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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6c5d1fc --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #63399 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63399) diff --git a/old/63399-8.txt b/old/63399-8.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 3851918..0000000 --- a/old/63399-8.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2186 +0,0 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Glebe 1914/09 (Vol. 2, No. 2): Poems, by -George W. Cronyn - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - -Title: The Glebe 1914/09 (Vol. 2, No. 2): Poems - -Author: George W. Cronyn - -Editor: Alfred Kreymborg - Man Ray - -Release Date: October 7, 2020 [EBook #63399] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GLEBE 1914/09: POEMS *** - - - - -Produced by Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. This book was -produced from images made available by the Blue Mountain -Project, Princeton University. - - - - - - - THE - GLEBE - - VOLUME 2 - NUMBER 2 - - SEPTEMBER - 1914 - - SUBSCRIPTION - Three Dollars Yearly - THIS ISSUE 50 CENTS - - POEMS - - George Cronyn - - -The only editorial policy of THE GLEBE is that embodied in its -declaration of absolute freedom of expression, which makes for a range -broad enough to include every temperament from the most radical to the -most conservative, the only requisite being that the work should have -unmistakable merit. Each issue will be devoted exclusively to one -individual, thereby giving him an opportunity to present his work in -sufficient bulk to make it possible for the reader to obtain a much more -comprehensive grasp of his personality than is afforded him in the -restricted spaces allotted by the other magazines. Published monthly, -THE GLEBE will issue twelve books per year, chosen on their merits -alone, since the subscription list does away with the need of catering -to the popular demand that confronts every publisher. Thus, THE GLEBE -can promise the best work of American and foreign authors, known and -unknown. - -The price of each issue of THE GLEBE will be fifty cents and the yearly -subscription three dollars. - - Editor - ALFRED KREYMBORG - - Published by - ALBERT AND CHARLES BONI - 96 FIFTH AVENUE - New York City - - - POEMS - - - - - POEMS - - - GEORGE W. CRONYN - - - NEW YORK - ALBERT AND CHARLES BONI - 96 FIFTH AVENUE - 1914 - - - Copyright, 1914 - By - Albert and Charles Boni - - - - - - - To touch the sleeping lids of Beauty - Drawing thru finger-tips her dream--a birth - Of hell and heaven for a nobler earth; - This is the poet's duty. - - To sleep with stars, to dream a flower, - From passing shadows pluck profound relation, - With a divine wonder at its emanation; - This is the poet's power. - - - - - DIONYSUS ELEUTHERIOS - - - THE PRAYER - - Like a cat beside a pool - More than half afraid of it, - Fishing gingerly I sit - Here beside this pool of wit-- - Dumb as any fool! - Chirrups humor in the grass; - Winds of tickling laughter pass, - And the world grows wise forsooth, - Lets gleam amused tooth - Seeing in this water-glass - Jests that swim the depths of truth, - And like fins of fishes shiver - It to fretful quirk and quiver. - Ripples break and bubbles rise - Catching smiles from out the skies - In their globed eyes. - Surely, surely there was never - Such a pleasant river! - Only I am out of tune - Like an icicle in June, - Or a monster from the moon. - - Dionysus, hear my prayer! - Spreading arms to the mute air, - I entreat thee, fashion me - One with this gay company, - One in mirth and one in song - Dartling their minds among. - Loosener of lips and heart, - Draw my sullen mouth apart. - Give a gleam to guide me by - As a phare in a night-sky-- - Grace of tongue and warmth of eye; - Give me of thy fire and dew; - Give me flash of mimic art-- - Spice of Godhead in this brew - To pierce my fellows thru and thru. - - Oh, thou vintal Deity, - Loose my limbs that they may fly - With this reckless revelry! - Sick of sober ways am I; - In this tumult I alone - Am a satyr turned to stone; - Satyr--satyr--not a man! - Gifts I ask not of Apollo-- - Wine is good and grief is hollow; - I would follow after Pan; - I would follow, follow, follow - After Pan! - Or if he wander ways too quiet, - Shepherd ways of warmth and ease, - Let me taste a wilder riot - In thy mysteries-- - Let me quaff it, laugh it, cry it! - Give me, give me, give me these-- - Fleet foot after those that flee, - Hot veins amorous to seize - Maenads maddened by the wine, - Wound with hair and wreathed with vine, - Maenads stained with purple lees-- - Give me, give me, give me these. - Only this I ask of thee - Dionysus, Dionysus, son of Semele! - - - THE ANSWER - - Lo! the God of purple pleasure - Heard and hearkened to his prayer, - Reft the swathed bands that bound him, - From his cloak of Self unwound him, - Filled him with supernal seizure - That his humor's jewelled treasure - Leaped and sparkled in the air-- - Till the night was bright around him. - Never such a jestful fit - Dreamt he in his wildest wishes! - Never from the pool of wit - Had he drawn such shining fishes! - Humid flame glowed in each eye - And his face had changed its vesture, - And his arms moved with strange gesture - Apt in every mimicry. - With the spell of Fire and Dew - He pierced his fellows thru and thru. - Surely Dithyrambus pressed him! - - Surely the Great God possessed him! - And the mystic sisters too, - Oeno, Spermo, and Elais, - (Who knoweth what their way is?) - Surely they caressed him! - He whose tongue of old was frozen-- - As he quaffs, with this potation - Deep and deeper inspiration - Seems to grow a Prophet--chosen, - For he speaks by divination! - Never were such fancies woven - From the carded thoughts of mortal. - Some are mazed, and some deride him, - "Lo, his wits have gone astray, - What a fool he is!" they say. - Others whisper (those beside him) - "He hath crossed another portal-- - He is one whose foot is cloven. - Do ye hear wild creatures beat - Lifted hoof and naked feet - On the quiet woodland sod? - Do ye mark what mood that strain is? - Hints it not the Shepherd God - With his pipings shrill and sweet-- - Snubnose, Sweetwine, old Silenus, - All his creatures shy and fleet?" - - Deeper, deeper, Fire and Dew - Drains he of the Wine-God's brew - Craving furthest essence--thus - Heareth now another voice - Terrible and new, - Luring--appalling, - "Iachus! Iachus! Iachus! - Wine! Wine! Wine! Rejoice!" - Thru the forest calling. - And the sky is red and golden - And the red, red stars are falling, - Falling to the earth in showers. - And the fresh blood-scents embolden - Gold and sable leopards, sleeping, - To come crawling, writhing, leaping, - Over gold and purple flowers. - And the autumn sun is swollen - With the sweetness he has stolen - From the wine, and he is wine, wine-red. - Come ye now with wreathed head, - Come ye now - With ivy bound on your white brow, - And forgotten, forgotten be the hours! - - Forgotten and forgotten! Ah the night has fled away, - And the wine is spilt, and the stars are gray, - For the old cold dawn abashes - All the torches turned to ashes, - But the feasters--where are they? - Fled, the sound of pipes at last; - Fled, the panting, goat-shank'd clan, - And the maenad rout have passed, - And the echoes caught and cast - Died where they began. - Never, never, never - A more sombre river - From such springs of laughter ran! - And the lucid pool of wit-- - What a scum has clouded it! - Past each stately Parian column - Day comes, gaunt and pale and shrunken - And her step is very solemn. - On the veined marble sunken, - Reft of breath of Deity, - Prone there, lies the Priest--the Chosen, - Huddled, bestial, bleared and drunken-- - Like a body that is frozen - (That such things should be!) - Shape of shapeless mockery - He had tasted all one can; - He had heard the pipes of Pan; - He had followed in thy van - Dionysus, Dionysus, son of Semele-- - Satyr?--not a satyr he--a man! - - - - - THE TRAIL BY NIGHT - - - No human foot-print here before my own! - And it is strange to come so far--alone-- - So far into this frozen forest world - Of moonlight and of shadow and deep snow, - And things I do not know, - That strike the civil vestments from my soul-- - As if all law-born years were backward hurled - Toward some dim and other pole-- - Some brute primordial reign - Whose voice was terror and whose life was pain. - - On--up the trail I go; - Beneath my feet cold streams of moonlight glow, - And in the silver-sifted dark strange, naked fancies grow, - While the vast pines in vista, round by round, - Move with an unearthly sound, - And every tree with its white hair is crowned. - - On--up--I go, - And as thru ancient Gothic arches seen - I glimpse the valley far below - That glistens with a fine fantastic sheen. - - On--up--I pass, - Nor reck the night-wrought spells about me thrown, - Heedless--sucked dry of thought or will - Save to peer curious into this magician's glass, - And see the forest dreams thru forest moonlight blown. - On--up I plunge--until - Bending, discern before me, with a thrill - The signs where some wild beast has gone. - - Who knows but that within the silence here - The cedar shadows gloom about a deer, - That stands with body lithe and slim - Struck to a statue by surprise? - Who knows but that, upon some snowy limb - A lynx, lean-bellied, pricks his tufted ear - And watches me with evil, amber eyes? - - * * * * * - - Surely beyond the stars my man-world lies-- - For close to me unhallowed mountains rise - And fill my heart with fear! - - - - - SONG IN WINTER - - - Burning stars in a frosty sky, - Thread-bare winds from the hollow west, - "Give us a garment of beauty!" they cry, - "For the waters of truth our throats are dry, - And phantoms of chaos uncover the bones of our breast, - Leaving us little rest." - - Bitter stars in a frozen sky, - Tattered winds from the lonely west, - Haggard beggars of hours that die-- - (Begging the gift of a golden lie!) - Is it with you as with us, no rest, no rest-- - Is it with you no rest? - - - - - - - The lacy chequer of aerial boughs - That winter weaves with delicate wizardry. - - * * * * * - - Far away--who knows how far?-- - Against the flaming calm of winter twilight, - I hear the voice of speed--muffled and hoarse, - Sounding across the hills. - - * * * * * - - Locomotive, locomotive, - Over the hills at night, - Running on your far-away groove - With the husky pant of things that move - And cannot turn to left or right, - Of things that toil and things that pass - In the murk of smoke and the stench of gas, - Serf of the monstrous city, - What pity--oh what pity - For the dearth of your delight, - Locomotive, locomotive, - Over the hills at night! - - - - - CLOUDS - - - Whence do you come, oh silken shapes, - Across the silver sky? - We come from where the wind blows - And the young stars die. - - Why do you move so fast, so fast - Across the white moon's breast? - The cruel wind is at our heels - And we may not rest. - - Are you not weary, fleeing shapes, - That never cease to flee? - The forkéd trees' chained shadows are - Less weary than we. - - Whither do you go, O shadow-shapes - Across the ghastly sky? - We go to where the wind blows - And the old stars die. - - My head is circl'd with fire-- - And I think of the failing of one's desire-- - And I hear outside the pitiful dropping of rain; - Which is the greater pain? - - I yearn for the birth of the brain-- - Be it child of blood and pain, - (I pray to endure the pain)-- - My heart--lo! my heart is afire - With hue as of purple or Tyre-- - With hope of Promethean fire-- - And oh God! God! God! the desire - For what only the Gods attain! - - In the white moonlight stand - With every finger on a star, and feel - Infinity as an engulfing wave. - - - - - JOY - - - The cañons are covered with snow, - But the sky doth over them lean - With eyes that are warm and keen - As if he could never know - The gray despair of the snow; - And snow and sky join hands together - To dance a dance of wonderful weather! - - - - - A VOICE - - - A woman spoke to me in the street-- - I do not remember how or why-- - But a breath blew over the winter sky - And spring came in with silver feet! - - - - - ANOTHER - - - A creature plucked at me in the street - But well I knew the reason why - The red stars sickened in the sky - And Hell gaped open at my feet! - - - - - IMPRESSIONS - - - This is the Gate of the Gray City--wrought - With piled roofs and steeples dimly seen - Thru the gray dusk--pale, wistful flakes of fire - Kindled about its lower fringe--vast murk-- - A snuffling monster with an evil eye - That surly pants to work some will unknown, - Blowing white breaths--a semaphore - With lifted arm--a form that swings a light - In arcs, against infinitude of gray, - Uneasy sounds, the clink and clank and groan; - Of things inanimate--the curves of rails - In rhythmical convergence gathered up-- - (And gathering up what burdens from afar!) - Monotony--monotony--despair! - This is the Gate of the Gray City. - - - - - - - Whatever our immitigable end, - The earth's our home and prison thru whose windows - Our wistful scrutinizing minds traverse - The sky's dissolving continents, exult - In melancholy mountains or, shackled, - Envy the inconstant sea that seems - An uncontaminated god, alone, complete - In mighty passion and the scorn of time. - - * * * * * - - I love the skyward-spiring tree - For its supreme unconsciousness of me. - - - - - - - So let us seek the lands that the Gods love, - The soil unsown, the isles of sumptuous store; - Where fallow fields yield yearly fee of grain, - And vines unpruned produce perennial bloom, - And olive slips engender faithfully, - And dark figs deck their trees; the cavernous oaks - Bleed honey'd drops, and from high hills descend - The nimble waters with melodious feet. - - - - - PRELUDE TO A PHANTASY - - - I will tell thee of Far-Away, of Far-Away, of Far-Away, - I will tell thee of Far-Away - The home of wandering dreams; - For they come out of Far-Away - To show us how to love and play, - And when they've wandered for a day - Must return, it seems. - - There's more than gold in Far-Away, in Far-Away, in Far-Away, - There's more than gold in Far-Away, - There's more than jewelled gleams. - There's more than smiles in Far-Away, - And coronals of laughter gay; - There's crystal tears that bloom alway - Beside forgotten streams. - - We'll gather gold from Far-Away, from Far-Away, from Far-Away, - We'll gather gold from Far-Away, - We'll steal the jewelled gleams. - We'll hunt for smiles from Far-Away; - Following laughter by the way, - But we must for another day - Leave the tears it seems. - - We'll find the road to Far-Away, to Far-Away, to Far-Away, - We'll know the road to Far-Away - By the feet of dreams; - For they come out of Far-Away - To love a little and to play, - And when they've wandered for a day - Must return it seems. - - - - - RUNNING WATER - - - Oh you who stand by the river in a gown of willow-green, - I will make you an eager song of my heart to-night; - I will find me a feather of a singing bird that has seen - And touched the blue targe of the sky in its flight. - I will make me a quill of it, and dip in my heart and write! - - I would not make you a threnody of sorrow that has been, - For you are no more than an eager child who demand - Magical tales of me, of lacquered Arabian sheen; - I will speak very softly then with your hand - In mine, a rose petal, the things that you understand. - - On the waxen and beautiful tablet that is your heart - With a singing quill and the stain of my heart I will write; - I will write with the simplest words and the simplest art - All the splendors that