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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ballads of a Bohemian, by Robert W. Service
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Ballads of a Bohemian
+
+Author: Robert W. Service
+
+Posting Date: July 21, 2008 [EBook #995]
+Release Date: July, 1997
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BALLADS OF A BOHEMIAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alan Light
+
+
+
+
+
+BALLADS OF A BOHEMIAN
+
+By Robert W. Service
+
+[British-born Canadian Poet--1874-1958.]
+
+
+Author of "The Spell of the Yukon", "Ballads of a Cheechako",
+"Rhymes of a Red Cross Man", etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+
+ Prelude
+
+
+ BOOK ONE
+ SPRING
+
+ I
+
+ My Garret
+ Julot the _Apache_
+
+ II
+
+ _L'Escargot D'Or_
+ It Is Later Than You Think
+ Noctambule
+
+ III
+
+ Insomnia
+ Moon Song
+ The Sewing-Girl
+
+ IV
+
+ Lucille
+ On the Boulevard
+ Facility
+
+ V
+
+ Golden Days
+ The Joy of Little Things
+ The Absinthe Drinkers
+
+
+ BOOK TWO
+ EARLY SUMMER
+
+ I
+
+ The Release
+ The Wee Shop
+ The Philistine and the Bohemian
+
+ II
+
+ The Bohemian Dreams
+ A Domestic Tragedy
+ The Pencil Seller
+
+ III
+
+ Fi-Fi in Bed
+ Gods in the Gutter
+ The Death of Marie Toro
+
+ IV
+
+ The Bohemian
+ The Auction Sale
+ The Joy of Being Poor
+
+ V
+
+ My Neighbors
+ Room 4: The Painter Chap
+ Room 6: The Little Workgirl
+ Room 5: The Concert Singer
+ Room 7: The Coco-Fiend
+
+
+ BOOK THREE
+ LATE SUMMER
+
+ I
+
+ The Philanderer
+ The _Petit Vieux_
+ My Masterpiece
+ My Book
+ My Hour
+
+ II
+
+ A Song of Sixty-Five
+ Teddy Bear
+ The Outlaw
+ The Walkers
+
+ III
+
+ Poor Peter
+ The Wistful One
+ If You Had a Friend
+ The Contented Man
+ The Spirit of the Unborn Babe
+
+ IV
+
+ Finistere
+ Old David Smail
+ The Wonderer
+ Oh, It Is Good
+
+ V
+
+ I Have Some Friends
+ The Quest
+ The Comforter
+ The Other One
+ Catastrophe
+
+
+ BOOK FOUR
+ WINTER
+
+ I
+
+ Priscilla
+ A Casualty
+ The Blood-Red _Fourragere_
+ Jim
+
+ II
+
+ Kelly of the Legion
+ The Three Tommies
+ The Twa Jocks
+
+ III
+
+ His Boys
+ The Booby-Trap
+ Bonehead Bill
+
+ IV
+
+ A Lapse of Time and a Word of Explanation
+ Michael
+ The Wife
+ Victory Stuff
+ Was It You?
+
+ V
+
+ _Les Grands Mutiles_
+ The Sightless Man
+ The Legless Man
+ The Faceless Man
+
+
+ L'Envoi
+
+
+
+
+
+BALLADS OF A BOHEMIAN
+
+
+
+
+Prelude
+
+
+ Alas! upon some starry height,
+ The Gods of Excellence to please,
+ This hand of mine will never smite
+ The Harp of High Serenities.
+ Mere minstrel of the street am I,
+ To whom a careless coin you fling;
+ But who, beneath the bitter sky,
+ Blue-lipped, yet insolent of eye,
+ Can shrill a song of Spring;
+ A song of merry mansard days,
+ The cheery chimney-tops among;
+ Of rolics and of roundelays
+ When we were young . . . when we were young;
+ A song of love and lilac nights,
+ Of wit, of wisdom and of wine;
+ Of Folly whirling on the Heights,
+ Of hunger and of hope divine;
+ Of Blanche, Suzette and Celestine,
+ And all that gay and tender band
+ Who shared with us the fat, the lean,
+ The hazard of Illusion-land;
+ When scores of Philistines we slew
+ As mightily with brush and pen
+ We sought to make the world anew,
+ And scorned the gods of other men;
+ When we were fools divinely wise,
+ Who held it rapturous to strive;
+ When Art was sacred in our eyes,
+ And it was Heav'n to be alive. . . .
+
+ O days of glamor, glory, truth,
+ To you to-night I raise my glass;
+ O freehold of immortal youth,
+ Bohemia, the lost, alas!
+ O laughing lads who led the romp,
+ Respectable you've grown, I'm told;
+ Your heads you bow to power and pomp,
+ You've learned to know the worth of gold.
+ O merry maids who shared our cheer,
+ Your eyes are dim, your locks are gray;
+ And as you scrub I sadly fear
+ Your daughters speed the dance to-day.
+ O windmill land and crescent moon!
+ O Columbine and Pierrette!
+ To you my old guitar I tune
+ Ere I forget, ere I forget. . . .
+
+ So come, good men who toil and tire,
+ Who smoke and sip the kindly cup,
+ Ring round about the tavern fire
+ Ere yet you drink your liquor up;
+ And hear my simple songs of earth,
+ Of youth and truth and living things;
+ Of poverty and proper mirth,
+ Of rags and rich imaginings;
+ Of cock-a-hoop, blue-heavened days,
+ Of hearts elate and eager breath,
+ Of wonder, worship, pity, praise,
+ Of sorrow, sacrifice and death;
+ Of lusting, laughter, passion, pain,
+ Of lights that lure and dreams that thrall . . .
+ And if a golden word I gain,
+ Oh, kindly folks, God save you all!
+ And if you shake your heads in blame . . .
+ Good friends, God love you all the same.
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK ONE ~~ SPRING
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+Montparnasse,
+
+April 1914.
+
+All day the sun has shone into my little attic, a bitter sunshine that
+brightened yet did not warm. And so as I toiled and toiled doggedly
+enough, many were the looks I cast at the three faggots I had saved to
+cook my evening meal. Now, however, my supper is over, my pipe alight,
+and as I stretch my legs before the embers I have at last a glow of
+comfort, a glimpse of peace.
+
+
+
+
+My Garret
+
+
+
+ Here is my Garret up five flights of stairs;
+ Here's where I deal in dreams and ply in fancies,
+ Here is the wonder-shop of all my wares,
+ My sounding sonnets and my red romances.
+ Here's where I challenge Fate and ring my rhymes,
+ And grope at glory--aye, and starve at times.
+
+ Here is my Stronghold: stout of heart am I,
+ Greeting each dawn as songful as a linnet;
+ And when at night on yon poor bed I lie
+ (Blessing the world and every soul that's in it),
+ Here's where I thank the Lord no shadow bars
+ My skylight's vision of the valiant stars.
+
+ Here is my Palace tapestried with dreams.
+ Ah! though to-night ten _sous_ are all my treasure,
+ While in my gaze immortal beauty gleams,
+ Am I not dowered with wealth beyond all measure?
+ Though in my ragged coat my songs I sing,
+ King of my soul, I envy not the king.
+
+ Here is my Haven: it's so quiet here;
+ Only the scratch of pen, the candle's flutter;
+ Shabby and bare and small, but O how dear!
+ Mark you--my table with my work a-clutter,
+ My shelf of tattered books along the wall,
+ My bed, my broken chair--that's nearly all.
+
+ Only four faded walls, yet mine, all mine.
+ Oh, you fine folks, a pauper scorns your pity.
+ Look, where above me stars of rapture shine;
+ See, where below me gleams the siren city . . .
+ Am I not rich?--a millionaire no less,
+ If wealth be told in terms of Happiness.
+
+
+
+Ten _sous_. . . . I think one can sing best of poverty when one is
+holding it at arm's length. I'm sure that when I wrote these lines,
+fortune had for a moment tweaked me by the nose. To-night, however, I
+am truly down to ten _sous_. It is for that I have stayed in my room
+all day, rolled in my blankets and clutching my pen with clammy fingers.
+I must work, work, work. I must finish my book before poverty crushes
+me. I am not only writing for my living but for my life. Even to-day my
+Muse was mutinous. For hours and hours anxiously I stared at a paper
+that was blank; nervously I paced up and down my garret; bitterly I
+flung myself on my bed. Then suddenly it all came. Line after line I
+wrote with hardly a halt. So I made another of my Ballads of the
+Boulevards. Here it is:
+
+
+
+
+Julot the _Apache_
+
+
+
+ You've heard of Julot the _apache_, and Gigolette, his _mome_. . . .
+ Montmartre was their hunting-ground, but Belville was their home.
+ A little chap just like a boy, with smudgy black mustache,--
+ Yet there was nothing juvenile in Julot the _apache_.
+ From head to heel as tough as steel, as nimble as a cat,
+ With every trick of twist and kick, a master of _savate_.
+ And Gigolette was tall and fair, as stupid as a cow,
+ With three combs in the greasy hair she banged upon her brow.
+ You'd see her on the Place Pigalle on any afternoon,
+ A primitive and strapping wench as brazen as the moon.
+ And yet there is a tale that's told of Clichy after dark,
+ And two _gendarmes_ who swung their arms with Julot for a mark.
+ And oh, but they'd have got him too; they banged and blazed away,
+ When like a flash a woman leapt between them and their prey.
+ She took the medicine meant for him; she came down with a crash . . .
+ "Quick now, and make your get-away, O Julot the _apache_!" . . .
+ But no! He turned, ran swiftly back, his arms around her met;
+ They nabbed him sobbing like a kid, and kissing Gigolette.
+
+ Now I'm a reckless painter chap who loves a jamboree,
+ And one night in Cyrano's bar I got upon a spree;
+ And there were trollops all about, and crooks of every kind,
+ But though the place was reeling round I didn't seem to mind.
+ Till down I sank, and all was blank when in the bleary dawn
+ I woke up in my studio to find--my money gone;
+ Three hundred francs I'd scraped and squeezed to pay my quarter's rent.
+ "Some one has pinched my wad," I wailed; "it never has been spent."
+ And as I racked my brains to seek how I could raise some more,
+ Before my cruel landlord kicked me cowering from the door:
+ A knock . . . "Come in," I gruffly groaned; I did not raise my head,
+ Then lo! I heard a husky voice, a swift and silky tread:
+ "You got so blind, last night, _mon vieux_, I collared all your cash--
+ Three hundred francs. . . . There! _Nom de Dieu_," said Julot the _apache_.
+
+ And that was how I came to know Julot and Gigolette,
+ And we would talk and drink a _bock_, and smoke a cigarette.
+ And I would meditate upon the artistry of crime,
+ And he would tell of cracking cribs and cops and doing time;
+ Or else when he was flush of funds he'd carelessly explain
+ He'd biffed some bloated _bourgeois_ on the border of the Seine.
+ So gentle and polite he was, just like a man of peace,
+ And not a desperado and the terror of the police.
+
+ Now one day in a _bistro_ that's behind the Place Vendome
+ I came on Julot the _apache_, and Gigolette his _mome_.
+ And as they looked so very grave, says I to them, says I,
+ "Come on and have a little glass, it's good to rinse the eye.
+ You both look mighty serious; you've something on the heart."
+ "Ah, yes," said Julot the _apache_, "we've something to impart.
+ When such things come to folks like us, it isn't very gay . . .
+ It's Gigolette--she tells me that a _gosse_ is on the way."
+ Then Gigolette, she looked at me with eyes like stones of gall:
+ "If we were honest folks," said she, "I wouldn't mind at all.
+ But then . . . you know the life we lead; well, anyway I mean
+ (That is, providing it's a girl) to call her Angeline."
+ "Cheer up," said I; "it's all in life. There's gold within the dross.
+ Come on, we'll drink another _verre_ to Angeline the _gosse_."
+
+ And so the weary winter passed, and then one April morn
+ The worthy Julot came at last to say the babe was born.
+ "I'd like to chuck it in the Seine," he sourly snarled, "and yet
+ I guess I'll have to let it live, because of Gigolette."
+ I only laughed, for sure I saw his spite was all a bluff,
+ And he was prouder than a prince behind his manner gruff.
+ Yet every day he'd blast the brat with curses deep and grim,
+ And swear to me that Gigolette no longer thought of _him_.
+ And then one night he dropped the mask; his eyes were sick with dread,
+ And when I offered him a smoke he groaned and shook his head:
+ "I'm all upset; it's Angeline . . . she's covered with a rash . . .
+ She'll maybe die, my little _gosse_," cried Julot the _apache_.
+
+ But Angeline, I joy to say, came through the test all right,
+ Though Julot, so they tell me, watched beside her day and night.
+ And when I saw him next, says he: "Come up and dine with me.
+ We'll buy a beefsteak on the way, a bottle and some _brie_."
+ And so I had a merry night within his humble home,
+ And laughed with Angeline the _gosse_ and Gigolette the _mome_.
+ And every time that Julot used a word the least obscene,
+ How Gigolette would frown at him and point to Angeline:
+ Oh, such a little innocent, with hair of silken floss,
+ I do not wonder they were proud of Angeline the _gosse_.
+ And when her arms were round his neck, then Julot says to me:
+ "I must work harder now, _mon vieux_, since I've to work for three."
+ He worked so very hard indeed, the police dropped in one day,
+ And for a year behind the bars they put him safe away.
+
+ So dark and silent now, their home; they'd gone--I wondered where,
+ Till in a laundry near I saw a child with shining hair;
+ And o'er the tub a strapping wench, her arms in soapy foam;
+ Lo! it was Angeline the _gosse_, and Gigolette the _mome_.
+ And so I kept an eye on them and saw that all went right,
+ Until at last came Julot home, half crazy with delight.
+ And when he'd kissed them both, says he: "I've had my fill this time.
+ I'm on the honest now, I am; I'm all fed up with crime.
+ You mark my words, the page I turn is going to be clean,
+ I swear it on the head of her, my little Angeline."
+
+ And so, to finish up my tale, this morning as I strolled
+ Along the boulevard I heard a voice I knew of old.
+ I saw a rosy little man with walrus-like mustache . . .
+ I stopped, I stared. . . . By all the gods! 'twas Julot the _apache_.
+ "I'm in the garden way," he said, "and doing mighty well;
+ I've half an acre under glass, and heaps of truck to sell.
+ Come out and see. Oh come, my friend, on Sunday, wet or shine . . .
+ Say!--_it's the First Communion of that little girl of mine._"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+
+
+_Chez Moi_, Montparnasse,
+
+_The same evening_.
+
+To-day is an anniversary. A year ago to-day I kicked over an office
+stool and came to Paris thinking to make a living by my pen. I was
+twenty then, and in my pocket I had twenty pounds. Of that, my ten
+_sous_ are all that remain. And so to-night I am going to spend them,
+not prudently on bread, but prodigally on beer.
+
+As I stroll down the Boul' Mich' the lingering light has all the
+exquisite tenderness of violet; the trees are in their first translucent
+green; beneath them the lamps are lit with purest gold, and from the
+Little Luxembourg comes a silver jangle of tiny voices. Taking the gay
+side of the street, I enter a cafe. Although it isn't its true name, I
+choose to call my cafe--
+
+
+
+
+_L'Escargot D'Or_
+
+
+
+ O Tavern of the Golden Snail!
+ Ten _sous_ have I, so I'll regale;
+ Ten _sous_ your amber brew to sip
+ (Eight for the _bock_ and two the tip),
+ And so I'll sit the evening long,
+ And smoke my pipe and watch the throng,
+ The giddy crowd that drains and drinks,
+ I'll watch it quiet as a sphinx;
+ And who among them all shall buy
+ For ten poor _sous_ such joy as I?
+ As I who, snugly tucked away,
+ Look on it all as on a play,
+ A frolic scene of love and fun,
+ To please an audience of One.
+
+ O Tavern of the Golden Snail!
+ You've stuff indeed for many a tale.
+ All eyes, all ears, I nothing miss:
+ Two lovers lean to clasp and kiss;
+ The merry students sing and shout,
+ The nimble _garcons_ dart about;
+ Lo! here come Mimi and Musette
+ With: "_S'il vous plait, une cigarette?_"
+ Marcel and Rudolf, Shaunard too,
+ Behold the old rapscallion crew,
+ With flowing tie and shaggy head . . .
+ Who says Bohemia is dead?
+ Oh shades of Murger! prank and clown,
+ And I will watch and write it down.
+
+ O Tavern of the Golden Snail!
+ What crackling throats have gulped your ale!
+ What sons of Fame from far and near
+ Have glowed and mellowed in your cheer!
+ Within this corner where I sit
+ Banville and Coppee clashed their wit;
+ And hither too, to dream and drain,
+ And drown despair, came poor Verlaine.
+ Here Wilde would talk and Synge would muse,
+ Maybe like me with just ten _sous_.
+ Ah! one is lucky, is one not?
+ With ghosts so rare to drain a pot!
+ So may your custom never fail,
+ O Tavern of the Golden Snail!
+
+
+
+There! my pipe is out. Let me light it again and consider. I have no
+illusions about myself. I am not fool enough to think I am a poet, but
+I have a knack of rhyme and I love to make verses. Mine is a tootling,
+tin-whistle music. Humbly and afar I follow in the footsteps of Praed
+and Lampson, of Field and Riley, hoping that in time my Muse may bring
+me bread and butter. So far, however, it has been all kicks and no
+coppers. And to-night I am at the end of my tether. I wish I knew where
+to-morrow's breakfast was coming from. Well, since rhyming's been my
+ruin, let me rhyme to the bitter end.
+
+
+
+
+It Is Later Than You Think
+
+
+
+ Lone amid the cafe's cheer,
+ Sad of heart am I to-night;
+ Dolefully I drink my beer,
+ But no single line I write.
+ There's the wretched rent to pay,
+ Yet I glower at pen and ink:
+ Oh, inspire me, Muse, I pray,
+ _It is later than you think!_
+
+ Hello! there's a pregnant phrase.
