out of this world
+ Helps fix his heft for the other sp'ere,
+I reckon my old friend Golyer's Ben
+Will lay over lots of likelier men
+ For one thing he done down here.
+
+You didn't know Ben? He driv a stage
+ On the line they called the Old Sou'-west;
+He wa'n't the best man that ever you seen,
+And he wa'n't so ungodly pizen mean, -
+ No better nor worse than the rest.
+
+He was hard on women and rough on his friends;
+ And he didn't have many, I'll let you know;
+He hated a dog and disgusted a cat,
+But he'd run off his legs for a motherless brat,
+ And I guess there's many jess so.
+
+I've seed my sheer of the run of things,
+ I've hoofed it a many and many a miled,
+But I never seed nothing that could or can
+Jest git all the good from the heart of a man
+ Like the hands of a little child.
+
+Well! this young one I started to tell you about, -
+ His folks was all dead, I was fetchin' him through, -
+He was just at the age that's loudest for boys,
+And he blowed such a horn with his sarchin' small voice,
+ We called him "the Little Boy Blue."
+
+He ketched a sight of Ben on the box,
+ And you bet he bawled and kicked and howled,
+For to git 'long of Ben, and ride thar too;
+I tried to tell him it wouldn't do,
+ When suddingly Golyer growled,
+
+"What's the use of making the young one cry?
+ Say, what's the use of being a fool?
+Sling the little one up here whar he can see,
+He won't git the snuffles a-ridin' with me,
+ The night ain't any too cool."
+
+The child hushed cryin' the minute he spoke;
+ "Come up here, Major! don't let him slip."
+And jest as nice as a woman could do,
+He wropped his blanket around them two,
+ And was off in the crack of a whip.
+
+We rattled along an hour or so,
+ Till we heerd a yell on the still night air.
+Did you ever hear an Apache yell?
+Well, ye needn't want to, THIS side of hell;
+ There's nothing more devilish there.
+
+Caught in the shower of lead and flint,
+ We felt the old stage stagger and plunge;
+Then we heerd the voice and the whip of Ben,
+As he gethered his critters up again,
+ And tore away with a lunge.
+
+The passengers laughed. "Old Ben's all right,
+ He's druv five year and never was struck."
+"Now if _I_'d been thar, as sure as you live,
+They'd 'a' plugged me with holes as thick as a sieve;
+ It's the reg'lar Golyer luck."
+
+Over hill and holler and ford and creek,
+ Jest like the hosses had wings, we tore;
+We got to Looney's, and Ben come in
+And laid down the baby and axed for his gin,
+ And dropped in a heap on the floor.
+
+Said he, "When they fired, I kivered the kid, -
+ Although I ain't pretty, I'm middlin' broad;
+And look! he ain't fazed by arrow nor ball, -
+Thank God! my own carcase stopped them all."
+Then we seen his eye glaze, and his lower jaw fall, -
+ And he carried his thanks to God.
+
+
+
+THE PLEDGE AT SPUNKY POINT.
+
+
+
+A TALE OF EARNEST EFFORT AND HUMAN PERFIDY.
+
+It's all very well for preachin',
+ But preachin' and practice don't gee:
+I've give the thing a fair trial,
+ And you can't ring it in on me.
+So toddle along with your pledge, Squire,
+ Ef that's what you want me to sign;
+Betwixt me and you, I've been thar,
+ And I'll not take any in mine.
+
+A year ago last Fo'th July
+ A lot of the boys was here.
+We all got corned and signed the pledge
+ For to drink no more that year.
+There was Tilmon Joy and Sheriff McPhail
+ And me and Abner Fry,
+And Shelby's boy Leviticus,
+ And the Golyers, Luke and Cy.
+
+And we anteed up a hundred
+ In the hands of Deacon Kedge
+For to be divided the follerin' Fo'th
+ 'Mongst the boys that kep' the pledge.
+And we knowed each other so well, Squire,
+ You may take my scalp for a fool,
+Ef every man when he signed his name
+ Didn't feel cock-sure of the pool.
+
+Fur a while it all went lovely;
+ We put up a job next day
+Fur to make Joy b'lieve his wife was dead,
+ And he went home middlin' gay;
+Then Abner Fry he killed a man
+ And afore he was hung McPhail
+Jest bilked the widder outen her sheer
+ By getting him slewed in jail.
+
+But Chris'mas scooped the Sheriff,
+ The egg-nogs gethered him in;
+And Shelby's boy Leviticus
+ Was, New Year's, tight as sin;
+And along in March the Golyers
+ Got so drunk that a fresh-biled owl
+Would 'a' looked 'longside o' them two young men,
+ Like a sober temperance fowl.
+
+Four months alone I walked the chalk,
+ I thought my heart would break;
+And all them boys a-slappin my back
+ And axin', "What'll you take?"
+I never slep' without dreamin' dreams
+ Of Burbin, Peach, or Rye,
+But I chawed at my niggerhead and swore
+ I'd rake that pool or die.
+
+At last--the Fo'th--I humped myself
+ Through chores and breakfast soon,
+Then scooted down to Taggart's store -
+ For the pledge was off at noon;
+And all the boys was gethered thar,
+ And each man hilt his glass -
+Watchin' me and the clock quite solemn-like
+ Fur to see the last minute pass.
+
+The clock struck twelve! I raised the jug
+ And took one lovin' pull -
+I was holler clar from skull to boots.
+ It seemed I couldn't git full.
+But I was roused by a fiendish laugh
+ That might have raised the dead -
+Them ornary sneaks had sot the clock
+ A half an hour ahead!
+
+"All right!" I squawked. "You've got me,
+ Jest order your drinks agin,
+And we'll paddle up to the Deacon's
+ And scoop the ante in."
+But when we got to Kedge's,
+ What a sight was that we saw!
+The Deacon and Parson Skeeters
+ In the tail of a game of Draw.
+
+They had shook 'em the heft of the mornin',
+ The Parson's luck was fa'r,
+And he raked, the minute we got thar,
+ The last of our pool on a pa'r.
+So toddle along with your pledge, Squire,
+ I 'low it's all very fine,
+But ez fur myself, I thank ye,
+ I'll not take any in mine.
+
+
+
+WANDERLIEDER.
+
+
+
+SUNRISE IN THE PLACE DE LA CONCORDE.
+(PARIS, AUGUST 1865.)
+
+
+
+I stand at the break of day
+In the Champs Elysees.
+The tremulous shafts of dawning,
+As they shoot o'er the Tuileries early,
+Strike Luxor's cold grey spire,
+And wild in the light of the morning
+With their marble manes on fire,
+Ramp the white Horses of Marly.
+
+But the Place of Concord lies
+Dead hushed 'neath the ashy skies.
+And the Cities sit in council
+With sleep in their wide stone eyes.
+I see the mystic plain
+Where the army of spectres slain
+In the Emperor's life-long war
+March on with unsounding tread
+To trumpets whose voice is dead.
+Their spectral chief still leads them, -
+The ghostly flash of his sword
+Like a comet through mist shines far, -
+And the noiseless host is poured,
+For the gendarme never heeds them,
+Up the long dim road where thundered
+The army of Italy onward
+Through the great pale Arch of the Star!
+
+The spectre army fades
+Far up the glimmering hill,
+But, vaguely lingering still,
+A group of shuddering shades
+Infects the pallid air,
+Growing dimmer as day invades
+The hush of the dusky square.
+There is one that seems a King,
+As if the ghost of a Crown
+Still shadowed his jail-bleached hair;
+I can hear the guillotine ring,
+As its regicide note rang there,
+When he laid his tired life down
+And grew brave in his last despair.
+And a woman frail and fair
+Who weeps at leaving a world
+Of love and revel and sin
+In the vast Unknown to be hurled;
+(For life was wicked and sweet
+With kings at her small white feet!)
+And one, every inch a Queen,
+In life and in death a Queen,
+Whose blood baptized the place,
+In the days of madness and fear, -
+Her shade has never a peer
+In majesty and grace.
+
+Murdered and murderers swarm;
+Slayers that slew and were slain,
+Till the drenched place smoked with the rain
+That poured in a torrent warm, -
+Till red as the Riders of Edom
+Were splashed the white garments of Freedom
+With the wash of the horrible storm!
+
+And Liberty's hands were not clean
+In the day of her pride unchained,
+Her royal hands were stained
+With the life of a King and Queen;
+And darker than that with the blood
+Of the nameless brave and good
+Whose blood in witness clings
+More damning than Queens' and Kings'.
+
+Has she not paid it dearly?
+Chained, watching her chosen nation
+Grinding late and early
+In the mills of usurpation?
+Have not her holy tears,
+Flowing through shameful years,
+Washed the stains from her tortured hands?
+We thought so when God's fresh breeze,
+Blowing over the sleeping lands,
+In 'Forty-Eight waked the world,
+And the Burgher-King was hurled
+From that palace behind the trees.
+
+As Freedom with eyes aglow
+Smiled glad through her childbirth pain,
+How was the mother to know
+That her woe and travail were vain?
+A smirking servant smiled
+When she gave him her child to keep;
+Did she know he would strangle the child
+As it lay in his arms asleep?
+
+Liberty's cruellest shame!
+She is stunned and speechless yet,
+In her grief and bloody sweat
+Shall we make her trust her blame?
+The treasure of 'Forty-Eight
+A lurking jail-bird stole,
+She can but watch and wait
+As the swift sure seasons roll.
+
+And when in God's good hour
+Comes the time of the brave and true,
+Freedom again shall rise
+With a blaze in her awful eyes
+That shall wither this robber-power
+As the sun now dries the dew.
+This Place shall roar with the voice
+Of the glad triumphant people,
+And the heavens be gay with the chimes
+Ringing with jubilant noise
+From every clamorous steeple
+The coming of better times.
+And the dawn of Freedom waking
+Shall fling its splendours far
+Like the day which now is breaking
+On the great pale Arch of the Star,
+And back o'er the town shall fly,
+While the joy-bells wild are ringing,
+To crown the Glory springing
+From the Column of July!
+
+
+
+THE SPHINX OF THE TUILERIES.
+
+
+
+Out of the Latin Quarter
+ I came to the lofty door
+Where the two marble Sphinxes guard
+ The Pavillon de Flore.
+Two Cockneys stood by the gate, and one
+ Observed, as they turned to go,
+"No wonder He likes that sort of thing, -
+ He's a Sphinx himself, you know."
+
+I thought as I walked where the garden glowed
+ In the sunset's level fire,
+Of the Charlatan whom the Frenchmen loathe
+ And the Cockneys all admire.
+They call him a Sphinx,--it pleases him, -
+ And if we narrowly read,
+We will find some truth in the flunkey's praise, -
+ The man is a Sphinx indeed.
+
+For the Sphinx with breast of woman
+ And face so debonair
+Had the sleek false paws of a lion,
+ That could furtively seize and tear.
+So far to the shoulders,--but if you took
+ The Beast in reverse you would find
+The ignoble form of a craven cur
+ Was all that lay behind.
+
+She lived by giving to simple folk
+ A silly riddle to read,
+And when they failed she drank their blood
+ In cruel and ravenous greed.
+But at last came one who knew her word,
+ And she perished in pain and shame, -
+This bastard Sphinx leads the same base life
+ And his end will be the same.
+
+For an OEdipus-People is coming fast
+ With swelled feet limping on,
+If they shout his true name once aloud
+ His false foul power is gone.
+Afraid to fight and afraid to fly,
+ He cowers in an abject shiver;
+The people will come to their own at last, -
+ God is not mocked for ever.
+
+
+
+THE SURRENDER OF SPAIN.
+
+
+
+I.
+Land of unconquered Pelayo! land of the Cid Campeador!
+Sea-girdled mother of men! Spain, name of glory and power;
+Cradle of world-grasping Emperors, grave of the reckless invader,
+How art thou fallen, my Spain! how art thou sunk at this hour!
+
+II.
+Once thy magnanimous sons trod, victors, the portals of Asia,
+Once the Pacific waves rushed, joyful thy banners to see;
+For it was Trajan that carried the battle-flushed eagles to Dacia,
+Cortes that planted thy flag fast by the uttermost sea.
+
+III.
+Hast thou forgotten those days illumined with glory and honour,
+When the far isles of the sea thrilled to the tread of Castile?
+When every land under Heaven was flecked by the shade of thy banner, -
+When every beam of the sun flashed on thy conquering steel?
+
+IV.
+Then through red fields of slaughter, through death and defeat and
+disaster,
+Still flared thy banner aloft, tattered, but free from a stain, -
+Now to the upstart Savoyard thou bendest to beg for a master!
+How the red flush of her shame mars the proud beauty of Spain!
+
+V.
+Has the red blood run cold that boiled by the Xenil and Darro?
+Are the high deeds of the sires sung to the children no more?
+On the dun hills of the North hast thou heard of no plough-boy Pizarro?
+Roams no young swine-herd Cortes hid by the Tagus' wild shore?
+
+VI.
+Once again does Hispania bend low to the yoke of the stranger!
+Once again will she rise, flinging her gyves in the sea!
+Princeling of Piedmont! unwitting thou weddest with doubt and with
+danger,
+King over men who have learned all that it costs to be free.
+
+
+
+THE PRAYER OF THE ROMANS.
+
+
+
+Not done, but near its ending,
+ Is the work that our eyes desired;
+Not yet fulfilled, but near the goal,
+ Is the hope that our worn hearts fired.
+And on the Alban Mountains,
+ Where the blushes of dawn increase,
+We see the flash of the beautiful feet
+ Of Freedom and of Peace!
+
+How long were our fond dreams baffled! -
+ Novara's sad mischance,
+The Kaiser's sword and fetter-lock,
+ And the traitor stab of France;
+Till at last came glorious Venice,
+ In storm and tempest home;
+And now God maddens the greedy kings,
+ And gives to her people Rome.
+
+Lame Lion of Caprera!
+ Red-shirts of the lost campaigns!
+Not idly shed was the costly blood
+ You poured from generous veins.
+For the shame of Aspromonte,
+ And the stain of Mentana's sod,
+But forged the curse of kings that sprang
+ From your breaking hearts to God!
+
+We lift our souls to Thee, O Lord
+ Of Liberty and of Light!
+Let not earth's kings pollute the work
+ That was done in their despite;
+Let not Thy light be darkened
+ In the shade of a sordid crown,
+Nor pampered swine devour the fruit
+ Thou shook'st with an earthquake down!