glow so by night-- - Of the Genie and the Bottle, and carpets of orient flight. - - And you who are more than a princess in your gown of yellow-green - With your bird-like and trembling heart will understand - All the luxurious sorrows and loves that have been - Written on parchment at a king's demand-- - And the simple words of them will flutter like birds in your hand. - - - - - EPITHALAMION - - - The pale dawn went down unto the sea, - Past the gray ships in the offing. - The salt wind found her blowing hair - And closed his wings and nested there, - And the salt sea hungered for her rare - Sweet body and forgot his scoffing. - - The pale dawn went down unto the sea - When all the world was sleeping; - She lifted veils and veils of air - Until her eager limbs were bare, - And the salt sea shook his manéd hair, - And the curl'd waves came to her, leaping. - - - - - MARSH-LANDS - - - Sure in this spongy and luxuriant retreat-- - This lovely lyric little marsh - Which nothing hath of fierce or harsh, - Unhappy fancies to evoke, - Where all life is most delicately attuned to sweet - Melodious living, here we'll meet - Naiads dainty and discreet - With other watery folk - And watch the twinkle of their iridescent feet. - - Upon a reed's high silver point - Which early dews anoint, - The Red-wing lights and poises, swaying, - With throaty and delicious whistle playing - Pan-music in the mellow morning light. - It is like running water's flow - A bit unearthly, and celestial quite-- - A golden tremolo; - And satin robes of air half veil him from our sight. - - The gay marsh-marigold - Delights its small sun to unfold; - And many a bulbous goblin thing, - Ugly and grave, - Into the dull mud burrowing - Draws from some secret treasure-cave - And to the sunlight heaves - Green breadth--great leaves - To build a vessel floating on an inland wave. - - We'll be as busy as the clouds, with naught to do, - And we will wonder at the curious striping, - In saffron glimpses, of more distant pools - Which the wind cools - With deep reflected blue. - And we will listen now to Hyla's piping-- - A thin small sprite - That one may never see - Calling to the sky his clear delight - Filled with insatiate and unbounded ecstasy. - - - - - SPRING FANCY - - - There is an orchard, old and rare, - (I cannot tell you where!) - With green doors opening to the sun; - And the sky-children gather there - To watch the blossoms, one by one, - Falling wistfully thru the air - From the trees' dishevelled hair. - - The sky-children shake their wings - With flutterings and gurglings-- - And love the light and kiss the sun, - Nor heed the blossoms that have blown - From the fruit-wives' ancient hair - Earthward thru the glowing air, - Wistfully--one by one. - - - - - SONG - - - A Flicker, a Robin, a Song-sparrow - Have come from Arcady. - The Flicker was an imp that shouted in a tree; - The Robin was a winged laugh that Spring set free; - The Song-sparrow was a liquid arrow - That pierced to the heart of me. - - - - - PLAYING - - - Three little girls and one little boy - Out in the first warm sunshine; - The wind blows in and the wind blows out - Voices cool as moonshine. - - Six tin cans and a pile of dirt - And the air smiles like a mother-- - The wind blows in and the wind blows out - As they play with each other. - - Sparrows on the fence and clothes on the line - And somewhere someone's laughter-- - The wind blows in and the wind blows out - And it could not blow much softer! - - Three little girls and one little boy - Out in the first warm weather-- - The wind blows in and the wind blows out - While they play together. - - - - - SONG - - - Hi! hi! hi! - On this green morning - My soul is as taut as a greenwood-bow, - Feeling the sap in it mounting so, - Needs but a jog to loose without warning - An arrow into the infinite sky-- - Hi! hi! hi! - On this green morning! - - - - - A BUST BY RODIN, KNOWN AS CERES - - - With rhythmic feet and garments flowing free - Draw near, draw near, bring largesse in full hand; - Move as to music of the saraband - Stately, before this Woman-deity. - - Woman's--these billows of thick hair that roll - Down the billowing breasts of her, and close - Shadows of pain and mirth in firm repose-- - This delicate mask drawn tight across a soul! - - A Goddess--Ultima Thule in her eye; - For the sad wisdom of its steady gaze, - Fixed on far, wintry fields and frozen ways, - Goes out to larger things than you or I: - - The Titan-sap makes gods of the spring hours, - And Earth renews its children and its flowers! - - - - - THE FLOWER'S WAY - - - I have stood long in the night - Under a star; - I have stood still with shadowy head - And arrowy leaves outspread - Under its trembling light - Where green things are. - - I have crept close to the grass - Where the beetles dart, - And the humming-bird and the dragon-fly - Were visions in the sky, - And the mendicant bees that pass - Rifled my heart. - - I have lain long in the day - Under the sun, - With my burning face in the arms of the wind, - And my petals unconfin'd - And my virginal robes a-sway-- - Thus joy is won! - - - - - THE TREE'S WAY - - - The high trees are honest folk; - They do not stand so much aloof - Up under heaven's roof, - Altho they are earth's fairest cloak. - Their lives are very calm and slow; - They wait for coming things to come, - They wait, they rest, they ponder some - Purpose forgotten long ago - Like quiet folk; - And sometimes I am moved to stroke - Hand-greeting as I pass them near, - And often I am sure I hear - An answer from these stately folk! - - - - - CHILDREN - - - What a garden of surprise - Out beyond my window lies! - Fancy, when the night is there - Gentle trees with drooping hair - Rocking, rocking cradle-wise - Little stars with yellow eyes! - - - - - VERSES TO A LITTLE CHILD - - (From Hofmannsthal) - - - Your feet have been fashioned as roses - To seek the lands of the rainbow-- - The rainbow-kingdoms are open. - There, haunting the taciturn tree-tops - Millennial prophecies linger, - The inexhaustible waters - Abide there forever and aye. - Beside the immeasurable forest - From wooden bowl brimming will you then - Apportion your milk with a hop-toad? - So festive a banqueting almost - Entices the stars to their fall! - By borders of measureless waters - Soon you will discover a playmate, - A dolphin engaging and kind. - He'll leap to dry-land at your bidding, - And if he shall fail you sometimes - The tender, innumerable zephyrs - Will still your tempestuous sobbing. - You'll find in the rainbow-kingdom - The ancient exalted traditions - Forever and ever unchanged. - The sun with mysterious power - Has fashioned your feet as the roses - To enter his measureless kingdom. - - - - - NIGHT-FLOWERS - - - This night hath no disease; - It knows not wrecks nor wars - Nor deaths of human minds. - The feet of the sweet winds - Break all the river's peace - Into marmoreal bars. - The tops of moonlit trees - Have blossomed with white stars, - And perfumes that one finds - In old Arabian jars - Had never blooms like these! - - - - - THE NIGHT - - - Sorrows confide their secrets; joys lead lives - Of lonely splendor. Mankind tells all things - To me, knowing I will not ever speak. - - - - - DISILLUSION - - - The night was like a jewell'd crown-- - (Could jewels be so soft a thing!) - For stars and wind were in the town - And by the highways entering, - Plucked there as on a viol string, - Until--somewhere--a woman's scream-- - Sharply shattered the dream! - - - - - - - Silence within - The upper twilight of a temple lies - Asleep, with pendant plumes--a dreaming god-- - And dreams the pageantry of things--and dreams - The gifts that he has given with his hands-- - The gifts that he has taken with his hands-- - And dreams his own eternity. - - * * * * * - - I am one that loves - The stars of labyrinthine night whom the shrill dawn - Devours, the quietude of ultimate slopes - Thoughtful of twilight, peering moons that shed - Unrisen glamours thru the umbrageous wood - With gnome and goblin rife, and the light spray - Of gray spring rains enveloping the hills. - - - - - SONG - - - Would I were a bird - To nest in a cover - Of leaves that hover - 'Twixt earth and heaven - Where no sound is heard-- - Only the uneven - Brush of winds that slumber - With no thought to cumber; - Would I were a bird! - - Would I were a wave - To rise for a moment - From the ocean's foment, - To puff my lips asunder - Blowing bubbles brave, - To dream and to wonder - Of the depths below me - And the winds that blow me-- - Would I were a wave! - - Bird, canst thou fashion - Song of things that grieve thee? - Wave hast thou passion - For things that will deceive thee? - Bird and wave I leave ye! - - - - - RONDEAU - - - A Sunday-calm, ornate, profound, - Enchanting sense, subduing sound, - Enjoins its ritual to prepare; - The day is bland with unctuous prayer - That leaps to heaven at a bound. - - And bells ope throats in mellow round - Of sweet antiphonal resound, - And virtue glistens everywhere-- - A Sunday-calm. - - Draw breath! Away to virgin ground! - But where the fields are flower-crowned - The cattle with self-conscious stare - Chide my undeprecative air,-- - Good heavens! Can they too have found - A Sunday-calm? - - - - - SUNSET BURIAL - - - The trees upheaven filigrane fingers of desire - To touch a ruby-throated cloud-face fanned - By a bronze breath and globous mouth of fire; - Beneath, the rigid gravestones stand, - Each one a cadaver that cannot close its hand. - - - - - FAIRY SONG - - - I can live in a golden fruit - Whose core is hung with honey; - I can swing on golden wing - In elfin ceremony-- - But oh! for the power - To open as a flower - When the air is sunny! - - - - - A YOUNG GIRL'S LOVE - - - The season is less stubborn now; - Over the youngling world we see - A white sky full of scudding blue, - A white wind that runneth as a child - Touching most delicately the new - Sweet buds, and having touched and smiled, - Goes to seek out some pale anemone, - And wreathe with maiden flowers her fragile brow. - - - - - A YOUNG MAN'S LOVE - - - If I were your sister I'd lie with you the night-long - To feel your bosom's beating; - If I were your brother I'd wake you with a day-song - And give a kiss as greeting; - If I were your mother I'd hold you as a shut flower - When the dark comes creeping; - If I were your father I'd enter at the dawn-hour - To look upon you, sleeping. - What is there left over - For me, who am your lover? - - - - - SONG - - - A cup full of star-shine - That glowed as an ember, - (Oh, star of my delight!) - With smiles I do remember - And words forgotten quite, - A cup full of star-shine - I drank with you to-night. - - A cup full of sea-sound - That was as summer thunder-- - (Oh sea of my delight!) - With love that lay under - Seven heavens bright, - A cup full of sea-sound - I drank with you to-night. - - - - - SONG - - (_After an old English tune_) - - - I will bring thee a silver crown. - I will bring thee an ell of vair, - Cloth of gold and ermine rare - To make thee a gown. - - Thou hast brought me a marble frown. - Thou hast brought me a cold, cold stare, - Heart of lead and wry despair, - And a mad-man's swown. - - I will bring thee a leaden crown, - Cloth of Raines in thirty-fold! - I will bring thee a bed on the wold - To lay thee down. - - Thou hast brought me out of the town - To the earth upturned where the bell is tolled-- - Fires of hell and the river's cold - My sorrows drown! - - - - - TRISTAN AND ISOLDE - - - The sea is here, it hath not any shore, - Nor moves with moving of wind-driven waves - Which, undulant and writhing--naked slaves - To the uneasy wanderer of heaven's floor, - Bow sullen backs beneath their master's store - He brought with viewless hands from broken graves-- - The sea is here, and in its silent caves - Moves not, tho the wind clamors more and more. - - The sea is here, an infinite undertone; - But lo! upon its surface I descry - Two floating bubbles, wonderfully blown - Toward each other, flame-like from the sky-- - Meet--melt with lyric splendor into one-- - Then, wind-prick'd, vanish--o'er the Sea, a cry! - - - - - PALINURUS - - - Starlight: with deep and quiet breathing slept - The southern sea. The white-wing'd ship that bore - The good Aeneas from his Dido's shore - Ghostlike, with rippling furrows, onward crept, - And only faithful Palinurus kept - The midnight watch--but ah, the magic bough, - The opiate dew that dript upon his brow, - The vacant post, the friends who waking wept. - - The gods demand their victims; who shall know - What failures Time and Circumstance compel? - Yet, if such doom were mine, I would 'twere so - That they would mark my absence thus: "How well - Even unto the last he struggled, lo! - He tore the rudder with him when he fell!" - - - - - THE DERELICT - - - I cannot remember whither I was bound-- - I cannot remember why I was found - Moving without a sound - Moving in mystery-- - Derelict, derelict, - Over the sea! - - I too carry a cargo in my hold, - Underneath sea-water and green with mold-- - I cannot remember how old! - For terrible it is to be - Derelict, derelict, - Over the sea! - - Feebler ships weather bravely into port; - Running a course that is safe and short-- - My voyage is another sort; - No master guideth me-- - Derelict, derelict, - Over the sea! - - Nights have shadow'd me with phantom stride-- - Stars have peer'd at me, eerie-eyed-- - Goblin lights and magic tide - Keep me company, - Derelict, derelict, - Over the sea! - - Setting suns have rowell'd me with crimson'd heel-- - Winds have flung laughter, peal after peal-- - But they shall not know that I feel - Mute in my agony-- - Derelict, derelict, - Over the sea! - - Rudderless, by ways uncharted blown-- - Some day shall waken to find me gone-- - What matter? I have drifted alone - Ever--alone--yet free-- - Derelict, derelict, - Over the sea! - - - - - THE SQUIRE OF DAMES TO HIS LADY - - - Why should our meeting borrow - A sense of shame or sorrow - That each must go his way? - Love liketh no fetter - Therefore our roads were better - If you go yours to-morrow, - And I go mine to-day. - - I hold you for a minute-- - You'd catch the hour and pin it-- - But if I held you longer - Would you have more assurance - In days of richer durance, - Life with more rapture in it, - Passion more wise and stronger? - - The Daughter of Illusion - Hath made our love seem fusion - Of two strange things in one-- - But loving hath not taught her - That strange as fire to water, - Love becomes bleak intrusion - When all the glamor's gone. - - You say I've brought you sorrow - And pay not debts I borrow-- - But mirth is what's to pay! - So part our paths in laughter, - And, since your heart is softer, - You go your way to-morrow-- - And I'll go mine to-day. - - - - - GAS-LIGHT HEROICS - - - With this night's carousal - We will close the portal - On our poor espousal-- - Sacrament and housel - For a love too mortal! - - With this gay delaying - We'll delay yet longer-- - Care not what the saying - Of the World--that braying - Evil tattle-monger! - - Pleasure has as thunder - Scorched and jangled thru me; - Now I'll sit and wonder - At the day-star yonder - And your face, grown gloomy. - - You are known as "Lily" - And they mock your gender; - Is it but a silly - Fancy, you seem stilly - Lily-souled and tender? - - Underneath the bitter - Mockery of color, - Underneath the titter - Is there something fitter? - Something finer, fuller? - - Something (can I hear it - In your secret eyes?) - When I come too near it - Like a frightened spirit - Running from the skies? - - Girl, you know that glow meant - Dawn's thin lips of scarlet-- - Bubble of life's foment - Stay your soul a moment! - - * * * * * - - Bah! You're drunk, you harlot! - - - - - MISTS - - - I - - I am most weary of this fatuous me - That doth obtrude a niddering death's head - At a blithe feast of Springtide jollity, - Of revelling buds and flowers unsurfeited. - I am most weary of this chained thought - That hath forgotten where its mansions are-- - And lost the dew its seven-spher'd courses caught - Wandering in plunged dark from star to star. - I am most weary of my stagnant soul - That neither thirsts, nor hungers, nor is stirred - By the gigantic thunders that have rolled - From the white, hurtling lightning of a word. - - I am most weary, love; so let thy face-- - The sponge that sops my gaze, myself erase. - - - II - - Oft in the groping night I am afraid, - For this, mine opaque organism, seems - A glass, a mere reflex of trooping dreams-- - A polished boss where images parade. - And to see these doth make my senses cold-- - This globe become a visionary face-- - This little spinning soul of me--in space-- - I dare not think of what that space may hold! - Such thoughts are as the charnel mists that rise - From feverish and mortuary ground - Thru which one sees the country all around-- - Yet near, the dead--and far away, the skies. - - But at the thought of you my life expands - Until it holds all life within its hands! - - - - - SCEPTIC - - - I - - This hour has shut us like a tent - From all but night; we two, alone, - So close, so poignantly alert, have grown, - That trivial speech, from silence rent, - Breaks off--a useless instrument. - - For all the opening world is ours, - And you, tho scarce a woman yet, - Your eyes with feasts of lights and vintage set, - Hold all the dewy wealth of flowers, - And gold of Babylonian towers. - - Our lives will alter if we move-- - It were so easy now to rise - And tell my unimpassioned soul it lies-- - And claim youth's heritage of love, - Let bald life prove what it may prove! - - It were so easy to conceive - Your lack my lack would compensate-- - And by one stroke undo the knot of fate; - It were so easy to believe - The lies that such a thing could weave! - - Or shall I stumble through the night - Biting my lips to hold the tears - Because your incommunicable years - Must spend their summer of delight - Without my reach--beyond my sight? - - The house is still; the midnight seems - Inscrutable--no answer there. - Oh God!