+ Bravo! let me write it down;
+ Hold it with a hopeful gaze,
+ Gauge it with a fretful frown;
+ Tune it to my lyric lyre . . .
+ Ah! upon starvation's brink,
+ How the words are dark and dire:
+ It is later than you think.
+
+ Weigh them well. . . . Behold yon band,
+ Students drinking by the door,
+ Madly merry, _bock_ in hand,
+ Saucers stacked to mark their score.
+ Get you gone, you jolly scamps;
+ Let your parting glasses clink;
+ Seek your long neglected lamps:
+ It is later than you think.
+
+ Look again: yon dainty blonde,
+ All allure and golden grace,
+ Oh so willing to respond
+ Should you turn a smiling face.
+ Play your part, poor pretty doll;
+ Feast and frolic, pose and prink;
+ There's the Morgue to end it all,
+ And it's later than you think.
+
+ Yon's a playwright--mark his face,
+ Puffed and purple, tense and tired;
+ Pasha-like he holds his place,
+ Hated, envied and admired.
+ How you gobble life, my friend;
+ Wine, and woman soft and pink!
+ Well, each tether has its end:
+ Sir, it's later than you think.
+
+ See yon living scarecrow pass
+ With a wild and wolfish stare
+ At each empty absinthe glass,
+ As if he saw Heaven there.
+ Poor damned wretch, to end your pain
+ There is still the Greater Drink.
+ Yonder waits the sanguine Seine . . .
+ It is later than you think.
+
+ Lastly, you who read; aye, you
+ Who this very line may scan:
+ Think of all you planned to do . . .
+ Have you done the best you can?
+ See! the tavern lights are low;
+ Black's the night, and how you shrink!
+ God! and is it time to go?
+ Ah! the clock is always slow;
+ It is later than you think;
+ Sadly later than you think;
+ Far, far later than you think.
+
+
+
+Scarcely do I scribble that last line on the back of an old envelope
+when a voice hails me. It is a fellow free-lance, a short-story man
+called MacBean. He is having a feast of _Marennes_ and he asks me to
+join him.
+
+MacBean is a Scotsman with the soul of an Irishman. He has a keen,
+lean, spectacled face, and if it were not for his gray hair he might be
+taken for a student of theology. However, there is nothing of the
+Puritan in MacBean. He loves wine and women, and money melts in his
+fingers.
+
+He has lived so long in the Quarter he looks at life from the Parisian
+angle. His knowledge of literature is such that he might be a Professor,
+but he would rather be a vagabond of letters. We talk shop. We discuss
+the American short story, but MacBean vows they do these things better
+in France. He says that some of the _contes_ printed every day in the
+_Journal_ are worthy of Maupassant. After that he buys more beer, and
+we roam airily over the fields of literature, plucking here and there a
+blossom of quotation. A fine talk, vivid and eager. It puts me into a
+kind of glow.
+
+MacBean pays the bill from a handful of big notes, and the thought of my
+own empty pockets for a moment damps me. However, when we rise to go,
+it is well after midnight, and I am in a pleasant daze. The rest of the
+evening may be summed up in the following jingle:
+
+
+
+
+Noctambule
+
+
+
+ Zut! it's two o'clock.
+ See! the lights are jumping.
+ Finish up your _bock_,
+ Time we all were humping.
+ Waiters stack the chairs,
+ Pile them on the tables;
+ Let us to our lairs
+ Underneath the gables.
+
+ Up the old Boul' Mich'
+ Climb with steps erratic.
+ Steady . . . how I wish
+ I was in my attic!
+ Full am I with cheer;
+ In my heart the joy stirs;
+ Couldn't be the beer,
+ Must have been the oysters.
+
+ In obscene array
+ Garbage cans spill over;
+ How I wish that they
+ Smelled as sweet as clover!
+ Charing women wait;
+ Cafes drop their shutters;
+ Rats perambulate
+ Up and down the gutters.
+
+ Down the darkened street
+ Market carts are creeping;
+ Horse with wary feet,
+ Red-faced driver sleeping.
+ Loads of vivid greens,
+ Carrots, leeks, potatoes,
+ Cabbages and beans,
+ Turnips and tomatoes.
+
+ Pair of dapper chaps,
+ Cigarettes and sashes,
+ Stare at me, perhaps
+ Desperate _Apaches_.
+ "Needn't bother me,
+ Jolly well you know it;
+ _Parceque je suis
+ Quartier Latin poete._
+
+ "Give you villanelles,
+ Madrigals and lyrics;
+ Ballades and rondels,
+ Odes and panegyrics.
+ Poet pinched and poor,
+ Pricked by cold and hunger;
+ Trouble's troubadour,
+ Misery's balladmonger."
+
+ Think how queer it is!
+ Every move I'm making,
+ Cosmic gravity's
+ Center I am shaking;
+ Oh, how droll to feel
+ (As I now am feeling),
+ Even as I reel,
+ All the world is reeling.
+
+ Reeling too the stars,
+ Neptune and Uranus,
+ Jupiter and Mars,
+ Mercury and Venus;
+ Suns and moons with me,
+ As I'm homeward straying,
+ All in sympathy
+ Swaying, swaying, swaying.
+
+ Lord! I've got a head.
+ Well, it's not surprising.
+ I must gain my bed
+ Ere the sun be rising;
+ When the merry lark
+ In the sky is soaring,
+ I'll refuse to hark,
+ I'll be snoring, snoring.
+
+ Strike a sulphur match . . .
+ Ha! at last my garret.
+ Fumble at the latch,
+ Close the door and bar it.
+ Bed, you graciously
+ Wait, despite my scorning . . .
+ So, bibaciously
+ Mad old world, good morning.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+My Garret,
+
+Montparnasse, April.
+
+
+
+
+Insomnia
+
+
+
+ Heigh ho! to sleep I vainly try;
+ Since twelve I haven't closed an eye,
+ And now it's three, and as I lie,
+ From Notre Dame to St. Denis
+ The bells of Paris chime to me;
+ "You're young," they say, "and strong and free."
+
+ I do not turn with sighs and groans
+ To ease my limbs, to rest my bones,
+ As if my bed were stuffed with stones,
+ No peevish murmur tips my tongue--
+ Ah no! for every sound upflung
+ Says: "Lad, you're free and strong and young."
+
+ And so beneath the sheet's caress
+ My body purrs with happiness;
+ Joy bubbles in my veins. . . . Ah yes,
+ My very blood that leaps along
+ Is chiming in a joyous song,
+ Because I'm young and free and strong.
+
+
+
+Maybe it is the springtide. I am so happy I am afraid. The sense of
+living fills me with exultation. I want to sing, to dance; I am
+dithyrambic with delight.
+
+
+
+ I think the moon must be to blame:
+ It fills the room with fairy flame;
+ It paints the wall, it seems to pour
+ A dappled flood upon the floor.
+ I rise and through the window stare . . .
+ Ye gods! how marvelously fair!
+ From Montrouge to the Martyr's Hill,
+ A silver city rapt and still;
+ Dim, drowsy deeps of opal haze,
+ And spire and dome in diamond blaze;
+ The little lisping leaves of spring
+ Like sequins softly glimmering;
+ Each roof a plaque of argent sheen,
+ A gauzy gulf the space between;
+ Each chimney-top a thing of grace,
+ Where merry moonbeams prank and chase;
+ And all that sordid was and mean,
+ Just Beauty, deathless and serene.
+
+ O magic city of a dream!
+ From glory unto glory gleam;
+ And I will gaze and pity those
+ Who on their pillows drowse and doze . . .
+ And as I've nothing else to do,
+ Of tea I'll make a rousing brew,
+ And coax my pipes until they croon,
+ And chant a ditty to the moon.
+
+
+
+There! my tea is black and strong. Inspiration comes with every sip.
+Now for the moon.
+
+
+
+ The moon peeped out behind the hill
+ As yellow as an apricot;
+ Then up and up it climbed until
+ Into the sky it fairly got;
+ The sky was vast and violet;
+ The poor moon seemed to faint in fright,
+ And pale it grew and paler yet,
+ Like fine old silver, rinsed and bright.
+ And yet it climbed so bravely on
+ Until it mounted heaven-high;
+ Then earthward it serenely shone,
+ A silver sovereign of the sky,
+ A bland sultana of the night,
+ Surveying realms of lily light.
+
+
+
+
+Moon Song
+
+
+
+ A child saw in the morning skies
+ The dissipated-looking moon,
+ And opened wide her big blue eyes,
+ And cried: "Look, look, my lost balloon!"
+ And clapped her rosy hands with glee:
+ "Quick, mother! Bring it back to me."
+
+ A poet in a lilied pond
+ Espied the moon's reflected charms,
+ And ravished by that beauty blonde,
+ Leapt out to clasp her in his arms.
+ And as he'd never learnt to swim,
+ Poor fool! that was the end of him.
+
+ A rustic glimpsed amid the trees
+ The bluff moon caught as in a snare.
+ "They say it do be made of cheese,"
+ Said Giles, "and that a chap bides there. . . .
+ That Blue Boar ale be strong, I vow--
+ The lad's a-winkin' at me now."
+
+ Two lovers watched the new moon hold
+ The old moon in her bright embrace.
+ Said she: "There's mother, pale and old,
+ And drawing near her resting place."
+ Said he: "Be mine, and with me wed,"
+ Moon-high she stared . . . she shook her head.
+
+ A soldier saw with dying eyes
+ The bleared moon like a ball of blood,
+ And thought of how in other skies,
+ So pearly bright on leaf and bud
+ Like peace its soft white beams had lain;
+ _Like Peace!_ . . . He closed his eyes again.
+
+ Child, lover, poet, soldier, clown,
+ Ah yes, old Moon, what things you've seen!
+ I marvel now, as you look down,
+ How can your face be so serene?
+ And tranquil still you'll make your round,
+ Old Moon, when we are underground.
+
+
+
+"And now, blow out your candle, lad, and get to bed. See, the dawn is in
+the sky. Open your window and let its freshness rouge your cheek.
+You've earned your rest. Sleep."
+
+Aye, but before I do so, let me read again the last of my _Ballads_.
+
+
+
+
+The Sewing-Girl
+
+
+
+ The humble garret where I dwell
+ Is in that Quarter called the Latin;
+ It isn't spacious--truth to tell,
+ There's hardly room to swing a cat in.
+ But what of that! It's there I fight
+ For food and fame, my Muse inviting,
+ And all the day and half the night
+ You'll find me writing, writing, writing.
+
+ Now, it was in the month of May
+ As, wrestling with a rhyme rheumatic,
+ I chanced to look across the way,
+ And lo! within a neighbor attic,
+ A hand drew back the window shade,
+ And there, a picture glad and glowing,
+ I saw a sweet and slender maid,
+ And she was sewing, sewing, sewing.
+
+ So poor the room, so small, so scant,
+ Yet somehow oh, so bright and airy.
+ There was a pink geranium plant,
+ Likewise a very pert canary.
+ And in the maiden's heart it seemed
+ Some fount of gladness must be springing,
+ For as alone I sadly dreamed
+ I heard her singing, singing, singing.
+
+ God love her! how it cheered me then
+ To see her there so brave and pretty;
+ So she with needle, I with pen,
+ We slaved and sang above the city.
+ And as across my streams of ink
+ I watched her from a poet's distance,
+ She stitched and sang . . . I scarcely think
+ She was aware of my existence.
+
+ And then one day she sang no more.
+ That put me out, there's no denying.
+ I looked--she labored as before,
+ But, bless me! she was crying, crying.
+ Her poor canary chirped in vain;
+ Her pink geranium drooped in sorrow;
+ "Of course," said I, "she'll sing again.
+ Maybe," I sighed, "she will to-morrow."
+
+ Poor child; 'twas finished with her song:
+ Day after day her tears were flowing;
+ And as I wondered what was wrong
+ She pined and peaked above her sewing.
+ And then one day the blind she drew,
+ Ah! though I sought with vain endeavor
+ To pierce the darkness, well I knew
+ My sewing-girl had gone for ever.
+
+ And as I sit alone to-night
+ My eyes unto her room are turning . . .
+ I'd give the sum of all I write
+ Once more to see her candle burning,
+ Once more to glimpse her happy face,
+ And while my rhymes of cheer I'm ringing,
+ Across the sunny sweep of space
+ To hear her singing, singing, singing.
+
+
+
+Heigh ho! I realize I am very weary. It's nice to be so tired, and to
+know one can sleep as long as one wants. The morning sunlight floods in
+at my window, so I draw the blind, and throw myself on my bed. . . .
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+My Garret,
+
+Montparnasse, April.
+
+Hurrah! As I opened my eyes this morning to a hard, unfeeling world,
+little did I think what a surprise awaited me. A big blue envelope had
+been pushed under my door. Another rejection, I thought, and I took it
+up distastefully. The next moment I was staring at my first cheque.
+
+It was an express order for two hundred francs, in payment of a bit of
+verse.. . . So to-day I will celebrate. I will lunch at the
+D'Harcourt, I will dine on the Grand Boulevard, I will go to the
+theater.
+
+Well, here's the thing that has turned the tide for me. It is somewhat
+in the vein of "Sourdough" Service, the Yukon bard. I don't think much
+of his stuff, but they say he makes heaps of money. I can well believe
+it, for he drives a Hispano-Suiza in the Bois every afternoon. The
+other night he was with a crowd at the Dome Cafe, a chubby chap who sits
+in a corner and seldom speaks. I was disappointed. I thought he was a
+big, hairy man who swore like a trooper and mixed brandy with his beer.
+He only drank Vichy, poor fellow!
+
+
+
+
+Lucille
+
+
+
+ Of course you've heard of the _Nancy Lee_, and how she sailed away
+ On her famous quest of the Arctic flea, to the wilds of Hudson's Bay?
+ For it was a foreign Prince's whim to collect this tiny cuss,
+ And a golden quid was no more to him than a copper to coves like us.
+ So we sailed away and our hearts were gay as we gazed on the gorgeous scene;
+ And we laughed with glee as we caught the flea of the wolf and the wolverine;
+ Yea, our hearts were light as the parasite of the ermine rat we slew,
+ And the great musk ox, and the silver fox, and the moose and the caribou.
+ And we laughed with zest as the insect pest of the marmot crowned our zeal,
+ And the wary mink and the wily "link", and the walrus and the seal.
+ And with eyes aglow on the scornful snow we danced a rigadoon,
+ Round the lonesome lair of the Arctic hare, by the light of the silver moon.
+
+ But the time was nigh to homeward hie, when, imagine our despair!
+ For the best of the lot we hadn't got--the flea of the polar bear.
+ Oh, his face was long and his breath was strong, as the Skipper he says to me:
+ "I wants you to linger 'ere, my lad, by the shores of the Hartic Sea;
+ I wants you to 'unt the polar bear the perishin' winter through,
+ And if flea ye find of its breed and kind, there's a 'undred quid for you."
+ But I shook my head: "No, Cap," I said; "it's yourself I'd like to please,
+ But I tells ye flat I wouldn't do that if ye went on yer bended knees."
+ Then the Captain spat in the seething brine, and he says: "Good luck to you,
+ If it can't be did for a 'undred quid, supposin' we call it two?"
+ So that was why they said good-by, and they sailed and left me there--
+ Alone, alone in the Arctic Zone to hunt for the polar bear.
+
+ Oh, the days were slow and packed with woe,
+ till I thought they would never end;
+ And I used to sit when the fire was lit, with my pipe for my only friend.
+ And I tried to sing some rollicky thing, but my song broke off in a prayer,
+ And I'd drowse and dream by the driftwood gleam; I'd dream of a polar bear;
+ I'd dream of a cloudlike polar bear that blotted the stars on high,
+ With ravenous jaws and flenzing claws, and the flames of hell in his eye.
+ And I'd trap around on the frozen ground, as a proper hunter ought,
+ And beasts I'd find of every kind, but never the one I sought.
+ Never a track in the white ice-pack that humped and heaved and flawed,
+ Till I came to think: "Why, strike me pink! if the creature ain't a fraud."
+ And then one night in the waning light, as I hurried home to sup,
+ I hears a roar by the cabin door, and a great white hulk heaves up.
+ So my rifle flashed, and a bullet crashed; dead, dead as a stone fell he,
+ And I gave a cheer, for there in his ear--Gosh ding me!--a tiny flea.
+
+ At last, at last! Oh, I clutched it fast, and I gazed on it with pride;
+ And I thrust it into a biscuit-tin, and I shut it safe inside;
+ With a lid of glass for the light to pass, and space to leap and play;
+ Oh, it kept alive; yea, seemed to thrive, as I watched it night and day.
+ And I used to sit and sing to it, and I shielded it from harm,
+ And many a hearty feed it had on the heft of my hairy arm.
+ For you'll never know in that land of snow how lonesome a man can feel;
+ So I made a fuss of the little cuss, and I christened it "Lucille".
+ But the longest winter has its end, and the ice went out to sea,
+ And I saw one day a ship in the bay, and there was the _Nancy Lee_.
+ So a boat was lowered and I went aboard, and they opened wide their eyes--
+ Yes, they gave a cheer when the truth was clear,
+ and they saw my precious prize.
+ And then it was all like a giddy dream; but to cut my story short,
+ We sailed away on the fifth of May to the foreign Prince's court;
+ To a palmy land and a palace grand, and the little Prince was there,
+ And a fat Princess in a satin dress with a crown of gold on her hair.
+ And they showed me into a shiny room, just him and her and me,
+ And the Prince he was pleased and friendly-like,
+ and he calls for drinks for three.
+ And I shows them my battered biscuit-tin, and I makes my modest spiel,
+ And they laughed, they did, when I opened the lid,
+ and out there popped Lucille.
+
+ Oh, the Prince was glad, I could soon see that, and the Princess she was too;
+ And Lucille waltzed round on the tablecloth as she often used to do.
+ And the Prince pulled out a purse of gold, and he put it in my hand;
+ And he says: "It was worth all that, I'm told, to stay in that nasty land."
+ And then he turned with a sudden cry, and he clutched at his royal beard;
+ And the Princess screamed, and well she might--for Lucille had disappeared.