+
+Let the People come to their birthright,
+ And crosier and crown pass away
+Like phantasms that flit o'er the marshes
+ At the glance of the clean, white day.
+And then from the lava of AEtna
+ To the ice of the Alps let there be
+One freedom, one faith without fetters,
+ One republic in Italy free!
+
+
+
+THE CURSE OF HUNGARY.
+
+
+
+King Saloman looked from his donjon bars,
+ Where the Danube clamours through sedge and sand,
+ And he cursed with a curse his revolting land, -
+With a king's deep curse of treason and wars.
+
+He said: "May this false land know no truth!
+ May the good hearts die and the bad ones flourish,
+ And a greed of glory but live to nourish
+Envy and hate in its restless youth.
+
+"In the barren soil may the ploughshare rust,
+ While the sword grows bright with its fatal labour,
+ And blackens between each man and neighbour
+The perilous cloud of a vague distrust!
+
+"Be the noble idle, the peasant in thrall,
+ And each to the other as unknown things,
+ That with links of hatred and pride the kings
+May forge firm fetters through each for all!
+
+"May a king wrong them as they wronged their king
+ May he wring their hearts as they wrung mine,
+ Till they pour their blood for his revels like wine,
+And to women and monks their birthright fling!"
+
+The mad king died; but the rushing river
+ Still brawls by the spot where his donjon stands,
+ And its swift waves sigh to the conscious sands
+That the curse of King Saloman works for ever.
+
+For flowing by Pressbourg they heard the cheers
+ Ring out from the leal and cheated hearts
+ That were caught and chained by Theresa's arts, -
+A man's cool head and a girl's hot tears!
+
+And a star, scarce risen, they saw decline,
+ Where Orsova's hills looked coldly down,
+ As Kossuth buried the Iron Crown
+And fled in the dark to the Turkish line.
+
+And latest they saw in the summer glare
+ The Magyar nobles in pomp arrayed,
+ To shout as they saw, with his unfleshed blade,
+A Hapsburg beating the harmless air.
+
+But ever the same sad play they saw,
+ The same weak worship of sword and crown,
+ The noble crushing the humble down,
+And moulding Wrong to a monstrous Law.
+
+The donjon stands by the turbid river,
+ But Time is crumbling its battered towers;
+ And the slow light withers a despot's powers,
+And a mad king's curse is not for ever!
+
+
+
+THE MONKS OF BASLE.
+
+
+
+I tore this weed from the rank, dark soil
+ Where it grew in the monkish time,
+I trimmed it close and set it again
+ In a border of modern rhyme.
+
+I.
+Long years ago, when the Devil was loose
+ And faith was sorely tried,
+Three monks of Basle went out to walk
+ In the quiet eventide.
+
+A breeze as pure as the breath of Heaven
+ Blew fresh through the cloister-shades,
+A sky as glad as the smile of Heaven
+ Blushed rose o'er the minster-glades.
+
+But scorning the lures of summer and sense,
+ The monks passed on in their walk;
+Their eyes were abased, their senses slept,
+ Their souls were in their talk.
+
+In the tough grim talk of the monkish days
+ They hammered and slashed about, -
+Dry husks of logic,--old scraps of creed, -
+ And the cold gray dreams of doubt, -
+
+And whether Just or Justified
+ Was the Church's mystic Head, -
+And whether the Bread was changed to God,
+ Or God became the Bread.
+
+But of human hearts outside their walls
+ They never paused to dream,
+And they never thought of the love of God
+ That smiled in the twilight gleam.
+
+II.
+As these three monks went bickering on
+ By the foot of a spreading tree,
+Out from its heart of verdurous gloom
+ A song burst wild and free, -
+
+A wordless carol of life and love,
+ Of nature free and wild;
+And the three monks paused in the evening shade,
+ Looked up at each other and smiled.
+
+And tender and gay the bird sang on,
+ And cooed and whistled and trilled,
+And the wasteful wealth of life and love
+ From his happy heart was spilled.
+
+The song had power on the grim old monks
+ In the light of the rosy skies;
+And as they listened the years rolled back,
+ And tears came into their eyes.
+
+The years rolled back and they were young,
+ With the hearts and hopes of men,
+They plucked the daisies and kissed the girls
+ Of dear dead summers again.
+
+III.
+But the eldest monk soon broke the spell;
+ "'Tis sin and shame," quoth he,
+"To be turned from talk of holy things
+ By a bird's cry from a tree.
+
+"Perchance the Enemy of Souls
+ Hath come to tempt us so.
+Let us try by the power of the Awful Word
+ If it be he, or no!"
+
+To Heaven the three monks raised their hands;
+ "We charge thee, speak!" they said,
+"By His dread Name who shall one day come
+ To judge the quick and the dead, -
+
+"Who art thou? Speak!" The bird laughed loud.
+ "I am the Devil," he said.
+The monks on their faces fell, the bird
+ Away through the twilight sped.
+
+A horror fell on those holy men
+ (The faithful legends say),
+And one by one from the face of the earth
+ They pined and vanished away.
+
+IV.
+So goes the tale of the monkish books,
+ The moral who runs may read, -
+He has no ears for Nature's voice
+ Whose soul is the slave of creed.
+
+Not all in vain with beauty and love
+ Has God the world adorned;
+And he who Nature scorns and mocks,
+ By Nature is mocked and scorned.
+
+
+
+THE ENCHANTED SHIRT.
+
+
+
+Fytte the First: wherein it shall be shown how the Truth is too mighty a
+Drug for such as be of feeble temper.
+
+The King was sick. His cheek was red
+ And his eye was clear and bright;
+He ate and drank with a kingly zest,
+ And peacefully snored at night.
+
+But he said he was sick, and a king should know,
+ And doctors came by the score.
+They did not cure him. He cut off their heads
+ And sent to the schools for more.
+
+At last two famous doctors came,
+ And one was as poor as a rat, -
+He had passed his life in studious toil,
+ And never found time to grow fat.
+
+The other had never looked in a book;
+ His patients gave him no trouble -
+If they recovered they paid him well,
+ If they died their heirs paid double.
+
+Together they looked at the royal tongue,
+ As the King on his couch reclined;
+In succession they thumped his august chest,
+ But no trace of disease could find.
+
+The old sage said, "You're as sound as a nut."
+ "Hang him up!" roared the King in a gale, -
+In a ten-knot gale of royal rage;
+ The other leech grew a shade pale;
+
+But he pensively rubbed his sagacious nose,
+ And thus his prescription ran, -
+The King will be well, if he sleeps one night
+ In the Shirt of a Happy Man.
+
+
+
+Fytte the Second: tells of the search for the Shirt, and how it was nigh
+found, but was not, for reasons which are said or sung.
+
+Wide o'er the realm the couriers rode,
+ And fast their horses ran,
+And many they saw, and to many they spoke,
+ But they found no Happy Man.
+
+They found poor men who would fain be rich
+ And rich who thought they were poor;
+And men who twisted their waists in stays,
+ And women that shorthose wore.
+
+They saw two men by the roadside sit,
+ And both bemoaned their lot;
+For one had buried his wife, he said,
+ And the other one had not.
+
+At last they came to a village gate,
+ A beggar lay whistling there;
+He whistled and sang and laughed and rolled
+ On the grass in the soft June air.
+
+The weary couriers paused and looked
+ At the scamp so blithe and gay;
+And one of them said, "Heaven save you, friend!
+ You seem to be happy to-day."
+
+"O yes, fair sirs!" the rascal laughed,
+ And his voice rang free and glad,
+"An idle man has so much to do
+ That he never has time to be sad."
+
+"This is our man," the courier said
+ "Our luck has led us aright.
+I will give you a hundred ducats, friend,
+ For the loan of your shirt to-night."
+
+The merry blackguard lay back on the grass,
+ And laughed till his face was black;
+"I would do it, God wot," and he roared with the fun,
+ "But I haven't a shirt to my back."
+
+
+
+Fytte the Third: shewing how His Majesty the King came at last to sleep
+in a Happy Man his Shirt.
+
+Each day to the King the reports came in
+ Of his unsuccessful spies,
+And the sad panorama of human woes
+ Passed daily under his eyes.
+
+And he grew ashamed of his useless life,
+ And his maladies hatched in gloom;
+He opened his windows and let the air
+ Of the free heaven into his room.
+
+And out he went in the world and toiled
+ In his own appointed way;
+And the people blessed him, the land was glad,
+ And the King was well and gay.
+
+
+
+A WOMAN'S LOVE.
+
+
+
+A sentinel angel sitting high in glory
+Heard this shrill wail ring out from Purgatory:
+"Have mercy, mighty angel, hear my story!
+
+"I loved,--and, blind with passionate love, I fell.
+Love brought me down to death, and death to Hell.
+For God is just, and death for sin is well.
+
+"I do not rage against His high decree,
+Nor for myself do ask that grace shall be;
+But for my love on earth who mourns for me.
+
+"Great Spirit! let me see my love again
+And comfort him one hour, and I were fain
+To pay a thousand years of fire and pain."
+
+Then said the pitying angel, "Nay, repent
+That wild vow! Look, the dial-finger's bent
+Down to the last hour of thy punishment!"
+
+But still she wailed, "I pray thee, let me go!
+I cannot rise to peace and leave him so.
+Oh, let me soothe him in his bitter woe!"
+
+The brazen gates ground sullenly ajar,
+And upward, joyous, like a rising star,
+She rose and vanished in the ether far.
+
+But soon adown the dying sunset sailing,
+And like a wounded bird her pinions trailing,
+She fluttered back, with broken-hearted wailing.
+
+She sobbed, "I found him by the summer sea
+Reclined, his head upon a maiden's knee, -
+She curled his hair and kissed him. Woe is me!"
+
+She wept, "Now let my punishment begin!
+I have been fond and foolish. Let me in
+To expiate my sorrow and my sin."
+
+The angel answered, "Nay, sad soul, go higher!
+To be deceived in your true heart's desire
+Was bitterer than a thousand years of fire!"
+
+
+
+ON PITZ LANGUARD.
+
+
+
+I stood on the top of Pitz Languard,
+ And heard three voices whispering low,
+Where the Alpine birds in their circling ward
+ Made swift dark shadows upon the snow.
+
+First Voice.
+
+I loved a girl with truth and pain,
+ She loved me not. When she said good-bye
+She gave me a kiss to sting and stain
+ My broken life to a rosy dye.
+
+Second Voice.
+
+I loved a woman with love well tried, -
+ And I swear I believe she loves me still.
+But it was not I who stood by her side
+ When she answered the priest and said "I will."
+
+Third Voice.
+
+I loved two girls, one fond, one shy,
+ And I never divined which one loved me.
+One married, and now, though I can't tell why,
+ Of the four in the story I count but three.
+
+The three weird voices whispered low
+ Where the eagles swept in their circling ward;
+But only one shadow scarred the snow
+ As I clambered down from Pitz Languard.
+
+
+
+BOUDOIR PROPHECIES.
+
+
+
+One day in the Tuileries,
+When a south-west Spanish breeze
+ Brought scandalous news of the Queen,
+The fair, proud Empress said,
+"My good friend loses her head;
+ If matters go on this way,
+ I shall see her shopping, some day,
+ In the Boulevard des Capucines."
+
+The saying swiftly went
+To the Place of the Orient,
+ And the stout Queen sneered, "Ah, well!
+ You are proud and prude, ma belle!
+But I think I will hazard a guess
+I shall see you one day playing chess
+ With the Cure of Carabanchel."
+
+Both ladies, though not over wise,
+Were lucky in prophecies.
+ For the Boulevard shopmen well
+ Know the form of stout Isabel
+ As she buys her modes de Paris;
+And after Sedan in despair
+The Empress prude and fair
+Went to visit Madame sa Mere
+ In her villa at Carabanchel -
+ But the Queen was not there to see.
+
+
+
+A TRIUMPH OF ORDER.
+
+
+
+A squad of regular infantry,
+ In the Commune's closing days,
+Had captured a crowd of rebels
+ By the wall of Pere-la-Chaise.
+
+There were desperate men, wild women,
+ And dark-eyed Amazon girls,
+And one little boy, with a peach-down cheek
+ And yellow clustering curls.
+
+The captain seized the little waif,
+ And said, "What dost thou here?"
+"Sapristi, Citizen captain!
+ I'm a Communist, my dear!"
+
+"Very well! Then you die with the others!"
+--"Very well! That's my affair;
+But first let me take to my mother,
+ Who lives by the wine-shop there,
+
+"My father's watch. You see it;
+ A gay old thing, is it not?
+It would please the old lady to have it;
+ Then I'll come back here, and be shot."
+
+"That is the last we shall see of him,"
+ The grizzled captain grinned,
+As the little man skimmed down the hill
+ Like a swallow down the wind.
+
+For the joy of killing had lost its zest
+ In the glut of those awful days,
+And Death writhed, gorged like a greedy snake,
+ From the Arch to Pere-la-Chaise.
+
+But before the last platoon had fired
+ The child's shrill voice was heard;
+"Houp-la! the old girl made such a row
+ I feared I should break my word."
+
+Against the bullet-pitted wall
+ He took his place with the rest,
+A button was lost from his ragged blouse,
+ Which showed his soft white breast.
+
+"Now blaze away, my children!
+ With your little one-two-three!"
+The Chassepots tore the stout young heart,
+ And saved Society.
+
+
+
+ERNST OF EDELSHEIM.
+
+
+
+I'll tell the story, kissing
+ This white hand for my pains:
+No sweeter heart, nor falser,
+ E'er filled such fine, blue veins.
+
+I'll sing a song of true love,
+ My Lilith, dear! to you;
+Contraria contrariis -
+ The rule is old and true.
+
+The happiest of all lovers
+ Was Ernst of Edelsheim;
+And why he was the happiest,
+ I'll tell you in my rhyme.
+
+One summer night he wandered
+ Within a lonely glade,
+And, couched in moss and moonlight,
+ He found a sleeping maid.
+
+The stars of midnight sifted
+ Above her sands of gold;
+She seemed a slumbering statue,
+ So fair and white and cold.
+
+Fair and white and cold she lay
+ Beneath the starry skies;
+Rosy was her waking
+ Beneath the Ritter's eyes.
+
+He won her drowsy fancy,
+ He bore her to his towers,
+And swift with love and laughter
+ Flew morning's purpled hours.
+
+But when the thickening sunbeams
+ Had drunk the gleaming dew,
+A misty cloud of sorrow
+ Swept o'er her eyes' deep blue.