--to break this tension of despair. - Between us the calm lamplight streams-- - "Good night!" and "Pleasant dreams!"--yes--dreams. - - - II - - I would I had lain with my love to-night; - Her eyes trembled for her body said, - "I have smoothed a pillow and made a bed"-- - But I smiled against it - And turned away my head - To come into the cold starlight. - - I would I had lain with my love to-night, - For I know how flowers are shed, - And the cynical scintillant stars are dead-- - Dead, dead utterly! - Yet I turned away my head - To come into the cold starlight. - - I would I had lain with my love to-night! - Oh, indolent Gods, we too can tread - On the silent spirits, the uncomforted! - She did not reproach me, - Tho I turned away my head - And came into the starlight. - - - III - - Love (as a cloud on the sea - Hung between poles of blue) - Hangs in the heart of me - Between the eyes of you. - Love, as a cloud on the sea, - Claims the tears of two. - - Love (as a wind in a tree - Shaking its tower of green) - Shakes all the heart of me - And leaves no peace between. - Love, as the wind the tree - Tears with hands unseen. - - Love (as a storm on the sea - Shatters the sleep of the wave) - Shatters the heart of me - With desires that grope and crave. - Love, as the storm the sea, - Boasts not me his slave. - - - IV - - You, flower-named, and as a flower arrayed, - Open to all the wandering airs that pass, - Opened to me--yet I drew back afraid, - Craven to the blood that would have preyed - And the sly viper coiling in the grass. - - - V - - Love, when you smiled and beckoned - My cold thought stood aloof and reckoned - Some heights above you. - But now you have turned and gone - Smiling, fugitive as dawn, - I know (oh fool!) I love you. - - - VI - - Love, with her queen's face and child lips - Walked at my side; her hair about her head - Streamed, with riotous and exuberant spread - Like sails and cordage of sea-breasting ships, - And as the tides, her mirthful glints and dips - Tugged at my anchor'd calmness--then she said, - Chilling to gravity, "You are lead." - It was as when the bright blade cruelly slips, - For in my soul that hid its vain desires - Under closed hatch, I knew the stifled fires - Devoured in silence, as stealthy serpents writhe - Their folds about their prey; and seemed to hear - The passing of some irrevocable year, - And faint for whistle of a monstrous scythe. - - - VII - - Pain of widest range-- - The intimate grown strange. - - - - - ARMA VIRUMQUE CANO - - - And so the good Aeneas went away. - It was not dawn, and yet the sleepless sea - Felt as a mother, the still unborn day. - The stars were brighter than they ought to be. - A milky foam curled from the vessel's breast - Whose long blades lifted to each lifting crest. - - Happy were the sailors to be aboard once more, - And the laughing sea answered to their shouts afar off shore. - - Dido the Queen - Knew he was gone. - No need to have seen - From the casement withdrawn; - No need to be told; - Her heart had guessed - By the aching unrest - And empty breast-- - Empty and cold. - - Oh, plain her Maidens at their spinning, - Love has end that had beginning. - - As the course was traced Aeneas paced, - His thoughts uprising like a flock of birds; - And one flew west, to the new the unknown nest, - And one that was wing'd with flaming words-- - Something the Queen had uttered, tender--sweet,-- - Fluttered back and died--just at her feet. - - Ho! chants a Rower, straining at the sweep, - Leave the landsman to his pillow, the sailor to the deep. - - All night the Queen - In fever burned; - A dream returned - Long ago seen: - A dream of ships, - Of one who came - Out of a flame - And cried her name - And kissed her lips. - - Somewhere in the dawn Someone's singing: - "Lo! what gifts love's hands are bringing!" - - Jet-black, the palms like sculptured fountains loomed - Above the lovers; one star blazed all night. - Beyond the river was the sea that boomed. - Their barge was lit with lightnings of delight. - Of this, the good Aeneas too had dreamed - While the unshaken towers of Ilium gleamed. - - Ah! cry the sailors, "whom we loved must wait. - There's no turning back from the open track to the gates of fate." - - The cicadas drone; - Desert winds blow - As oarsmen row - Their Queen alone - Down the river. - Alone, she cried - Alone! to the tide. - And the sea replied - Forever! - - La, croon the Women, nimbly weaving, - "Whose heart do we hear grieving?" - - Months bring all wanderings to a close. - The fleet years flee; Aeneas wisely wed, - Often, when wind and sea strike mighty blows, - Wakening from dreams half ecstasy, half dread, - That come upon him from another life, - Touches the calm breast of his sleeping wife. - - Hum, the Night Watch mutters, leaning on his spear, - "'Tis a strange world to be in and to have no fear." - - The sea at last - Brings pain to end. - The desert vast - Becomes her friend. - Her people fear it: - "The Queen," they say, - "Grows day by day - Paler, but still gay-- - As a spirit." - - Oh, they murmur, "Queen Dido goes away - To where the dark river runs, sunless and gray." - - - - - A HYMN TO DIONYSUS IN SPRING - - - Yellow the sands of the shores of Elis, and over the creaming - Foam-flakes that flutter and curl on the edge of the dreaming - Mediterranean, Jupiter arches his azure dome. - Here to the somnolent sands the Aeolian women have come, - The dreamers, all languid with silence of spring-tide dreaming, - And they stand with their hair unbound and their feet in the foam. - - The heart of the morning beats with a swooning, amorous beating, - And the nymph-cool waters and brazen sunshine meeting, - Mingle where indolent spring-tide ripples shimmer and burn; - Out to the dim horizon the eyes of the dreamers yearn, - And like flutes are the low, soft voices that chant thus, entreating - The God, Dionysus, to rise from the sea and return. - - "Bitter thy roving hath been, O Hunter, and stricken with madness, - And thy winter frenzy hath torn us with torment of sadness-- - Horror of blood in the mouth and of murderous lusts that bring - Shadows a-couch in the forest from under us shuddering. - We are sick of the feverish nights that have stolen our gladness-- - Ah! we are weary of winter and fain of the Spring!" - - "Thy foes, O Hunter, have goaded thy soul, but their goading is - over, - For every unfolding leaf is a shield for thy cover - And every grass-blade upraises a spear that is scimitar-keen, - Gladly the flowers will weave thee a mantle to wander unseen. - Slim as a willow-wand, Ariadne awaits thee, her lover, - And her heart is full of the dreams that are cool and green." - - "Hyé, the Dew, thy mother, sorrows because of thy going, - And the film-pale, rain-sweet Hyades fleeing and flowing, - Dissolved from the rainbow and river to rise in the sap of the tree, - Leave never their dolorous grieving, lamenting in quest of thee. - And the succulent vine and the spirit of all things growing - Cry 'Dionysus, return! Oh, return from the sea!'" - - "Wilt thou forsake us forever, unheeding our sedulous plaining? - See'st not the clusters of pale green globes, crescent and straining - Sunwards, that long for thy hand to engarb them with royal attire? - Hear us, O Wine-God; return to us! Kindle once more Desire!" - So chant the Aeolian women till the light be waning - While the foam breaks over their feet in soft folds of fire. - - The robes of the sun are red, and close to the earth he dozes; - The long day lingers, then slowly and silently closes - The shadowy orient gates, climbing upward stair by stair, - Raising her evening face to the stars in the spring-tide air. - Lo! the sea is aglow and aflame with the odor of roses! - Lo! a glimpse of the God with the sun in his yellow hair! - - - Recent Publications - - Price Post - Love of One's Neighbor--Leonid Andreyev Boards .40 .05 - A satirical comedy by the greatest of the - modern Russians. - Mariana--José Echegaray Cloth .75 .10 - The masterpiece of modern Spain's greatest - writer. - Chants Communal--Horace Traubel Boards 1.00 .10 - Inspirational prose pieces. Paper .25 .05 - Collects--Horace Traubel Cloth 1.00 .10 - Jack London says: "His is the vision of the Paper .50 Paid - poet and the voice of the poet." - Horace Traubel--Mildred Bain Boards .50 .05 - Not Guilty--Robert Blatchford Cloth .50 .10 - A defence of the bottom-dog. Paper .25 .05 - The Diary of a Suicide--Wallace Baker Cloth 1.00 .08 - "The confession of a youth who was prematurely Paper .50 Paid - tired." - The Case of Mexico--De Zayas Cloth 1.35 0.10 - Our Irrational Distribution of Wealth--Byron C. Cloth 1.00 .10 - Mathews - Des Imagistes--An Anthology Cloth 1.00 .07 - "It sticks out of the crowd like a tall marble - monument."--_The New Weekly._ - The Thresher's Wife--Harry Kemp Boards .40 .05 - A narrative poem of great strength and - originality. - An English Dante--John Pyne Boards 1.00 .07 - A translation in the original rhythm and - rhymes. - Erna Vitek--Alfred Kreymborg Cloth 1.00 .10 - A new form of the novel. 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Cronyn - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - -Title: The Glebe 1914/09 (Vol. 2, No. 2): Poems - -Author: George W. Cronyn - -Editor: Alfred Kreymborg - Man Ray - -Release Date: October 7, 2020 [EBook #63399] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GLEBE 1914/09: POEMS *** - - - - -Produced by Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. This book was -produced from images made available by the Blue Mountain -Project, Princeton University. - - - - - - -</pre> - - -<div class="frontmatter chapter"> -<div class="centerpic"> -<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div> - - <div class="coverpage"> -<p class="journal"> -THE<br /> -GLEBE -</p> - -<p class="issue"> -VOLUME 2<br /> -NUMBER 2 -</p> - -<p class="issue"> -SEPTEMBER<br /> -1914 -</p> - -<p class="price"> -SUBSCRIPTION -Three Dollars Yearly -THIS ISSUE 50 CENTS -</p> - -<p class="tit"> -POEMS -</p> - -<p class="aut"> -George Cronyn -</p> - - </div> -</div> - -<div class="frontmatter chapter"> -<p class="first editorial"> -<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">he</span> only editorial policy of THE GLEBE is -that embodied in its declaration of absolute -freedom of expression, which makes for a range -broad enough to include every temperament from -the most radical to the most conservative, the only -requisite being that the work should have unmistakable -merit. Each issue will be devoted exclusively -to one individual, thereby giving him an opportunity -to present his work in sufficient bulk to -make it possible for the reader to obtain a much -more comprehensive grasp of his personality than -is afforded him in the restricted spaces allotted by -the other magazines. Published monthly, THE -GLEBE will issue twelve books per year, chosen -on their merits alone, since the subscription list -does away with the need of catering to the popular -demand that confronts every publisher. Thus, -THE GLEBE can promise the best work of American -and foreign authors, known and unknown. -</p> - -<p> -The price of each issue of THE GLEBE will be -fifty cents and the yearly subscription three dollars. -</p> - -<p class="sign"> -Editor<br /> -ALFRED KREYMBORG -</p> - -<p class="published"> -Published by<br /> -ALBERT AND CHARLES BONI<br /> -96 FIFTH AVENUE<br /> -New York City -</p> - -</div> - -<div class="frontmatter chapter"> -<p class="halftitle"> -POEMS -</p> - -</div> - -<div class="frontmatter chapter"> -<h1 class="title"> -POEMS -</h1> - -<p class="aut"> -GEORGE W. CRONYN -</p> - -<div class="centerpic logo"> -<img src="images/logo.jpg" alt="" /></div> - -<p class="pub"> -NEW YORK<br /> -ALBERT AND CHARLES BONI<br /> -96 FIFTH AVENUE<br /> -1914 -</p> - -</div> - -<div class="frontmatter chapter"> -<p class="cop"> -Copyright, 1914<br /> -By<br /> -Albert and Charles Boni -</p> - -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter blank" id="chapter-0-1" title="To touch the sleeping lids of Beauty"> -<a id="page-5" class="pagenum" title="5"></a> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">To touch the sleeping lids of Beauty</p> - <p class="verse">Drawing thru finger-tips her dream—a birth</p> - <p class="verse">Of hell and heaven for a nobler earth;</p> - <p class="verse3">This is the poet’s duty.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">To sleep with stars, to dream a flower,</p> - <p class="verse">From passing shadows pluck profound relation,</p> - <p class="verse">With a divine wonder at its emanation;</p> - <p class="verse3">This is the poet’s power.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-2"> -<a id="page-6" class="pagenum" title="6"></a> -<span class="firstline">DIONYSUS ELEUTHERIOS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-2-1"> -THE PRAYER -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Like a cat beside a pool</p> - <p class="verse">More than half afraid of it,</p> - <p class="verse">Fishing gingerly I sit</p> - <p class="verse">Here beside this pool of wit—</p> - <p class="verse">Dumb as any fool!</p> - <p class="verse">Chirrups humor in the grass;</p> - <p class="verse">Winds of tickling laughter pass,</p> - <p class="verse">And the world grows wise forsooth,</p> - <p class="verse">Lets gleam amused tooth</p> - <p class="verse">Seeing in this water-glass</p> - <p class="verse">Jests that swim the depths of truth,</p> - <p class="verse">And like fins of fishes shiver</p> - <p class="verse">It to fretful quirk and quiver.