+
+ "She must be here," said his Noble Nibbs, so we hunted all around;
+ Oh, we searched that place, but never a trace of the little beast we found.
+ So I shook my head, and I glumly said: "Gol darn the saucy cuss!
+ It's mighty queer, but she isn't here; so . . . she must be on one of us.
+ You'll pardon me if I make so free, but--there's just one thing to do:
+ If you'll kindly go for a half a mo' I'll search me garments through."
+ Then all alone on the shiny throne I stripped from head to heel;
+ In vain, in vain; it was very plain that I hadn't got Lucille.
+ So I garbed again, and I told the Prince, and he scratched his august head;
+ "I suppose if she hasn't selected you, it must be me," he said.
+ So _he_ retired; but he soon came back, and his features showed distress:
+ "Oh, it isn't you and it isn't me." . . . Then we looked at the Princess.
+ So _she_ retired; and we heard a scream, and she opened wide the door;
+ And her fingers twain were pinched to pain, but a radiant smile she wore:
+ "It's here," she cries, "our precious prize.
+ Oh, I found it right away. . . ."
+ Then I ran to her with a shout of joy, but I choked with a wild dismay.
+ I clutched the back of the golden throne, and the room began to reel . . .
+ What she held to me was, ah yes! a flea, but . . . _it wasn't my Lucille_.
+
+
+
+After all, I did not celebrate. I sat on the terrace of the Cafe
+Napolitain on the Grand Boulevard, half hypnotized by the passing crowd.
+And as I sat I fell into conversation with a god-like stranger who
+sipped some golden ambrosia. He told me he was an actor and introduced
+me to his beverage, which he called a "Suze-Anni". He soon left me, but
+the effect of the golden liquid remained, and there came over me a
+desire to write. _C'etait plus fort que moi._ So instead of going to
+the Folies Bergere I spent all evening in the Omnium Bar near the
+Bourse, and wrote the following:
+
+
+
+
+On the Boulevard
+
+
+
+ Oh, it's pleasant sitting here,
+ Seeing all the people pass;
+ You beside your _bock_ of beer,
+ I behind my _demi-tasse_.
+ Chatting of no matter what.
+ You the Mummer, I the Bard;
+ Oh, it's jolly, is it not?--
+ Sitting on the Boulevard.
+
+ More amusing than a book,
+ If a chap has eyes to see;
+ For, no matter where I look,
+ Stories, stories jump at me.
+ Moving tales my pen might write;
+ Poems plain on every face;
+ Monologues you could recite
+ With inimitable grace.
+
+ (Ah! Imagination's power)
+ See yon _demi-mondaine_ there,
+ Idly toying with a flower,
+ Smiling with a pensive air . . .
+ Well, her smile is but a mask,
+ For I saw within her muff
+ Such a wicked little flask:
+ Vitriol--ugh! the beastly stuff.
+
+ Now look back beside the bar.
+ See yon curled and scented _beau_,
+ Puffing at a fine cigar--
+ _Sale espece de maquereau_.
+ Well (of course, it's all surmise),
+ It's for him she holds her place;
+ When he passes she will rise,
+ Dash the vitriol in his face.
+
+ Quick they'll carry him away,
+ Pack him in a Red Cross car;
+ Her they'll hurry, so they say,
+ To the cells of St. Lazare.
+ What will happen then, you ask?
+ What will all the sequel be?
+ Ah! Imagination's task
+ Isn't easy . . . let me see . . .
+
+ She will go to jail, no doubt,
+ For a year, or maybe two;
+ Then as soon as she gets out
+ Start her bawdy life anew.
+ He will lie within a ward,
+ Harmless as a man can be,
+ With his face grotesquely scarred,
+ And his eyes that cannot see.
+
+ Then amid the city's din
+ He will stand against a wall,
+ With around his neck a tin
+ Into which the pennies fall.
+ She will pass (I see it plain,
+ Like a cinematograph),
+ She will halt and turn again,
+ Look and look, and maybe laugh.
+
+ Well, I'm not so sure of that--
+ Whether she will laugh or cry.
+ He will hold a battered hat
+ To the lady passing by.
+ He will smile a cringing smile,
+ And into his grimy hold,
+ With a laugh (or sob) the while,
+ She will drop a piece of gold.
+
+ "Bless you, lady," he will say,
+ And get grandly drunk that night.
+ She will come and come each day,
+ Fascinated by the sight.
+ Then somehow he'll get to know
+ (Maybe by some kindly friend)
+ Who she is, and so . . . and so
+ Bring my story to an end.
+
+ How his heart will burst with hate!
+ He will curse and he will cry.
+ He will wait and wait and wait,
+ Till again she passes by.
+ Then like tiger from its lair
+ He will leap from out his place,
+ Down her, clutch her by the hair,
+ Smear the vitriol on her face.
+
+ (Ah! Imagination rare)
+ See . . . he takes his hat to go;
+ Now he's level with her chair;
+ Now she rises up to throw. . . .
+ _God! and she has done it too_ . . .
+ Oh, those screams; those hideous screams!
+ I imagined and . . . it's true:
+ How his face will haunt my dreams!
+
+ What a sight! It makes me sick.
+ Seems I am to blame somehow.
+ _Garcon_, fetch a brandy quick . . .
+ There! I'm feeling better now.
+ Let's collaborate, we two,
+ You the Mummer, I the Bard;
+ Oh, what ripping stuff we'll do,
+ Sitting on the Boulevard!
+
+
+
+It is strange how one works easily at times. I wrote this so quickly
+that I might almost say I had reached the end before I had come to the
+beginning. In such a mood I wonder why everybody does not write poetry.
+Get a Roget's _Thesaurus_, a rhyming dictionary: sit before your
+typewriter with a strong glass of coffee at your elbow, and just click
+the stuff off.
+
+
+
+
+Facility
+
+
+
+ So easy 'tis to make a rhyme,
+ That did the world but know it,
+ Your coachman might Parnassus climb,
+ Your butler be a poet.
+
+ Then, oh, how charming it would be
+ If, when in haste hysteric
+ You called the page, you learned that he
+ Was grappling with a lyric.
+
+ Or else what rapture it would yield,
+ When cook sent up the salad,
+ To find within its depths concealed
+ A touching little ballad.
+
+ Or if for tea and toast you yearned,
+ What joy to find upon it
+ The chambermaid had coyly laid
+ A palpitating sonnet.
+
+ Your baker could the fashion set;
+ Your butcher might respond well;
+ With every tart a triolet,
+ With every chop a rondel.
+
+ Your tailor's bill . . . well, I'll be blowed!
+ Dear chap! I never knowed him . . .
+ He's gone and written me an ode,
+ Instead of what I _owed_ him.
+
+ So easy 'tis to rhyme . . . yet stay!
+ Oh, terrible misgiving!
+ Please do not give the game away . . .
+ I've got to make my living.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+My Garret
+
+May 1914.
+
+
+
+
+Golden Days
+
+
+
+ Another day of toil and strife,
+ Another page so white,
+ Within that fateful Log of Life
+ That I and all must write;
+ Another page without a stain
+ To make of as I may,
+ That done, I shall not see again
+ Until the Judgment Day.
+
+ Ah, could I, could I backward turn
+ The pages of that Book,
+ How often would I blench and burn!
+ How often loathe to look!
+ What pages would be meanly scrolled;
+ What smeared as if with mud;
+ A few, maybe, might gleam like gold,
+ Some scarlet seem as blood.
+
+ O Record grave, God guide my hand
+ And make me worthy be,
+ Since what I write to-day shall stand
+ To all eternity;
+ Aye, teach me, Lord of Life, I pray,
+ As I salute the sun,
+ To bear myself that every day
+ May be a Golden One.
+
+
+
+I awoke this morning to see the bright sunshine flooding my garret. No
+chamber in the palace of a king could have been more fair. How I sang as
+I dressed! How I lingered over my coffee, savoring every drop! How
+carefully I packed my pipe, gazing serenely over the roofs of Paris.
+
+Never is the city so lovely as in this month of May, when all the trees
+are in the fullness of their foliage. As I look, I feel a freshness of
+vision in my eyes. Wonder wakes in me. The simplest things move me to
+delight.
+
+
+
+
+The Joy of Little Things
+
+
+
+ It's good the great green earth to roam,
+ Where sights of awe the soul inspire;
+ But oh, it's best, the coming home,
+ The crackle of one's own hearth-fire!
+ You've hob-nobbed with the solemn Past;
+ You've seen the pageantry of kings;
+ Yet oh, how sweet to gain at last
+ The peace and rest of Little Things!
+
+ Perhaps you're counted with the Great;
+ You strain and strive with mighty men;
+ Your hand is on the helm of State;
+ Colossus-like you stride . . . and then
+ There comes a pause, a shining hour,
+ A dog that leaps, a hand that clings:
+ O Titan, turn from pomp and power;
+ Give all your heart to Little Things.
+
+ Go couch you childwise in the grass,
+ Believing it's some jungle strange,
+ Where mighty monsters peer and pass,
+ Where beetles roam and spiders range.
+ 'Mid gloom and gleam of leaf and blade,
+ What dragons rasp their painted wings!
+ O magic world of shine and shade!
+ O beauty land of Little Things!
+
+ I sometimes wonder, after all,
+ Amid this tangled web of fate,
+ If what is great may not be small,
+ And what is small may not be great.
+ So wondering I go my way,
+ Yet in my heart contentment sings . . .
+ O may I ever see, I pray,
+ God's grace and love in Little Things.
+
+ So give to me, I only beg,
+ A little roof to call my own,
+ A little cider in the keg,
+ A little meat upon the bone;
+ A little garden by the sea,
+ A little boat that dips and swings . . .
+ Take wealth, take fame, but leave to me,
+ O Lord of Life, just Little Things.
+
+
+
+Yesterday I finished my tenth ballad. When I have done about a score I
+will seek a publisher. If I cannot find one, I will earn, beg or steal
+the money to get them printed. Then if they do not sell I will hawk
+them from door to door. Oh, I'll succeed, I know I'll succeed. And yet
+I don't want an easy success; give me the joy of the fight, the thrill
+of the adventure. Here's my last ballad:
+
+
+
+
+The Absinthe Drinkers
+
+
+
+ He's yonder, on the terrace of the Cafe de la Paix,
+ The little wizened Spanish man, I see him every day.
+ He's sitting with his Pernod on his customary chair;
+ He's staring at the passers with his customary stare.
+ He never takes his piercing eyes from off that moving throng,
+ That current cosmopolitan meandering along:
+ Dark diplomats from Martinique, pale Rastas from Peru,
+ An Englishman from Bloomsbury, a Yank from Kalamazoo;
+ A poet from Montmartre's heights, a dapper little Jap,
+ Exotic citizens of all the countries on the map;
+ A tourist horde from every land that's underneath the sun--
+ That little wizened Spanish man, he misses never one.
+ Oh, foul or fair he's always there, and many a drink he buys,
+ And there's a fire of red desire within his hollow eyes.
+ And sipping of my Pernod, and a-knowing what I know,
+ Sometimes I want to shriek aloud and give away the show.
+ I've lost my nerve; he's haunting me; he's like a beast of prey,
+ That Spanish man that's watching at the Cafe de la Paix.
+
+ Say! Listen and I'll tell you all . . . the day was growing dim,
+ And I was with my Pernod at the table next to him;
+ And he was sitting soberly as if he were asleep,
+ When suddenly he seemed to tense, like tiger for a leap.
+ And then he swung around to me, his hand went to his hip,
+ My heart was beating like a gong--my arm was in his grip;
+ His eyes were glaring into mine; aye, though I shrank with fear,
+ His fetid breath was on my face, his voice was in my ear:
+ "Excuse my _brusquerie_," he hissed; "but, sir, do you suppose--
+ That portly man who passed us had a _wen upon his nose?_"
+
+ And then at last it dawned on me, the fellow must be mad;
+ And when I soothingly replied: "I do not think he had,"
+ The little wizened Spanish man subsided in his chair,
+ And shrouded in his raven cloak resumed his owlish stare.
+ But when I tried to slip away he turned and glared at me,
+ And oh, that fishlike face of his was sinister to see:
+ "Forgive me if I startled you; of course you think I'm queer;
+ No doubt you wonder who I am, so solitary here;
+ You question why the passers-by I piercingly review . . .
+ Well, listen, my bibacious friend, I'll tell my tale to you.
+
+ "It happened twenty years ago, and in another land:
+ A maiden young and beautiful, two suitors for her hand.
+ My rival was the lucky one; I vowed I would repay;
+ Revenge has mellowed in my heart, it's rotten ripe to-day.
+ My happy rival skipped away, vamoosed, he left no trace;
+ And so I'm waiting, waiting here to meet him face to face;
+ For has it not been ever said that all the world one day
+ Will pass in pilgrimage before the Cafe de la Paix?"
+
+ "But, sir," I made remonstrance, "if it's twenty years ago,
+ You'd scarcely recognize him now, he must have altered so."
+ The little wizened Spanish man he laughed a hideous laugh,
+ And from his cloak he quickly drew a faded photograph.
+ "You're right," said he, "but there are traits (oh, this you must allow)
+ That never change; Lopez was fat, he must be fatter now.
+ His paunch is senatorial, he cannot see his toes,
+ I'm sure of it; and then, behold! that wen upon his nose.
+ I'm looking for a man like that. I'll wait and wait until . . ."
+ "What will you do?" I sharply cried; he answered me: "Why, kill!
+ He robbed me of my happiness--nay, stranger, do not start;
+ I'll firmly and politely put--a bullet in his heart."
+
+ And then that little Spanish man, with big cigar alight,
+ Uprose and shook my trembling hand and vanished in the night.
+ And I went home and thought of him and had a dreadful dream
+ Of portly men with each a wen, and woke up with a scream.
+ And sure enough, next morning, as I prowled the Boulevard,
+ A portly man with wenny nose roamed into my regard;
+ Then like a flash I ran to him and clutched him by the arm:
+ "Oh, sir," said I, "I do not wish to see you come to harm;
+ But if your life you value aught, I beg, entreat and pray--
+ Don't pass before the terrace of the Cafe de la Paix."
+ That portly man he looked at me with such a startled air,
+ Then bolted like a rabbit down the rue Michaudiere.
+ "Ha! ha! I've saved a life," I thought; and laughed in my relief,
+ And straightway joined the Spanish man o'er his _aperitif_.
+ And thus each day I dodged about and kept the strictest guard
+ For portly men with each a wen upon the Boulevard.
+ And then I hailed my Spanish pal, and sitting in the sun,
+ We ordered many Pernods and we drank them every one.
+ And sternly he would stare and stare until my hand would shake,
+ And grimly he would glare and glare until my heart would quake.
+ And I would say: "Alphonso, lad, I must expostulate;
+ Why keep alive for twenty years the furnace of your hate?
+ Perhaps his wedded life was hell; and you, at least, are free . . ."
+ "That's where you've got it wrong," he snarled; "the fool she took was _me_.
+ My rival sneaked, threw up the sponge, betrayed himself a churl:
+ 'Twas he who got the happiness, I only got--the girl."
+ With that he looked so devil-like he made me creep and shrink,
+ And there was nothing else to do but buy another drink.
+
+ Now yonder like a blot of ink he sits across the way,
+ Upon the smiling terrace of the Cafe de la Paix;
+ That little wizened Spanish man, his face is ghastly white,
+ His eyes are staring, staring like a tiger's in the night.
+ I know within his evil heart the fires of hate are fanned,
+ I know his automatic's ready waiting to his hand.
+ I know a tragedy is near. I dread, I have no peace . . .
+ Oh, don't you think I ought to go and call upon the police?
+ Look there . . . he's rising up . . . my God!
+ He leaps from out his place . . .
+ Yon millionaire from Argentine . . . the two are face to face . . .
+ A shot! A shriek! A heavy fall! A huddled heap! Oh, see
+ The little wizened Spanish man is dancing in his glee. . . .
+ I'm sick . . . I'm faint . . . I'm going mad. . . .
+ Oh, please take me away . . .
+ There's BLOOD upon the terrace of the Cafe de la Paix. . . .
+
+
+
+And now I'll leave my work and sally forth. The city is _en fete_. I'll
+join the crowd and laugh and sing with the best.
+
+
+
+ The sunshine seeks my little room
+ To tell me Paris streets are gay;
+ That children cry the lily bloom
+ All up and down the leafy way;
+ That half the town is mad with May,
+ With flame of flag and boom of bell:
+ For Carnival is King to-day;
+ So pen and page, awhile farewell.
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK TWO ~~ EARLY SUMMER
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+Parc Montsouris
+
+June 1914.
+
+
+
+
+The Release
+
+
+
+ To-day within a grog-shop near
+ I saw a newly captured linnet,
+ Who beat against his cage in fear,
+ And fell exhausted every minute;
+ And when I asked the fellow there
+ If he to sell the bird were willing,
+ He told me with a careless air
+ That I could have it for a shilling.
+
+ And so I bought it, cage and all
+ (Although I went without my dinner),
+ And where some trees were fairly tall
+ And houses shrank and smoke was thinner,
+ The tiny door I open threw,
+ As down upon the grass I sank me:
+ Poor little chap! How quick he flew . . .
+ He didn't even wait to thank me.
+
+ Life's like a cage; we beat the bars,
+ We bruise our breasts, we struggle vainly;
+ Up to the glory of the stars
+ We strain with flutterings ungainly.
+ And then--God opens wide the door;
+ Our wondrous wings are arched for flying;
+ We poise, we part, we sing, we soar . . .
+ Light, freedom, love. . . . Fools call it--Dying.
+
+
+
+Yes, that wretched little bird haunted me. I had to let it go. Since I
+have seized my own liberty I am a fanatic for freedom. It is now a year
+ago I launched on my great adventure. I have had hard times, been
+hungry, cold, weary. I have worked harder than ever I did and
+discouragement has slapped me on the face. Yet the year has been the
+happiest of my life.