+
+She hung upon the Ritter's neck,
+ She wept with love and pain,
+She showered her sweet, warm kisses
+ Like fragrant summer rain.
+
+"I am no Christian soul," she sobbed,
+ As in his arms she lay;
+"I'm half the day a woman,
+ A serpent half the day.
+
+"And when from yonder bell-tower
+ Rings out the noonday chime,
+Farewell! farewell for ever,
+ Sir Ernst of Edelsheim!"
+
+"Ah! not farewell for ever!"
+ The Ritter wildly cried;
+"I will be saved or lost with thee,
+ My lovely Wili-Bride!"
+
+Loud from the lordly bell-tower
+ Rang out the noon of day,
+And from the bower of roses
+ A serpent slid away.
+
+But when the mid-watch moonlight
+ Was shimmering through the grove,
+He clasped his bride thrice dowered
+ With beauty and with love.
+
+The happiest of all lovers
+ Was Ernst of Edelsheim -
+His true love was a serpent
+ Only half the time!
+
+
+
+MY CASTLE IN SPAIN.
+
+
+
+There was never a castle seen
+ So fair as mine in Spain:
+It stands embowered in green,
+ Crowning the gentle slope
+Of a hill by the Xenil's shore
+And at eve its shade flaunts o'er
+ The storied Vega plain,
+And its towers are hid in the mists of Hope;
+ And I toil through years of pain
+ Its glimmering gates to gain.
+
+In visions wild and sweet
+Sometimes its courts I greet:
+ Sometimes in joy its shining halls
+I tread with favoured feet;
+But never my eyes in the light of day
+ Were blest with its ivied walls,
+Where the marble white and the granite gray
+Turn gold alike when the sunbeams play,
+ When the soft day dimly falls.
+
+I know in its dusky rooms
+ Are treasures rich and rare;
+The spoil of Eastern looms,
+ And whatever of bright and fair
+Painters divine have caught and won
+ From the vault of Italy's air:
+White gods in Phidian stone
+ People the haunted glooms;
+And the song of immortal singers
+Like a fragrant memory lingers,
+ I know, in the echoing rooms.
+
+But nothing of these, my soul!
+ Nor castle, nor treasures, nor skies,
+Nor the waves of the river that roil
+ With a cadence faint and sweet
+ In peace by its marble feet -
+Nothing of these is the goal
+ For which my whole heart sighs.
+'Tis the pearl gives worth to the shell -
+ The pearl I would die to gain;
+For there does my lady dwell,
+My love that I love so well -
+ The Queen whose gracious reign
+ Makes glad my castle in Spain.
+
+Her face so pure and fair
+ Sheds light in the shady places,
+And the spell of her girlish graces
+ Holds charmed the happy air.
+A breath of purity
+ For ever before her flies,
+And ill things cease to be
+ In the glance of her honest eyes.
+Around her pathway flutter,
+ Where her dear feet wander free
+ In youth's pure majesty,
+ The wings of the vague desires;
+But the thought that love would utter
+ In reverence expires.
+
+Not yet! not yet shall I see
+ That face which shines like a star
+ O'er my storm-swept life afar,
+Transfigured with love for me.
+Toiling, forgetting, and learning
+With labour and vigils and prayers,
+ Pure heart and resolute will,
+ At last I shall climb the hill
+And breathe the enchanted airs
+Where the light of my life is burning
+ Most lovely and fair and free,
+Where alone in her youth and beauty
+And bound by her fate's sweet duty,
+ Unconscious she waits for me.
+
+
+
+SISTER SAINT LUKE.
+
+
+
+She lived shut in by flowers and trees
+And shade of gentle bigotries.
+On this side lay the trackless sea,
+On that the great world's mystery;
+But all unseen and all unguessed
+They could not break upon her rest.
+The world's far splendours gleamed and flashed,
+Afar the wild seas foamed and dashed;
+But in her small, dull Paradise,
+Safe housed from rapture or surprise,
+Nor day nor night had power to fright
+The peace of God that filled her eyes.
+
+
+
+NEW AND OLD.
+
+
+
+MILES KEOGH'S HORSE.
+
+
+
+On the bluff of the Little Big-Horn,
+ At the close of a woeful day,
+Custer and his Three Hundred
+ In death and silence lay.
+
+Three Hundred to Three Thousand!
+ They had bravely fought and bled;
+For such is the will of Congress
+ When the White man meets the Red.
+
+The White men are ten millions,
+ The thriftiest under the sun;
+The Reds are fifty thousand,
+ And warriors every one.
+
+So Custer and all his fighting-men
+ Lay under the evening skies,
+Staring up at the tranquil heaven
+ With wide, accusing eyes.
+
+And of all that stood at noonday
+ In that fiery scorpion ring,
+Miles Keogh's horse at evening
+ Was the only living thing.
+
+Alone from that field of slaughter,
+ Where lay the three hundred slain,
+The horse Comanche wandered,
+ With Keogh's blood on his mane.
+
+And Sturgis issued this order,
+ Which future times shall read,
+While the love and honour of comrades
+ Are the soul of the soldiers creed.
+
+He said -
+ Let the horse Comanche
+ Henceforth till he shall die,
+Be kindly cherished and cared for
+ By the Seventh Cavalry.
+
+He shall do no labour; he never shall know
+ The touch of spur or rein;
+Nor shall his back be ever crossed
+ By living rider again.
+
+And at regimental formation
+ Of the Seventh Cavalry,
+Comanche draped in mourning and led
+ By a trooper of Company I,
+
+Shall parade with the Regiment!
+ Thus it was
+ Commanded and thus done,
+By order of General Sturgis, signed
+ By Adjutant Garlington.
+
+Even as the sword of Custer,
+ In his disastrous fall,
+Flashed out a blaze that charmed the world
+ And glorified his pall,
+
+This order, issued amid the gloom
+ That shrouds our army's name,
+When all foul beasts are free to rend
+ And tear its honest fame,
+
+Shall prove to a callous people
+ That the sense of a soldier's worth,
+That the love of comrades, the honour of arms,
+ Have not yet perished from earth.
+
+
+
+THE ADVANCE-GUARD.
+
+
+
+In the dream of the Northern poets,
+ The braves who in battle die
+Fight on in shadowy phalanx
+ In the field of the upper sky;
+And as we read the sounding rhyme,
+ The reverent fancy hears
+The ghostly ring of the viewless swords
+ And the clash of the spectral spears.
+
+We think with imperious questionings
+ Of the brothers whom we have lost,
+And we strive to track in death's mystery
+ The flight of each valiant ghost.
+The Northern myth comes back to us,
+ And we feel, through our sorrow's night,
+That those young souls are striving still
+ Somewhere for the truth and light.
+
+It was not their time for rest and sleep;
+ Their hearts beat high and strong;
+In their fresh veins the blood of youth
+ Was singing its hot, sweet song.
+The open heaven bent over them,
+ 'Mid flowers their lithe feet trod,
+Their lives lay vivid in light, and blest
+ By the smiles of women and God.
+
+Again they come! Again I hear
+ The tread of that goodly band;
+I know the flash of Ellsworth's eye
+ And the grasp of his hard, warm hand;
+And Putnam, and Shaw, of the lion-heart,
+ And an eye like a Boston girl's;
+And I see the light of heaven which lay
+ On Ulric Dahlgren's curls.
+
+There is no power in the gloom of hell
+ To quench those spirits' fire;
+There is no power in the bliss of heaven
+ To bid them not aspire;
+But somewhere in the eternal plan
+ That strength, that life survive,
+And like the files on Lookout's crest,
+ Above death's clouds they strive.
+
+A chosen corps, they are marching on
+ In a wider field than ours;
+Those bright battalions still fulfil
+ The scheme of the heavenly powers;
+And high brave thoughts float down to us,
+ The echoes of that far fight,
+Like the flash of a distant picket's gun
+ Through the shades of the severing night.
+
+No fear for them! In our lower field
+ Let us keep our arms unstained,
+That at last we be worthy to stand with them
+ On the shining heights they've gained.
+We shall meet and greet in closing ranks
+ In Time's declining sun,
+When the bugles of God shall sound recall
+ And the battle of life be won.
+
+
+
+LOVE'S PRAYER.
+
+
+
+If Heaven would hear my prayer,
+ My dearest wish would be,
+Thy sorrows not to share,
+ But take them all on me;
+If Heaven would hear my prayer.
+
+I'd beg with prayers and sighs
+ That never a tear might flow
+From out thy lovely eyes,
+ If Heaven might grant it so;
+Mine be the tears and sighs.
+
+No cloud thy brow should cover,
+ But smiles each other chase
+From lips to eyes all over
+ Thy sweet and sunny face;
+The clouds my heart should cover.
+
+That all thy path be light
+ Let darkness fall on me;
+If all thy days be bright,
+ Mine black as night could be.
+My love would light my night.
+
+For thou art more than life,
+ And if our fate should set
+Life and my love at strife,
+ How could I then forget
+I love thee more than life?
+
+
+
+CHRISTINE.
+
+
+
+The beauty of the Northern dawns,
+ Their pure, pale light is thine;
+Yet all the dreams of tropic nights
+ Within thy blue eyes shine.
+Not statelier in their prisoning seas
+ The icebergs grandly move,
+But in thy smile is youth and joy,
+ And in thy voice is love.
+
+Thou art like Hecla's crest that stands
+ So lonely, proud, and high,
+No earthly thing may come between
+ Her summit and the sky.
+The sun in vain may strive to melt
+ Her crown of virgin snow -
+But the great heart of the mountain glows
+ With deathless fire below.
+
+
+
+EXPECTATION.
+
+
+
+Roll on, O shining sun,
+ To the far seas!
+Bring down, ye shades of eve,
+ The soft, salt breeze!
+Shine out, O stars, and light
+My darling's pathway bright,
+As through the summer night
+ She comes to me.
+
+No beam of any star
+ Can match her eyes;
+Her smile the bursting day
+ In light outvies.
+Her voice--the sweetest thing
+Heard by the raptured spring
+When waking wild-woods ring -
+ She comes to me.
+
+Ye stars, more swiftly wheel
+ O'er earth's still breast;
+More wildly plunge and reel
+ In the dim west!
+The earth is lone and lorn,
+Till the glad day be born,
+Till with the happy morn
+ She comes to me.
+
+
+
+TO FLORA.
+
+
+
+When April woke the drowsy flowers,
+ And vagrant odours thronged the breeze,
+And bluebirds wrangled in the bowers,
+ And daisies flashed along the leas,
+And faint arbutus strove among
+ Dead winter's leaf-strewn wreck to rise,
+And nature's sweetly jubilant song
+ Went murmuring up the sunny skies,
+Into this cheerful world you came,
+And gained by right your vernal name.
+
+I think the springs have changed of late,
+ For "Arctics" are my daily wear,
+The skies are turned to cold grey slate,
+ And zephyrs are but draughts of air;
+But you make up whate'er we lack,
+ When we, too rarely, come together,
+More potent than the almanac,
+ You bring the ideal April weather;
+When you are with us we defy
+The blustering air, the lowering sky;
+In spite of winter's icy darts,
+We've spring and sunshine in our hearts.
+
+In fine, upon this April day,
+ This deep conundrum I will bring:
+Tell me the two good reasons, pray,
+ I have, to say you are like spring?
+
+[You give it up?] Because we love you -
+ And see so very little of you.
+
+
+
+A HAUNTED ROOM.
+
+
+
+In the dim chamber whence but yesterday
+ Passed my beloved, filled with awe I stand;
+ And haunting Loves fluttering on every hand
+Whisper her praises who is far away.
+A thousand delicate fancies glance and play
+ On every object which her robes have fanned,
+ And tenderest thoughts and hopes bloom and expand
+In the sweet memory of her beauty's ray.
+Ah! could that glass but hold the faintest trace
+ Of all the loveliness once mirrored there,
+ The clustering glory of the shadowy hair
+That framed so well the dear young angel face!
+ But no, it shows my own face, full of care,
+And my heart is her beauty's dwelling place.
+
+
+
+DREAMS.
+
+
+
+I love a woman tenderly,
+But cannot know if she loves me.
+I press her hand, her lips I kiss,
+But still love's full assurance miss.
+Our waking life for ever seems
+Cleft by a veil of doubt and dreams.
+
+But love and night and sleep combine
+In dreams to make her wholly mine.
+A sure love lights her eyes' deep blue,
+Her hands and lips are warm and true.
+Always the fact unreal seems,
+And truth I find alone in dreams.
+
+
+
+THE LIGHT OF LOVE.
+
+
+
+Each shining light above us
+ Has its own peculiar grace;
+But every light of heaven
+ Is in my darling's face.
+
+For it is like the sunlight,
+ So strong and pure and warm,
+That folds all good and happy things,
+ And guards from gloom and harm.
+
+And it is like the moonlight,
+ So holy and so calm;
+The rapt peace of a summer night,
+ When soft winds die in balm.
+
+And it is like the starlight;
+ For, love her as I may,
+She dwells still lofty and serene
+ In mystery far away.
+
+
+
+QUAND MEME.
+
+
+
+I strove, like Israel, with my youth,
+ And said, "Till thou bestow
+Upon my life Love's joy and truth,
+ I will not let thee go."
+
+And sudden on my night there woke
+ The trouble of the dawn;
+Out of the east the red light broke,
+ To broaden on and on.
+
+And now let death be far or nigh,
+ Let fortune gloom or shine,
+I cannot all untimely die,
+ For love, for love is mine.
+
+My days are tuned to finer chords,
+ And lit by higher suns;
+Through all my thoughts and all my words
+ A purer purpose runs.
+
+The blank page of my heart grows rife
+ With wealth of tender lore;
+Her image, stamped upon my life,
+ Gives value evermore.
+
+She is so noble, firm, and true,
+ I drink truth from her eyes,
+As violets gain the heaven's own blue
+ In gazing at the skies.
+
+No matter if my hands attain
+ The golden crown or cross;
+Only to love is such a gain
+ That losing is not loss.
+
+And thus whatever fate betide
+ Of rapture or of pain,
+If storm or sun the future hide,
+ My love is not in vain.
+
+So only thanks are on my lips;
+ And through my love I see
+My earliest dreams, like freighted ships,
+ Come sailing home to me.
+
+
+
+WORDS.