</p> - <p class="verse">Ripples break and bubbles rise</p> - <p class="verse">Catching smiles from out the skies</p> - <p class="verse">In their globed eyes.</p> - <p class="verse">Surely, surely there was never</p> - <p class="verse">Such a pleasant river!</p> - <p class="verse">Only I am out of tune</p> - <p class="verse">Like an icicle in June,</p> - <p class="verse">Or a monster from the moon.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Dionysus, hear my prayer!</p> - <p class="verse">Spreading arms to the mute air,</p> - <p class="verse">I entreat thee, fashion me</p> - <p class="verse">One with this gay company,</p> -<a id="page-7" class="pagenum" title="7"></a> - <p class="verse">One in mirth and one in song</p> - <p class="verse">Dartling their minds among.</p> - <p class="verse">Loosener of lips and heart,</p> - <p class="verse">Draw my sullen mouth apart.</p> - <p class="verse">Give a gleam to guide me by</p> - <p class="verse">As a phare in a night-sky—</p> - <p class="verse">Grace of tongue and warmth of eye;</p> - <p class="verse">Give me of thy fire and dew;</p> - <p class="verse">Give me flash of mimic art—</p> - <p class="verse">Spice of Godhead in this brew</p> - <p class="verse">To pierce my fellows thru and thru.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Oh, thou vintal Deity,</p> - <p class="verse">Loose my limbs that they may fly</p> - <p class="verse">With this reckless revelry!</p> - <p class="verse">Sick of sober ways am I;</p> - <p class="verse">In this tumult I alone</p> - <p class="verse">Am a satyr turned to stone;</p> - <p class="verse">Satyr—satyr—not a man!</p> - <p class="verse">Gifts I ask not of Apollo—</p> - <p class="verse">Wine is good and grief is hollow;</p> - <p class="verse">I would follow after Pan;</p> - <p class="verse">I would follow, follow, follow</p> - <p class="verse">After Pan!</p> - <p class="verse">Or if he wander ways too quiet,</p> - <p class="verse">Shepherd ways of warmth and ease,</p> - <p class="verse">Let me taste a wilder riot</p> - <p class="verse">In thy mysteries—</p> - <p class="verse">Let me quaff it, laugh it, cry it!</p> - <p class="verse">Give me, give me, give me these—</p> -<a id="page-8" class="pagenum" title="8"></a> - <p class="verse">Fleet foot after those that flee,</p> - <p class="verse">Hot veins amorous to seize</p> - <p class="verse">Maenads maddened by the wine,</p> - <p class="verse">Wound with hair and wreathed with vine,</p> - <p class="verse">Maenads stained with purple lees—</p> - <p class="verse">Give me, give me, give me these.</p> - <p class="verse">Only this I ask of thee</p> - <p class="verse">Dionysus, Dionysus, son of Semele!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-2-2"> -THE ANSWER -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Lo! the God of purple pleasure</p> - <p class="verse">Heard and hearkened to his prayer,</p> - <p class="verse">Reft the swathed bands that bound him,</p> - <p class="verse">From his cloak of Self unwound him,</p> - <p class="verse">Filled him with supernal seizure</p> - <p class="verse">That his humor’s jewelled treasure</p> - <p class="verse">Leaped and sparkled in the air—</p> - <p class="verse">Till the night was bright around him.</p> - <p class="verse">Never such a jestful fit</p> - <p class="verse">Dreamt he in his wildest wishes!</p> - <p class="verse">Never from the pool of wit</p> - <p class="verse">Had he drawn such shining fishes!</p> - <p class="verse">Humid flame glowed in each eye</p> - <p class="verse">And his face had changed its vesture,</p> - <p class="verse">And his arms moved with strange gesture</p> - <p class="verse">Apt in every mimicry.</p> - <p class="verse">With the spell of Fire and Dew</p> - <p class="verse">He pierced his fellows thru and thru.</p> - <p class="verse">Surely Dithyrambus pressed him!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-9" class="pagenum" title="9"></a> - <p class="verse">Surely the Great God possessed him!</p> - <p class="verse">And the mystic sisters too,</p> - <p class="verse">Oeno, Spermo, and Elais,</p> - <p class="verse">(Who knoweth what their way is?)</p> - <p class="verse">Surely they caressed him!</p> - <p class="verse">He whose tongue of old was frozen—</p> - <p class="verse">As he quaffs, with this potation</p> - <p class="verse">Deep and deeper inspiration</p> - <p class="verse">Seems to grow a Prophet—chosen,</p> - <p class="verse">For he speaks by divination!</p> - <p class="verse">Never were such fancies woven</p> - <p class="verse">From the carded thoughts of mortal.</p> - <p class="verse">Some are mazed, and some deride him,</p> - <p class="verse">“Lo, his wits have gone astray,</p> - <p class="verse">What a fool he is!” they say.</p> - <p class="verse">Others whisper (those beside him)</p> - <p class="verse">“He hath crossed another portal—</p> - <p class="verse">He is one whose foot is cloven.</p> - <p class="verse">Do ye hear wild creatures beat</p> - <p class="verse">Lifted hoof and naked feet</p> - <p class="verse">On the quiet woodland sod?</p> - <p class="verse">Do ye mark what mood that strain is?</p> - <p class="verse">Hints it not the Shepherd God</p> - <p class="verse">With his pipings shrill and sweet—</p> - <p class="verse">Snubnose, Sweetwine, old Silenus,</p> - <p class="verse">All his creatures shy and fleet?”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Deeper, deeper, Fire and Dew</p> - <p class="verse">Drains he of the Wine-God’s brew</p> - <p class="verse">Craving furthest essence—thus</p> - <p class="verse">Heareth now another voice</p> -<a id="page-10" class="pagenum" title="10"></a> - <p class="verse">Terrible and new,</p> - <p class="verse">Luring—appalling,</p> - <p class="verse">“Iachus! Iachus! Iachus!</p> - <p class="verse">Wine! Wine! Wine! Rejoice!”</p> - <p class="verse">Thru the forest calling.</p> - <p class="verse">And the sky is red and golden</p> - <p class="verse">And the red, red stars are falling,</p> - <p class="verse">Falling to the earth in showers.</p> - <p class="verse">And the fresh blood-scents embolden</p> - <p class="verse">Gold and sable leopards, sleeping,</p> - <p class="verse">To come crawling, writhing, leaping,</p> - <p class="verse">Over gold and purple flowers.</p> - <p class="verse">And the autumn sun is swollen</p> - <p class="verse">With the sweetness he has stolen</p> - <p class="verse">From the wine, and he is wine, wine-red.</p> - <p class="verse">Come ye now with wreathed head,</p> - <p class="verse">Come ye now</p> - <p class="verse">With ivy bound on your white brow,</p> - <p class="verse">And forgotten, forgotten be the hours!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Forgotten and forgotten! Ah the night has fled away,</p> - <p class="verse">And the wine is spilt, and the stars are gray,</p> - <p class="verse">For the old cold dawn abashes</p> - <p class="verse">All the torches turned to ashes,</p> - <p class="verse">But the feasters—where are they?</p> - <p class="verse">Fled, the sound of pipes at last;</p> - <p class="verse">Fled, the panting, goat-<a id="corr-0"></a>shank’d clan,</p> - <p class="verse">And the maenad rout have passed,</p> - <p class="verse">And the echoes caught and cast</p> - <p class="verse">Died where they began.</p> -<a id="page-11" class="pagenum" title="11"></a> - <p class="verse">Never, never, never</p> - <p class="verse">A more sombre river</p> - <p class="verse">From such springs of laughter ran!</p> - <p class="verse">And the lucid pool of wit—</p> - <p class="verse">What a scum has clouded it!</p> - <p class="verse">Past each stately Parian column</p> - <p class="verse">Day comes, gaunt and pale and shrunken</p> - <p class="verse">And her step is very solemn.</p> - <p class="verse">On the veined marble sunken,</p> - <p class="verse">Reft of breath of Deity,</p> - <p class="verse">Prone there, lies the Priest—the Chosen,</p> - <p class="verse">Huddled, bestial, bleared and drunken—</p> - <p class="verse">Like a body that is frozen</p> - <p class="verse">(That such things should be!)</p> - <p class="verse">Shape of shapeless mockery</p> - <p class="verse">He had tasted all one can;</p> - <p class="verse">He had heard the pipes of Pan;</p> - <p class="verse">He had followed in thy van</p> - <p class="verse">Dionysus, Dionysus, son of Semele—</p> - <p class="verse">Satyr?—not a satyr he—a man!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-3"> -<a id="page-12" class="pagenum" title="12"></a> -<span class="firstline">THE TRAIL BY NIGHT</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">No human foot-print here before my own!</p> - <p class="verse">And it is strange to come so far—alone—</p> - <p class="verse">So far into this frozen forest world</p> - <p class="verse">Of moonlight and of shadow and deep snow,</p> - <p class="verse">And things I do not know,</p> - <p class="verse">That strike the civil vestments from my soul—</p> - <p class="verse">As if all law-born years were backward hurled</p> - <p class="verse">Toward some dim and other pole—</p> - <p class="verse">Some brute primordial reign</p> - <p class="verse">Whose voice was terror and whose life was pain.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">On—up the trail I go;</p> - <p class="verse">Beneath my feet cold streams of moonlight glow,</p> - <p class="verse">And in the silver-sifted dark strange, naked fancies grow,</p> - <p class="verse">While the vast pines in vista, round by round,</p> - <p class="verse">Move with an unearthly sound,</p> - <p class="verse">And every tree with its white hair is crowned.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">On—up—I go,</p> - <p class="verse">And as thru ancient Gothic arches seen</p> - <p class="verse">I glimpse the valley far below</p> - <p class="verse">That glistens with a fine fantastic sheen.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">On—up—I pass,</p> - <p class="verse">Nor reck the night-wrought spells about me thrown,</p> - <p class="verse">Heedless—sucked dry of thought or will</p> - <p class="verse">Save to peer curious into this magician’s glass,</p> -<a id="page-13" class="pagenum" title="13"></a> - <p class="verse">And see the forest dreams thru forest moonlight blown.</p> - <p class="verse">On—up I plunge—until</p> - <p class="verse">Bending, discern before me, with a thrill</p> - <p class="verse">The signs where some wild beast has gone.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Who knows but that within the silence here</p> - <p class="verse">The cedar shadows gloom about a deer,</p> - <p class="verse">That stands with body lithe and slim</p> - <p class="verse">Struck to a statue by surprise?</p> - <p class="verse">Who knows but that, upon some snowy limb</p> - <p class="verse">A lynx, lean-bellied, pricks his tufted ear</p> - <p class="verse">And watches me with evil, amber eyes?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza tb"> - <p class="tb">* * *</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Surely beyond the stars my man-world lies—</p> - <p class="verse">For close to me unhallowed mountains rise</p> - <p class="verse">And fill my heart with fear!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-4"> -<a id="page-14" class="pagenum" title="14"></a> -<span class="firstline">SONG IN WINTER</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Burning stars in a frosty sky,</p> - <p class="verse">Thread-bare winds from the hollow west,</p> - <p class="verse">“Give us a garment of beauty!” they cry,</p> - <p class="verse">“For the waters of truth our throats are dry,</p> - <p class="verse">And phantoms of chaos uncover the bones of our breast,</p> - <p class="verse">Leaving us little rest.”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Bitter stars in a frozen sky,</p> - <p class="verse">Tattered winds from the lonely west,</p> - <p class="verse">Haggard beggars of hours that die—</p> - <p class="verse">(Begging the gift of a golden lie!)</p> - <p class="verse">Is it with you as with us, no rest, no rest—</p> - <p class="verse">Is it with you no rest?</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter blank" id="chapter-0-5" title="Unnamed Fragments"> -<a id="page-15" class="pagenum" title="15"></a> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The lacy chequer of aerial boughs</p> - <p class="verse">That winter weaves with delicate wizardry.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza tb"> - <p class="tb">* * *</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Far away—who knows how far?—</p> - <p class="verse">Against the flaming calm of winter twilight,</p> - <p class="verse">I hear the voice of speed—muffled and hoarse,</p> - <p class="verse">Sounding across the hills.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza tb"> - <p class="tb">* * *</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Locomotive, locomotive,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the hills at night,</p> - <p class="verse">Running on your far-away groove</p> - <p class="verse">With the husky pant of things that move</p> - <p class="verse">And cannot turn to left or right,</p> - <p class="verse">Of things that toil and things that pass</p> - <p class="verse">In the murk of smoke and the stench of gas,</p> - <p class="verse">Serf of the monstrous city,</p> - <p class="verse">What pity—oh what pity</p> - <p class="verse">For the dearth of your delight,</p> - <p class="verse">Locomotive, locomotive,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the hills at night!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-6"> -<a id="page-16" class="pagenum" title="16"></a> -<span class="firstline">CLOUDS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Whence do you come, oh silken shapes,</p> - <p class="verse">Across the silver sky?</p> - <p class="verse">We come from where the wind blows</p> - <p class="verse">And the young stars die.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Why do you move so fast, so fast</p> - <p class="verse">Across the white moon’s breast?</p> - <p class="verse">The cruel wind is at our heels</p> - <p class="verse">And we may not rest.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Are you not weary, fleeing shapes,</p> - <p class="verse">That never cease to flee?</p> - <p class="verse">The forkéd trees’ chained shadows are</p> - <p class="verse">Less weary than we.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Whither do you go, O shadow-shapes</p> - <p class="verse">Across the ghastly sky?</p> - <p class="verse">We go to where the wind blows</p> - <p class="verse">And the old stars die.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-17" class="pagenum" title="17"></a> - <p class="verse">My head is circl’d with fire—</p> - <p class="verse">And I think of the failing of one’s desire—</p> - <p class="verse">And I hear outside the pitiful dropping of rain;</p> - <p class="verse">Which is the greater pain?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I yearn for the birth of the brain—</p> - <p class="verse">Be it child of blood and pain,</p> - <p class="verse">(I pray to endure the pain)—</p> - <p class="verse">My heart—lo! my heart is afire</p> - <p class="verse">With hue as of purple or Tyre—</p> - <p class="verse">With hope of Promethean fire—</p> - <p class="verse">And oh God! God! God! the desire</p> - <p class="verse">For what only the Gods attain!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse3">In the white moonlight stand</p> - <p class="verse">With every finger on a star, and feel</p> - <p class="verse">Infinity as an engulfing wave.