+
+And all because I am free. By reason of filthy money no one can say to
+me: Do this, or do that. "Master" doesn't exist in my vocabulary. I can
+look any man in the face and tell him to go to the devil. I belong to
+myself. I am not for sale. It's glorious to feel like that. It
+sweetens the dry crust and warms the heart in the icy wind. For that I
+will hunger and go threadbare; for that I will live austerely and deny
+myself all pleasure. After health, the best thing in life is freedom.
+
+Here is the last of my ballads. It is by way of being an experiment.
+Its theme is commonplace, its language that of everyday. It is a bit of
+realism in rhyme.
+
+
+
+
+The Wee Shop
+
+
+
+ She risked her all, they told me, bravely sinking
+ The pinched economies of thirty years;
+ And there the little shop was, meek and shrinking,
+ The sum of all her dreams and hopes and fears.
+ Ere it was opened I would see them in it,
+ The gray-haired dame, the daughter with her crutch;
+ So fond, so happy, hoarding every minute,
+ Like artists, for the final tender touch.
+
+ The opening day! I'm sure that to their seeming
+ Was never shop so wonderful as theirs;
+ With pyramids of jam-jars rubbed to gleaming;
+ Such vivid cans of peaches, prunes and pears;
+ And chocolate, and biscuits in glass cases,
+ And bon-bon bottles, many-hued and bright;
+ Yet nothing half so radiant as their faces,
+ Their eyes of hope, excitement and delight.
+
+ I entered: how they waited all a-flutter!
+ How awkwardly they weighed my acid-drops!
+ And then with all the thanks a tongue could utter
+ They bowed me from the kindliest of shops.
+ I'm sure that night their customers they numbered;
+ Discussed them all in happy, breathless speech;
+ And though quite worn and weary, ere they slumbered,
+ Sent heavenward a little prayer for each.
+
+ And so I watched with interest redoubled
+ That little shop, spent in it all I had;
+ And when I saw it empty I was troubled,
+ And when I saw them busy I was glad.
+ And when I dared to ask how things were going,
+ They told me, with a fine and gallant smile:
+ "Not badly . . . slow at first . . . There's never knowing . . .
+ 'Twill surely pick up in a little while."
+
+ I'd often see them through the winter weather,
+ Behind the shutters by a light's faint speck,
+ Poring o'er books, their faces close together,
+ The lame girl's arm around her mother's neck.
+ They dressed their windows not one time but twenty,
+ Each change more pinched, more desperately neat;
+ Alas! I wondered if behind that plenty
+ The two who owned it had enough to eat.
+
+ Ah, who would dare to sing of tea and coffee?
+ The sadness of a stock unsold and dead;
+ The petty tragedy of melting toffee,
+ The sordid pathos of stale gingerbread.
+ Ignoble themes! And yet--those haggard faces!
+ Within that little shop. . . . Oh, here I say
+ One does not need to look in lofty places
+ For tragic themes, they're round us every day.
+
+ And so I saw their agony, their fighting,
+ Their eyes of fear, their heartbreak, their despair;
+ And there the little shop is, black and blighting,
+ And all the world goes by and does not care.
+ They say she sought her old employer's pity,
+ Content to take the pittance he would give.
+ The lame girl? yes, she's working in the city;
+ She coughs a lot--she hasn't long to live.
+
+
+
+Last night MacBean introduced me to Saxon Dane the Poet. Truly, he is
+more like a blacksmith than a Bard--a big bearded man whose black eyes
+brood somberly or flash with sudden fire. We talked of Walt Whitman, and
+then of others.
+
+"The trouble with poetry," he said, "is that it is too exalted. It has a
+phraseology of its own; it selects themes that are quite outside of
+ordinary experience. As a medium of expression it fails to reach the
+great mass of the people."
+
+Then he added: "To hell with the great mass of the people! What have
+they got to do with it? Write to please yourself, as if not a single
+reader existed. The moment a man begins to be conscious of an audience
+he is artistically damned. You're not a Poet, I hope?"
+
+I meekly assured him I was a mere maker of verse.
+
+"Well," said he, "better good verse than middling poetry. And maybe even
+the humblest of rhymes has its uses. Happiness is happiness, whether it
+be inspired by a Rossetti sonnet or a ballad by G. R. Sims. Let each one
+who has something to say, say it in the best way he can, and abide the
+result. . . . After all," he went on, "what does it matter? We are
+living in a pygmy day. With Tennyson and Browning the line of great
+poets passed away, perhaps for ever. The world to-day is full of little
+minstrels, who echo one another and who pipe away tunefully enough. But
+with one exception they do not matter."
+
+I dared to ask who was his one exception. He answered, "Myself, of
+course."
+
+Here's a bit of light verse which it amused me to write to-day, as I sat
+in the sun on the terrace of the Closerie de Lilas:
+
+
+
+
+The Philistine and the Bohemian
+
+
+
+ She was a Philistine spick and span,
+ He was a bold Bohemian.
+ She had the _mode_, and the last at that;
+ He had a cape and a brigand hat.
+ She was so _riant_ and _chic_ and trim;
+ He was so shaggy, unkempt and grim.
+ On the rue de la Paix she was wont to shine;
+ The rue de la Gaite was more his line.
+ She doted on Barclay and Dell and Caine;
+ He quoted Mallarme and Paul Verlaine.
+ She was a triumph at Tango teas;
+ At Vorticist's suppers he sought to please.
+ She thought that Franz Lehar was utterly great;
+ Of Strauss and Stravinsky he'd piously prate.
+ She loved elegance, he loved art;
+ They were as wide as the poles apart:
+ Yet--Cupid and Caprice are hand and glove--
+ They met at a dinner, they fell in love.
+
+ Home he went to his garret bare,
+ Thrilling with rapture, hope, despair.
+ Swift he gazed in his looking-glass,
+ Made a grimace and murmured: "Ass!"
+ Seized his scissors and fiercely sheared,
+ Severed his buccaneering beard;
+ Grabbed his hair, and clip! clip! clip!
+ Off came a bunch with every snip.
+ Ran to a tailor's in startled state,
+ Suits a dozen commanded straight;
+ Coats and overcoats, pants in pairs,
+ Everything that a dandy wears;
+ Socks and collars, and shoes and ties,
+ Everything that a dandy buys.
+ Chums looked at him with wondering stare,
+ Fancied they'd seen him before somewhere;
+ A Brummell, a D'Orsay, a _beau_ so fine,
+ A shining, immaculate Philistine.
+
+ Home she went in a raptured daze,
+ Looked in a mirror with startled gaze,
+ Didn't seem to be pleased at all;
+ Savagely muttered: "Insipid Doll!"
+ Clutched her hair and a pair of shears,
+ Cropped and bobbed it behind the ears;
+ Aimed at a wan and willowy-necked
+ Sort of a Holman Hunt effect;
+ Robed in subtile and sage-green tones,
+ Like the dames of Rossetti and E. Burne-Jones;
+ Girdled her garments billowing wide,
+ Moved with an undulating glide;
+ All her frivolous friends forsook,
+ Cultivated a soulful look;
+ Gushed in a voice with a creamy throb
+ Over some weirdly Futurist daub--
+ Did all, in short, that a woman can
+ To be a consummate Bohemian.
+
+ A year went past with its hopes and fears,
+ A year that seemed like a dozen years.
+ They met once more. . . . Oh, at last! At last!
+ They rushed together, they stopped aghast.
+ They looked at each other with blank dismay,
+ They simply hadn't a word to say.
+ He thought with a shiver: "Can this be she?"
+ She thought with a shudder: "This can't be he?"
+ This simpering dandy, so sleek and spruce;
+ This languorous lily in garments loose;
+ They sought to brace from the awful shock:
+ Taking a seat, they tried to talk.
+ She spoke of Bergson and Pater's prose,
+ He prattled of dances and ragtime shows;
+ She purred of pictures, Matisse, Cezanne,
+ His tastes to the girls of Kirchner ran;
+ She raved of Tchaikovsky and Caesar Franck,
+ He owned that he was a jazz-band crank!
+ They made no headway. Alas! alas!
+ He thought her a bore, she thought him an ass.
+ And so they arose and hurriedly fled;
+ Perish Illusion, Romance, you're dead.
+ He loved elegance, she loved art,
+ Better at once to part, to part.
+
+ And what is the moral of all this rot?
+ Don't try to be what you know you're not.
+ And if you're made on a muttonish plan,
+ Don't seek to seem a Bohemian;
+ And if to the goats your feet incline,
+ Don't try to pass for a Philistine.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+A Small Cafe in a Side Street,
+
+June 1914.
+
+
+
+
+The Bohemian Dreams
+
+
+
+ Because my overcoat's in pawn,
+ I choose to take my glass
+ Within a little _bistro_ on
+ The rue du Montparnasse;
+ The dusty bins with bottles shine,
+ The counter's lined with zinc,
+ And there I sit and drink my wine,
+ And think and think and think.
+
+ I think of hoary old Stamboul,
+ Of Moslem and of Greek,
+ Of Persian in coat of wool,
+ Of Kurd and Arab sheikh;
+ Of all the types of weal and woe,
+ And as I raise my glass,
+ Across Galata bridge I know
+ They pass and pass and pass.
+
+ I think of citron-trees aglow,
+ Of fan-palms shading down,
+ Of sailors dancing heel and toe
+ With wenches black and brown;
+ And though it's all an ocean far
+ From Yucatan to France,
+ I'll bet beside the old bazaar
+ They dance and dance and dance.
+
+ I think of Monte Carlo, where
+ The pallid croupiers call,
+ And in the gorgeous, guilty air
+ The gamblers watch the ball;
+ And as I flick away the foam
+ With which my beer is crowned,
+ The wheels beneath the gilded dome
+ Go round and round and round.
+
+ I think of vast Niagara,
+ Those gulfs of foam a-shine,
+ Whose mighty roar would stagger a
+ More prosy bean than mine;
+ And as the hours I idly spend
+ Against a greasy wall,
+ I know that green the waters bend
+ And fall and fall and fall.
+
+ I think of Nijni Novgorod
+ And Jews who never rest;
+ And womenfolk with spade and hod
+ Who slave in Buda-Pest;
+ Of squat and sturdy Japanese
+ Who pound the paddy soil,
+ And as I loaf and smoke at ease
+ They toil and toil and toil.
+
+ I think of shrines in Hindustan,
+ Of cloistral glooms in Spain,
+ Of minarets in Ispahan,
+ Of St. Sophia's fane,
+ Of convent towers in Palestine,
+ Of temples in Cathay,
+ And as I stretch and sip my wine
+ They pray and pray and pray.
+
+ And so my dreams I dwell within,
+ And visions come and go,
+ And life is passing like a Cin-
+ Ematographic Show;
+ Till just as surely as my pipe
+ Is underneath my nose,
+ Amid my visions rich and ripe
+ I doze and doze and doze.
+
+
+
+Alas! it is too true. Once more I am counting the coppers, living on
+the ragged edge. My manuscripts come back to me like boomerangs, and I
+have not the postage, far less the heart, to send them out again.
+
+MacBean seems to take an interest in my struggles. I often sit in his
+room in the rue Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre, smoking and sipping whisky into
+the small hours. He is an old hand, who knows the market and frankly
+manufactures for it.
+
+"Give me short pieces," he says; "things of three verses that will fill
+a blank half-page of a magazine. Let them be sprightly, and, if
+possible, have a snapper at the end. Give me that sort of article. I
+think I can place it for you."
+
+Then he looked through a lot of my verse: "This is the kind of stuff I
+might be able to sell," he said:
+
+
+
+
+A Domestic Tragedy
+
+
+
+ Clorinda met me on the way
+ As I came from the train;
+ Her face was anything but gay,
+ In fact, suggested pain.
+ "Oh hubby, hubby dear!" she cried,
+ "I've awful news to tell. . . ."
+ "What is it, darling?" I replied;
+ "Your mother--is she well?"
+
+ "Oh no! oh no! it is not that,
+ It's something else," she wailed,
+ My heart was beating pit-a-pat,
+ My ruddy visage paled.
+ Like lightning flash in heaven's dome
+ The fear within me woke:
+ "Don't say," I cried, "our little home
+ Has all gone up in smoke!"
+
+ She shook her head. Oh, swift I clasped
+ And held her to my breast;
+ "The children! Tell me quick," I gasped,
+ "Believe me, it is best."
+ Then, then she spoke; 'mid sobs I caught
+ These words of woe divine:
+ "It's coo-coo-cook has gone and bought
+ _A new hat just like mine._"
+
+
+
+At present I am living on bread and milk. By doing this I can rub along
+for another ten days. The thought pleases me. As long as I have a
+crust I am master of my destiny. Some day, when I am rich and famous, I
+shall look back on all this with regret. Yet I think I shall always
+remain a Bohemian. I hate regularity. The clock was never made for me.
+I want to eat when I am hungry, sleep when I am weary, drink--well,
+any old time.
+
+I prefer to be alone. Company is a constraint on my spirit. I never
+make an engagement if I can avoid it. To do so is to put a mortgage on
+my future. I like to be able to rise in the morning with the thought
+that the hours before me are all mine, to spend in my own way--to work,
+to dream, to watch the unfolding drama of life.
+
+Here is another of my ballads. It is longer than most, and gave me more
+trouble, though none the better for that.
+
+
+
+
+The Pencil Seller
+
+
+
+ A pencil, sir; a penny--won't you buy?
+ I'm cold and wet and tired, a sorry plight;
+ Don't turn your back, sir; take one just to try;
+ I haven't made a single sale to-night.
+ Oh, thank you, sir; but take the pencil too;
+ I'm not a beggar, I'm a business man.
+ Pencils I deal in, red and black and blue;
+ It's hard, but still I do the best I can.
+ Most days I make enough to pay for bread,
+ A cup o' coffee, stretching room at night.
+ One needs so little--to be warm and fed,
+ A hole to kennel in--oh, one's all right . . .
+
+ Excuse me, you're a painter, are you not?
+ I saw you looking at that dealer's show,
+ The _croutes_ he has for sale, a shabby lot--
+ What do I know of Art? What do I know . . .
+ Well, look! That David Strong so well displayed,
+ "White Sorcery" it's called, all gossamer,
+ And pale moon-magic and a dancing maid
+ (You like the little elfin face of her?)--
+ That's good; but still, the picture as a whole,
+ The values,--Pah! He never painted worse;
+ Perhaps because his fire was lacking coal,
+ His cupboard bare, no money in his purse.
+ Perhaps . . . they say he labored hard and long,
+ And see now, in the harvest of his fame,
+ When round his pictures people gape and throng,
+ A scurvy dealer sells this on his name.
+ A wretched rag, wrung out of want and woe;
+ A soulless daub, not David Strong a bit,
+ Unworthy of his art. . . . How should I know?
+ How should I know? I'm _Strong_--I painted it.
+
+ There now, I didn't mean to let that out.
+ It came in spite of me--aye, stare and stare.
+ You think I'm lying, crazy, drunk, no doubt--
+ Think what you like, it's neither here nor there.
+ It's hard to tell so terrible a truth,
+ To gain to glory, yet be such as I.
+ It's true; that picture's mine, done in my youth,
+ Up in a garret near the Paris sky.
+ The child's my daughter; aye, she posed for me.
+ That's why I come and sit here every night.
+ The painting's bad, but still--oh, still I see
+ Her little face all laughing in the light.
+ So now you understand.--I live in fear
+ Lest one like you should carry it away;
+ A poor, pot-boiling thing, but oh, how dear!
+ "Don't let them buy it, pitying God!" I pray!
+ And hark ye, sir--sometimes my brain's awhirl.
+ Some night I'll crash into that window pane
+ And snatch my picture back, my little girl,
+ And run and run. . . .
+ I'm talking wild again;
+ A crab can't run. I'm crippled, withered, lame,
+ Palsied, as good as dead all down one side.
+ No warning had I when the evil came:
+ It struck me down in all my strength and pride.
+ Triumph was mine, I thrilled with perfect power;
+ Honor was mine, Fame's laurel touched my brow;
+ Glory was mine--within a little hour
+ I was a god and . . . what you find me now.
+
+ My child, that little, laughing girl you see,
+ She was my nurse for all ten weary years;
+ Her joy, her hope, her youth she gave for me;
+ Her very smiles were masks to hide her tears.
+ And I, my precious art, so rich, so rare,
+ Lost, lost to me--what could my heart but break!
+ Oh, as I lay and wrestled with despair,
+ I would have killed myself but for her sake. . . .
+
+ By luck I had some pictures I could sell,
+ And so we fought the wolf back from the door;
+ She painted too, aye, wonderfully well.
+ We often dreamed of brighter days in store.
+ And then quite suddenly she seemed to fail;
+ I saw the shadows darken round her eyes.
+ So tired she was, so sorrowful, so pale,
+ And oh, there came a day she could not rise.
+ The doctor looked at her; he shook his head,
+ And spoke of wine and grapes and Southern air:
+ "If you can get her out of this," he said,
+ "She'll have a fighting chance with proper care."
+
+ "With proper care!" When he had gone away,
+ I sat there, trembling, twitching, dazed with grief.
+ Under my old and ragged coat she lay,
+ Our room was bare and cold beyond belief.
+ "Maybe," I thought, "I still can paint a bit,
+ Some lilies, landscape, anything at all."
+ Alas! My brush, I could not steady it.
+ Down from my fumbling hand I let it fall.
+ "With proper care"--how could I give her that,
+ Half of me dead? . . . I crawled down to the street.
+ Cowering beside the wall, I held my hat
+ And begged of every one I chanced to meet.
+ I got some pennies, bought her milk and bread,
+ And so I fought to keep the Doom away;
+ And yet I saw with agony of dread
+ My dear one sinking, sinking day by day.
+ And then I was awakened in the night:
+ "Please take my hands, I'm cold," I heard her sigh;
+ And soft she whispered, as she held me tight:
+ "Oh daddy, we've been happy, you and I!"