+
+
+
+When violets were springing
+ And sunshine filled the day,
+And happy birds were singing
+ The praises of the May,
+A word came to me, blighting
+ The beauty of the scene,
+And in my heart was winter,
+ Though all the trees were green.
+
+Now down the blast go sailing
+ The dead leaves, brown and sere;
+The forests are bewailing
+ The dying of the year;
+A word comes to me, lighting
+ With rapture all the air,
+And in my heart is summer,
+ Though all the trees are bare.
+
+
+
+THE STIRRUP-CUP.
+
+
+
+My short and happy day is done,
+The long and dreary night comes on;
+And at my door the Pale Horse stands,
+To carry me to unknown lands.
+
+His whinny shrill, his pawing hoof,
+Sound dreadful as a gathering storm;
+And I must leave this sheltering roof,
+And joys of life so soft and warm.
+
+Tender and warm the joys of life, -
+Good friends, the faithful and the true;
+My rosy children and my wife,
+So sweet to kiss, so fair to view.
+
+So sweet to kiss, so fair to view, -
+The night comes down, the lights burn blue;
+And at my door the Pale Horse stands,
+To bear me forth to unknown lands.
+
+
+
+A DREAM OF BRIC-A-BRAC.
+ [C. K. loquitur.]
+
+
+
+I dreamed I was in fair Niphon.
+Amid tea-fields I journeyed on,
+Reclined in my jinrikishaw;
+Across the rolling plains I saw
+The lordly Fusi-yama rise,
+His blue cone lost in bluer skies.
+
+At last I bade my bearers stop
+Before what seemed a china-shop.
+I roused myself and entered in.
+A fearful joy, like some sweet sin,
+Pierced through my bosom as I gazed,
+Entranced, transported, and amazed.
+
+For all the house was but one room,
+And in its clear and grateful gloom,
+Filled with all odours strange and strong
+That to the wondrous East belong,
+I saw above, around, below,
+A sight to make the warm heart glow,
+And leave the eager soul no lack, -
+An endless wealth of bric-a-brac.
+
+I saw bronze statues, old and rare,
+Fashioned by no mere mortal skill,
+With robes that fluttered in the air,
+Blown out by Art's eternal will;
+And delicate ivory netsukes,
+Richer in tone than Cheddar cheese,
+Of saints and hermits, cats and dogs,
+Grim warriors and ecstatic frogs.
+
+And here and there those wondrous masks,
+More living flesh than sandal-wood,
+Where the full soul in pleasure basks
+And dreams of love, the only good.
+The walls were all with pictures hung:
+Gay villas bright in rain-washed air,
+Trees to whose boughs brown monkeys clung,
+Outlineless dabs of fuzzy hair.
+And all about the opulent shelves
+Littered with porcelain beyond price:
+Imari pots arrayed themselves
+Beside Ming dishes; grain-of-rice
+Vied with the Royal Satsuma,
+Proud of its sallow ivory beam;
+And Kaga's Thousand Hermits lay
+Tranced in some punch-bowl's golden gleam.
+Over bronze censers, black with age,
+The five-clawed dragons strife engage;
+A curled and insolent Dog of Foo
+Sniffs at the smoke aspiring through.
+
+In what old days, in what far lands,
+What busy brains, what cunning hands,
+With what quaint speech, what alien thought,
+Strange fellow-men these marvels wrought!
+
+As thus I mused, I was aware
+There grew before my eager eyes
+A little maid too bright and fair,
+Too strangely lovely for surprise.
+It seemed the beauty of the place
+Had suddenly become concrete,
+So full was she of Orient grace,
+From her slant eyes and burnished face
+Down to her little gold-bronzed feet.
+She was a girl of old Japan;
+Her small hand held a gilded fan,
+Which scattered fragrance through the room;
+Her cheek was rich with pallid bloom,
+Her eye was dark with languid fire,
+Her red lips breathed a vague desire;
+Her teeth, of pearl inviolate,
+Sweetly proclaimed her maiden state.
+Her garb was stiff with broidered gold
+Twined with mysterious fold on fold,
+That gave no hint where, hidden well,
+Her dainty form might warmly dwell, -
+A pearl within too large a shell.
+So quaint, so short, so lissome, she,
+It seemed as if it well might be
+Some jocose god, with sportive whirl,
+Had taken up a long lithe girl
+And tied a graceful knot in her.
+I tried to speak, and found, oh, bliss!
+I needed no interpreter;
+I knew the Japanese for kiss, -
+I had no other thought but this;
+And she, with smile and blush divine,
+Kind to my stammering prayer did seem;
+My thought was hers, and hers was mine,
+In the swift logic of my dream.
+My arms clung round her slender waist,
+Through gold and silk the form I traced,
+And glad as rain that follows drouth,
+I kissed and kissed her bright red mouth.
+
+What ailed the girl? No loving sigh
+Heaved the round bosom; in her eye
+Trembled no tear; from her dear throat
+Bubbled a sweet and silvery note
+Of girlish laughter, shrill and clear,
+That all the statues seemed to hear.
+The bronzes tinkled laughter fine;
+I heard a chuckle argentine
+Ring from the silver images;
+Even the ivory netsukes
+Uttered in every silent pause
+Dry, bony laughs from tiny jaws;
+The painted monkeys on the wall
+Waked up with chatter impudent;
+Pottery, porcelain, bronze, and all
+Broke out in ghostly merriment, -
+Faint as rain pattering on dry leaves,
+Or cricket's chirp on summer eves.
+
+And suddenly upon my sight
+There grew a portent: left and right,
+On every side, as if the air
+Had taken substance then and there,
+In every sort of form and face,
+A throng of tourists filled the place.
+I saw a Frenchman's sneering shrug;
+A German countess, in one hand
+A sky-blue string which held a pug,
+With the other a fiery face she fanned;
+A Yankee with a soft felt hat;
+A Coptic priest from Ararat;
+An English girl with cheeks of rose;
+A Nihilist with Socratic nose;
+Paddy from Cork with baggage light
+And pockets stuffed with dynamite;
+A haughty Southern Readjuster,
+Wrapped in his pride and linen duster;
+Two noisy New York stockbrokers,
+And twenty British globe-trotters.
+To my disgust and vast surprise,
+They turned on me lack-lustre eyes,
+And each with dropped and wagging jaw
+Burst out into a wild guffaw:
+They laughed with huge mouths opened wide;
+They roared till each one held his side;
+They screamed and writhed with brutal glee,
+With fingers rudely stretched to me, -
+Till lo! at once the laughter died,
+The tourists faded into air;
+None but my fair maid lingered there,
+Who stood demurely by my side.
+"Who were your friends?" I asked the maid,
+Taking a tea-cup from its shelf.
+"This audience is disclosed," she said,
+"Whenever a man makes a fool of himself."
+
+
+
+LIBERTY.
+
+
+
+What man is there so bold that he should say,
+"Thus, and thus only, would I have the sea"?
+For whether lying calm and beautiful,
+Clasping the earth in love, and throwing back
+The smile of heaven from waves of amethyst;
+Or whether, freshened by the busy winds,
+It bears the trade and navies of the world
+To ends of use or stern activity;
+Or whether, lashed by tempests, it gives way
+To elemental fury, howls and roars
+At all its rocky barriers, in wild lust
+Of ruin drinks the blood of living things,
+And strews its wrecks o'er leagues of desolate shore, -
+Always it is the sea, and men bow down
+Before its vast and varied majesty.
+
+So all in vain will timorous ones essay
+To set the metes and bounds of Liberty.
+For Freedom is its own eternal law;
+It makes its own conditions, and in storm
+Or calm alike fulfils the unerring Will.
+Let us not then despise it when it lies
+Still as a sleeping lion, while a swarm
+Of gnat-like evils hover round its head;
+Nor doubt it when in mad, disjointed times
+It shakes the torch of terror, and its cry
+Shrills o'er the quaking earth, and in the flame
+Of riot and war we see its awful form
+Rise by the scaffold, where the crimson axe
+Rings down its grooves the knell of shuddering kings.
+For ever in thine eyes, O Liberty,
+Shines that high light whereby the world is saved,
+And though thou slay us, we will trust in thee!
+
+
+
+THE WHITE FLAG.
+
+
+
+I sent my love two roses,--one
+ As white as driven snow,
+And one a blushing royal red,
+ A flaming Jacqueminot.
+
+I meant to touch and test my fate;
+ That night I should divine,
+The moment I should see my love,
+ If her true heart were mine.
+
+For if she holds me dear, I said,
+ She'll wear my blushing rose;
+If not, she'll wear my cold Lamarque
+ As white as winter's snows.
+
+My heart sank when I met her: sure
+ I had been over bold,
+For on her breast my pale rose lay
+ In virgin whiteness cold.
+
+Yet with low words she greeted me,
+ With smiles divinely tender;
+Upon her cheek the red rose dawned. -
+ The white rose meant surrender.
+
+
+
+THE LAW OF DEATH.
+
+
+
+The song of Kilvani: fairest she
+In all the land of Savatthi.
+She had one child, as sweet and gay
+And dear to her as the light of day.
+She was so young, and he so fair,
+The same bright eyes and the same dark hair;
+To see them by the blossomy way,
+They seemed two children at their play.
+
+There came a death-dart from the sky,
+Kilvani saw her darling die.
+The glimmering shade his eyes invades,
+Out of his cheek the red bloom fades;
+His warm heart feels the icy chill,
+The round limbs shudder, and are still.
+And yet Kilvani held him fast
+Long after life's last pulse was past,
+As if her kisses could restore
+The smile gone out for evermore.
+
+But when she saw her child was dead,
+She scattered ashes on her head,
+And seized the small corpse, pale and sweet,
+And rushing wildly through the street,
+She sobbing fell at Buddha's feet.
+
+"Master, all-helpful, help me now!
+Here at thy feet I humbly bow;
+Have mercy, Buddha, help me now!"
+She grovelled on the marble floor,
+And kissed the dead child o'er and o'er.
+And suddenly upon the air
+There fell the answer to her prayer:
+"Bring me to-night a lotus tied
+With thread from a house where none has died."
+
+She rose, and laughed with thankful joy,
+Sure that the god would save the boy.
+She found a lotus by the stream;
+She plucked it from its noonday dream,
+And then from door to door she fared,
+To ask what house by Death was spared.
+Her heart grew cold to see the eyes
+Of all dilate with slow surprise:
+"Kilvani, thou hast lost thy head;
+Nothing can help a child that's dead.
+There stands not by the Ganges' side
+A house where none hath ever died."
+Thus, through the long and weary day,
+From every door she bore away
+Within her heart, and on her arm,
+A heavier load, a deeper harm.
+By gates of gold and ivory,
+By wattled huts of poverty,
+The same refrain heard poor Kilvani,
+THE LIVING ARE FEW, THE DEAD ARE MANY.
+
+The evening came--so still and fleet -
+And overtook her hurrying feet.
+And, heartsick, by the sacred fane
+She fell, and prayed the god again.
+She sobbed and beat her bursting breast:
+"Ah, thou hast mocked me, Mightiest!
+Lo! I have wandered far and wide;
+There stands no house where none hath died."
+And Buddha answered, in a tone
+Soft as a flute at twilight blown,
+But grand as heaven and strong as death
+To him who hears with ears of faith:
+"Child, thou art answered. Murmur not!
+Bow, and accept the common lot."
+
+Kilvani heard with reverence meet,
+And laid her child at Buddha's feet.
+
+
+
+MOUNT TABOR.
+
+
+
+On Tabor's height a glory came,
+And, shrined in clouds of lambent flame,
+The awestruck, hushed disciples saw
+Christ and the prophets of the law.
+Moses, whose grand and awful face
+Of Sinai's thunder bore the trace,
+And wise Elias,--in his eyes
+The shade of Israel's prophecies, -
+Stood in that wide, mysterious light,
+Than Syrian noons more purely bright,
+One on each hand, and high between
+Shone forth the godlike Nazarene.
+They bowed their heads in holy fright, -
+No mortal eyes could bear the sight, -
+And when they looked again, behold!
+The fiery clouds had backward rolled,
+And borne aloft in grandeur lonely,
+Nothing was left "save Jesus only."
+
+Resplendent type of things to be!
+We read its mystery to-day
+With clearer eyes than even they,
+The fisher-saints of Galilee.
+We see the Christ stand out between
+The ancient law and faith serene,
+Spirit and letter; but above
+Spirit and letter both was Love.
+Led by the hand of Jacob's God,
+Through wastes of eld a path was trod
+By which the savage world could move
+Upward through law and faith to love.
+And there in Tabor's harmless flame
+The crowning revelation came.
+The old world knelt in homage due,
+The prophets near in reverence drew,
+Law ceased its mission to fulfil,
+And Love was lord on Tabor's hill.
+
+So now, while creeds perplex the mind
+And wranglings load the weary wind,
+When all the air is filled with words
+And texts that wring like clashing swords,
+Still, as for refuge, we may turn
+Where Tabor's shining glories burn, -
+The soul of antique Israel gone,
+And nothing left but Christ alone.
+
+
+
+RELIGION AND DOCTRINE.
+
+
+
+ He stood before the Sanhedrim;
+The scowling rabbis gazed at him.
+He recked not of their praise or blame;
+There was no fear, there was no shame,
+For one upon whose dazzled eyes
+The whole world poured its vast surprise.
+The open heaven was far too near,
+His first day's light too sweet and clear,
+To let him waste his new-gained ken
+On the hate-clouded face of men.
+
+ But still they questioned, "Who art thou?
+What hast thou been? What art thou now?
+Thou art not he who yesterday
+Sat here and begged beside the way;
+For he was blind."
+
+ --"And I am he;
+For I was blind, but now I see."
+
+ He told the story o'er and o'er;
+It was his full heart's only lore:
+A prophet on the Sabbath-day
+Had touched his sightless eyes with clay,
+And made him see who had been blind.
+Their words passed by him like the wind,
+Which raves and howls, but cannot shock
+The hundred-fathom-rooted rock.
+
+ Their threats and fury all went wide;
+They could not touch his Hebrew pride.
+Their sneers at Jesus and His band,
+Nameless and homeless in the land,
+Their boasts of Moses and his Lord,
+All could not change him by one word.
+
+ "I know not what this man may be,
+Sinner or saint; but as for me,
+One thing I know,--that I am he
+Who once was blind, and now I see."
+
+ They were all doctors of renown,
+The great men of a famous town,
+With deep brows, wrinkled, broad, and wise,
+Beneath their wide phylacteries;
+The wisdom of the East was theirs,
+And honour crowned their silver hairs.