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-7"> -<a id="page-18" class="pagenum" title="18"></a> -<span class="firstline">JOY</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The cañons are covered with snow,</p> - <p class="verse">But the sky doth over them lean</p> - <p class="verse">With eyes that are warm and keen</p> - <p class="verse">As if he could never know</p> - <p class="verse">The gray despair of the snow;</p> - <p class="verse">And snow and sky join hands together</p> - <p class="verse">To dance a dance of wonderful weather!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-8"> -<a id="page-19" class="pagenum" title="19"></a> -<span class="firstline">A VOICE</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A woman spoke to me in the street—</p> - <p class="verse2">I do not remember how or why—</p> - <p class="verse">But a breath blew over the winter sky</p> - <p class="verse">And spring came in with silver feet!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-9"> -<span class="firstline">ANOTHER</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A creature plucked at me in the street</p> - <p class="verse2">But well I knew the reason why</p> - <p class="verse">The red stars sickened in the sky</p> - <p class="verse">And Hell gaped open at my feet!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-10"> -<a id="page-20" class="pagenum" title="20"></a> -<span class="firstline">IMPRESSIONS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">This is the Gate of the Gray City—wrought</p> - <p class="verse">With piled roofs and steeples dimly seen</p> - <p class="verse">Thru the gray dusk—pale, wistful flakes of fire</p> - <p class="verse">Kindled about its lower fringe—vast murk—</p> - <p class="verse">A snuffling monster with an evil eye</p> - <p class="verse">That surly pants to work some will unknown,</p> - <p class="verse">Blowing white breaths—a semaphore</p> - <p class="verse">With lifted arm—a form that swings a light</p> - <p class="verse">In arcs, against infinitude of gray,</p> - <p class="verse">Uneasy sounds, the clink and clank and groan;</p> - <p class="verse">Of things inanimate—the curves of rails</p> - <p class="verse">In rhythmical convergence gathered up—</p> - <p class="verse">(And gathering up what burdens from afar!)</p> - <p class="verse">Monotony—monotony—despair!</p> - <p class="verse">This is the Gate of the Gray City.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter blank" id="chapter-0-11" title="Unnamed Fragments"> -<a id="page-21" class="pagenum" title="21"></a> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Whatever our immitigable end,</p> - <p class="verse">The earth’s our home and prison thru whose windows</p> - <p class="verse">Our wistful scrutinizing minds traverse</p> - <p class="verse">The sky’s dissolving continents, exult</p> - <p class="verse">In melancholy mountains or, shackled,</p> - <p class="verse">Envy the inconstant sea that seems</p> - <p class="verse">An uncontaminated god, alone, complete</p> - <p class="verse">In mighty passion and the scorn of time.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza tb"> - <p class="tb">* * *</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I love the skyward-spiring tree</p> - <p class="verse">For its supreme unconsciousness of me.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter blank" id="chapter-0-12" title="Unnamed Fragment"> -<a id="page-22" class="pagenum" title="22"></a> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">So let us seek the lands that the Gods love,</p> - <p class="verse">The soil unsown, the isles of sumptuous store;</p> - <p class="verse">Where fallow fields yield yearly fee of grain,</p> - <p class="verse">And vines unpruned produce perennial bloom,</p> - <p class="verse">And olive slips engender faithfully,</p> - <p class="verse">And dark figs deck their trees; the cavernous oaks</p> - <p class="verse">Bleed honey’d drops, and from high hills descend</p> - <p class="verse">The nimble waters with melodious feet.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-13"> -<a id="page-23" class="pagenum" title="23"></a> -<span class="firstline">PRELUDE TO A PHANTASY</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I will tell thee of Far-Away, of Far-Away, of Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">I will tell thee of Far-Away</p> - <p class="verse">The home of wandering dreams;</p> - <p class="verse">For they come out of Far-Away</p> - <p class="verse">To show us how to love and play,</p> - <p class="verse">And when they’ve wandered for a day</p> - <p class="verse">Must return, it seems.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">There’s more than gold in Far-Away, in Far-Away, in Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">There’s more than gold in Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">There’s more than jewelled gleams.</p> - <p class="verse">There’s more than smiles in Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">And coronals of laughter gay;</p> - <p class="verse">There’s crystal tears that bloom alway</p> - <p class="verse">Beside forgotten streams.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">We’ll gather gold from Far-Away, from Far-Away, from Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">We’ll gather gold from Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">We’ll steal the jewelled gleams.</p> - <p class="verse">We’ll hunt for smiles from Far-Away;</p> - <p class="verse">Following laughter by the way,</p> - <p class="verse">But we must for another day</p> - <p class="verse">Leave the tears it seems.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-24" class="pagenum" title="24"></a> - <p class="verse">We’ll find the road to Far-Away, to Far-Away, to Far-Away,</p> - <p class="verse">We’ll know the road to Far-Away</p> - <p class="verse">By the feet of dreams;</p> - <p class="verse">For they come out of Far-Away</p> - <p class="verse">To love a little and to play,</p> - <p class="verse">And when they’ve wandered for a day</p> - <p class="verse">Must return it seems.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-14"> -<a id="page-25" class="pagenum" title="25"></a> -<span class="firstline">RUNNING WATER</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Oh you who stand by the river in a gown of willow-green,</p> - <p class="verse">I will make you an eager song of my heart to-night;</p> - <p class="verse">I will find me a feather of a singing bird that has seen</p> - <p class="verse">And touched the blue targe of the sky in its flight.</p> - <p class="verse">I will make me a quill of it, and dip in my heart and write!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I would not make you a threnody of sorrow that has been,</p> - <p class="verse">For you are no more than an eager child who demand</p> - <p class="verse">Magical tales of me, of lacquered Arabian sheen;</p> - <p class="verse">I will speak very softly then with your hand</p> - <p class="verse">In mine, a rose petal, the things that you understand.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">On the waxen and beautiful tablet that is your heart</p> - <p class="verse">With a singing quill and the stain of my heart I will write;</p> - <p class="verse">I will write with the simplest words and the simplest art</p> - <p class="verse">All the splendors that glow so by night—</p> - <p class="verse">Of the Genie and the Bottle, and carpets of orient flight.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">And you who are more than a princess in your gown of yellow-green</p> - <p class="verse">With your bird-like and trembling heart will understand</p> -<a id="page-26" class="pagenum" title="26"></a> - <p class="verse">All the luxurious sorrows and loves that have been</p> - <p class="verse">Written on parchment at a king’s demand—</p> - <p class="verse">And the simple words of them will flutter like birds in your hand.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-15"> -<a id="page-27" class="pagenum" title="27"></a> -<span class="firstline">EPITHALAMION</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The pale dawn went down unto the sea,</p> - <p class="verse">Past the gray ships in the offing.</p> - <p class="verse">The salt wind found her blowing hair</p> - <p class="verse">And closed his wings and nested there,</p> - <p class="verse">And the salt sea hungered for her rare</p> - <p class="verse">Sweet body and forgot his scoffing.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The pale dawn went down unto the sea</p> - <p class="verse">When all the world was sleeping;</p> - <p class="verse">She lifted veils and veils of air</p> - <p class="verse">Until her eager limbs were bare,</p> - <p class="verse">And the salt sea shook his manéd hair,</p> - <p class="verse">And the curl’d waves came to her, leaping.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-16"> -<a id="page-28" class="pagenum" title="28"></a> -<span class="firstline">MARSH-LANDS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Sure in this spongy and luxuriant retreat—</p> - <p class="verse">This lovely lyric little marsh</p> - <p class="verse">Which nothing hath of fierce or harsh,</p> - <p class="verse">Unhappy fancies to evoke,</p> - <p class="verse">Where all life is most delicately attuned to sweet</p> - <p class="verse">Melodious living, here we’ll meet</p> - <p class="verse">Naiads dainty and discreet</p> - <p class="verse">With other watery folk</p> - <p class="verse">And watch the twinkle of their iridescent feet.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Upon a reed’s high silver point</p> - <p class="verse">Which early dews anoint,</p> - <p class="verse">The Red-wing lights and poises, swaying,</p> - <p class="verse">With throaty and delicious whistle playing</p> - <p class="verse">Pan-music in the mellow morning light.</p> - <p class="verse">It is like running water’s flow</p> - <p class="verse">A bit unearthly, and celestial quite—</p> - <p class="verse">A golden tremolo;</p> - <p class="verse">And satin robes of air half veil him from our sight.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The gay marsh-marigold</p> - <p class="verse">Delights its small sun to unfold;</p> - <p class="verse">And many a bulbous goblin thing,</p> - <p class="verse">Ugly and grave,</p> - <p class="verse">Into the dull mud burrowing</p> - <p class="verse">Draws from some secret treasure-cave</p> - <p class="verse">And to the sunlight heaves</p> - <p class="verse">Green breadth—great leaves</p> - <p class="verse">To build a vessel floating on an inland wave.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-29" class="pagenum" title="29"></a> - <p class="verse">We’ll be as busy as the clouds, with naught to do,</p> - <p class="verse">And we will wonder at the curious striping,</p> - <p class="verse">In saffron glimpses, of more distant pools</p> - <p class="verse">Which the wind cools</p> - <p class="verse">With deep reflected blue.</p> - <p class="verse">And we will listen now to Hyla’s piping—</p> - <p class="verse">A thin small sprite</p> - <p class="verse">That one may never see</p> - <p class="verse">Calling to the sky his clear delight</p> - <p class="verse">Filled with insatiate and unbounded ecstasy.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-17"> -<a id="page-30" class="pagenum" title="30"></a> -<span class="firstline">SPRING FANCY</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">There is an orchard, old and rare,</p> - <p class="verse">(I cannot tell you where!)</p> - <p class="verse">With green doors opening to the sun;</p> - <p class="verse">And the sky-children gather there</p> - <p class="verse">To watch the blossoms, one by one,</p> - <p class="verse">Falling wistfully thru the air</p> - <p class="verse">From the trees’ dishevelled hair.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The sky-children shake their wings</p> - <p class="verse">With flutterings and gurglings—</p> - <p class="verse">And love the light and kiss the sun,</p> - <p class="verse">Nor heed the blossoms that have blown</p> - <p class="verse">From the fruit-wives’ ancient hair</p> - <p class="verse">Earthward thru the glowing air,</p> - <p class="verse">Wistfully—one by one.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-18"> -<a id="page-31" class="pagenum" title="31"></a> -<span class="firstline">SONG</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A Flicker, a Robin, a Song-sparrow</p> - <p class="verse">Have come from Arcady.</p> - <p class="verse">The Flicker was an imp that shouted in a tree;</p> - <p class="verse">The Robin was a winged laugh that Spring set free;</p> - <p class="verse">The Song-sparrow was a liquid arrow</p> - <p class="verse">That pierced to the heart of me.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-19"> -<a id="page-32" class="pagenum" title="32"></a> -<span class="firstline">PLAYING</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Three little girls and one little boy</p> - <p class="verse">Out in the first warm sunshine;</p> - <p class="verse">The wind blows in and the wind blows out</p> - <p class="verse">Voices cool as moonshine.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Six tin cans and a pile of dirt</p> - <p class="verse">And the air smiles like a mother—</p> - <p class="verse">The wind blows in and the wind blows out</p> - <p class="verse">As they play with each other.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Sparrows on the fence and clothes on the line</p> - <p class="verse">And somewhere someone’s laughter—</p> - <p class="verse">The wind blows in and the wind blows <a id="corr-2"></a>out</p> - <p class="verse">And it could not blow much softer!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Three little girls and one little boy</p> - <p class="verse">Out in the first warm weather—</p> - <p class="verse">The wind blows in and the wind blows out</p> - <p class="verse">While they play together.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-20"> -<a id="page-33" class="pagenum" title="33"></a> -<span class="firstline">SONG</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Hi! hi! hi!</p> - <p class="verse">On this green morning</p> - <p class="verse">My soul is as taut as a greenwood-bow,</p> - <p class="verse">Feeling the sap in it mounting so,</p> - <p class="verse">Needs but a jog to loose without warning</p> - <p class="verse">An arrow into the infinite sky—</p> - <p class="verse">Hi! hi! hi!</p> - <p class="verse">On this green morning!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-21"> -<a id="page-34" class="pagenum" title="34"></a> -<span class="firstline">A BUST BY RODIN, KNOWN AS CERES</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">With rhythmic feet and garments flowing free</p> - <p class="verse">Draw near, draw near, bring largesse in full hand;</p> - <p class="verse">Move as to music of the saraband</p> - <p class="verse">Stately, before this Woman-deity.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Woman’s—these billows of thick hair that roll</p> - <p class="verse">Down the billowing breasts of her, and close</p> - <p class="verse">Shadows of pain and mirth in firm repose—</p> - <p class="verse">This delicate mask drawn tight across a soul!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A Goddess—Ultima Thule in her eye;</p> - <p class="verse">For the sad wisdom of its steady gaze,</p> - <p class="verse">Fixed on far, wintry fields and frozen ways,</p> - <p class="verse">Goes out to larger things than you or I:</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The Titan-sap makes gods of the spring hours,</p> - <p class="verse">And Earth renews its children and its flowers!