+ I do not think she suffered any pain,
+ She breathed so quietly . . . but though I tried,
+ I could not warm her little hands again:
+ And so there in the icy dark she died. . . .
+ The dawn came groping in with fingers gray
+ And touched me, sitting silent as a stone;
+ I kissed those piteous lips, as cold as clay--
+ I did not cry, I did not even moan.
+ At last I rose, groped down the narrow stair;
+ An evil fog was oozing from the sky;
+ Half-crazed I stumbled on, I knew not where,
+ Like phantoms were the folks that passed me by.
+ How long I wandered thus I do not know,
+ But suddenly I halted, stood stock-still--
+ Beside a door that spilled a golden glow
+ I saw a name, _my name_, upon a bill.
+ "A Sale of Famous Pictures," so it read,
+ "A Notable Collection, each a gem,
+ Distinguished Works of Art by painters dead."
+ The folks were going in, I followed them.
+ I stood upon the outskirts of the crowd,
+ I only hoped that none might notice me.
+ Soon, soon I heard them call my name aloud:
+ "A 'David Strong', his _Fete in Brittany_."
+ (A brave big picture that, the best I've done,
+ It glowed and kindled half the hall away,
+ With all its memories of sea and sun,
+ Of pipe and bowl, of joyous work and play.
+ I saw the sardine nets blue as the sky,
+ I saw the nut-brown fisher-boats put out.)
+ "Five hundred pounds!" rapped out a voice near by;
+ "Six hundred!" "Seven!" "Eight!" And then a shout:
+ "A thousand pounds!" Oh, how I thrilled to hear!
+ Oh, how the bids went up by leaps, by bounds!
+ And then a silence; then the auctioneer:
+ "It's going! Going! Gone! _Three thousand pounds!_"
+ Three thousand pounds! A frenzy leapt in me.
+ "That picture's mine," I cried; "I'm David Strong.
+ I painted it, this famished wretch you see;
+ I did it, I, and sold it for a song.
+ And in a garret three small hours ago
+ My daughter died for want of Christian care.
+ Look, look at me! . . . Is it to mock my woe
+ You pay three thousand for my picture there?" . . .
+
+ O God! I stumbled blindly from the hall;
+ The city crashed on me, the fiendish sounds
+ Of cruelty and strife, but over all
+ "Three thousand pounds!" I heard; "Three thousand pounds!"
+
+ There, that's my story, sir; it isn't gay.
+ Tales of the Poor are never very bright . . .
+ You'll look for me next time you pass this way . . .
+ I hope you'll find me, sir; good-night, good-night.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+
+The Luxembourg,
+
+June 1914.
+
+On a late afternoon, when the sunlight is mellow on the leaves, I often
+sit near the Fontaine de Medicis, and watch the children at their play.
+Sometimes I make bits of verse about them, such as:
+
+
+
+
+Fi-Fi in Bed
+
+
+
+ Up into the sky I stare;
+ All the little stars I see;
+ And I know that God is there
+ O, how lonely He must be!
+
+ Me, I laugh and leap all day,
+ Till my head begins to nod;
+ He's so great, He cannot play:
+ I am glad I am not God.
+
+ Poor kind God upon His throne,
+ Up there in the sky so blue,
+ Always, always all alone . . .
+ "_Please, dear God, I pity You._"
+
+
+
+Or else, sitting on the terrace of a cafe on the Boul' Mich', I sip
+slowly a Dubonnet or a Byrrh, and the charm of the Quarter possesses me.
+I think of men who have lived and loved there, who have groveled and
+gloried, who have drunk deep and died. And then I scribble things like
+this:
+
+
+
+
+Gods in the Gutter
+
+
+
+ I dreamed I saw three demi-gods who in a cafe sat,
+ And one was small and crapulous, and one was large and fat;
+ And one was eaten up with vice and verminous at that.
+
+ The first he spoke of secret sins, and gems and perfumes rare;
+ And velvet cats and courtesans voluptuously fair:
+ "Who is the Sybarite?" I asked. They answered: "Baudelaire."
+
+ The second talked in tapestries, by fantasy beguiled;
+ As frail as bubbles, hard as gems, his pageantries he piled;
+ "This Lord of Language, who is he?" They whispered "Oscar Wilde."
+
+ The third was staring at his glass from out abysmal pain;
+ With tears his eyes were bitten in beneath his bulbous brain.
+ "Who is the sodden wretch?" I said. They told me: "Paul Verlaine."
+
+ Oh, Wilde, Verlaine and Baudelaire, their lips were wet with wine;
+ Oh poseur, pimp and libertine! Oh cynic, sot and swine!
+ Oh votaries of velvet vice! . . . Oh gods of light divine!
+
+ Oh Baudelaire, Verlaine and Wilde, they knew the sinks of shame;
+ Their sun-aspiring wings they scorched at passion's altar flame;
+ Yet lo! enthroned, enskied they stand, Immortal Sons of Fame.
+
+ I dreamed I saw three demi-gods who walked with feet of clay,
+ With cruel crosses on their backs, along a miry way;
+ Who climbed and climbed the bitter steep to which men turn and pray.
+
+
+
+And while I am on the subject of the Quarter, let me repeat this, which
+is included in my Ballads of the Boulevards:
+
+
+
+
+The Death of Marie Toro
+
+
+
+ We're taking Marie Toro to her home in Pere-La-Chaise;
+ We're taking Marie Toro to her last resting-place.
+ Behold! her hearse is hung with wreaths till everything is hid
+ Except the blossoms heaping high upon her coffin lid.
+ A week ago she roamed the street, a draggle and a slut,
+ A by-word of the Boulevard and everybody's butt;
+ A week ago she haunted us, we heard her whining cry,
+ We brushed aside the broken blooms she pestered us to buy;
+ A week ago she had not where to rest her weary head . . .
+ But now, oh, follow, follow on, for Marie Toro's dead.
+
+ Oh Marie, she was once a queen--ah yes, a queen of queens.
+ High-throned above the Carnival she held her splendid sway.
+ For four-and-twenty crashing hours she knew what glory means,
+ The cheers of half a million throats, the _delire_ of a day.
+ Yet she was only one of us, a little sewing-girl,
+ Though far the loveliest and best of all our laughing band;
+ Then Fortune beckoned; off she danced, amid the dizzy whirl,
+ And we who once might kiss her cheek were proud to kiss her hand.
+ For swiftly as a star she soared; she had her every wish;
+ We saw her roped with pearls of price, with princes at her call;
+ And yet, and yet I think her dreams were of the old Boul' Mich',
+ And yet I'm sure within her heart she loved us best of all.
+ For one night in the Purple Pig, upon the rue Saint-Jacques,
+ We laughed and quaffed . . . a limousine came swishing to the door;
+ Then Raymond Jolicoeur cried out: "It's Queen Marie come back,
+ In satin clad to make us glad, and witch our hearts once more."
+ But no, her face was strangely sad, and at the evening's end:
+ "Dear lads," she said; "I love you all, and when I'm far away,
+ Remember, oh, remember, little Marie is your friend,
+ And though the world may lie between, I'm coming back some day."
+ And so she went, and many a boy who's fought his way to Fame,
+ Can look back on the struggle of his garret days and bless
+ The loyal heart, the tender hand, the Providence that came
+ To him and all in hour of need, in sickness and distress.
+ Time passed away. She won their hearts in London, Moscow, Rome;
+ They worshiped her in Argentine, adored her in Brazil;
+ We smoked our pipes and wondered when she might be coming home,
+ And then we learned the luck had turned, the things were going ill.
+ Her health had failed, her beauty paled, her lovers fled away;
+ And some one saw her in Peru, a common drab at last.
+ So years went by, and faces changed; our beards were sadly gray,
+ And Marie Toro's name became an echo of the past.
+
+ You know that old and withered man, that derelict of art,
+ Who for a paltry franc will make a crayon sketch of you?
+ In slouching hat and shabby cloak he looks and is the part,
+ A sodden old Bohemian, without a single _sou_.
+ A boon companion of the days of Rimbaud and Verlaine,
+ He broods and broods, and chews the cud of bitter souvenirs;
+ Beneath his mop of grizzled hair his cheeks are gouged with pain,
+ The saffron sockets of his eyes are hollowed out with tears.
+ Well, one night in the D'Harcourt's din I saw him in his place,
+ When suddenly the door was swung, a woman halted there;
+ A woman cowering like a dog, with white and haggard face,
+ A broken creature, bent of spine, a daughter of Despair.
+ She looked and looked, as to her breast she held some withered bloom;
+ "Too late! Too late! . . . they all are dead and gone," I heard her say.
+ And once again her weary eyes went round and round the room;
+ "Not one of all I used to know . . ." she turned to go away . . .
+ But quick I saw the old man start: "Ah no!" he cried, "not all.
+ Oh Marie Toro, queen of queens, don't you remember Paul?"
+
+ "Oh Marie, Marie Toro, in my garret next the sky,
+ Where many a day and night I've crouched with not a crust to eat,
+ A picture hangs upon the wall a fortune couldn't buy,
+ A portrait of a girl whose face is pure and angel-sweet."
+ Sadly the woman looked at him: "Alas! it's true," she said;
+ "That little maid, I knew her once. It's long ago--she's dead."
+ He went to her; he laid his hand upon her wasted arm:
+ "Oh, Marie Toro, come with me, though poor and sick am I.
+ For old times' sake I cannot bear to see you come to harm;
+ Ah! there are memories, God knows, that never, never die. . . ."
+ "Too late!" she sighed; "I've lived my life of splendor and of shame;
+ I've been adored by men of power, I've touched the highest height;
+ I've squandered gold like heaps of dirt--oh, I have played the game;
+ I've had my place within the sun . . . and now I face the night.
+ Look! look! you see I'm lost to hope; I live no matter how . . .
+ To drink and drink and so forget . . . that's all I care for now."
+
+ And so she went her heedless way, and all our help was vain.
+ She trailed along with tattered shawl and mud-corroded skirt;
+ She gnawed a crust and slept beneath the bridges of the Seine,
+ A garbage thing, a composite of alcohol and dirt.
+ The students learned her story and the cafes knew her well,
+ The Pascal and the Pantheon, the Sufflot and Vachette;
+ She shuffled round the tables with the flowers she tried to sell,
+ A living mask of misery that no one will forget.
+ And then last week I missed her, and they found her in the street
+ One morning early, huddled down, for it was freezing cold;
+ But when they raised her ragged shawl her face was still and sweet;
+ Some bits of broken bloom were clutched within her icy hold.
+ That's all. . . . Ah yes, they say that saw: her blue, wide-open eyes
+ Were beautiful with joy again, with radiant surprise. . . .
+
+ A week ago she begged for bread; we've bought for her a stone,
+ And a peaceful place in Pere-La-Chaise where she'll be well alone.
+ She cost a king his crown, they say; oh, wouldn't she be proud
+ If she could see the wreaths to-day, the coaches and the crowd!
+ So follow, follow, follow on with slow and sober tread,
+ For Marie Toro, gutter waif and queen of queens, is dead.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+The Cafe de Deux Magots,
+
+June 1914.
+
+
+
+
+The Bohemian
+
+
+
+ Up in my garret bleak and bare
+ I tilted back on my broken chair,
+ And my three old pals were with me there,
+ Hunger and Thirst and Cold;
+ Hunger scowled at his scurvy mate:
+ Cold cowered down by the hollow grate,
+ And I hated them with a deadly hate
+ As old as life is old.
+
+ So up in my garret that's near the sky
+ I smiled a smile that was thin and dry:
+ "You've roomed with me twenty year," said I,
+ "Hunger and Thirst and Cold;
+ But now, begone down the broken stair!
+ I've suffered enough of your spite . . . so there!"
+ Bang! Bang! I slapped on the table bare
+ A glittering heap of gold.
+
+ "Red flames will jewel my wine to-night;
+ I'll loose my belt that you've lugged so tight;
+ Ha! Ha! Dame Fortune is smiling bright;
+ The stuff of my brain I've sold;
+ _Canaille_ of the gutter, up! Away!
+ You've battened on me for a bitter-long day;
+ But I'm driving you forth, and forever and aye,
+ Hunger and Thirst and Cold."
+
+ So I kicked them out with a scornful roar;
+ Yet, oh, they turned at the garret door;
+ Quietly there they spoke once more:
+ "The tale is not all told.
+ It's _au revoir_, but it's not good-by;
+ We're yours, old chap, till the day you die;
+ Laugh on, you fool! Oh, you'll never defy
+ Hunger and Thirst and Cold."
+
+
+
+Hurrah! The crisis in my financial career is over. Once more I have
+weathered the storm, and never did money jingle so sweetly in my pocket.
+It was MacBean who delivered me. He arrived at the door of my garret
+this morning, with a broad grin of pleasure on his face.
+
+"Here," said he; "I've sold some of your rubbish. They'll take more
+too, of the same sort."
+
+With that he handed me three crisp notes. For a moment I thought that
+he was paying the money out of his own pocket, as he knew I was
+desperately hard up; but he showed me the letter enclosing the cheque he
+had cashed for me.
+
+So we sought the Grand Boulevard, and I had a Pernod, which rose to my
+head in delicious waves of joy. I talked ecstatic nonsense, and seemed
+to walk like a god in clouds of gold. We dined on frogs' legs and
+Vouvray, and then went to see the Revue at the Marigny. A very merry
+evening.
+
+Such is the life of Bohemia, up and down, fast and feast; its very
+uncertainty its charm.
+
+Here is my latest ballad, another attempt to express the sentiment of
+actuality:
+
+
+
+
+The Auction Sale
+
+
+
+ Her little head just topped the window-sill;
+ She even mounted on a stool, maybe;
+ She pressed against the pane, as children will,
+ And watched us playing, oh so wistfully!
+ And then I missed her for a month or more,
+ And idly thought: "She's gone away, no doubt,"
+ Until a hearse drew up beside the door . . .
+ I saw a tiny coffin carried out.
+
+ And after that, towards dusk I'd often see
+ Behind the blind another face that looked:
+ Eyes of a young wife watching anxiously,
+ Then rushing back to where her dinner cooked.
+ She often gulped it down alone, I fear,
+ Within her heart the sadness of despair,
+ For near to midnight I would vaguely hear
+ A lurching step, a stumbling on the stair.
+
+ These little dramas of the common day!
+ A man weak-willed and fore-ordained to fail . . .
+ The window's empty now, they've gone away,
+ And yonder, see, their furniture's for sale.
+ To all the world their door is open wide,
+ And round and round the bargain-hunters roam,
+ And peer and gloat, like vultures avid-eyed,
+ Above the corpse of what was once a home.
+
+ So reverent I go from room to room,
+ And see the patient care, the tender touch,
+ The love that sought to brighten up the gloom,
+ The woman-courage tested overmuch.
+ Amid those things so intimate and dear,
+ Where now the mob invades with brutal tread,
+ I think: "What happiness is buried here,
+ What dreams are withered and what hopes are dead!"
+
+ Oh, woman dear, and were you sweet and glad
+ Over the lining of your little nest!
+ What ponderings and proud ideas you had!
+ What visions of a shrine of peace and rest!
+ For there's his easy-chair upon the rug,
+ His reading-lamp, his pipe-rack on the wall,
+ All that you could devise to make him snug--
+ And yet you could not hold him with it all.
+
+ Ah, patient heart, what homelike joys you planned
+ To stay him by the dull domestic flame!
+ Those silken cushions that you worked by hand
+ When you had time, before the baby came.
+ Oh, how you wove around him cozy spells,
+ And schemed so hard to keep him home of nights!
+ Aye, every touch and turn some story tells
+ Of sweet conspiracies and dead delights.
+
+ And here upon the scratched piano stool,
+ Tied in a bundle, are the songs you sung;
+ That cozy that you worked in colored wool,
+ The Spanish lace you made when you were young,
+ And lots of modern novels, cheap reprints,
+ And little dainty knick-knacks everywhere;
+ And silken bows and curtains of gay chintz . . .
+ _And oh, her tiny crib, her folding chair!_
+
+ Sweet woman dear, and did your heart not break,
+ To leave this precious home you made in vain?
+ Poor shabby things! so prized for old times' sake,
+ With all their memories of love and pain.
+ Alas! while shouts the raucous auctioneer,
+ And rat-faced dames are prying everywhere,
+ The echo of old joy is all I hear,
+ All, all I see just heartbreak and despair.
+
+
+
+Imagination is the great gift of the gods. Given it, one does not need
+to look afar for subjects. There is romance in every face.
+
+Those who have Imagination live in a land of enchantment which the eyes
+of others cannot see. Yet if it brings marvelous joy it also brings
+exquisite pain. Who lives a hundred lives must die a hundred deaths.
+
+I do not know any of the people who live around me. Sometimes I pass
+them on the stairs. However, I am going to give my imagination rein,
+and string some rhymes about them.
+
+Before doing so, having money in my pocket and seeing the prospect of
+making more, let me blithely chant about.
+
+
+
+
+The Joy of Being Poor
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ Let others sing of gold and gear, the joy of being rich;
+ But oh, the days when I was poor, a vagrant in a ditch!
+ When every dawn was like a gem, so radiant and rare,
+ And I had but a single coat, and not a single care;
+ When I would feast right royally on bacon, bread and beer,
+ And dig into a stack of hay and doze like any peer;
+ When I would wash beside a brook my solitary shirt,
+ And though it dried upon my back I never took a hurt;
+ When I went romping down the road contemptuous of care,
+ And slapped Adventure on the back--by Gad! we were a pair;
+ When, though my pockets lacked a coin, and though my coat was old,
+ The largess of the stars was mine, and all the sunset gold;
+ When time was only made for fools, and free as air was I,
+ And hard I hit and hard I lived beneath the open sky;
+ When all the roads were one to me, and each had its allure . . .
+ Ye Gods! these were the happy days, the days when I was poor.
+
+
+ II
+
+ Or else, again, old pal of mine, do you recall the times
+ You struggled with your storyettes, I wrestled with my rhymes;
+ Oh, we were happy, were we not?--we used to live so "high"
+ (A little bit of broken roof between us and the sky);
+ Upon the forge of art we toiled with hammer and with tongs;
+ You told me all your rippling yarns, I sang to you my songs.