+The man they jeered and laughed to scorn
+Was unlearned, poor, and humbly born;
+But he knew better far than they
+What came to him that Sabbath-day;
+And what the Christ had done for him
+He knew, and not the Sanhedrim.
+
+
+
+SINAI AND CALVARY.
+
+
+
+There are two mountains hallowed
+ By majesty sublime,
+Which rear their crests unconquered
+ Above the floods of Time.
+Uncounted generations
+ Have gazed on them with awe, -
+The mountain of the Gospel,
+ The mountain of the Law.
+
+From Sinai's cloud of darkness
+ The vivid lightnings play;
+They serve the God of vengeance,
+ The Lord who shall repay.
+Each fault must bring its penance,
+ Each sin the avenging blade,
+For God upholds in justice
+ The laws that He hath made.
+
+But Calvary stands to ransom
+ The earth from utter loss,
+In shade than light more glorious,
+ The shadow of the Cross.
+To heal a sick world's trouble,
+ To soothe its woe and pain,
+On Calvary's sacred summit
+ The Paschal Lamb was slain.
+
+The boundless might of Heaven
+ Its law in mercy furled,
+As once the bow of promise
+ O'erarched a drowning world.
+The Law said, "As you keep me,
+ It shall be done to you; "
+But Calvary prays, "Forgive them;
+ They know not what they do."
+
+Almighty God! direct us
+ To keep Thy perfect Law!
+O blessed Saviour, help us
+ Nearer to Thee to draw!
+Let Sinai's thunders aid us
+ To guard our feet from sin;
+And Calvary's light inspire us
+ The love of God to win.
+
+
+
+THE VISION OF ST. PETER.
+
+
+
+To Peter by night the faithfullest came
+ And said, "We appeal to thee!
+The life of the Church is in thy life;
+ We pray thee to rise and flee.
+
+"For the tyrant's hand is red with blood,
+ And his arm is heavy with power;
+Thy head, the head of the Church, will fall
+ If thou tarry in Rome an hour."
+
+Through the sleeping town St. Peter passed
+ To the wide Campagna plain;
+In the starry light of the Alban night
+ He drew free breath again:
+
+When across his path an awful form
+ In luminous glory stood;
+His thorn-crowned brow, His hands and feet,
+ Were wet with immortal blood.
+
+The godlike sorrow which filled His eyes
+ Seemed changed to a godlike wrath
+As they turned on Peter, who cried aloud,
+ And sank to his knees in the path.
+
+"Lord of my life, my love, my soul!
+ Say, what wilt Thou with me?"
+A voice replied, "I go to Rome
+ To be crucified for thee."
+
+The Apostle sprang, all flushed, to his feet, -
+ The vision had passed away;
+The light still lay on the dewy plain,
+ But the sky in the east was gray.
+
+To the city walls St. Peter turned,
+ And his heart in his breast grew fire;
+In every vein the hot blood burned
+ With the strength of one high desire.
+
+And sturdily back he marched to his death
+ Of terrible pain and shame;
+And never a shade of fear again
+ To the stout Apostle came.
+
+
+
+ISRAEL.
+
+
+
+When by Jabbok the patriarch waited
+ To learn on the morrow his doom,
+And his dubious spirit debated
+ In darkness and silence and gloom,
+ There descended a Being with whom
+He wrestled in agony sore,
+ With striving of heart and of brawn,
+And not for an instant forbore
+ Till the east gave a threat of the dawn;
+And then, as the Awful One blessed him,
+ To his lips and his spirit there came,
+Compelled by the doubts that oppressed him,
+The cry that through questioning ages
+Has been wrung from the hinds and the sages,
+ "Tell me, I pray Thee, Thy name!"
+
+Most fatal, most futile, of questions!
+ Wherever the heart of man beats,
+ In the spirit's most sacred retreats,
+It comes with its sombre suggestions,
+ Unanswered for ever and aye.
+ The blessing may come and may stay,
+For the wrestlers heroic endeavour;
+But the question, unheeded for ever,
+ Dies out in the broadening day.
+
+In the ages before our traditions,
+By the altars of dark superstitions,
+ The imperious question has come;
+When the death-stricken victim lay sobbing
+ At the feet of his slayer and priest,
+And his heart was laid smoking and throbbing
+ To the sound of the cymbal and drum
+On the steps of the high Teocallis;
+ When the delicate Greek at his feast
+Poured forth the red wine from his chalice
+ With mocking and cynical prayer;
+When by Nile Egypt worshipping lay,
+ And afar, through the rosy, flushed air
+The Memnon called out to the day;
+Where the Muezzin's cry floats from his spire;
+ In the vaulted Cathedral's dim shades,
+Where the crushed hearts of thousands aspire
+Through arts highest miracles higher,
+ This question of questions invades
+ Each heart bowed in worship or shame;
+In the air where the censers are swinging,
+A voice, going up with the singing,
+ Cries, "Tell me, I pray Thee, Thy name!"
+
+No answer came back, not a word,
+To the patriarch there by the ford;
+No answer has come through the ages
+To the poets, the seers, and the sages
+Who have sought in the secrets of science
+The name and the nature of God,
+Whether cursing in desperate defiance
+Or kissing His absolute rod;
+But the answer which was and shall be,
+"My name! Nay, what is it to thee?"
+The search and the question are vain.
+By use of the strength that is in you,
+By wrestling of soul and of sinew
+The blessing of God you may gain.
+
+There are lights in the far-gleaming Heaven
+ That never will shine on our eyes;
+To mortals it may not be given
+ To range those inviolate skies.
+The mind, whether praying or scorning,
+ That tempts those dread secrets shall fail;
+But strive through the night till the morning,
+ And mightily shalt thou prevail.
+
+
+
+THE CROWS AT WASHINGTON.
+
+
+
+Slow flapping to the setting sun
+ By twos and threes, in wavering rows,
+ As twilight shadows dimly close,
+The crows fly over Washington.
+
+Under the crimson sunset sky
+Virginian woodlands leafless lie,
+ In wintry torpor bleak and dun.
+Through the rich vault of heaven, which shines
+ Like a warmed opal in the sun,
+With wide advance in broken lines
+ The crows fly over Washington.
+
+Over the Capitol's white dome,
+ Across the obelisk soaring bare
+To prick the clouds, they travel home,
+Content and weary, winnowing
+ With dusky vans the golden air,
+Which hints the coming of the spring,
+ Though winter whitens Washington.
+
+The dim, deep air, the level ray
+Of dying sunlight on their plumes,
+ Give them a beauty not their own;
+Their hoarse notes fail and faint away;
+ A rustling murmur floating down
+Blends sweetly with the thickening glooms;
+They touch with grace the fading day,
+ Slow flying over Washington.
+
+I stand and watch with clouded eyes
+ These dim battalions move along;
+Out of the distance memory cries
+ Of days when life and hope were strong,
+When love was prompt and wit was gay;
+Even then, at evening, as to-day,
+ I watched, while twilight hovered dim
+ Over Potomac's curving rim,
+This selfsame flight of homing crows
+Blotting the sunset's fading rose,
+ Above the roofs of Washington.
+
+
+
+REMORSE.
+
+
+
+Sad is the thought of sunniest days
+ Of love and rapture perished,
+And shine through memory's tearful haze
+ The eyes once fondliest cherished.
+Reproachful is the ghost of toys
+ That charmed while life was wasted.
+But saddest is the thought of joys
+ That never yet were tasted.
+
+Sad is the vague and tender dream
+ Of dead love's lingering kisses,
+To crushed hearts haloed by the gleam
+ Of unreturning blisses;
+Deep mourns the soul in anguished pride
+ For the pitiless death that won them, -
+But the saddest wail is for lips that died
+ With the virgin dew upon them.
+
+
+
+
+ESSE QUAM VIDERI.
+
+
+
+The knightly legend of thy shield betrays
+ The moral of thy life; a forecast wise,
+ And that large honour that deceit defies,
+Inspired thy fathers in the elder days,
+Who decked thy scutcheon with that sturdy phrase,
+ TO BE RATHER THAN SEEM. As eve's red skies
+ Surpass the morning's rosy prophecies,
+Thy life to that proud boast its answer pays.
+Scorning thy faith and purpose to defend
+ The ever-mutable multitude at last
+ Will hail the power they did not comprehend, -
+Thy fame will broaden through the centuries;
+ As, storm and billowy tumult overpast,
+ The moon rules calmly o'er the conquered seas.
+
+
+
+WHEN THE BOYS COME HOME.
+
+
+
+There's a happy time coming,
+ When the boys come home.
+There's a glorious day coming,
+ When the boys come home.
+We will end the dreadful story
+Of this treason dark and gory
+In a sunburst of glory,
+ When the boys come home.
+
+The day will seem brighter
+ When the boys come home,
+For our hearts will be lighter
+ When the boys come home.
+Wives and sweethearts will press them
+In their arms and caress them,
+And pray God to bless them,
+ When the boys come home.
+
+The thinned ranks will be proudest
+ When the boys come home,
+And their cheer will ring the loudest
+ When the boys come home.
+The full ranks will be shattered,
+And the bright arms will be battered,
+And the battle-standards tattered,
+ When the boys come home.
+
+Their bayonets may be rusty,
+ When the boys come home,
+And their uniforms dusty,
+ When the boys come home.
+But all shall see the traces
+Of battle's royal graces,
+In the brown and bearded faces,
+ When the boys come home.
+
+Our love shall go to meet them,
+ When the boys come home,
+To bless them and to greet them,
+ When the boys come home;
+And the fame of their endeavour
+Time and change shall not dissever
+From the nation's heart for ever,
+ When the boys come home.
+
+
+
+LESE-AMOUR.
+
+
+
+ How well my heart remembers
+ Beside these camp-fire embers
+The eyes that smiled so far away, -
+ The joy that was November's.
+
+ Her voice to laughter moving,
+ So merrily reproving, -
+We wandered through the autumn woods,
+ And neither thought of loving.
+
+ The hills with light were glowing,
+ The waves in joy were flowing, -
+It was not to the clouded sun
+ The day's delight was owing.
+
+ Though through the brown leaves straying,
+ Our lives seemed gone a-Maying;
+We knew not Love was with us there,
+ No look nor tone betraying.
+
+ How unbelief still misses
+ The best of being's blisses!
+Our parting saw the first and last
+ Of love's imagined kisses.
+
+ Now 'mid these scenes the drearest
+ I dream of her, the dearest, -
+Whose eyes outshine the Southern stars,
+ So far, and yet the nearest.
+
+ And Love, so gaily taunted,
+ Who died, no welcome granted,
+Comes to me now, a pallid ghost,
+ By whom my life is haunted.
+
+ With bonds I may not sever,
+ He binds my heart for ever,
+And leads me where we murdered him, -
+ The Hill beside the River.
+
+CAMP SHAW, FLORIDA,
+ February 1864.
+
+
+
+NORTHWARD.
+
+
+
+Under the high unclouded sun
+That makes the ship and shadow one,
+ I sail away as from the fort
+Booms sullenly the noonday gun.
+
+The odorous airs blow thin and fine,
+The sparkling waves like emeralds shine,
+ The lustre of the coral reefs
+Gleams whitely through the tepid brine.
+
+And glitters o'er the liquid miles
+The jewelled ring of verdant isles,
+ Where generous Nature holds her court
+Of ripened bloom and sunny smiles.
+
+Encinctured by the faithful seas
+Inviolate gardens load the breeze,
+ Where flaunt like giant-warders' plumes
+The pennants of the cocoa-trees.
+
+Enthroned in light and bathed in balm,
+In lonely majesty the Palm
+ Blesses the isles with waving hands, -
+High-Priest of the eternal Calm.
+
+Yet Northward with an equal mind
+I steer my course, and leave behind
+ The rapture of the Southern skies, -
+The wooing of the Southern wind.
+
+For here o'er Nature's wanton bloom
+Falls far and near the shade of gloom,
+ Cast from the hovering vulture-wings
+Of one dark thought of woe and doom.
+
+I know that in the snow-white pines
+The brave Norse fire of freedom shines,
+ And fain for this I leave the land
+Where endless summer pranks the vines.
+
+O strong, free North, so wise and brave!
+O South, too lovely for a slave!
+ Why read ye not the changeless truth, -
+The free can conquer but to save?
+
+May God upon these shining sands
+Send Love and Victory clasping hands,
+ And Freedom's banners wave in peace
+For ever o'er the rescued lands!
+
+And here, in that triumphant hour,
+Shall yielding beauty wed with power;
+ And blushing earth and smiling sea
+In dalliance deck the bridal bower.
+
+KEY WEST, 1864.
+
+
+
+IN THE FIRELIGHT.
+
+
+
+My dear wife sits beside the fire
+ With folded hands and dreaming eyes,
+Watching the restless flames aspire,
+ And rapt in thralling memories.
+I mark the fitful firelight fling
+ Its warm caresses on her brow,
+ And kiss her hands' unmelting snow,
+And glisten on her wedding-ring.
+
+The proud free head that crowns so well
+ The neck superb, whose outlines glide
+Into the bosom's perfect swell
+ Soft-billowed by its peaceful tide,
+The cheek's faint flush, the lip's red glow,
+ The gracious charm her beauty wears,
+ Fill my fond eyes with tender tears
+As in the days of long ago.
+
+Days long ago, when in her eyes
+ The only heaven I cared for lay,
+When from our thoughtless Paradise
+ All care and toil dwelt far away;
+When Hope in wayward fancies throve,
+ And rioted in secret sweets,
+ Beguiled by Passion's dear deceits, -
+The mysteries of maiden love.
+
+One year had passed since first my sight
+ Was gladdened by her girlish charms,
+When on a rapturous summer night
+ I clasped her in possessing arms.
+And now ten years have rolled away,
+ And left such blessings as their dower;
+ I owe her tenfold at this hour
+The love that lit our wedding-day.
+
+For now, vague-hovering o'er her form,
+ My fancy sees, by love refined,
+A warmer and a dearer charm
+ By wedlock's mystic hands entwined, -
+A golden coil of wifely cares
+ That years have forged, the loving joy
+ That guards the curly-headed boy
+Asleep an hour ago upstairs.
+
+A fair young mother, pure as fair,
+ A matron heart and virgin soul!
+The flickering light that crowns her hair
+ Seems like a saintly aureole.