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-22"> -<a id="page-35" class="pagenum" title="35"></a> -<span class="firstline">THE FLOWER’S WAY</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I have stood long in the night</p> - <p class="verse">Under a star;</p> - <p class="verse">I have stood still with shadowy head</p> - <p class="verse">And arrowy leaves outspread</p> - <p class="verse">Under its trembling light</p> - <p class="verse">Where green things are.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I have crept close to the grass</p> - <p class="verse">Where the beetles dart,</p> - <p class="verse">And the humming-bird and the dragon-fly</p> - <p class="verse">Were visions in the sky,</p> - <p class="verse">And the mendicant bees that pass</p> - <p class="verse">Rifled my heart.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I have lain long in the day</p> - <p class="verse">Under the sun,</p> - <p class="verse">With my burning face in the arms of the wind,</p> - <p class="verse">And my petals unconfin’d</p> - <p class="verse">And my virginal robes a-sway—</p> - <p class="verse">Thus joy is won!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-23"> -<a id="page-36" class="pagenum" title="36"></a> -<span class="firstline">THE TREE’S WAY</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The high trees are honest folk;</p> - <p class="verse">They do not stand so much aloof</p> - <p class="verse">Up under heaven’s roof,</p> - <p class="verse">Altho they are earth’s fairest cloak.</p> - <p class="verse">Their lives are very calm and slow;</p> - <p class="verse">They wait for coming things to come,</p> - <p class="verse">They wait, they rest, they ponder some</p> - <p class="verse">Purpose forgotten long ago</p> - <p class="verse">Like quiet folk;</p> - <p class="verse">And sometimes I am moved to stroke</p> - <p class="verse">Hand-greeting as I pass them near,</p> - <p class="verse">And often I am sure I hear</p> - <p class="verse">An answer from these stately folk!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-24"> -<a id="page-37" class="pagenum" title="37"></a> -<span class="firstline">CHILDREN</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">What a garden of surprise</p> - <p class="verse">Out beyond my window lies!</p> - <p class="verse">Fancy, when the night is there</p> - <p class="verse">Gentle trees with drooping hair</p> - <p class="verse">Rocking, rocking cradle-wise</p> - <p class="verse">Little stars with yellow eyes!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-25"> -<a id="page-38" class="pagenum" title="38"></a> -<span class="firstline">VERSES TO A LITTLE CHILD</span><br /> -(From Hofmannsthal) -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Your feet have been fashioned as roses</p> - <p class="verse">To seek the lands of the rainbow—</p> - <p class="verse">The rainbow-kingdoms are open.</p> - <p class="verse">There, haunting the taciturn tree-tops</p> - <p class="verse">Millennial prophecies linger,</p> - <p class="verse">The inexhaustible waters</p> - <p class="verse">Abide there forever and aye.</p> - <p class="verse">Beside the immeasurable forest</p> - <p class="verse">From wooden bowl brimming will you then</p> - <p class="verse">Apportion your milk with a hop-toad?</p> - <p class="verse">So festive a banqueting almost</p> - <p class="verse">Entices the stars to their fall!</p> - <p class="verse">By borders of measureless waters</p> - <p class="verse">Soon you will discover a playmate,</p> - <p class="verse">A dolphin engaging and kind.</p> - <p class="verse">He’ll leap to dry-land at your bidding,</p> - <p class="verse">And if he shall fail you sometimes</p> - <p class="verse">The tender, innumerable zephyrs</p> - <p class="verse">Will still your tempestuous sobbing.</p> - <p class="verse">You’ll find in the rainbow-kingdom</p> - <p class="verse">The ancient exalted traditions</p> - <p class="verse">Forever and ever unchanged.</p> - <p class="verse">The sun with mysterious power</p> - <p class="verse">Has fashioned your feet as the roses</p> - <p class="verse">To enter his measureless kingdom.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-26"> -<a id="page-39" class="pagenum" title="39"></a> -<span class="firstline">NIGHT-FLOWERS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">This night hath no disease;</p> - <p class="verse">It knows not wrecks nor wars</p> - <p class="verse">Nor deaths of human minds.</p> - <p class="verse">The feet of the sweet winds</p> - <p class="verse">Break all the river’s peace</p> - <p class="verse">Into marmoreal bars.</p> - <p class="verse">The tops of moonlit trees</p> - <p class="verse">Have blossomed with white stars,</p> - <p class="verse">And perfumes that one finds</p> - <p class="verse">In old Arabian jars</p> - <p class="verse">Had never blooms like these!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-27"> -<a id="page-40" class="pagenum" title="40"></a> -<span class="firstline">THE NIGHT</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Sorrows confide their secrets; joys lead lives</p> - <p class="verse">Of lonely splendor. Mankind tells all things</p> - <p class="verse">To me, knowing I will not ever speak.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-28"> -<span class="firstline">DISILLUSION</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The night was like a jewell’d crown—</p> - <p class="verse">(Could jewels be so soft a thing!)</p> - <p class="verse">For stars and wind were in the town</p> - <p class="verse">And by the highways entering,</p> - <p class="verse">Plucked there as on a viol string,</p> - <p class="verse">Until—somewhere—a woman’s scream—</p> - <p class="verse">Sharply shattered the dream!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter blank" id="chapter-0-29" title="Silence within"> -<a id="page-41" class="pagenum" title="41"></a> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse3">Silence within</p> - <p class="verse">The upper twilight of a temple lies</p> - <p class="verse">Asleep, with pendant plumes—a dreaming god—</p> - <p class="verse">And dreams the pageantry of things—and dreams</p> - <p class="verse">The gifts that he has given with his hands—</p> - <p class="verse">The gifts that he has taken with his hands—</p> - <p class="verse">And dreams his own eternity.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza tb"> - <p class="tb">* * *</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse3">I am one that loves</p> - <p class="verse">The stars of labyrinthine night whom the shrill dawn</p> - <p class="verse">Devours, the quietude of ultimate slopes</p> - <p class="verse">Thoughtful of twilight, peering moons that shed</p> - <p class="verse">Unrisen glamours thru the umbrageous wood</p> - <p class="verse">With gnome and goblin rife, and the light spray</p> - <p class="verse">Of gray spring rains enveloping the hills.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-30"> -<a id="page-42" class="pagenum" title="42"></a> -<span class="firstline">SONG</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Would I were a bird</p> - <p class="verse">To nest in a cover</p> - <p class="verse">Of leaves that hover</p> - <p class="verse">’Twixt earth and heaven</p> - <p class="verse">Where no sound is heard—</p> - <p class="verse">Only the uneven</p> - <p class="verse">Brush of winds that slumber</p> - <p class="verse">With no thought to cumber;</p> - <p class="verse">Would I were a bird!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Would I were a wave</p> - <p class="verse">To rise for a moment</p> - <p class="verse">From the ocean’s foment,</p> - <p class="verse">To puff my lips asunder</p> - <p class="verse">Blowing bubbles brave,</p> - <p class="verse">To dream and to wonder</p> - <p class="verse">Of the depths below me</p> - <p class="verse">And the winds that blow me—</p> - <p class="verse">Would I were a wave!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Bird, canst thou fashion</p> - <p class="verse">Song of things that grieve thee?</p> - <p class="verse">Wave hast thou passion</p> - <p class="verse">For things that will deceive thee?</p> - <p class="verse">Bird and wave I leave ye!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-31"> -<a id="page-43" class="pagenum" title="43"></a> -<span class="firstline">RONDEAU</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A Sunday-calm, ornate, profound,</p> - <p class="verse">Enchanting sense, subduing sound,</p> - <p class="verse">Enjoins its ritual to prepare;</p> - <p class="verse">The day is bland with unctuous prayer</p> - <p class="verse">That leaps to heaven at a bound.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">And bells ope throats in mellow round</p> - <p class="verse">Of sweet antiphonal resound,</p> - <p class="verse">And virtue glistens everywhere—</p> - <p class="verse5">A Sunday-calm.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Draw breath! Away to virgin ground!</p> - <p class="verse">But where the fields are flower-crowned</p> - <p class="verse">The cattle with self-conscious stare</p> - <p class="verse">Chide my undeprecative air,—</p> - <p class="verse">Good heavens! Can they too have found</p> - <p class="verse5">A Sunday-calm?</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-32"> -<a id="page-44" class="pagenum" title="44"></a> -<span class="firstline">SUNSET BURIAL</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The trees upheaven filigrane fingers of desire</p> - <p class="verse">To touch a ruby-throated cloud-face fanned</p> - <p class="verse">By a bronze breath and globous mouth of fire;</p> - <p class="verse">Beneath, the rigid gravestones stand,</p> - <p class="verse">Each one a cadaver that cannot close its hand.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-33"> -<span class="firstline">FAIRY SONG</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I can live in a golden fruit</p> - <p class="verse">Whose core is hung with honey;</p> - <p class="verse">I can swing on golden wing</p> - <p class="verse">In elfin ceremony—</p> - <p class="verse">But oh! for the power</p> - <p class="verse">To open as a flower</p> - <p class="verse">When the air is sunny!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-34"> -<a id="page-45" class="pagenum" title="45"></a> -<span class="firstline">A YOUNG GIRL’S LOVE</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The season is less stubborn now;</p> - <p class="verse">Over the youngling world we see</p> - <p class="verse">A white sky full of scudding blue,</p> - <p class="verse">A white wind that runneth as a child</p> - <p class="verse">Touching most delicately the new</p> - <p class="verse">Sweet buds, and having touched and smiled,</p> - <p class="verse">Goes to seek out some pale anemone,</p> - <p class="verse">And wreathe with maiden flowers her fragile brow.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-35"> -<a id="page-46" class="pagenum" title="46"></a> -<span class="firstline">A YOUNG MAN’S LOVE</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">If I were your sister I’d lie with you the night-long</p> - <p class="verse">To feel your bosom’s beating;</p> - <p class="verse">If I were your brother I’d wake you with a day-song</p> - <p class="verse">And give a kiss as greeting;</p> - <p class="verse">If I were your mother I’d hold you as a shut flower</p> - <p class="verse">When the dark comes creeping;</p> - <p class="verse">If I were your father I’d enter at the dawn-hour</p> - <p class="verse">To look upon you, sleeping.</p> - <p class="verse">What is there left over</p> - <p class="verse">For me, who am your lover?</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-36"> -<a id="page-47" class="pagenum" title="47"></a> -<span class="firstline">SONG</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A cup full of star-shine</p> - <p class="verse">That glowed as an ember,</p> - <p class="verse">(Oh, star of my delight!)</p> - <p class="verse">With smiles I do remember</p> - <p class="verse">And words forgotten quite,</p> - <p class="verse">A cup full of star-shine</p> - <p class="verse">I drank with you to-night.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">A cup full of sea-sound</p> - <p class="verse">That was as summer thunder—</p> - <p class="verse">(Oh sea of my delight!)</p> - <p class="verse">With love that lay under</p> - <p class="verse">Seven heavens bright,</p> - <p class="verse">A cup full of sea-sound</p> - <p class="verse">I drank with you to-night.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-37"> -<a id="page-48" class="pagenum" title="48"></a> -<span class="firstline">SONG</span><br /> -(<i>After an old English tune</i>) -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I will bring thee a silver crown.</p> - <p class="verse">I will bring thee an ell of vair,</p> - <p class="verse">Cloth of gold and ermine rare</p> - <p class="verse">To make thee a gown.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Thou hast brought me a marble frown.</p> - <p class="verse">Thou hast brought me a cold, cold stare,</p> - <p class="verse">Heart of lead and wry despair,</p> - <p class="verse">And a mad-man’s swown.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I will bring thee a leaden crown,</p> - <p class="verse">Cloth of Raines in thirty-fold!</p> - <p class="verse">I will bring thee a bed on the wold</p> - <p class="verse">To lay thee down.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Thou hast brought me out of the town</p> - <p class="verse">To the earth upturned where the bell is tolled—</p> - <p class="verse">Fires of hell and the river’s cold</p> - <p class="verse">My sorrows drown!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-38"> -<a id="page-49" class="pagenum" title="49"></a> -<span class="firstline">TRISTAN AND ISOLDE</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The sea is here, it hath not any shore,</p> - <p class="verse">Nor moves with moving of wind-driven waves</p> - <p class="verse">Which, undulant and writhing—naked slaves</p> - <p class="verse">To the uneasy wanderer of heaven’s floor,</p> - <p class="verse">Bow sullen backs beneath their master’s store</p> - <p class="verse">He brought with viewless hands from broken graves—</p> - <p class="verse">The sea is here, and in its silent caves</p> - <p class="verse">Moves not, tho the wind clamors more and more.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The sea is here, an infinite undertone;</p> - <p class="verse">But lo! upon its surface I descry</p> - <p class="verse">Two floating bubbles, wonderfully blown</p> - <p class="verse">Toward each other, flame-like from the sky—</p> - <p class="verse">Meet—melt with lyric splendor into one—</p> - <p class="verse">Then, wind-prick’d, vanish—o’er the Sea, a cry!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-39"> -<a id="page-50" class="pagenum" title="50"></a> -<span class="firstline">PALINURUS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Starlight: with deep and quiet breathing slept</p> - <p class="verse">The southern sea. The white-wing’d ship that bore</p> - <p class="verse">The good Aeneas from his Dido’s shore</p> - <p class="verse">Ghostlike, with rippling furrows, onward crept,</p> - <p class="verse">And only faithful Palinurus kept</p> - <p class="verse">The midnight watch—but ah, the magic bough,</p> - <p class="verse">The opiate dew that dript upon his brow,</p> - <p class="verse">The vacant post, the friends who waking wept.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The gods demand their victims; who shall know</p> - <p class="verse">What failures Time and Circumstance compel?</p> - <p class="verse">Yet, if such doom were mine, I would ’twere so</p> - <p class="verse">That they would mark my absence thus: “How well</p> - <p class="verse">Even unto the last he struggled, lo!</p> - <p class="verse">He tore the rudder with him when he fell!”