+ Our hats were frayed, our jackets patched, our boots were down at heel,
+ But oh, the happy men were we, although we lacked a meal.
+ And if I sold a bit of rhyme, or if you placed a tale,
+ What feasts we had of tenderloins and apple-tarts and ale!
+ And yet how often we would dine as cheerful as you please,
+ Beside our little friendly fire on coffee, bread and cheese.
+ We lived upon the ragged edge, and grub was never sure,
+ But oh, these were the happy days, the days when we were poor.
+
+
+ III
+
+ Alas! old man, we're wealthy now, it's sad beyond a doubt;
+ We cannot dodge prosperity, success has found us out.
+ Your eye is very dull and drear, my brow is creased with care,
+ We realize how hard it is to be a millionaire.
+ The burden's heavy on our backs--you're thinking of your rents,
+ I'm worrying if I'll invest in five or six per cents.
+ We've limousines, and marble halls, and flunkeys by the score,
+ We play the part . . . but say, old chap, oh, isn't it a bore?
+ We work like slaves, we eat too much, we put on evening dress;
+ We've everything a man can want, I think . . . but happiness.
+
+ Come, let us sneak away, old chum; forget that we are rich,
+ And earn an honest appetite, and scratch an honest itch.
+ Let's be two jolly garreteers, up seven flights of stairs,
+ And wear old clothes and just pretend we aren't millionaires;
+ And wonder how we'll pay the rent, and scribble ream on ream,
+ And sup on sausages and tea, and laugh and loaf and dream.
+
+ And when we're tired of that, my friend, oh, you will come with me;
+ And we will seek the sunlit roads that lie beside the sea.
+ We'll know the joy the gipsy knows, the freedom nothing mars,
+ The golden treasure-gates of dawn, the mintage of the stars.
+ We'll smoke our pipes and watch the pot, and feed the crackling fire,
+ And sing like two old jolly boys, and dance to heart's desire;
+ We'll climb the hill and ford the brook and camp upon the moor . . .
+ Old chap, let's haste, I'm mad to taste the Joy of Being Poor.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+My Garret, Montparnasse,
+
+June 1914.
+
+
+
+
+My Neighbors
+
+
+
+ _To rest my fagged brain now and then,
+ When wearied of my proper labors,
+ I lay aside my lagging pen
+ And get to thinking on my neighbors;
+ For, oh, around my garret den
+ There's woe and poverty a-plenty,
+ And life's so interesting when
+ A lad is only two-and-twenty.
+
+ Now, there's that artist gaunt and wan,
+ A little card his door adorning;
+ It reads: "Je ne suis pour personne",
+ A very frank and fitting warning.
+ I fear he's in a sorry plight;
+ He starves, I think, too proud to borrow,
+ I hear him moaning every night:
+ Maybe they'll find him dead to-morrow._
+
+
+
+
+Room 4: The Painter Chap
+
+
+
+ He gives me such a bold and curious look,
+ That young American across the way,
+ As if he'd like to put me in a book
+ (Fancies himself a poet, so they say.)
+ Ah well! He'll make no "document" of me.
+ I lock my door. Ha! ha! Now none shall see. . . .
+
+ Pictures, just pictures piled from roof to floor,
+ Each one a bit of me, a dream fulfilled,
+ A vision of the beauty I adore,
+ My own poor glimpse of glory, passion-thrilled . . .
+ But now my money's gone, I paint no more.
+
+ For three days past I have not tasted food;
+ The jeweled colors run . . . I reel, I faint;
+ They tell me that my pictures are no good,
+ Just crude and childish daubs, a waste of paint.
+ I burned to throw on canvas all I saw--
+ Twilight on water, tenderness of trees,
+ Wet sands at sunset and the smoking seas,
+ The peace of valleys and the mountain's awe:
+ Emotion swayed me at the thought of these.
+ I sought to paint ere I had learned to draw,
+ And that's the trouble. . . .
+ Ah well! here am I,
+ Facing my failure after struggle long;
+ And there they are, my _croutes_ that none will buy
+ (And doubtless they are right and I am wrong);
+ Well, when one's lost one's faith it's time to die. . . .
+
+ This knife will do . . . and now to slash and slash;
+ Rip them to ribands, rend them every one,
+ My dreams and visions--tear and stab and gash,
+ So that their crudeness may be known to none;
+ Poor, miserable daubs! Ah! there, it's done. . . .
+
+ And now to close my little window tight.
+ Lo! in the dusking sky, serenely set,
+ The evening star is like a beacon bright.
+ And see! to keep her tender tryst with night
+ How Paris veils herself in violet. . . .
+
+ Oh, why does God create such men as I?--
+ All pride and passion and divine desire,
+ Raw, quivering nerve-stuff and devouring fire,
+ Foredoomed to failure though they try and try;
+ Abortive, blindly to destruction hurled;
+ Unfound, unfit to grapple with the world. . . .
+
+ And now to light my wheezy jet of gas;
+ Chink up the window-crannies and the door,
+ So that no single breath of air may pass;
+ So that I'm sealed air-tight from roof to floor.
+ There, there, that's done; and now there's nothing more. . . .
+
+ Look at the city's myriad lamps a-shine;
+ See, the calm moon is launching into space . . .
+ There will be darkness in these eyes of mine
+ Ere it can climb to shine upon my face.
+ Oh, it will find such peace upon my face! . . .
+
+ City of Beauty, I have loved you well,
+ A laugh or two I've had, but many a sigh;
+ I've run with you the scale from Heav'n to Hell.
+ Paris, I love you still . . . good-by, good-by.
+ Thus it all ends--unhappily, alas!
+ It's time to sleep, and now . . . _blow out the gas_. . . .
+
+
+ _Now there's that little _midinette_
+ Who goes to work each morning daily;
+ I choose to call her Blithe Babette,
+ Because she's always humming gaily;
+ And though the Goddess "Comme-il-faut"
+ May look on her with prim expression,
+ It's Pagan Paris where, you know,
+ The queen of virtues is Discretion._
+
+
+
+
+Room 6: The Little Workgirl
+
+
+
+ Three gentlemen live close beside me--
+ A painter of pictures bizarre,
+ A poet whose virtues might guide me,
+ A singer who plays the guitar;
+ And there on my lintel is Cupid;
+ I leave my door open, and yet
+ These gentlemen, aren't they stupid!
+ They never make love to Babette.
+
+ I go to the shop every morning;
+ I work with my needle and thread;
+ Silk, satin and velvet adorning,
+ Then luncheon on coffee and bread.
+ Then sewing and sewing till seven;
+ Or else, if the order I get,
+ I toil and I toil till eleven--
+ And such is the day of Babette.
+
+ It doesn't seem cheerful, I fancy;
+ The wage is unthinkably small;
+ And yet there is one thing I can say:
+ I keep a bright face through it all.
+ I chaff though my head may be aching;
+ I sing a gay song to forget;
+ I laugh though my heart may be breaking--
+ It's all in the life of Babette.
+
+ That gown, O my lady of leisure,
+ You begged to be "finished in haste."
+ It gives you an exquisite pleasure,
+ Your lovers remark on its taste.
+ Yet . . . oh, the poor little white faces,
+ The tense midnight toil and the fret . . .
+ I fear that the foam of its laces
+ Is salt with the tears of Babette.
+
+ It takes a brave heart to be cheery
+ With no gleam of hope in the sky;
+ The future's so utterly dreary,
+ I'm laughing--in case I should cry.
+ And if, where the gay lights are glowing,
+ I dine with a man I have met,
+ And snatch a bright moment--who's going
+ To blame a poor little Babette?
+
+ And you, Friend beyond all the telling,
+ Although you're an ocean away,
+ Your pictures, they tell me, are selling,
+ You're married and settled, they say.
+ Such happiness one wouldn't barter;
+ Yet, oh, do you never regret
+ The Springtide, the roses, Montmartre,
+ Youth, poverty, love and--Babette?
+
+
+
+
+ _That blond-haired chap across the way
+ With sunny smile and voice so mellow,
+ He sings in some cheap cabaret,
+ Yet what a gay and charming fellow!
+ His breath with garlic may be strong,
+ What matters it? his laugh is jolly;
+ His day he gives to sleep and song:
+ His night's made up of song and folly._
+
+
+
+
+ Room 5: The Concert Singer
+
+
+
+ I'm one of these haphazard chaps
+ Who sit in cafes drinking;
+ A most improper taste, perhaps,
+ Yet pleasant, to my thinking.
+ For, oh, I hate discord and strife;
+ I'm sadly, weakly human;
+ And I do think the best of life
+ Is wine and song and woman.
+
+ Now, there's that youngster on my right
+ Who thinks himself a poet,
+ And so he toils from morn to night
+ And vainly hopes to show it;
+ And there's that dauber on my left,
+ Within his chamber shrinking--
+ He looks like one of hope bereft;
+ He lives on air, I'm thinking.
+
+ But me, I love the things that are,
+ My heart is always merry;
+ I laugh and tune my old guitar:
+ _Sing ho! and hey-down-derry._
+ Oh, let them toil their lives away
+ To gild a tawdry era,
+ But I'll be gay while yet I may:
+ _Sing tira-lira-lira._
+
+ I'm sure you know that picture well,
+ A monk, all else unheeding,
+ Within a bare and gloomy cell
+ A musty volume reading;
+ While through the window you can see
+ In sunny glade entrancing,
+ With cap and bells beneath a tree
+ A jester dancing, dancing.
+
+ Which is the fool and which the sage?
+ I cannot quite discover;
+ But you may look in learning's page
+ And I'll be laughter's lover.
+ For this our life is none too long,
+ And hearts were made for gladness;
+ Let virtue lie in joy and song,
+ The only sin be sadness.
+
+ So let me troll a jolly air,
+ Come what come will to-morrow;
+ I'll be no _cabotin_ of care,
+ No _souteneur_ of sorrow.
+ Let those who will indulge in strife,
+ To my most merry thinking,
+ The true philosophy of life
+ Is laughing, loving, drinking.
+
+
+
+
+ _And there's that weird and ghastly hag
+ Who walks head bent, with lips a-mutter;
+ With twitching hands and feet that drag,
+ And tattered skirts that sweep the gutter.
+ An outworn harlot, lost to hope,
+ With staring eyes and hair that's hoary
+ I hear her gibber, dazed with dope:
+ I often wonder what's her story._
+
+
+
+
+Room 7: The Coco-Fiend
+
+
+
+ I look at no one, me;
+ I pass them on the stair;
+ Shadows! I don't see;
+ Shadows! everywhere.
+ Haunting, taunting, staring, glaring,
+ Shadows! I don't care.
+ Once my room I gain
+ Then my life begins.
+ Shut the door on pain;
+ How the Devil grins!
+ Grin with might and main;
+ Grin and grin in vain;
+ Here's where Heav'n begins:
+ Cocaine! Cocaine!
+
+ A whiff! Ah, that's the thing.
+ How it makes me gay!
+ Now I want to sing,
+ Leap, laugh, play.
+ Ha! I've had my fling!
+ Mistress of a king
+ In my day.
+ Just another snuff . . .
+ Oh, the blessed stuff!
+ How the wretched room
+ Rushes from my sight;
+ Misery and gloom
+ Melt into delight;
+ Fear and death and doom
+ Vanish in the night.
+ No more cold and pain,
+ I am young again,
+ Beautiful again,
+ Cocaine! Cocaine!
+
+ Oh, I was made to be good, to be good,
+ For a true man's love and a life that's sweet;
+ Fireside blessings and motherhood.
+ Little ones playing around my feet.
+ How it all unfolds like a magic screen,
+ Tender and glowing and clear and glad,
+ The wonderful mother I might have been,
+ The beautiful children I might have had;
+ Romping and laughing and shrill with glee,
+ Oh, I see them now and I see them plain.
+ Darlings! Come nestle up close to me,
+ You comfort me so, and you're just . . . Cocaine.
+
+ It's Life that's all to blame:
+ We can't do what we will;
+ She robes us with her shame,
+ She crowns us with her ill.
+ I do not care, because
+ I see with bitter calm,
+ Life made me what I was,
+ Life makes me what I am.
+ Could I throw back the years,
+ It all would be the same;
+ Hunger and cold and tears,
+ Misery, fear and shame,
+ And then the old refrain,
+ Cocaine! Cocaine!
+
+ A love-child I, so here my mother came,
+ Where she might live in peace with none to blame.
+ And how she toiled! Harder than any slave,
+ What courage! patient, hopeful, tender, brave.
+ We had a little room at Lavilette,
+ So small, so neat, so clean, I see it yet.
+ Poor mother! sewing, sewing late at night,
+ Her wasted face beside the candlelight,
+ This Paris crushed her. How she used to sigh!
+ And as I watched her from my bed I knew
+ She saw red roofs against a primrose sky
+ And glistening fields and apples dimmed with dew.
+ Hard times we had. We counted every _sou_,
+ We sewed sacks for a living. I was quick . . .
+ Four busy hands to work instead of two.
+ Oh, we were happy there, till she fell sick. . . .
+
+ My mother lay, her face turned to the wall,
+ And I, a girl of sixteen, fair and tall,
+ Sat by her side, all stricken with despair,
+ Knelt by her bed and faltered out a prayer.
+ A doctor's order on the table lay,
+ Medicine for which, alas! I could not pay;
+ Medicine to save her life, to soothe her pain.
+ I sought for something I could sell, in vain . . .
+ All, all was gone! The room was cold and bare;
+ Gone blankets and the cloak I used to wear;
+ Bare floor and wall and cupboard, every shelf--
+ Nothing that I could sell . . . except myself.
+
+ I sought the street, I could not bear
+ To hear my mother moaning there.
+ I clutched the paper in my hand.
+ 'Twas hard. You cannot understand . . .
+ I walked as martyr to the flame,
+ Almost exalted in my shame.
+ They turned, who heard my voiceless cry,
+ "For Sale, a virgin, who will buy?"
+ And so myself I fiercely sold,
+ And clutched the price, a piece of gold.
+ Into a pharmacy I pressed;
+ I took the paper from my breast.
+ I gave my money . . . how it gleamed!
+ How precious to my eyes it seemed!
+ And then I saw the chemist frown,
+ Quick on the counter throw it down,
+ Shake with an angry look his head:
+ "Your _louis d'or_ is bad," he said.
+
+ Dazed, crushed, I went into the night,
+ I clutched my gleaming coin so tight.
+ No, no, I could not well believe
+ That any one could so deceive.
+ I tried again and yet again--
+ Contempt, suspicion and disdain;
+ Always the same reply I had:
+ "Get out of this. Your money's bad."
+
+ Heart broken to the room I crept,
+ To mother's side. All still . . . she slept . . .
+ I bent, I sought to raise her head . . .
+ "Oh, God, have pity!" she was dead.
+
+ That's how it all began.
+ Said I: Revenge is sweet.
+ So in my guilty span
+ I've ruined many a man.
+ They've groveled at my feet,
+ I've pity had for none;
+ I've bled them every one.
+ Oh, I've had interest for
+ That worthless _louis d'or_.
+
+ But now it's over; see,
+ I care for no one, me;
+ Only at night sometimes
+ In dreams I hear the chimes
+ Of wedding-bells and see
+ A woman without stain
+ With children at her knee.
+ Ah, how you comfort me,
+ Cocaine! . . .
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK THREE ~~ LATE SUMMER
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+The Omnium Bar, near the Bourse,
+
+Late July 1914.
+
+MacBean, before he settled down to the manufacture of mercantile
+fiction, had ideas of a nobler sort, which bore their fruit in a slender
+book of poems. In subject they are either erotic, mythologic, or
+descriptive of nature. So polished are they that the mind seems to slide
+over them: so faultless in form that the critics hailed them with
+highest praise, and as many as a hundred copies were sold.
+
+Saxon Dane, too, has published a book of poems, but he, on the other
+hand, defies tradition to an eccentric degree. Originality is his sin.
+He strains after it in every line. I must confess I think much of the
+free verse he writes is really prose, and a good deal of it blank verse
+chopped up into odd lengths. He talks of assonance and color, of stress
+and pause and accent, and bewilders me with his theories.
+
+He and MacBean represent two extremes, and at night, as we sit in the
+Cafe du Dome, they have the hottest of arguments. As for me, I listen
+with awe, content that my medium is verse, and that the fashions of
+Hood, Thackeray and Bret Harte are the fashions of to-day.
+
+Of late I have been doing light stuff, "fillers" for MacBean. Here are
+three of my specimens:
+
+
+
+
+The Philanderer
+
+
+
+ Oh, have you forgotten those afternoons
+ With riot of roses and amber skies,
+ When we thrilled to the joy of a million Junes,
+ And I sought for your soul in the deeps of your eyes?
+ I would love you, I promised, forever and aye,
+ And I meant it too; yet, oh, isn't it odd?
+ When we met in the Underground to-day
+ I addressed you as Mary instead of as Maude.
+
+ Oh, don't you remember that moonlit sea,
+ With us on a silver trail afloat,
+ When I gracefully sank on my bended knee
+ At the risk of upsetting our little boat?
+ Oh, I vowed that my life was blighted then,
+ As friendship you proffered with mournful mien;
+ But now as I think of your children ten,
+ I'm glad you refused me, Evangeline.
+
+ Oh, is that moment eternal still
+ When I breathed my love in your shell-like ear,
+ And you plucked at your fan as a maiden will,
+ And you blushed so charmingly, Guenivere?
+ Like a worshiper at your feet I sat;
+ For a year and a day you made me mad;
+ But now, alas! you are forty, fat,
+ And I think: What a lucky escape I had!
+
+ Oh, maidens I've set in a sacred shrine,
+ Oh, Rosamond, Molly and Mignonette,
+ I've deemed you in turn the most divine,
+ In turn you've broken my heart . . . and yet
+ It's easily mended. What's past is past.