+A tender sense upon me falls
+ That joy unmerited is mine,
+ And in this pleasant twilight shine
+My perfect bliss myself appals.
+
+Come back! my darling, strayed so far
+ Into the realm of fantasy, -
+Let thy dear face shine like a star
+ In love-light beaming over me.
+My melting soul is jealous, sweet,
+ Of thy long silence' drear eclipse;
+ O kiss me back with living lips,
+To life, love, lying at thy feet!
+
+
+
+IN A GRAVEYARD.
+
+
+
+In the dewy depths of the graveyard
+ I lie in the tangled grass,
+And watch, in the sea of azure,
+ The white cloud-islands pass.
+
+The birds in the rustling branches
+ Sing gaily overhead;
+Grey stones like sentinel spectres
+ Are guarding the silent dead.
+
+The early flowers sleep shaded
+ In the cool green noonday glooms;
+The broken light falls shuddering
+ On the cold white face of the tombs.
+
+Without, the world is smiling
+ In the infinite love of God,
+But the sunlight fails and falters
+ When it falls on the churchyard sod.
+
+On me the joyous rapture
+ Of a heart's first love is shed,
+But it falls on my heart as coldly
+ As sunlight on the dead.
+
+
+
+THE PRAIRIE.
+
+
+
+The skies are blue above my head,
+ The prairie green below,
+And flickering o'er the tufted grass
+ The shifting shadows go,
+Vague-sailing, where the feathery clouds
+ Fleck white the tranquil skies,
+Black javelins darting where aloft
+ The whirring pheasant flies.
+
+A glimmering plain in drowsy trance
+ The dim horizon bounds,
+Where all the air is resonant
+ With sleepy summer sounds, -
+The life that sings among the flowers,
+ The lisping of the breeze,
+The hot cicala's sultry cry,
+ The murmurous dream of bees.
+
+The butterfly--a flying flower -
+ Wheels swift in flashing rings,
+And flutters round his quiet kin,
+ With brave flame-mottled wings.
+The wild Pinks burst in crimson fire
+ The Phlox' bright clusters shine,
+And Prairie-Cups are swinging free
+ To spill their airy wine.
+
+And lavishly beneath the sun,
+ In liberal splendour rolled,
+The Fennel fills the dipping plain
+ With floods of flowery gold;
+And widely weaves the Iron-Weed
+ A woof of purple dyes
+Where Autumn's royal feet may tread
+ When bankrupt Summer flies.
+
+In verdurous tumult far away
+ The prairie-billows gleam,
+Upon their crests in blessing rests
+ The noontide's gracious beam.
+Low quivering vapours steaming dim
+ The level splendours break
+Where languid Lilies deck the rim
+ Of some land-circled lake.
+
+Far in the east like low-hung clouds
+ The waving woodlands lie;
+Far in the west the glowing plain
+ Melts warmly in the sky.
+No accent wounds the reverent air,
+ No footprint dints the sod,
+Lone in the light the prairie lies
+ Rapt in a dream of God.
+
+ILLINOIS, 1858.
+
+
+
+CENTENNIAL.
+
+
+
+A hundred times the bells of Brown
+ Have rung to sleep the idle summers,
+And still to-day clangs clamouring down
+ A greeting to the welcome comers.
+
+And far, like waves of morning, pours
+ Her call, in airy ripples breaking,
+And wanders to the farthest shores,
+ Her children's drowsy hearts awaking.
+
+The wild vibration floats along,
+ O'er heart-strings tense its magic plying,
+And wakes in every breast its song
+ Of love and gratitude undying.
+
+My heart to meet the summons leaps
+ At limit of its straining tether,
+Where the fresh western sunlight steeps
+ In golden flame the prairie heather.
+
+And others, happier, rise and fare
+ To pass within the hallowed portal,
+And see the glory shining there
+ Shrined in her steadfast eyes immortal.
+
+What though their eyes be dim and dull,
+ Their heads be white in reverend blossom;
+Our mothers smile is beautiful
+ As when she bore them on her bosom!
+
+Her heavenly forehead bears no line
+ Of Time's iconolastic fingers,
+But o'er her form the grace divine
+ Of deathless youth and wisdom lingers.
+
+We fade and pass, grow faint and old,
+ Till youth and joy and hope are banished,
+And still her beauty seems to fold
+ The sum of all the glory vanished.
+
+As while Tithonus faltered on
+ The threshold of the Olympian dawnings,
+Aurora's front eternal shone
+ With lustre of the myriad mornings.
+
+So joys that slip like dead leaves down,
+ And hopes burnt out that die in ashes,
+Rise restless from their graves to crown
+ Our mother's brow with fadeless flashes.
+
+And lives wrapped in traditions mist
+ These honoured halls to-day are haunting,
+And lips by lips long withered kissed
+ The sagas of the past are chanting.
+
+Scornful of absence' envious bar
+ BROWN smiles upon the mystic meeting
+Of those her sons, who, sundered far,
+ In brotherhood of heart are greeting;
+
+Her wayward children wandering on
+ Where setting stars are lowly burning,
+But still in worship toward the dawn
+ That gilds their souls' dear Mecca turning;
+
+Or those who, armed for God's own fight,
+ Stand by His Word through fire and slaughter,
+Or bear our banner's starry light
+ Far-flashing through the Gulf's blue water.
+
+For where one strikes for light and truth,
+ The right to aid, the wrong redressing,
+The mother of his spirit's youth
+ Sheds o'er his soul her silent blessing.
+
+She gained her crown a gem of flame
+ When KNEASS fell dead in victory gory;
+New splendour blazed upon her name
+ When IVES' young life went out in glory!
+
+Thus bright for ever may she keep
+ Her fires of tolerant Freedom burning,
+Till War's red eyes are charmed to sleep
+ And bells ring home the boys returning.
+
+And may she shed her radiant truth
+ In largess on ingenuous comers,
+And hold the bloom of gracious youth
+ Through many a hundred tranquil summers!
+
+
+
+A WINTER NIGHT.
+
+
+
+The winter wind is raving fierce and shrill,
+ And chides with angry moan the frosty skies;
+ The white stars gaze with sleepless Gorgon eyes
+That freeze the earth in terror fixed and still.
+We reck not of the wild night's gloom and chill,
+ Housed from its rage, dear friend; and fancy flies,
+ Lured by the hand of beckoning memories,
+Back to those summer evenings on the hill
+Where we together watched the sun go down
+ Beyond the gold-washed uplands, while his fires
+ Touched into glittering life the vanes and spires
+Piercing the purpling mists that veiled the town.
+ The wintry night thy voice and eyes beguile,
+ Till wake the sleeping summers in thy smile.
+
+
+
+STUDENT-SONG.
+
+
+
+When Youth's warm heart beats high, my friend,
+ And Youth's blue sky is bright,
+And shines in Youth's clear eye, my friend,
+ Love's early dawning light,
+Let the free soul spurn care's control,
+ And while the glad days shine,
+We'll use their beams for Youth's gay dreams
+ Of Love and Song and Wine.
+
+Let not the bigot's frown, my friend,
+ O'ercast thy brow with gloom,
+For Autumn's sober brown, my friend,
+ Shall follow Summer's bloom.
+Let smiles and sighs and loving eyes
+ In changeful beauty shine,
+And shed their beams on Youth's gay dreams
+ Of Love and Song and Wine.
+
+For in the weary years, my friend,
+ That stretched before us lie,
+There'll be enough of tears, my friend,
+ To dim the brightest eye.
+So let them wait, and laugh at fate,
+ While Youth's sweet moments shine, -
+Till memory gleams with golden dreams
+ Of Love and Song and Wine.
+
+
+
+HOW IT HAPPENED.
+
+
+
+I pray you, pardon me, Elsie,
+ And smile that frown away
+That dims the light of your lovely face
+ As a thunder-cloud the day.
+I really could not help it, -
+ Before I thought, 'twas done, -
+And those great grey eyes flashed bright and cold,
+ Like an icicle in the sun.
+
+I was thinking of the summers
+ When we were boys and girls,
+And wandered in the blossoming woods,
+ And the gay winds romped with your curls.
+And you seemed to me the same little girl
+ I kissed in the alder-path,
+I kissed the little girl's lips, and, alas!
+ I have roused a woman's wrath.
+
+There is not so much to pardon, -
+ For why were your lips so red?
+The blond hair fell in a shower of gold
+ From the proud, provoking head.
+And the beauty that flashed from the splendid eyes,
+ And played round the tender mouth,
+Rushed over my soul like a warm sweet wind
+ That blows from the fragrant south.
+
+And where, after all, is the harm done?
+ I believe we were made to be gay,
+And all of youth not given to love
+ Is vainly squandered away.
+And strewn through life's low labours,
+ Like gold in the desert sands,
+Are love's swift kisses and sighs and vows
+ And the clasp of clinging hands.
+
+And when you are old and lonely,
+ In Memory's magic shine
+You will see on your thin and wasting hands,
+ Like gems, these kisses of mine.
+And when you muse at evening
+ At the sound of some vanished name,
+The ghost of my kisses shall touch your lips
+ And kindle your heart to flame.
+
+
+
+GOD'S VENGEANCE.
+
+
+
+Saith the Lord, "Vengeance is mine;
+ I will repay," saith the Lord;
+Ours be the anger divine,
+ Lit by the flash of His word.
+
+How shall His vengeance be done?
+ How, when His purpose is clear?
+Must He come down from His throne?
+ Hath He no instruments here?
+
+Sleep not in imbecile trust,
+ Waiting for God to begin,
+While, growing strong in the dust,
+ Rests the bruised serpent of sin.
+
+Right and Wrong,--both cannot live
+ Death-grappled. Which shall we see?
+Strike! only Justice can give
+ Safety to all that shall be.
+
+Shame! to stand paltering thus,
+ Tricked by the balancing odds;
+Strike! God is waiting for us!
+ Strike! for the vengeance is God's.
+
+
+
+TOO LATE.
+
+
+
+Had we but met in other days,
+Had we but loved in other ways,
+Another light and hope had shone
+ On your life and my own.
+
+In sweet but hopeless reveries
+I fancy how your wistful eyes
+Had saved me, had I known their power
+ In fate's imperious hour;
+
+How loving you, beloved of God,
+And following you, the path I trod
+Had led me, through your love and prayers,
+ To God's love unawares:
+
+And how our beings joined as one
+Had passed through checkered shade and sun,
+Until the earth our lives had given,
+ With little change, to heaven.
+
+God knows why this was not to be.
+You bloomed from childhood far from me.
+The sunshine of the favoured place
+ That knew your youth and grace.
+
+And when your eyes, so fair and free,
+In fearless beauty beamed on me,
+I knew the fatal die was thrown,
+ My choice in life was gone.
+
+And still with wild and tender art
+Your child-love touched my torpid heart,
+Gilding the blackness where it fell,
+ Like sunlight over hell.
+
+In vain, in vain! my choice was gone!
+Better to struggle on alone
+Than blot your pure life's blameless shine
+ With cloudy stains of mine.
+
+A vague regret, a troubled prayer,
+And then the future vast and fair
+Will tempt your young and eager eyes
+ With all its glad surprise.
+
+And I shall watch you, safe and far,
+As some late traveller eyes a star
+Wheeling beyond his desert sands
+ To gladden happier lands.
+
+
+
+LOVE'S DOUBT.
+
+
+
+'Tis love that blinds my heart and eyes, -
+ I sometimes say in doubting dreams, -
+ The face that near me perfect seems
+Cold Memory paints in fainter dyes.
+
+'Twas but love's dazzled eyes--I say -
+ That made her seem so strangely bright;
+ The face I worshipped yesternight,
+I dread to meet it changed to-day.
+
+As, when dies out some song's refrain,
+ And leaves your eyes in happy tears,
+ Awake the same fond idle fears, -
+It cannot sound so sweet again.
+
+You wait and say with vague annoy,
+ "It will not sound so sweet again,"
+ Until comes back the wild refrain
+That floods your soul with treble joy.
+
+So when I see my love again
+ Fades the unquiet doubt away,
+ While shines her beauty like the day
+Over my happy heart and brain.
+
+And in that face I see no more
+ The fancied faults I idly dreamed,
+ But all the charms that fairest seemed,
+I find them, fairer than before.
+
+
+
+LAGRIMAS.
+
+
+
+ God send me tears!
+Loose the fierce band that binds my tired brain,
+Give me the melting heart of other years,
+ And let me weep again!
+
+ Before me pass
+The shapes of things inexorably true.
+Gone is the sparkle of transforming dew
+ From every blade of grass.
+
+ In life's high noon
+Aimless I stand, my promised task undone,
+And raise my hot eyes to the angry sun
+ That will go down too soon.
+
+ Turned into gall
+Are the sweet joys of childhood's sunny reign;
+And memory is a torture, love a chain
+ That binds my life in thrall.
+
+ And childhood's pain
+Could to me now the purest rapture yield;
+I pray for tears as in his parching field
+ The husbandman for rain.
+
+ We pray in vain!
+The sullen sky flings down its blaze of brass;
+The joys of life all scorched and withering pass;
+ I shall not weep again.
+
+
+
+ON THE BLUFF.
+
+
+
+O grandly flowing River!
+O silver-gliding River!
+Thy springing willows shiver
+ In the sunset as of old;
+They shiver in the silence
+Of the willow-whitened islands,
+While the sun-bars and the sand-bars
+ Fill air and wave with gold.
+
+O gay, oblivious River!
+O sunset-kindled River!
+Do you remember ever
+ The eyes and skies so blue
+On a summer day that shone here,
+When we were all alone here,
+And the blue eyes were too wise
+ To speak the love they knew?
+
+O stern, impassive River!
+O still, unanswering River!
+The shivering willows quiver
+ As the night-winds moan and rave.
+From the past a voice is calling,
+From heaven a star is falling,
+And dew swells in the bluebells
+ Above her hillside grave.
+
+
+
+UNA.
+
+
+
+In the whole wide world there was but one;
+Others for others, but she was mine,
+The one fair woman beneath the sun.
+
+From her gold-flax curls' most marvellous shine
+Down to the lithe and delicate feet
+There was not a curve nor a waving line
+
+But moved in a harmony firm and sweet
+With all of passion my life could know.
+By knowledge perfect and faith complete
+
+I was bound to her,--as the planets go
+Adoring around their central star,
+Free, but united for weal or woe.
+
+She was so near and Heaven so far -
+She grew my heaven and law and fate,
+Rounding my life with a mystic bar
+
+No thought beyond could violate.