</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-40"> -<a id="page-51" class="pagenum" title="51"></a> -<span class="firstline">THE DERELICT</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I cannot remember whither I was bound—</p> - <p class="verse">I cannot remember why I was found</p> - <p class="verse">Moving without a sound</p> - <p class="verse">Moving in mystery—</p> - <p class="verse">Derelict, derelict,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the sea!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I too carry a cargo in my hold,</p> - <p class="verse">Underneath sea-water and green with mold—</p> - <p class="verse">I cannot remember how old!</p> - <p class="verse">For terrible it is to be</p> - <p class="verse">Derelict, derelict,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the sea!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Feebler ships weather bravely into port;</p> - <p class="verse">Running a course that is safe and short—</p> - <p class="verse">My voyage is another sort;</p> - <p class="verse">No master guideth me—</p> - <p class="verse">Derelict, derelict,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the sea!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Nights have shadow’d me with phantom stride—</p> - <p class="verse">Stars have peer’d at me, eerie-eyed—</p> - <p class="verse">Goblin lights and magic tide</p> - <p class="verse">Keep me company,</p> - <p class="verse">Derelict, derelict,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the sea!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-52" class="pagenum" title="52"></a> - <p class="verse">Setting suns have rowell’d me with crimson’d heel—</p> - <p class="verse">Winds have flung laughter, peal after peal—</p> - <p class="verse">But they shall not know that I feel</p> - <p class="verse">Mute in my agony—</p> - <p class="verse">Derelict, derelict,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the sea!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Rudderless, by ways uncharted blown—</p> - <p class="verse">Some day shall waken to find me gone—</p> - <p class="verse">What matter? I have drifted alone</p> - <p class="verse">Ever—alone—yet free—</p> - <p class="verse">Derelict, derelict,</p> - <p class="verse">Over the sea!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-41"> -<a id="page-53" class="pagenum" title="53"></a> -<span class="firstline">THE SQUIRE OF DAMES TO HIS LADY</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Why should our meeting borrow</p> - <p class="verse">A sense of shame or sorrow</p> - <p class="verse">That each must go his way?</p> - <p class="verse">Love liketh no fetter</p> - <p class="verse">Therefore our roads were better</p> - <p class="verse">If you go yours to-morrow,</p> - <p class="verse">And I go mine to-day.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I hold you for a minute—</p> - <p class="verse">You’d catch the hour and pin it—</p> - <p class="verse">But if I held you longer</p> - <p class="verse">Would you have more assurance</p> - <p class="verse">In days of richer durance,</p> - <p class="verse">Life with more rapture in it,</p> - <p class="verse">Passion more wise and stronger?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The Daughter of Illusion</p> - <p class="verse">Hath made our love seem fusion</p> - <p class="verse">Of two strange things in one—</p> - <p class="verse">But loving hath not taught her</p> - <p class="verse">That strange as fire to water,</p> - <p class="verse">Love becomes bleak intrusion</p> - <p class="verse">When all the glamor’s gone.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">You say I’ve brought you sorrow</p> - <p class="verse">And pay not debts I borrow—</p> - <p class="verse">But mirth is what’s to pay!</p> - <p class="verse">So part our paths in laughter,</p> -<a id="page-54" class="pagenum" title="54"></a> - <p class="verse">And, since your heart is softer,</p> - <p class="verse">You go your way to-morrow—</p> - <p class="verse">And I’ll go mine to-day.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-42"> -<a id="page-55" class="pagenum" title="55"></a> -<span class="firstline">GAS-LIGHT HEROICS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">With this night’s carousal</p> - <p class="verse">We will close the portal</p> - <p class="verse">On our poor espousal—</p> - <p class="verse">Sacrament and housel</p> - <p class="verse">For a love too mortal!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">With this gay delaying</p> - <p class="verse">We’ll delay yet longer—</p> - <p class="verse">Care not what the saying</p> - <p class="verse">Of the World—that braying</p> - <p class="verse">Evil tattle-monger!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Pleasure has as thunder</p> - <p class="verse">Scorched and jangled thru me;</p> - <p class="verse">Now I’ll sit and wonder</p> - <p class="verse">At the day-star yonder</p> - <p class="verse">And your face, grown gloomy.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-56" class="pagenum" title="56"></a> - <p class="verse">You are known as “Lily”</p> - <p class="verse">And they mock your gender;</p> - <p class="verse">Is it but a silly</p> - <p class="verse">Fancy, you seem stilly</p> - <p class="verse">Lily-souled and tender?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Underneath the bitter</p> - <p class="verse">Mockery of color,</p> - <p class="verse">Underneath the titter</p> - <p class="verse">Is there something fitter?</p> - <p class="verse">Something finer, fuller?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Something (can I hear it</p> - <p class="verse">In your secret eyes?)</p> - <p class="verse">When I come too near it</p> - <p class="verse">Like a frightened spirit</p> - <p class="verse">Running from the skies?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Girl, you know that glow meant</p> - <p class="verse">Dawn’s thin lips of scarlet—</p> - <p class="verse">Bubble of life’s foment</p> - <p class="verse">Stay your soul a moment!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza tb"> - <p class="tb">. . . . . .</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Bah! You’re drunk, you harlot!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-43"> -<a id="page-57" class="pagenum" title="57"></a> -<span class="firstline">MISTS</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-43-1"> -I -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I am most weary of this fatuous me</p> - <p class="verse">That doth obtrude a niddering death’s head</p> - <p class="verse">At a blithe feast of Springtide jollity,</p> - <p class="verse">Of revelling buds and flowers unsurfeited.</p> - <p class="verse">I am most weary of this chained thought</p> - <p class="verse">That hath forgotten where its mansions are—</p> - <p class="verse">And lost the dew its seven-spher’d courses caught</p> - <p class="verse">Wandering in plunged dark from star to star.</p> - <p class="verse">I am most weary of my stagnant soul</p> - <p class="verse">That neither thirsts, nor hungers, nor is stirred</p> - <p class="verse">By the gigantic thunders that have rolled</p> - <p class="verse">From the white, hurtling lightning of a word.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I am most weary, love; so let thy face—</p> - <p class="verse">The sponge that sops my gaze, myself erase.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-43-2"> -<a id="page-58" class="pagenum" title="58"></a> -II -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Oft in the groping night I am afraid,</p> - <p class="verse">For this, mine opaque organism, seems</p> - <p class="verse">A glass, a mere reflex of trooping dreams—</p> - <p class="verse">A polished boss where images parade.</p> - <p class="verse">And to see these doth make my senses cold—</p> - <p class="verse">This globe become a visionary face—</p> - <p class="verse">This little spinning soul of me—in space—</p> - <p class="verse">I dare not think of what that space may hold!</p> - <p class="verse">Such thoughts are as the charnel mists that rise</p> - <p class="verse">From feverish and mortuary ground</p> - <p class="verse">Thru which one sees the country all around—</p> - <p class="verse">Yet near, the dead—and far away, the skies.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">But at the thought of you my life expands</p> - <p class="verse">Until it holds all life within its hands!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-44"> -<a id="page-59" class="pagenum" title="59"></a> -<span class="firstline">SCEPTIC</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-1"> -I -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">This hour has shut us like a tent</p> - <p class="verse">From all but night; we two, alone,</p> - <p class="verse">So close, so poignantly alert, have grown,</p> - <p class="verse">That trivial speech, from silence rent,</p> - <p class="verse">Breaks off—a useless instrument.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">For all the opening world is ours,</p> - <p class="verse">And you, tho scarce a woman yet,</p> - <p class="verse">Your eyes with feasts of lights and vintage set,</p> - <p class="verse">Hold all the dewy wealth of flowers,</p> - <p class="verse">And gold of Babylonian towers.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Our lives will alter if we move—</p> - <p class="verse">It were so easy now to rise</p> - <p class="verse">And tell my unimpassioned soul it lies—</p> - <p class="verse">And claim youth’s heritage of love,</p> - <p class="verse">Let bald life prove what it may prove!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">It were so easy to conceive</p> - <p class="verse">Your lack my lack would compensate—</p> - <p class="verse">And by one stroke undo the knot of fate;</p> - <p class="verse">It were so easy to believe</p> - <p class="verse">The lies that such a thing could weave!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-60" class="pagenum" title="60"></a> - <p class="verse">Or shall I stumble through the night</p> - <p class="verse">Biting my lips to hold the tears</p> - <p class="verse">Because your incommunicable years</p> - <p class="verse">Must spend their summer of delight</p> - <p class="verse">Without my reach—beyond my sight?</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The house is still; the midnight seems</p> - <p class="verse">Inscrutable—no answer there.</p> - <p class="verse">Oh God!—to break this tension of despair.</p> - <p class="verse">Between us the calm lamplight streams—</p> - <p class="verse">“Good night!” and “Pleasant dreams!”—yes—dreams.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-2"> -<a id="page-61" class="pagenum" title="61"></a> -II -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I would I had lain with my love to-night;</p> - <p class="verse">Her eyes trembled for her body said,</p> - <p class="verse">“I have smoothed a pillow and made a bed”—</p> - <p class="verse">But I smiled against it</p> - <p class="verse">And turned away my head</p> - <p class="verse">To come into the cold starlight.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I would I had lain with my love to-night,</p> - <p class="verse">For I know how flowers are shed,</p> - <p class="verse">And the cynical scintillant stars are dead—</p> - <p class="verse">Dead, dead utterly!</p> - <p class="verse">Yet I turned away my head</p> - <p class="verse">To come into the cold starlight.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">I would I had lain with my love to-night!</p> - <p class="verse">Oh, indolent Gods, we too can tread</p> - <p class="verse">On the silent spirits, the uncomforted!</p> - <p class="verse">She did not reproach me,</p> - <p class="verse">Tho I turned away my head</p> - <p class="verse">And came into the starlight.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-3"> -<a id="page-62" class="pagenum" title="62"></a> -III -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Love (as a cloud on the sea</p> - <p class="verse">Hung between poles of blue)</p> - <p class="verse">Hangs in the heart of me</p> - <p class="verse">Between the eyes of you.</p> - <p class="verse">Love, as a cloud on the sea,</p> - <p class="verse">Claims the tears of two.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Love (as a wind in a tree</p> - <p class="verse">Shaking its tower of green)</p> - <p class="verse">Shakes all the heart of me</p> - <p class="verse">And leaves no peace between.</p> - <p class="verse">Love, as the wind the tree</p> - <p class="verse">Tears with hands unseen.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Love (as a storm on the sea</p> - <p class="verse">Shatters the sleep of the wave)</p> - <p class="verse">Shatters the heart of me</p> - <p class="verse">With desires that grope and crave.</p> - <p class="verse">Love, as the storm the sea,</p> - <p class="verse">Boasts not me his slave.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-4"> -<a id="page-63" class="pagenum" title="63"></a> -IV -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">You, flower-named, and as a flower arrayed,</p> - <p class="verse">Open to all the wandering airs that pass,</p> - <p class="verse">Opened to me—yet I drew back afraid,</p> - <p class="verse">Craven to the blood that would have preyed</p> - <p class="verse">And the sly viper coiling in the grass.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-5"> -V -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Love, when you smiled and beckoned</p> - <p class="verse">My cold thought stood aloof and reckoned</p> - <p class="verse">Some heights above you.</p> - <p class="verse">But now you have turned and gone</p> - <p class="verse">Smiling, fugitive as dawn,</p> - <p class="verse">I know (oh fool!) I love you.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-6"> -<a id="page-64" class="pagenum" title="64"></a> -VI -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Love, with her queen’s face and child lips</p> - <p class="verse">Walked at my side; her hair about her head</p> - <p class="verse">Streamed, with riotous and exuberant spread</p> - <p class="verse">Like sails and cordage of sea-breasting ships,</p> - <p class="verse">And as the tides, her mirthful glints and dips</p> - <p class="verse">Tugged at my anchor’d calmness—then she said,</p> - <p class="verse">Chilling to gravity, “You are lead.”</p> - <p class="verse">It was as when the bright blade cruelly slips,</p> - <p class="verse">For in my soul that hid its vain desires</p> - <p class="verse">Under closed hatch, I knew the stifled fires</p> - <p class="verse">Devoured in silence, as stealthy serpents writhe</p> - <p class="verse">Their folds about their prey; and seemed to hear</p> - <p class="verse">The passing of some irrevocable year,</p> - <p class="verse">And faint for whistle of a monstrous scythe.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<h3 class="section" id="subchap-0-44-7"> -VII -</h3> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Pain of widest range—</p> - <p class="verse">The intimate grown strange.</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-45"> -<a id="page-65" class="pagenum" title="65"></a> -<span class="firstline">ARMA VIRUMQUE CANO</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse1">And so the good Aeneas went away.</p> - <p class="verse1">It was not dawn, and yet the sleepless sea</p> - <p class="verse1">Felt as a mother, the still unborn day.</p> - <p class="verse1">The stars were brighter than they ought to be.</p> - <p class="verse1">A milky foam curled from the vessel’s breast</p> - <p class="verse1">Whose long blades lifted to each lifting crest.