+ To-day on Lucy I'm going to call;
+ For I'm sure that I know true love at last,
+ And _She_ is the fairest girl of all.
+
+
+
+
+The _Petit Vieux_
+
+
+
+ "Sow your wild oats in your youth," so we're always told;
+ But I say with deeper sooth: "Sow them when you're old."
+ I'll be wise till I'm about seventy or so:
+ Then, by Gad! I'll blossom out as an ancient _beau_.
+
+ I'll assume a dashing air, laugh with loud Ha! ha! . . .
+ How my grandchildren will stare at their grandpapa!
+ Their perfection aureoled I will scandalize:
+ Won't I be a hoary old sinner in their eyes!
+
+ Watch me, how I'll learn to chaff barmaids in a bar;
+ Scotches daily, gayly quaff, puff a fierce cigar.
+ I will haunt the Tango teas, at the stage-door stand;
+ Wait for Dolly Dimpleknees, bouquet in my hand.
+
+ Then at seventy I'll take flutters at roulette;
+ While at eighty hope I'll make good at poker yet;
+ And in fashionable togs to the races go,
+ Gayest of the gay old dogs, ninety years or so.
+
+ "Sow your wild oats while you're young," that's what you are told;
+ Don't believe the foolish tongue--sow 'em when you're old.
+ Till you're threescore years and ten, take my humble tip,
+ Sow your nice tame oats and then . . . Hi, boys! Let 'er rip.
+
+
+
+
+My Masterpiece
+
+
+
+ It's slim and trim and bound in blue;
+ Its leaves are crisp and edged with gold;
+ Its words are simple, stalwart too;
+ Its thoughts are tender, wise and bold.
+ Its pages scintillate with wit;
+ Its pathos clutches at my throat:
+ Oh, how I love each line of it!
+ That Little Book I Never Wrote.
+
+ In dreams I see it praised and prized
+ By all, from plowman unto peer;
+ It's pencil-marked and memorized,
+ It's loaned (and not returned, I fear);
+ It's worn and torn and travel-tossed,
+ And even dusky natives quote
+ That classic that the world has lost,
+ The Little Book I Never Wrote.
+
+ Poor ghost! For homes you've failed to cheer,
+ For grieving hearts uncomforted,
+ Don't haunt me now. . . . Alas! I fear
+ The fire of Inspiration's dead.
+ A humdrum way I go to-night,
+ From all I hoped and dreamed remote:
+ Too late . . . a better man must write
+ That Little Book I Never Wrote.
+
+
+
+Talking about writing books, there is a queer character who shuffles up
+and down the little streets that neighbor the Place Maubert, and who,
+they say, has been engaged on one for years. Sometimes I see him
+cowering in some cheap _bouge_, and his wild eyes gleam at me through
+the tangle of his hair. But I do not think he ever sees me. He mumbles
+to himself, and moves like a man in a dream. His pockets are full of
+filthy paper on which he writes from time to time. The students laugh at
+him and make him tipsy; the street boys pelt him with ordure; the better
+cafes turn him from their doors. But who knows? At least, this is how I
+see him:
+
+
+
+
+My Book
+
+
+
+ Before I drink myself to death,
+ God, let me finish up my Book!
+ At night, I fear, I fight for breath,
+ And wake up whiter than a spook;
+ And crawl off to a _bistro_ near,
+ And drink until my brain is clear.
+
+ Rare Absinthe! Oh, it gives me strength
+ To write and write; and so I spend
+ Day after day, until at length
+ With joy and pain I'll write The End:
+ Then let this carcase rot; I give
+ The world my Book--my Book will live.
+
+ For every line is tense with truth,
+ There's hope and joy on every page;
+ A cheer, a clarion call to Youth,
+ A hymn, a comforter to Age:
+ All's there that I was meant to be,
+ My part divine, the God in me.
+
+ It's of my life the golden sum;
+ Ah! who that reads this Book of mine,
+ In stormy centuries to come,
+ Will dream I rooted with the swine?
+ Behold! I give mankind my best:
+ What does it matter, all the rest?
+
+ It's this that makes sublime my day;
+ It's this that makes me struggle on.
+ Oh, let them mock my mortal clay,
+ My spirit's deathless as the dawn;
+ Oh, let them shudder as they look . . .
+ I'll be immortal in my Book.
+
+ And so beside the sullen Seine
+ I fight with dogs for filthy food,
+ Yet know that from my sin and pain
+ Will soar serene a Something Good;
+ Exultantly from shame and wrong
+ A Right, a Glory and a Song.
+
+
+
+How charming it is, this Paris of the summer skies! Each morning I leap
+up with joy in my heart, all eager to begin the day of work. As I eat my
+breakfast and smoke my pipe, I ponder over my task. Then in the golden
+sunshine that floods my little attic I pace up and down, absorbed and
+forgetful of the world. As I compose I speak the words aloud. There are
+difficulties to overcome; thoughts that will not fit their mold;
+rebellious rhymes. Ah! those moments of despair and defeat.
+
+Then suddenly the mind grows lucid, imagination glows, the snarl
+unravels. In the end is always triumph and success. O delectable
+_metier_! Who would not be a rhymesmith in Paris, in Bohemia, in the
+heart of youth!
+
+I have now finished my twentieth ballad. Five more and they will be
+done. In quiet corners of cafes, on benches of the Luxembourg, on the
+sunny Quays I read them over one by one. Here is my latest:
+
+
+
+
+My Hour
+
+
+
+ Day after day behold me plying
+ My pen within an office drear;
+ The dullest dog, till homeward hieing,
+ Then lo! I reign a king of cheer.
+ A throne have I of padded leather,
+ A little court of kiddies three,
+ A wife who smiles whate'er the weather,
+ A feast of muffins, jam and tea.
+
+ The table cleared, a romping battle,
+ A fairy tale, a "Children, bed,"
+ A kiss, a hug, a hush of prattle
+ (God save each little drowsy head!)
+ A cozy chat with wife a-sewing,
+ A silver lining clouds that low'r,
+ Then she too goes, and with her going,
+ I come again into my Hour.
+
+ I poke the fire, I snugly settle,
+ My pipe I prime with proper care;
+ The water's purring in the kettle,
+ Rum, lemon, sugar, all are there.
+ And now the honest grog is steaming,
+ And now the trusty briar's aglow:
+ Alas! in smoking, drinking, dreaming,
+ How sadly swift the moments go!
+
+ Oh, golden hour! 'twixt love and duty,
+ All others I to others give;
+ But you are mine to yield to Beauty,
+ To glean Romance, to greatly live.
+ For in my easy-chair reclining . . .
+ _I feel the sting of ocean spray;
+ And yonder wondrously are shining
+ The Magic Isles of Far Away.
+
+ Beyond the comber's crashing thunder
+ Strange beaches flash into my ken;
+ On jetties heaped head-high with plunder
+ I dance and dice with sailor-men.
+ Strange stars swarm down to burn above me,
+ Strange shadows haunt, strange voices greet;
+ Strange women lure and laugh and love me,
+ And fling their bastards at my feet.
+
+ Oh, I would wish the wide world over,
+ In ports of passion and unrest,
+ To drink and drain, a tarry rover
+ With dragons tattooed on my chest,
+ With haunted eyes that hold red glories
+ Of foaming seas and crashing shores,
+ With lips that tell the strangest stories
+ Of sunken ships and gold moidores;
+
+ Till sick of storm and strife and slaughter,
+ Some ghostly night when hides the moon,
+ I slip into the milk-warm water
+ And softly swim the stale lagoon.
+ Then through some jungle python-haunted,
+ Or plumed morass, or woodland wild,
+ I win my way with heart undaunted,
+ And all the wonder of a child.
+
+ The pathless plains shall swoon around me,
+ The forests frown, the floods appall;
+ The mountains tiptoe to confound me,
+ The rivers roar to speed my fall.
+ Wild dooms shall daunt, and dawns be gory,
+ And Death shall sit beside my knee;
+ Till after terror, torment, glory,
+ I win again the sea, the sea. . . ._
+
+ Oh, anguish sweet! Oh, triumph splendid!
+ Oh, dreams adieu! my pipe is dead.
+ My glass is dry, my Hour is ended,
+ It's time indeed I stole to bed.
+ How peacefully the house is sleeping!
+ Ah! why should I strange fortunes plan?
+ To guard the dear ones in my keeping--
+ That's task enough for any man.
+
+ So through dim seas I'll ne'er go spoiling;
+ The red Tortugas never roam;
+ Please God! I'll keep the pot a-boiling,
+ And make at least a happy home.
+ My children's path shall gleam with roses,
+ Their grace abound, their joy increase.
+ And so my Hour divinely closes
+ With tender thoughts of praise and peace.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+The Garden of the Luxembourg,
+
+Late July 1914.
+
+
+When on some scintillating summer morning I leap lightly up to the
+seclusion of my garret, I often think of those lines: "In the brave days
+when I was twenty-one."
+
+True, I have no loving, kind Lisette to pin her petticoat across the
+pane, yet I do live in hope. Am I not in Bohemia the Magical, Bohemia
+of Murger, of de Musset, of Verlaine? Shades of Mimi Pinson, of Trilby,
+of all that immortal line of laughterful grisettes, do not tell me that
+the days of love and fun are forever at an end!
+
+Yes, youth is golden, but what of age? Shall it too not testify to the
+rhapsody of existence? Let the years between be those of struggle, of
+sufferance--of disillusion if you will; but let youth and age affirm
+the ecstasy of being. Let us look forward all to a serene sunset, and
+in the still skies "a late lark singing".
+
+This thought comes to me as, sitting on a bench near the band-stand, I
+see an old savant who talks to all the children. His clean-shaven face
+is alive with kindliness; under his tall silk hat his white hair falls
+to his shoulders. He wears a long black cape over a black frock-coat,
+very neat linen, and a flowing tie of black silk. I call him "Silvester
+Bonnard". As I look at him I truly think the best of life are the years
+between sixty and seventy.
+
+
+
+
+A Song of Sixty-Five
+
+
+
+ Brave Thackeray has trolled of days when he was twenty-one,
+ And bounded up five flights of stairs, a gallant garreteer;
+ And yet again in mellow vein when youth was gaily run,
+ Has dipped his nose in Gascon wine, and told of Forty Year.
+ But if I worthy were to sing a richer, rarer time,
+ I'd tune my pipes before the fire and merrily I'd strive
+ To praise that age when prose again has given way to rhyme,
+ The Indian Summer days of life when I'll be Sixty-five;
+
+ For then my work will all be done, my voyaging be past,
+ And I'll have earned the right to rest where folding hills are green;
+ So in some glassy anchorage I'll make my cable fast,--
+ Oh, let the seas show all their teeth, I'll sit and smile serene.
+ The storm may bellow round the roof, I'll bide beside the fire,
+ And many a scene of sail and trail within the flame I'll see;
+ For I'll have worn away the spur of passion and desire. . . .
+ Oh yes, when I am Sixty-five, what peace will come to me.
+
+ I'll take my breakfast in my bed, I'll rise at half-past ten,
+ When all the world is nicely groomed and full of golden song;
+ I'll smoke a bit and joke a bit, and read the news, and then
+ I'll potter round my peach-trees till I hear the luncheon gong.
+ And after that I think I'll doze an hour, well, maybe two,
+ And then I'll show some kindred soul how well my roses thrive;
+ I'll do the things I never yet have found the time to do. . . .
+ Oh, won't I be the busy man when I am Sixty-five.
+
+ I'll revel in my library; I'll read De Morgan's books;
+ I'll grow so garrulous I fear you'll write me down a bore;
+ I'll watch the ways of ants and bees in quiet sunny nooks,
+ I'll understand Creation as I never did before.
+ When gossips round the tea-cups talk I'll listen to it all;
+ On smiling days some kindly friend will take me for a drive:
+ I'll own a shaggy collie dog that dashes to my call:
+ I'll celebrate my second youth when I am Sixty-five.
+
+ Ah, though I've twenty years to go, I see myself quite plain,
+ A wrinkling, twinkling, rosy-cheeked, benevolent old chap;
+ I think I'll wear a tartan shawl and lean upon a cane.
+ I hope that I'll have silver hair beneath a velvet cap.
+ I see my little grandchildren a-romping round my knee;
+ So gay the scene, I almost wish 'twould hasten to arrive.
+ Let others sing of Youth and Spring, still will it seem to me
+ The golden time's the olden time, some time round Sixty-five.
+
+
+
+From old men to children is but a step, and there too, in the shadow of
+the Fontaine de Medicis, I spend much of my time watching the little
+ones. Childhood, so innocent, so helpless, so trusting, is somehow
+pathetic to me.
+
+There was one jolly little chap who used to play with a large white
+Teddy Bear. He was always with his mother, a sweet-faced woman, who
+followed his every movement with delight. I used to watch them both,
+and often spoke a few words.
+
+Then one day I missed them, and it struck me I had not seen them for a
+week, even a month, maybe. After that I looked for them a time or two
+and soon forgot.
+
+Then this morning I saw the mother in the rue D'Assas. She was alone and
+in deep black. I wanted to ask after the boy, but there was a look in
+her face that stopped me.
+
+I do not think she will ever enter the garden of the Luxembourg again.
+
+
+
+
+Teddy Bear
+
+
+
+ O Teddy Bear! with your head awry
+ And your comical twisted smile,
+ You rub your eyes--do you wonder why
+ You've slept such a long, long while?
+ As you lay so still in the cupboard dim,
+ And you heard on the roof the rain,
+ Were you thinking . . . what has become of _him_?
+ And when will he play again?
+
+ Do you sometimes long for a chubby hand,
+ And a voice so sweetly shrill?
+ O Teddy Bear! don't you understand
+ Why the house is awf'ly still?
+ You sit with your muzzle propped on your paws,
+ And your whimsical face askew.
+ Don't wait, don't wait for your friend . . . because
+ He's sleeping and dreaming too.
+
+ Aye, sleeping long. . . . You remember how
+ He stabbed our hearts with his cries?
+ And oh, the dew of pain on his brow,
+ And the deeps of pain in his eyes!
+ And, Teddy Bear! you remember, too,
+ As he sighed and sank to his rest,
+ How all of a sudden he smiled to you,
+ And he clutched you close to his breast.
+
+ I'll put you away, little Teddy Bear,
+ In the cupboard far from my sight;
+ Maybe he'll come and he'll kiss you there,
+ A wee white ghost in the night.
+ But me, I'll live with my love and pain
+ A weariful lifetime through;
+ And my Hope: will I see him again, again?
+ Ah, God! If I only knew!
+
+
+
+After old men and children I am greatly interested in dogs. I will go
+out of my way to caress one who shows any desire to be friendly. There
+is a very filthy fellow who collects cigarette stubs on the Boul' Mich',
+and who is always followed by a starved yellow cur. The other day I came
+across them in a little side street. The man was stretched on the
+pavement brutishly drunk and dead to the world. The dog, lying by his
+side, seemed to look at me with sad, imploring eyes. Though all the
+world despise that man, I thought, this poor brute loves him and will be
+faithful unto death.
+
+From this incident I wrote the verses that follow:
+
+
+
+
+The Outlaw
+
+
+ A wild and woeful race he ran
+ Of lust and sin by land and sea;
+ Until, abhorred of God and man,
+ They swung him from the gallows-tree.
+ And then he climbed the Starry Stair,
+ And dumb and naked and alone,
+ With head unbowed and brazen glare,
+ He stood before the Judgment Throne.
+
+ The Keeper of the Records spoke:
+ "This man, O Lord, has mocked Thy Name.
+ The weak have wept beneath his yoke,
+ The strong have fled before his flame.
+ The blood of babes is on his sword;
+ His life is evil to the brim:
+ Look down, decree his doom, O Lord!
+ Lo! there is none will speak for him."
+
+ The golden trumpets blew a blast
+ That echoed in the crypts of Hell,
+ For there was Judgment to be passed,
+ And lips were hushed and silence fell.
+ The man was mute; he made no stir,
+ Erect before the Judgment Seat . . .
+ When all at once a mongrel cur
+ Crept out and cowered and licked his feet.
+
+ It licked his feet with whining cry.
+ Come Heav'n, come Hell, what did it care?
+ It leapt, it tried to catch his eye;
+ Its master, yea, its God was there.
+ Then, as a thrill of wonder sped
+ Through throngs of shining seraphim,
+ The Judge of All looked down and said:
+ "Lo! here is ONE who pleads for him.
+
+ "And who shall love of these the least,
+ And who by word or look or deed
+ Shall pity show to bird or beast,
+ By Me shall have a friend in need.
+ Aye, though his sin be black as night,
+ And though he stand 'mid men alone,
+ He shall be softened in My sight,
+ And find a pleader by My Throne.
+
+ "So let this man to glory win;
+ From life to life salvation glean;
+ By pain and sacrifice and sin,
+ Until he stand before Me--_clean_.
+ For he who loves the least of these
+ (And here I say and here repeat)
+ Shall win himself an angel's pleas
+ For Mercy at My Judgment Seat."
+
+
+
+I take my exercise in the form of walking. It keeps me fit and leaves
+me free to think. In this way I have come to know Paris like my pocket.
+I have explored its large and little streets, its stateliness and its
+slums.
+
+But most of all I love the Quays, between the leafage and the sunlit
+Seine. Like shuttles the little steamers dart up and down, weaving the
+water into patterns of foam. Cigar-shaped barges stream under the
+lacework of the many bridges and make me think of tranquil days and
+willow-fringed horizons.
+
+But what I love most is the stealing in of night, when the sky takes on
+that strange elusive purple; when eyes turn to the evening star and
+marvel at its brightness; when the Eiffel Tower becomes a strange,
+shadowy stairway yearning in impotent effort to the careless moon.
+
+Here is my latest ballad, short if not very sweet:
+
+
+
+
+The Walkers
+
+
+
+ (_He speaks._)
+
+ Walking, walking, oh, the joy of walking!