+Our love to fulness in silence nursed
+Grew calm as morning, when through the gate
+
+Of the glimmering east the sun has burst,
+With his hot life filling the waiting air.
+She kissed me once,--that last and first
+
+Of her maiden kisses was placid as prayer.
+Against all comers I sat with lance
+In rest, and, drunk with my joy, I sware
+
+Defiance and scorn to the world's worst chance.
+In vain! for soon unhorsed I lay
+At the feet of the strong god Circumstance -
+
+And never again shall break the day,
+And never again shall fall the night,
+That shall light me, or shield me, on my way
+
+To the presence of my sad soul's delight.
+Her dead love comes like a passionate ghost
+To mourn the Body it held so light,
+
+And Fate, like a hound with a purpose lost,
+Goes round bewildered with shame and fright.
+
+
+
+THROUGH THE LONG DAYS.
+
+
+
+Through the long days and years
+ What will my loved one be,
+ Parted from me?
+Through the long days and years.
+
+Always as then she was,
+ Loveliest, brightest, best,
+ Blessing and blest, -
+Always as then she was.
+
+Never on earth again
+ Shall I before her stand,
+ Touch lip or hand, -
+Never on earth again.
+
+But while my darling lives
+ Peaceful I journey on,
+ Not quite alone,
+Not while my darling lives.
+
+
+
+A PHYLACTERY.
+
+
+
+Wise men I hold those rakes of old
+ Who, as we read in antique story,
+When lyres were struck and wine was poured,
+Set the white Death's Head on the board -
+ Memento mori.
+
+Love well! love truly! and love fast!
+ True love evades the dilatory.
+Life's bloom flares like a meteor past;
+A joy so dazzling cannot last -
+ Memento mori.
+
+Stop not to pluck the leaves of bay
+ That greenly deck the path of glory,
+The wreath will wither if you stay,
+So pass along your earnest way -
+ Memento mori.
+
+Hear but not heed, though wild and shrill,
+ The cries of faction transitory;
+Cleave to YOUR good, eschew YOUR ill,
+A Hundred Years and all is still -
+ Memento mori.
+
+When Old Age comes with muffled drums,
+ That beat to sleep our tired life's story,
+On thoughts of dying (Rest is good!),
+Like old snakes coiled i' the sun, we brood -
+ Memento mori.
+
+
+
+BLONDINE.
+
+
+
+I wandered through a careless world
+ Deceived when not deceiving,
+And never gave an idle heart
+ The rapture of believing.
+The smiles, the sighs, the glancing eyes,
+ Of many hundred comers
+Swept by me, light as rose-leaves blown
+ From long-forgotten summers.
+
+But never eyes so deep and bright
+ And loyal in their seeming,
+And never smiles so full of light
+ Have shone upon my dreaming.
+The looks and lips so gay and wise,
+ The thousand charms that wreathe them,
+--Almost I dare believe that truth
+ Is safely shrined beneath them.
+
+Ah! do they shine, those eyes of thine,
+ But for our own misleading?
+The fresh young smile, so pure and fine,
+ Does it but mock our reading?
+Then faith is fled, and trust is dead,
+ And unbelief grows duty,
+If fraud can wield the triple arm
+ Of youth and wit and beauty.
+
+
+
+DISTICHES.
+
+
+
+I.
+
+Wisely a woman prefers to a lover a man who neglects her.
+ This one may love her some day, some day the lover will not.
+
+II.
+
+There are three species of creatures who when they seem coming are going,
+ When they seem going they come: Diplomates, women, and crabs.
+
+III.
+
+Pleasures too hastily tasted grow sweeter in fond recollection,
+ As the pomegranate plucked green ripens far over the sea.
+
+IV.
+
+As the meek beasts in the Garden came flocking for Adam to name them,
+ Men for a title to-day crawl to the feet of a king.
+
+V.
+
+What is a first love worth, except to prepare for a second?
+ What does the second love bring? Only regret for the first.
+
+VI.
+
+Health was wooed by the Romans in groves of the laurel and myrtle.
+ Happy and long are the lives brightened by glory and love.
+
+VII.
+
+Wine is like rain: when it falls on the mire it but makes it the fouler,
+ But when it strikes the good soil wakes it to beauty and bloom.
+
+VIII.
+
+Break not the rose; its fragrance and beauty are surely sufficient:
+ Resting contented with these, never a thorn shall you feel.
+
+IX.
+
+When you break up housekeeping, you learn the extent of your treasures;
+ Till he begins to reform, no one can number his sins.
+
+X.
+
+Maidens! why should you worry in choosing whom you shall marry?
+ Choose whom you may, you will find you have got somebody else.
+
+XI.
+
+Unto each man comes a day when his favourite sins all forsake him,
+ And he complacently thinks he has forsaken his sins.
+
+XII.
+
+Be not too anxious to gain your next-door neighbour's approval:
+ Live your own life, and let him strive your approval to gain.
+
+XIII.
+
+Who would succeed in the world should be wise in the use of his pronouns.
+ Utter the You twenty times, where you once utter the I.
+
+XIV.
+
+The best-loved man or maid in the town would perish with anguish
+ Could they hear all that their friends say in the
+course of a day.
+
+XV.
+
+True luck consists not in holding the best of the cards at the table:
+ Luckiest he who knows just when to rise and go home.
+
+XVI.
+
+Pleasant enough it is to hear the world speak of your virtues;
+ But in your secret heart 'tis of your faults you are proud.
+
+XVII.
+
+Try not to beat back the current, yet be not drowned in its waters;
+ Speak with the speech of the world, think with the thoughts of the few.
+
+XVIII.
+
+Make all good men your well-wishers, and then, in the years' steady
+sifting,
+ Some of them turn into friends. Friends are the sunshine of life.
+
+
+
+REGARDANT.
+
+
+
+As I lay at your feet that afternoon,
+Little we spoke,--you sat and mused,
+Humming a sweet old-fashioned tune,
+
+And I worshipped you, with a sense confused
+Of the good time gone and the bad on the way,
+While my hungry eyes your face perused,
+
+To catch and brand on my soul for aye
+The subtle smile which had grown my doom.
+Drinking sweet poison hushed I lay
+
+Till the sunset shimmered athwart the room.
+I rose to go. You stood so fair
+And dim in the dead day's tender gloom:
+
+All at once, or ever I was aware,
+Flashed from you on me a warm strong wave
+Of passion and power; in the silence there
+
+I fell on my knees, like a lover, or slave,
+With my wild hands clasping your slender waist;
+And my lips, with a sudden frenzy brave,
+
+A madman's kiss on your girdle pressed,
+And I felt your calm heart's quickening beat,
+And your soft hands on me one instant rest.
+
+And if God had loved me, how endlessly sweet
+Had He let my heart in its rapture burst,
+And throb its last at your firm small feet!
+
+And when I was forth, I shuddered at first
+At my imminent bliss. As a soul in pain,
+Treading his desolate path accursed,
+
+Looks back and dreams through his tears' dim rain
+That by Heaven's wide gate the angels smile,
+Relenting, and beckon him back again,
+
+And goes on, thrice damned by that devil's wile, -
+So sometimes burns in my weary brain
+The thought that you loved me all the while.
+
+
+
+GUY OF THE TEMPLE.
+
+
+
+Down the dim west slowly fails the stricken sun,
+And from his hot face fades the crimson flush
+Veiled in death's herald-shadows sick and grey.
+Silent and dark the sombre valley lies
+Forgotten; happy in the late fond beams
+Glimmer the constant waves of Galilee.
+Afar, below, in airy music ring
+The bugles of my host; the column halts,
+A wearied serpent glittering in the vale,
+Where rising mist-like gleam the tented camps.
+
+Pitch my pavilion here, where its high cross
+May catch the last light lingering on the hill.
+The savage shadows, struggling by the shore,
+Have conquered in the valley; inch by inch
+The vanquished light fights bravely to these crags
+To perish glorious in the sunset fire;
+Even as our hunted Cause so pressed and torn
+In Syrian valleys, and the trampled marge
+Of consecrated streams, displays at last
+Its narrowing glories from these steadfast walls.
+Here in God's name we stand, and brighter far
+Shines the stern virtue of my martyr-host
+Through these invidious fortunes, than of old,
+When the still sunshine glinted on their helms,
+And dallying breezes woke their bridle-bells
+To tinkling music by the reedy shore
+Of calm Tiberias, where our angry Lord,
+Wroth at the deadly sin that cursed our camp,
+Denied and blinded us, and gave us up
+To the avenging sword of Saladin.
+Yet would He not permit His truth to sink
+To utter loss amid that foundering fight,
+But led us, scarred and shattered from the spoil
+Of Paynim rage, the desert's thirsty death,
+To where beneath the sheltering crags we prayed
+And rested and grew strong. Heroes and saints
+To alien peoples shall they be, my brave
+And patient warriors; for in their stout hearts
+God's Spirit dwells for ever, and their hands
+Are swift to do His service on His foes.
+The swelling music of their vesper-hymn
+Is rising fragrant from the shadowed vale
+Familiar to the welcoming gates of heaven.
+
+ Mother of God! as evening falls
+ Upon the silent sea,
+ And shadows veil the mountain walls,
+ We lift our souls to thee!
+ From lurking perils of the night,
+ The desert's hidden harms,
+ From plagues that waste, from blasts that smite,
+ Defend thy men-at-arms!
+
+Ay! Heaven keep them! and ye angel-hosts
+That wait with fluttering plumes around the great
+White throne of God, guard them from scath and harm!
+For in your starry records never shone
+The memory of desert so great as theirs.
+I hold not first, though peerless else on earth,
+That knightly valour, born of gentle blood
+And war's long tutelage, which hath made their name
+Blaze like a baleful planet o'er these lands;
+Firm seat in saddle, lance unmoved, a hand
+Wedding the hilt with death's persistent grasp;
+One-minded rush in fight that naught can stay.
+Not these the highest, though I scorn not these,
+But rather offer Heaven with humble heart
+The deeds that Heaven hath given us arms to do.
+For when God's smile was with us we were strong
+To go like sudden lightning to our mark:
+As on that summer day when Saladin -
+Passing in scorn our host at Antioch,
+Who spent the days in revel, and shamed the stars
+With nightly scandal--came with all his host,
+Its gay battalia brave with saffron silks,
+Flaunting the banners of the Caliphate
+Beneath the walls of fair Jerusalem:
+And white and shaking came the Leper-King,
+Great Baldwin's blasted scion, and Tripoli
+And I, and twenty score of Temple Knights,
+To meet the myriads marshalled by the bright
+Untarnished flower of Eastern chivalry;
+A moment paused with level-fronting spears
+And moveless helms before that shining host,
+Whose gay attire abashed the morning light,
+And then struck spur and charged, while from the mass
+Of rushing terror burst the awful cry,
+GOD AND THE TEMPLE! As the avalanche slides
+Down Alpine slopes, precipitous, cold and dark,
+Unpitying and unwrathful, grinds and crushes
+The mountain violets and the valley weeds,
+And drags behind a trail of chaos and death;
+So burst we on that field, and through and through
+The gay battalia brave with saffron silks,
+Crushed and abolished every grace and gleam,
+And dragged where'er we rode a sinuous track
+Of chaos and death, till all the plain was filled
+With battered armour, turbaned trunkless heads,
+With silken mantles blushing angry gules
+And Bagdad's banners trampled and forlorn.
+And Saladin, stunned and bewildered sore, -
+The greatest prince, save in the grace of God,
+That now wears sword,--mounted his brother's barb,
+And, followed by a half-score followers,
+Sped to his castle Shaubec, over against
+The cliffs by Ascalon, and there abode:
+And sullenly made order that no more
+The royal nouba should be played for him
+Until he should erase the rusting stain
+Upon his knightly honour; and no more
+The nouba sounded by the Sultan's tent,
+Morning nor evening by the silent tent,
+Until the headlong greed of Chatillon
+Spread ruin on our cause from Montreale.
+But greatest are my warriors, as I deem,
+In that their hearts, nearer than any else,
+Keep true the pledge of perfect purity
+They pledged upon their sword-hilts long ago.
+For all is possible to the pure in heart.
+
+ Mother of God! thy starry smile
+ Still bless us from above!
+ Keep pure our souls from passion's guile,
+ Our hearts from earthly love!
+ Still save each soul from guilt apart
+ As stainless as each sword,
+ And guard undimmed in every heart
+ The image of our Lord!
+
+O goodliest fellowship that the world has known,
+True hearts and stalwart arms! above your breasts
+Glitters no flash of wreathen amulet
+Forged against sword-stroke by the chanted rhythm
+Of charms accurst; but in each steadfast heart
+Blazes the light of cloudless purity,
+That like a splendid jewel glorifies
+With restless fire the gold that spheres it round,
+And marks you children of our God, whose lives
+He guards with the awful jealousy of love.
+And even me that generous love has spared, -
+Me, trustless knight and miserable man, -
+Sad prey of dark and mutinous thoughts that tempt
+My sick soul into perjury and death -
+Since His great love had pity on my pain,
+Has spared to lead these blameless warriors safe
+Into the desert from the blazing towns,
+Out of the desert to the inviolate hills
+Where God has roofed them with His hollow shield.
+Through all these days of tempest and eclipse
+His hand has led me and His wrath has flashed
+Its lightnings in the pathway of my sword.
+And so I hope, and so my crescent faith
+Gains daily power, that all my prayers and tears
+And toils and blood and anguish borne for Him
+May blot the accusing of my deadly sin
+From heavens high compt, and give me rest in death;
+And lay the pallid ghost of mortal love,
+That fills with banned and mournful loveliness,
+Unblest, the haunted chambers of my soul.
+My misery will atone,--my misery, -
+Dear God, will surely atone! for not the sting
+Of lacerating thongs, nor the slow horror
+Of crowns of thorny iron maddening the brows,
+Nor all that else pale hermits have devised
+To scourge the rebel senses in their shade
+Of caverned desolation, have the power
+To smart and goad and lash and mortify
+Like the great love that binds my ruined heart
+Relentless, as the insidious ivy binds
+The shattered bulk of some deserted tower,
+Enlacing slow and riving with strong hands
+Of pitiless verdure every seam and jut,
+Till none may tear it forth and save the tower.
+So binds and masters me my hopeless love.