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Happy were the sailors to be aboard once more,</p> - <p class="verse">And the laughing sea answered to their shouts afar off shore.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse1">Dido the Queen</p> - <p class="verse1">Knew he was gone.</p> - <p class="verse1">No need to have seen</p> - <p class="verse1">From the casement withdrawn;</p> - <p class="verse1">No need to be told;</p> - <p class="verse1">Her heart had guessed</p> - <p class="verse1">By the aching unrest</p> - <p class="verse1">And empty breast—</p> - <p class="verse1">Empty and cold.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Oh, plain her Maidens at their spinning,</p> - <p class="verse">Love has end that had beginning.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-66" class="pagenum" title="66"></a> - <p class="verse1">As the course was traced Aeneas paced,</p> - <p class="verse1">His thoughts uprising like a flock of birds;</p> - <p class="verse1">And one flew west, to the new the unknown nest,</p> - <p class="verse1">And one that was wing’d with flaming words—</p> - <p class="verse1">Something the Queen had uttered, tender—sweet,—</p> - <p class="verse1">Fluttered back and died—just at her feet.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Ho! chants a Rower, straining at the sweep,</p> - <p class="verse">Leave the landsman to his pillow, the sailor to the deep.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse1">All night the Queen</p> - <p class="verse1">In fever burned;</p> - <p class="verse1">A dream returned</p> - <p class="verse1">Long ago seen:</p> - <p class="verse1">A dream of ships,</p> - <p class="verse1">Of one who came</p> - <p class="verse1">Out of a flame</p> - <p class="verse1">And cried her name</p> - <p class="verse1">And kissed her lips.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Somewhere in the dawn Someone’s singing:</p> - <p class="verse">“Lo! what gifts love’s hands are bringing!”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-67" class="pagenum" title="67"></a> - <p class="verse1">Jet-black, the palms like sculptured fountains loomed</p> - <p class="verse1">Above the lovers; one star blazed all night.</p> - <p class="verse1">Beyond the river was the sea that boomed.</p> - <p class="verse1">Their barge was lit with lightnings of delight.</p> - <p class="verse1">Of this, the good Aeneas too had dreamed</p> - <p class="verse1">While the unshaken towers of Ilium gleamed.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Ah! cry the sailors, “whom we loved must wait.</p> - <p class="verse1">There’s no turning back from the open track to the gates of fate.”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse1">The cicadas drone;</p> - <p class="verse1">Desert winds blow</p> - <p class="verse1">As oarsmen row</p> - <p class="verse1">Their Queen alone</p> - <p class="verse1">Down the river.</p> - <p class="verse1">Alone, she cried</p> - <p class="verse1">Alone! to the tide.</p> - <p class="verse1">And the sea replied</p> - <p class="verse1">Forever!</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">La, croon the Women, nimbly weaving,</p> - <p class="verse">“Whose heart do we hear grieving?”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-68" class="pagenum" title="68"></a> - <p class="verse1">Months bring all wanderings to a close.</p> - <p class="verse">The fleet years flee; Aeneas wisely wed,</p> - <p class="verse1">Often, when wind and sea strike mighty blows,</p> - <p class="verse1">Wakening from dreams half ecstasy, half dread,</p> - <p class="verse1">That come upon him from another life,</p> - <p class="verse1">Touches the calm breast of his sleeping wife.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Hum, the Night Watch mutters, leaning on his spear,</p> - <p class="verse">“’Tis a strange world to be in and to have no fear.”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse1">The sea at last</p> - <p class="verse1">Brings pain to end.</p> - <p class="verse1">The desert vast</p> - <p class="verse1">Becomes her friend.</p> - <p class="verse1">Her people fear it:</p> - <p class="verse1">“The Queen,” they say,</p> - <p class="verse1">“Grows day by day</p> - <p class="verse1">Paler, but still gay—</p> - <p class="verse1">As a spirit.”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Oh, they murmur, “Queen Dido goes away</p> - <p class="verse">To where the dark river runs, sunless and gray.”</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<h2 class="chapter" id="chapter-0-46"> -<a id="page-69" class="pagenum" title="69"></a> -<span class="firstline">A HYMN TO DIONYSUS IN SPRING</span> -</h2> - -</div> - -<div class="poem-container"> - <div class="poem"> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">Yellow the sands of the shores of Elis, and over the creaming</p> - <p class="verse">Foam-flakes that flutter and curl on the edge of the dreaming</p> - <p class="verse">Mediterranean, Jupiter arches his azure dome.</p> - <p class="verse">Here to the somnolent sands the Aeolian women have come,</p> - <p class="verse">The dreamers, all languid with silence of spring-tide dreaming,</p> - <p class="verse">And they stand with their hair unbound and their feet in the foam.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">The heart of the morning beats with a swooning, amorous beating,</p> - <p class="verse">And the nymph-cool waters and brazen sunshine meeting,</p> - <p class="verse">Mingle where indolent spring-tide ripples shimmer and burn;</p> - <p class="verse">Out to the dim horizon the eyes of the dreamers yearn,</p> - <p class="verse">And like flutes are the low, soft voices that chant thus, entreating</p> - <p class="verse">The God, Dionysus, to rise from the sea and return.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-70" class="pagenum" title="70"></a> - <p class="verse">“Bitter thy roving hath been, O Hunter, and stricken with madness,</p> - <p class="verse">And thy winter frenzy hath torn us with torment of sadness—</p> - <p class="verse">Horror of blood in the mouth and of murderous lusts that bring</p> - <p class="verse">Shadows a-couch in the forest from under us shuddering.</p> - <p class="verse">We are sick of the feverish nights that have stolen our gladness—</p> - <p class="verse">Ah! we are weary of winter and fain of the Spring!”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">“Thy foes, O Hunter, have goaded thy soul, but their goading is over,</p> - <p class="verse">For every unfolding leaf is a shield for thy cover</p> - <p class="verse">And every grass-blade upraises a spear that is scimitar-keen,</p> - <p class="verse">Gladly the flowers will weave thee a mantle to wander unseen.</p> - <p class="verse">Slim as a willow-wand, Ariadne awaits thee, her lover,</p> - <p class="verse">And her heart is full of the dreams that are cool and green.”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-71" class="pagenum" title="71"></a> - <p class="verse">“Hyé, the Dew, thy mother, sorrows because of thy going,</p> - <p class="verse">And the film-pale, rain-sweet Hyades fleeing and flowing,</p> - <p class="verse">Dissolved from the rainbow and river to rise in the sap of the tree,</p> - <p class="verse">Leave never their dolorous grieving, lamenting in quest of thee.</p> - <p class="verse">And the succulent vine and the spirit of all things growing</p> - <p class="verse">Cry ‘Dionysus, return! Oh, return from the sea!’”</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> - <p class="verse">“Wilt thou forsake us forever, unheeding our sedulous plaining?</p> - <p class="verse">See’st not the clusters of pale green globes, crescent and straining</p> - <p class="verse">Sunwards, that long for thy hand to engarb them with royal attire?</p> - <p class="verse">Hear us, O Wine-God; return to us! Kindle once more Desire!”</p> - <p class="verse">So chant the Aeolian women till the light be waning</p> - <p class="verse">While the foam breaks over their feet in soft folds of fire.</p> - </div> - <div class="stanza"> -<a id="page-72" class="pagenum" title="72"></a> - <p class="verse">The robes of the sun are red, and close to the earth he dozes;</p> - <p class="verse">The long day lingers, then slowly and silently closes</p> - <p class="verse">The shadowy orient gates, climbing upward stair by stair,</p> - <p class="verse">Raising her evening face to the stars in the spring-tide air.</p> - <p class="verse">Lo! the sea is aglow and aflame with the odor of roses!</p> - <p class="verse">Lo! a glimpse of the God with the sun in his yellow hair!</p> - </div> - </div> -</div> - -<div class="ads chapter"> -<p class="h1 adh"> -Recent Publications -</p> - - <div class="table"> -<table class="table073" summary="Table-1"> -<tbody> - <tr> - <td class="col1"> </td> - <td class="col2"> </td> - <td class="col3">Price</td> - <td class="col4">Post</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Love of One’s Neighbor</b>—Leonid Andreyev</td> - <td class="col2">Boards</td> - <td class="col3">.40</td> - <td class="col4">.05</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">A satirical comedy by the greatest of the modern Russians.</td> - <td class="col2"> </td> - <td class="col3"> </td> - <td class="col4"> </td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Mariana</b>—José Echegaray</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">.75</td> - <td class="col4">.10</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">The masterpiece of modern Spain’s greatest writer.</td> - <td class="col2"> </td> - <td class="col3"> </td> - <td class="col4"> </td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Chants Communal</b>—Horace Traubel</td> - <td class="col2">Boards</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.10</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">Inspirational prose pieces.</td> - <td class="col2">Paper</td> - <td class="col3">.25</td> - <td class="col4">.05</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Collects</b>—Horace Traubel</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.10</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">Jack London says: “His is the vision of the poet and the voice of the poet.”</td> - <td class="col2">Paper</td> - <td class="col3">.50</td> - <td class="col4">Paid</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Horace Traubel</b>—Mildred Bain</td> - <td class="col2">Boards</td> - <td class="col3">.50</td> - <td class="col4">.05</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Not Guilty</b>—Robert Blatchford</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">.50</td> - <td class="col4">.10</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">A defence of the bottom-dog.</td> - <td class="col2">Paper</td> - <td class="col3">.25</td> - <td class="col4">.05</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>The Diary of a Suicide</b>—Wallace Baker</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.08</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">“The confession of a youth who was prematurely tired.”</td> - <td class="col2">Paper</td> - <td class="col3">.50</td> - <td class="col4">Paid</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>The Case of Mexico</b>—De Zayas</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">1.35</td> - <td class="col4">0.10</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Our Irrational Distribution of Wealth</b>—Byron C. Mathews</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.10</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Des Imagistes</b>—An Anthology</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.07</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">“It sticks out of the crowd like a tall marble monument.”—<i>The New Weekly.</i></td> - <td class="col2"> </td> - <td class="col3"> </td> - <td class="col4"> </td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>The Thresher’s Wife</b>—Harry Kemp</td> - <td class="col2">Boards</td> - <td class="col3">.40</td> - <td class="col4">.05</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">A narrative poem of great strength and originality.</td> - <td class="col2"> </td> - <td class="col3"> </td> - <td class="col4"> </td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>An English Dante</b>—John Pyne</td> - <td class="col2">Boards</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.07</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">A translation in the original rhythm and rhymes.</td> - <td class="col2"> </td> - <td class="col3"> </td> - <td class="col4"> </td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Erna Vitek</b>—Alfred Kreymborg</td> - <td class="col2">Cloth</td> - <td class="col3">1.00</td> - <td class="col4">.10</td> - </tr> - <tr class="i"> - <td class="col1">A new form of the novel. 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Kaun</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1">The Poetry of Revolt</td> - <td class="col2">Charles Ashleigh</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1">The Venetian Dramatists</td> - <td class="col2">Irma McArthur</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1">The Obituary of a Poet</td> - <td class="col2">Floyd Dell</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1">Humbugging the Public</td> - <td class="col2">Henry Blackman Sell</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1">London Letter</td> - <td class="col2">Amy Lowell</td> - </tr> -</tbody> -</table> - </div> -<p class="adp"> -You may make fifty cents on every subscription you send -us on the new basis. -</p> - -<p class="ade"> -917 FINE ARTS BUILDING, CHICAGO -</p> - -</div> - -<div class="ads chapter"> -<p class="h1 adh"> -<span class="underline">The June Number -Swept the Country</span> -</p> - -<div class="chapter"> - -<p class="h2 adh"> -The July is Still Better -</p> - -</div> - -<p class="h3 adh"> -<span class="smallcaps">Don’t Forget to Order Your Copy of</span> -</p> - -<p class="h1 adh"> -The Masses -</p> - -<p class="u c"> -A yearly subscription will insure an<br /> -immediate and regular delivery each<br /> -month of this unique periodical -</p> - -<p class="adp"> -<i>10 cents a Copy</i> <i>$1.00 a Year</i> -</p> - -<p class="ade"> -THE MASSES PUB. CO.<br /> -91 GREENWICH AVENUE<br /> -NEW YORK -</p> - -</div> - -<div class="backmatter chapter"> - <div class="next"> -<p> -The October issue of THE GLEBE -will present -</p> - -<p class="c"> -EARTH-SPIRIT -</p> - -<p class="r"> -By Frank Wedekind. -</p> - - </div> -<p class="hdr"> -Contents of Volume I: -</p> - - <div class="table"> -<table class="glebe" summary="Table-3"> -<tbody> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>Songs, Sighs and Curses.</b> By Adolf Wolff</td> - <td class="col2">60c.</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="col1"><b>The Diary of a Suicide.</b> By Wallace E. 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All other changes are listed here (before/after): -</p> - - - -<ul> - -<li> -... Fled, the panting, goat-<span class="underline">shankid</span> clan, ...<br /> -... Fled, the panting, goat-<a href="#corr-0"><span class="underline">shank’d</span></a> clan, ...<br /> -</li> - -<li> -... The wind blows in and the wind blows <span class="underline">out.</span> ...<br /> -... The wind blows in and the wind blows <a href="#corr-2"><span class="underline">out</span></a> ...<br /> -</li> -</ul> -</div> - - - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Glebe 1914/09 (Vol. 2, No. 2): -Poems, by George W. Cronyn - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GLEBE 1914/09: POEMS *** - -***** This file should be named 63399-h.htm or 63399-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/6/3/3/9/63399/ - -Produced by Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. 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