+So through the desert, in the silent hills,
+I' the current of the battle's storm and stress,
+One thought has driven me,--that though men may call
+Me stainless Paladin, Knight leal and true
+To Christ and Our Lady, still I know myself
+A knight not after God's own heart, a soul
+Recreant, and whelmed in the forbidden sin.
+For dearer to my sad heart than the cross
+I give my heart's best blood for are the eyes
+That long ago, when youth and hope were mine,
+I loved in thy still valleys, far Provence!
+And sweeter to my spirit than the bells
+Of rescued Salem are the loving tones
+Of her dear voice, soft echoing o'er the years.
+They haunt me in the stillness and the glare
+Of desert noontide when the horizon's line
+Swims faintly throbbing, and my shadow hides
+Skulking beneath me from the brassy sky.
+And when night comes to soothe with breath of balm
+And pomp of stars the worn and weary world,
+Her eyes rise in my soul and make its day.
+And even into the battle comes my love,
+Snatching the duty that I offer Heaven.
+ At closing of El-Majed's awful day,
+When the last quivering sunbeams, choked with dust
+And fume of blood, failed on the level plain,
+In the last charge, when gathered all our knights
+The precious handful who from morn had stemmed
+The fury of the multitudinous hosts
+Of Islam, where in youth's hot fire and pride
+Ramped the young lion-whelp, Ben-Saladin;
+As down the slope we rode at eventide,
+The dying sunlight faintly smiled to greet
+Our tattered guidons and our dinted helms
+And lance-heads blooming with the battle's rose.
+Into the vale, dusk with the shadow of death,
+With silent lips and ringing mail we rode.
+And something in the spirit of the hour,
+Or fate, or memory, or sorrow, or sin,
+Or love, which unto me is all of these,
+Possessed and bound me; for when dashed our troop
+In stormy clangour on the Paynim lines
+The soul of my dead youth came into me;
+Faded away my oath; the woes of Zion,
+God was forgot; blazed in my leaping heart,
+With instant flash, life's inextinguished fires;
+Plunging along each tense limb poured the blood
+Hot with its years of sleeping-smothered flame.
+And in a dream I charged, and in a dream
+I smote resistless; foemen in my path
+Fell unregarded, like the wayside flowers
+Clipped by the truant's staff in daisied lanes.
+For over me burned lustrous the dear eyes
+Of my beloved; I strove as at a joust
+To gain at end the guerdon of her smile.
+And ever, as in the dense melee I dashed,
+Her name burst from my lips, as lightning breaks
+Out of the plunging wrack of summer storms.
+
+O my lost love! Bright o'er the waste of years -
+That bliss and beauty shines upon my soul;
+As far beyond yon desert hangs the sun,
+Gilding with tender beam the barren stretch
+Of sands that intervene. In this still light
+The old sweet memories glimmer back to me,
+Fair summers of my youth,--the idle days
+I wandered in the bosky coverts hid
+In the dim woods that girt my ancient home;
+The blue young eyes I met and worshipped there;
+The love that growing turned those gloomy wilds
+To faery dells, and filled the vernal air
+With light that bathed the hills of Paradise;
+The warm, long days of rapturous summer-time,
+When through the forests thick and lush we strayed,
+And love made our own sunshine in the shades.
+And all things fair and graceful in the woods
+I loved with liberal heart; the violets
+Were dear for her dear eyes, the quiring birds
+That caught the musical tremble of her voice.
+O happy twilights in the leafy glooms!
+When in the glowing dusk the winsome arts
+And maiden graces that all day had kept
+Us twain and separate melted away
+In blushing silence, and my love was mine
+Utterly, utterly, with clinging arms
+And quick, caressing fingers, warm red lips,
+Where vows, half uttered, drowned in kisses, died;
+Mine, with the starlight in her passionate eyes;
+The wild wind of the woodland breathing low
+To wake the elfin music of the leaves,
+And free the prisoned odours of the flowers,
+In honour of young Love come to his throne!
+While we under the stars, with twining arms
+And mutual lips insatiate, gave our souls -
+Madly forgetting earth and heaven--to love!
+
+ In desert march or battle flame,
+ In fortress and in field,
+ Our war-cry is thy holy name,
+ Thy love our joy and shield!
+ And if we falter, let thy power
+ Thy stern avenger be,
+ And God forget us in the hour
+ We cease to think of thee!
+
+Curse me not, God of Justice and of Love!
+Pitiful God, let my long woe atone!
+
+I cannot deem but God has pitied me;
+Else why with painful care have I been saved,
+Whenever tossed and drenched in the fierce tide
+Of Saladin's victories by the walls profaned
+Of Jaffa, on the sands of far Daroum,
+Or in the battle thundering on the downs
+Of Ramlah, or the bloody day that shed
+Red horrors on high Gaza's parapets?
+For never a storm of fatal fight has raged
+In Islam's track of rout and ruin swept
+From Egypt to Gebail, but when the ebb
+Of battle came I and my host have lain,
+Scarred, scorched, safe somewhere on its fiery shore.
+At Marcab's lingering siege, where day by day
+We told the Moslem legions toiling slow,
+Planting their engines, delving in their mines
+To quench in our destruction this last light
+Of Christendom, our fortress in the crags,
+God's beacon swung defiant from the stars;
+One thunderous night I knew their miners groped
+Below, and thought ere morn to die, in crush
+And tumult of the falling citadel.
+And pondering of my fate--the broken storm
+Sobbing its life away--I was aware
+There grew between me and the quieting skies
+A face and form I knew,--not as in dreams,
+The sad dishevelled loveliness of earth,
+But lighter than the thin air where she swayed, -
+Gold hair flame-fluttered, eyes and mouth aglow
+With lambent light of spiritual joy.
+With sweet command she beckoned me away
+And led me vaguely dreaming, till I saw
+Where the wild flood in sudden fury had burst
+A passage through the rocks: and thence I led
+My host unharmed, following her luminous eyes,
+Until the east was grey, and with a smile
+Wooing me heavenward still she passed away
+Into the rosy trouble of the dawn.
+
+And I believe my love is shrived in heaven,
+And I believe that I shall soon be free.
+
+For ever, as I journey on, to me
+Waking or sleeping come faint whisperings
+And fancies not of earth, as if the gates
+Of near eternity stood for me ajar,
+And ghostly gales come blowing o'er my soul
+Fraught with the amaranth odours of the skies.
+I go to join the Lion-Heart at Acre,
+And there, after due homage to my liege,
+And after patient penance of the Church,
+And after final devoir in the fight,
+If that my God be gracious, I shall die.
+And so I pray--Lord, pardon if I sin! -
+That I may lose in death's embittered wave
+The stain of sinful loving, and may find
+In glory again the love I lost below,
+With all of fair and bright and unattained,
+Beautiful in the cherishing smile of God,
+By the glad waters of the River of Life!
+
+Night hangs above the valley; dies the day
+In peace, casting his last glance on my cross,
+And warns me to my prayers. Ave Maria!
+
+ Mother of God! the evening fades
+ On wave and hill and lea,
+ And in the twilight's deepening shades
+ We lift our souls to thee!
+ In passion's stress--the battle's strife,
+ The desert's lurking harms,
+ Maid-Mother of the Lord of Life
+ Protect thy men-at-arms!
+
+
+
+TRANSLATIONS.
+
+
+
+THE WAY TO HEAVEN.
+ FROM THE GERMAN.
+
+
+
+One day the Sultan, grand and grim,
+Ordered the Mufti brought to him.
+"Now let thy wisdom solve for me
+The question I shall put to thee.
+
+"The different tribes beneath my sway
+Four several sects of priests obey;
+Now tell me which of all the four
+Is on the path to Heaven's door."
+
+The Sultan spake, and then was dumb.
+The Mufti looked about the room,
+And straight made answer to his lord,
+Fearing the bowstring at each word:
+
+"Thou, godlike in thy lofty birth,
+Who art our Allah upon earth,
+Illume me with thy favouring ray,
+And I will answer as I may.
+
+"Here, where thou thronest in thy hall,
+I see there are four doors in all;
+And through all four thy slaves may gaze
+Upon the brightness of thy face.
+
+"That I came hither safely through
+Was to thy gracious message due,
+And, blinded by thy splendour's flame,
+I cannot tell the way I came."
+
+
+
+COUNTESS JUTTA.
+ FROM THE GERMAN OF HEINRICH HEINE.
+
+
+
+The Countess Jutta passed over the Rhine
+In a light canoe by the moon's pale shine.
+The handmaid rows and the Countess speaks:
+"Seest thou not there where the water breaks
+ Seven corpses swim
+ In the moonlight dim?
+So sorrowful swim the dead!
+
+"They were seven knights full of fire and youth,
+They sank on my heart and swore me truth.
+I trusted them; but for Truth's sweet sake,
+Lest they should be tempted their oaths to break,
+ I had them bound,
+ And tenderly drowned!
+So sorrowful swim the dead!"
+
+The merry Countess laughed outright!
+It rang so wild in the startled night!
+Up to the waist the dead men rise
+And stretch lean fingers to the skies.
+ They nod and stare
+ With a glassy glare!
+So sorrowful swim the dead!
+
+
+
+A BLESSING.
+ AFTER HEINE.
+
+
+
+When I look on thee and feel how dear,
+ How pure, and how fair thou art,
+Into my eyes there steals a tear,
+And a shadow mingled of love and fear
+ Creeps slowly over my heart.
+
+And my very hands feel as if they would lay
+ Themselves on thy fair young head,
+And pray the good God to keep thee alway
+As good and lovely, as pure and gay, -
+ When I and my wild love are dead.
+
+
+
+TO THE YOUNG.
+ AFTER HEINE.
+
+
+
+Let your feet not falter, your course not alter
+ By golden apples, till victory's won!
+The sword's sharp clangour, the dart's shrill anger,
+ Swerve not the hero thundering on.
+
+A bold beginning is half the winning,
+ An Alexander makes worlds his fee.
+No long debating! The Queens are waiting
+ In his pavilion on beaded knee.
+
+Thus swift pursuing his wars and wooing,
+ He mounts old Darius' bed and throne.
+O glorious ruin! O blithe undoing!
+ O drunk death-triumph in Babylon!
+
+
+
+THE GOLDEN CALF.
+ AFTER HEINE.
+
+
+
+Double flutes and horns resound
+As they dance the idol round;
+Jacob's daughters, madly reeling,
+ Whirl about the golden calf.
+ Hear them laugh!
+Kettledrums and laughter pealing.
+
+Dresses tucked above their knees,
+Maids of noblest families,
+In the swift dance blindly wheeling,
+ Circle in their wild career
+ Round the steer, -
+Kettledrums and laughter pealing.
+
+Aaron's self, the guardian grey
+Of the faith, at last gives way,
+Madness all his senses stealing;
+ Prances in his high priest's coat
+ Like a goat, -
+Kettledrums and laughter pealing.
+
+
+
+THE AZRA.
+ AFTER HEINE.
+
+
+
+Daily walked the fair and lovely
+Sultan's daughter in the twilight, -
+In the twilight by the fountain,
+Where the sparkling waters plash.
+
+Daily stood the young slave silent
+In the twilight by the fountain,
+Where the plashing waters sparkle,
+Pale and paler every day.
+
+Once by twilight came the princess
+Up to him with rapid questions:
+"I would know thy name, thy nation,
+Whence thou comest, who thou art."
+
+And the young slave said, "My name is
+Mahomet, I come from Yemmen.
+I am of the sons of Azra,
+Men who perish if they love."
+
+
+
+GOOD AND BAD LUCK.
+ AFTER HEINE.
+
+
+
+Good luck is the gayest of all gay girls,
+ Long in one place she will not stay;
+Back from your brow she strokes the curls,
+ Kisses you quick and flies away.
+
+But Madame Bad Luck soberly comes
+ And stays,--no fancy has she for flitting, -
+Snatches of true love-songs she hums,
+ And sits by your bed, and brings her knitting.
+
+
+
+L'AMOUR DU MENSONGE.
+ AFTER CHARLES BAUDELAIRE.
+
+
+
+When I behold thee, O my indolent love,
+ To the sound of ringing brazen melodies,
+Through garish halls harmoniously move,
+ Scattering a scornful light from languid eyes;
+
+When I see, smitten by the blazing lights,
+ Thy pale front, beauteous in its bloodless glow
+As the faint fires that deck the Northern nights,
+ And eyes that draw me wheresoe'er I go;
+
+I say, She is fair, too coldly strange for speech;
+ A crown of memories, her calm brow above,
+Shines; and her heart is like a bruised red peach,
+ Ripe as her body for intelligent love.
+
+Art thou late fruit of spicy savour and scent?
+ A funeral vase awaiting tearful showers?
+An Eastern odour, waste and oasis blent?
+ A silken cushion or a bank of flowers?
+
+I know there are eyes of melancholy sheen
+ To which no passionate secrets e'er were given;
+Shrines where no god or saint has ever been,
+ As deep and empty as the vault of Heaven.
+
+But what care I if this be all pretence?
+ 'Twill serve a heart that seeks for truth no more.
+All one thy folly or indifference, -
+ Hail, lovely mask, thy beauty I adore!
+
+
+
+AMOR MYSTICUS.
+ FROM THE SPANISH OF SOR MARCELA DE CARPIO.
+
+
+
+Let them say to my Lover
+ That here I lie!
+The thing of His pleasure,
+ His slave am I.
+
+Say that I seek Him
+ Only for love,
+And welcome are tortures
+ My passion to prove.
+
+Love giving gifts
+ Is suspicious and cold;
+I have all, my Beloved,
+ When Thee I hold.
+
+Hope and devotion
+ The good may gain;
+I am but worthy
+ Of passion and pain.
+
+So noble a Lord
+ None serves in vain,
+For the pay of my love
+ Is my love's sweet pain.
+
+I love Thee, to love Thee, -
+ No more I desire;
+By faith is nourished
+ My love's strong fire.
+
+I kiss Thy hands
+ When I feel their blows;
+In the place of caresses
+ Thou givest me woes.
+
+But in Thy chastising
+ Is joy and peace.
+O Master and Love,
+ Let Thy blows not cease.
+
+Thy beauty, Beloved,
+ With scorn is rife,
+But I know that Thou lovest me,
+ Better than life.
+
+And because thou lovest me,
+ Lover of mine,
+Death can but make me
+ Utterly Thine.
+
+I die with longing
+ Thy face to see;
+Oh! sweet is the anguish
+ Of death to me!
+
+
+
+
+
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