+ Swinging down the tawny lanes with head held high;
+ Striding up the green hills, through the heather stalking,
+ Swishing through the woodlands where the brown leaves lie;
+ Marveling at all things--windmills gaily turning,
+ Apples for the cider-press, ruby-hued and gold;
+ Tails of rabbits twinkling, scarlet berries burning,
+ Wedge of geese high-flying in the sky's clear cold,
+ Light in little windows, field and furrow darkling;
+ Home again returning, hungry as a hawk;
+ Whistling up the garden, ruddy-cheeked and sparkling,
+ Oh, but I am happy as I walk, walk, walk!
+
+
+ (_She speaks._)
+
+ Walking, walking, oh, the curse of walking!
+ Slouching round the grim square, shuffling up the street,
+ Slinking down the by-way, all my graces hawking,
+ Offering my body to each man I meet.
+ Peering in the gin-shop where the lads are drinking,
+ Trying to look gay-like, crazy with the blues;
+ Halting in a doorway, shuddering and shrinking
+ (Oh, my draggled feather and my thin, wet shoes).
+ Here's a drunken drover: "Hullo, there, old dearie!"
+ No, he only curses, can't be got to talk. . . .
+ On and on till daylight, famished, wet and weary,
+ God in Heaven help me as I walk, walk, walk!
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+The Cafe de la Source,
+
+Late in July 1914.
+
+The other evening MacBean was in a pessimistic mood.
+
+"Why do you write?" he asked me gloomily.
+
+"Obviously," I said, "to avoid starving. To produce something that will
+buy me food, shelter, raiment."
+
+"If you were a millionaire, would you still write?"
+
+"Yes," I said, after a moment's thought. "You get an idea. It haunts
+you. It seems to clamor for expression. It begins to obsess you. At
+last in desperation you embody it in a poem, an essay, a story. There!
+it is disposed of. You are at rest. It troubles you no more. Yes; if I
+were a millionaire I should write, if it were only to escape from my
+ideas."
+
+"You have given two reasons why men write," said MacBean: "for gain,
+for self-expression. Then, again, some men write to amuse themselves,
+some because they conceive they have a mission in the world; some
+because they have real genius, and are conscious they can enrich the
+literature of all time. I must say I don't know of any belonging to the
+latter class. We are living in an age of mediocrity. There is no writer
+of to-day who will be read twenty years after he is dead. That's a truth
+that must come home to the best of them."
+
+"I guess they're not losing much sleep over it," I said.
+
+"Take novelists," continued MacBean. "The line of first-class novelists
+ended with Dickens and Thackeray. Then followed some of the second
+class, Stevenson, Meredith, Hardy. And to-day we have three novelists
+of the third class, good, capable craftsmen. We can trust ourselves
+comfortably in their hands. We read and enjoy them, but do you think
+our children will?"
+
+"Yours won't, anyway," I said.
+
+"Don't be too sure. I may surprise you yet. I may get married and turn
+_bourgeois_."
+
+The best thing that could happen to MacBean would be that. It might
+change his point of view. He is so painfully discouraging. I have never
+mentioned my ballads to him. He would be sure to throw cold water on
+them. And as it draws near to its end the thought of my book grows more
+and more dear to me. How I will get it published I know not; but I will.
+Then even if it doesn't sell, even if nobody reads it, I will be
+content. Out of this brief, perishable Me I will have made something
+concrete, something that will preserve my thought within its dusty
+covers long after I am dead and dust.
+
+Here is one of my latest:
+
+
+
+
+Poor Peter
+
+
+
+ Blind Peter Piper used to play
+ All up and down the city;
+ I'd often meet him on my way,
+ And throw a coin for pity.
+ But all amid his sparkling tones
+ His ear was quick as any
+ To catch upon the cobble-stones
+ The jingle of my penny.
+
+ And as upon a day that shone
+ He piped a merry measure:
+ "How well you play!" I chanced to say;
+ Poor Peter glowed with pleasure.
+ You'd think the words of praise I spoke
+ Were all the pay he needed;
+ The artist in the player woke,
+ The penny lay unheeded.
+
+ Now Winter's here; the wind is shrill,
+ His coat is thin and tattered;
+ Yet hark! he's playing trill on trill
+ As if his music mattered.
+ And somehow though the city looks
+ Soaked through and through with shadows,
+ He makes you think of singing brooks
+ And larks and sunny meadows.
+
+ Poor chap! he often starves, they say;
+ Well, well, I can believe it;
+ For when you chuck a coin his way
+ He'll let some street-boy thieve it.
+ I fear he freezes in the night;
+ My praise I've long repented,
+ Yet look! his face is all alight . . .
+ Blind Peter seems contented.
+
+
+
+_A day later_.
+
+On the terrace of the Closerie de Lilas I came on Saxon Dane. He was
+smoking his big briar and drinking a huge glass of brown beer. The tree
+gave a pleasant shade, and he had thrown his sombrero on a chair. I
+noted how his high brow was bronzed by the sun and there were golden
+lights in his broad beard. There was something massive and imposing in
+the man as he sat there in brooding thought.
+
+MacBean, he told me, was sick and unable to leave his room. Rheumatism.
+So I bought a cooked chicken and a bottle of Barsac, and mounting to the
+apartment of the invalid, I made him eat and drink. MacBean was very
+despondent, but cheered up greatly.
+
+I think he rather dreads the future. He cannot save money, and all he
+makes he spends. He has always been a rover, often tried to settle down
+but could not. Now I think he wishes for security. I fear, however, it
+is too late.
+
+
+
+
+The Wistful One
+
+
+
+ I sought the trails of South and North,
+ I wandered East and West;
+ But pride and passion drove me forth
+ And would not let me rest.
+
+ And still I seek, as still I roam,
+ A snug roof overhead;
+ Four walls, my own; a quiet home. . . .
+ "You'll have it--_when you're dead_."
+
+
+
+MacBean is one of Bohemia's victims. It is a country of the young. The
+old have no place in it. He will gradually lose his grip, go down and
+down. I am sorry. He is my nearest approach to a friend. I do not make
+them easily. I have deep reserves. I like solitude. I am never so
+surrounded by boon companions as when I am all alone.
+
+But though I am a solitary I realize the beauty of friendship, and on
+looking through my note-book I find the following:
+
+
+
+
+If You Had a Friend
+
+
+
+ If you had a friend strong, simple, true,
+ Who knew your faults and who understood;
+ Who believed in the very best of you,
+ And who cared for you as a father would;
+ Who would stick by you to the very end,
+ Who would smile however the world might frown:
+ I'm sure you would try to please your friend,
+ You never would think to throw him down.
+
+ And supposing your friend was high and great,
+ And he lived in a palace rich and tall,
+ And sat like a King in shining state,
+ And his praise was loud on the lips of all;
+ Well then, when he turned to you alone,
+ And he singled you out from all the crowd,
+ And he called you up to his golden throne,
+ Oh, wouldn't you just be jolly proud?
+
+ If you had a friend like this, I say,
+ So sweet and tender, so strong and true,
+ You'd try to please him in every way,
+ You'd live at your bravest--now, wouldn't you?
+ His worth would shine in the words you penned;
+ You'd shout his praises . . . yet now it's odd!
+ You tell me you haven't got such a friend;
+ You haven't? I wonder . . . _What of God?_
+
+
+
+To how few is granted the privilege of doing the work which lies closest
+to the heart, the work for which one is best fitted. The happy man is he
+who knows his limitations, yet bows to no false gods.
+
+MacBean is not happy. He is overridden by his appetites, and to satisfy
+them he writes stuff that in his heart he despises.
+
+Saxon Dane is not happy. His dream exceeds his grasp. His twisted,
+tortured phrases mock the vague grandiosity of his visions.
+
+I am happy. My talent is proportioned to my ambition. The things I like
+to write are the things I like to read. I prefer the lesser poets to the
+greater, the cackle of the barnyard fowl to the scream of the eagle. I
+lack the divinity of discontent.
+
+True Contentment comes from within. It dominates circumstance. It is
+resignation wedded to philosophy, a Christian quality seldom attained
+except by the old.
+
+There is such an one I sometimes see being wheeled about in the
+Luxembourg. His face is beautiful in its thankfulness.
+
+
+
+
+The Contented Man
+
+
+
+ "How good God is to me," he said;
+ "For have I not a mansion tall,
+ With trees and lawns of velvet tread,
+ And happy helpers at my call?
+ With beauty is my life abrim,
+ With tranquil hours and dreams apart;
+ You wonder that I yield to Him
+ That best of prayers, a grateful heart?"
+
+ "How good God is to me," he said;
+ "For look! though gone is all my wealth,
+ How sweet it is to earn one's bread
+ With brawny arms and brimming health.
+ Oh, now I know the joy of strife!
+ To sleep so sound, to wake so fit.
+ Ah yes, how glorious is life!
+ I thank Him for each day of it."
+
+ "How good God is to me," he said;
+ "Though health and wealth are gone, it's true;
+ Things might be worse, I might be dead,
+ And here I'm living, laughing too.
+ Serene beneath the evening sky
+ I wait, and every man's my friend;
+ God's most contented man am I . . .
+ He keeps me smiling to the End."
+
+
+
+To-day the basin of the Luxembourg is bright with little boats. Hundreds
+of happy children romp around it. Little ones everywhere; yet there is
+no other city with so many childless homes.
+
+
+
+
+The Spirit of the Unborn Babe
+
+
+
+ The Spirit of the Unborn Babe peered through the window-pane,
+ Peered through the window-pane that glowed like beacon in the night;
+ For, oh, the sky was desolate and wild with wind and rain;
+ And how the little room was crammed with coziness and light!
+ Except the flirting of the fire there was no sound at all;
+ The Woman sat beside the hearth, her knitting on her knee;
+ The shadow of her husband's head was dancing on the wall;
+ She looked with staring eyes at it, she looked yet did not see.
+ She only saw a childish face that topped the table rim,
+ A little wistful ghost that smiled and vanished quick away;
+ And then because her tender eyes were flooding to the brim,
+ She lowered her head. . . . "Don't sorrow, dear," she heard him softly say;
+ "It's over now. We'll try to be as happy as before
+ (Ah! they who little children have, grant hostages to pain).
+ We gave Life chance to wound us once, but never, never more. . . ."
+ The Spirit of the Unborn Babe fled through the night again.
+
+ The Spirit of the Unborn Babe went wildered in the dark;
+ Like termagants the winds tore down and whirled it with the snow.
+ And then amid the writhing storm it saw a tiny spark,
+ A window broad, a spacious room all goldenly aglow,
+ A woman slim and Paris-gowned and exquisitely fair,
+ Who smiled with rapture as she watched her jewels catch the blaze;
+ A man in faultless evening dress, young, handsome, debonnaire,
+ Who smoked his cigarette and looked with frank admiring gaze.
+ "Oh, we are happy, sweet," said he; "youth, health, and wealth are ours.
+ What if a thousand toil and sweat that we may live at ease!
+ What if the hands are worn and torn that strew our path with flowers!
+ Ah, well! we did not make the world; let us not think of these.
+ Let's seek the beauty-spots of earth, Dear Heart, just you and I;
+ Let other women bring forth life with sorrow and with pain.
+ Above our door we'll hang the sign: '_No children need apply_. . . .'"
+ The Spirit of the Unborn Babe sped through the night again.
+
+ The Spirit of the Unborn Babe went whirling on and on;
+ It soared above a city vast, it swept down to a slum;
+ It saw within a grimy house a light that dimly shone;
+ It peered in through a window-pane and lo! a voice said: "Come!"
+ And so a little girl was born amid the dirt and din,
+ And lived in spite of everything, for life is ordered so;
+ A child whose eyes first opened wide to swinishness and sin,
+ A child whose love and innocence met only curse and blow.
+ And so in due and proper course she took the path of shame,
+ And gladly died in hospital, quite old at twenty years;
+ And when God comes to weigh it all, ah! whose shall be the blame
+ For all her maimed and poisoned life, her torture and her tears?
+ For oh, it is not what we do, but what we have not done!
+ And on that day of reckoning, when all is plain and clear,
+ What if we stand before the Throne, blood-guilty every one? . . .
+ Maybe the blackest sins of all are Selfishness and Fear.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+
+The Cafe de la Paix, August 1, 1914.
+
+Paris and I are out of tune. As I sit at this famous corner the faint
+breeze is stale and weary; stale and weary too the faces that swirl
+around me; while overhead the electric sign of Somebody's Chocolate
+appears and vanishes with irritating insistency. The very trees seem
+artificial, gleaming under the arc-lights with a raw virility that rasps
+my nerves.
+
+"Poor little trees," I mutter, "growing in all this grime and glare,
+your only dryads the loitering ladies with the complexions of such
+brilliant certainty, your only Pipes of Pan orchestral echoes from the
+clamorous cafes. Exiles of the forest! what know you of full-blossomed
+winds, of red-embered sunsets, of the gentle admonition of spring rain!
+Life, that would fain be a melody, seems here almost a malady. I crave
+for the balm of Nature, the anodyne of solitude, the breath of Mother
+Earth. Tell me, O wistful trees, what shall I do?"
+
+Then that stale and weary wind rustles the leaves of the nearest
+sycamore, and I am sure it whispers: "Brittany."
+
+So to-morrow I am off, off to the Land of Little Fields.
+
+
+
+
+Finistere
+
+
+
+ Hurrah! I'm off to Finistere, to Finistere, to Finistere;
+ My satchel's swinging on my back, my staff is in my hand;
+ I've twenty _louis_ in my purse, I know the sun and sea are there,
+ And so I'm starting out to-day to tramp the golden land.
+ I'll go alone and glorying, with on my lips a song of joy;
+ I'll leave behind the city with its canker and its care;
+ I'll swing along so sturdily--oh, won't I be the happy boy!
+ A-singing on the rocky roads, the roads of Finistere.
+
+ Oh, have you been to Finistere, and do you know a whin-gray town
+ That echoes to the clatter of a thousand wooden shoes?
+ And have you seen the fisher-girls go gallivantin' up and down,
+ And watched the tawny boats go out, and heard the roaring crews?
+ Oh, would you sit with pipe and bowl, and dream upon some sunny quay,
+ Or would you walk the windy heath and drink the cooler air;
+ Oh, would you seek a cradled cove and tussle with the topaz sea!--
+ Pack up your kit to-morrow, lad, and haste to Finistere.
+
+ Oh, I will go to Finistere, there's nothing that can hold me back.
+ I'll laugh with Yves and Leon, and I'll chaff with Rose and Jeanne;
+ I'll seek the little, quaint _buvette_ that's kept by Mother Merdrinac
+ Who wears a cap of many frills, and swears just like a man.
+ I'll yarn with hearty, hairy chaps who dance and leap and crack their heels;
+ Who swallow cupfuls of cognac and never turn a hair;
+ I'll watch the nut-brown boats come in with mullet, plaice and conger eels,
+ The jeweled harvest of the sea they reap in Finistere.
+
+ Yes, I'll come back from Finistere with memories of shining days,
+ Of scaly nets and salty men in overalls of brown;
+ Of ancient women knitting as they watch the tethered cattle graze
+ By little nestling beaches where the gorse goes blazing down;
+ Of headlands silvering the sea, of Calvarys against the sky,
+ Of scorn of angry sunsets, and of Carnac grim and bare;
+ Oh, won't I have the leaping veins, and tawny cheek and sparkling eye,
+ When I come back to Montparnasse and dream of Finistere.
+
+
+
+_Two days later_.
+
+Behold me with staff and scrip, footing it merrily in the Land of
+Pardons. I have no goal. When I am weary I stop at some _auberge_; when
+I am rested I go on again. Neither do I put any constraint on my
+spirit. No subduing of the mind to the task of the moment. I dream to
+heart's content.
+
+My dreams stretch into the future. I see myself a singer of simple
+songs, a laureate of the under-dog. I will write books, a score of
+them. I will voyage far and wide. I will . . .
+
+But there! Dreams are dangerous. They waste the time one should spend
+in making them come true. Yet when we do make them come true, we find
+the vision sweeter than the reality. How much of our happiness do we
+owe to dreams? I have in mind one old chap who used to herd the sheep
+on my uncle's farm.
+
+
+
+
+Old David Smail
+
+
+
+ He dreamed away his hours in school;
+ He sat with such an absent air,
+ The master reckoned him a fool,
+ And gave him up in dull despair.
+
+ When other lads were making hay
+ You'd find him loafing by the stream;
+ He'd take a book and slip away,
+ And just pretend to fish . . . and dream.
+
+ His brothers passed him in the race;
+ They climbed the hill and clutched the prize.
+ He did not seem to heed, his face
+ Was tranquil as the evening skies.
+
+ He lived apart, he spoke with few;
+ Abstractedly through life he went;
+ Oh, what he dreamed of no one knew,
+ And yet he seemed to be content.
+
+ I see him now, so old and gray,
+ His eyes with inward vision dim;
+ And though he faltered on the way,
+ Somehow I almost envied him.
+
+ At last beside his bed I stood:
+ "And is Life done so soon?" he sighed;
+ "It's been so rich, so full, so good,
+ I've loved it all . . ."--and so he died.
+
+
+
+_Another day_.
+
+Framed in hedgerows of emerald, the wheat glows with a caloric fervor,
+as if gorged with summer heat. In the vivid green of pastures old women
+are herding cows. Calm and patient are their faces as with gentle
+industry they bend over their knitting. One feels that they are
+necessary to the landscape.
+
+To gaze at me the field-workers suspend the magnificent lethargy of
+their labors. The men with the reaping hooks improve the occasion by
+another pull at the cider bottle under the stook; the women raise
+apathetic brown faces from the sheaf they are tying; every one is a
+study in deliberation, though the crop is russet ripe and crying to be
+cut.
+
+Then on I go again amid high banks overgrown with fern and honeysuckle.
+Sometimes I come on an old mill that seems to have been constructed by
+Constable, so charmingly does Nature imitate Art. By the deserted
+house, half drowned in greenery, the velvety wheel, dipping in the
+crystal water, seems to protest against this prolongation of its toil.
+
+Then again I come on its brother, the Mill of the Wind, whirling its
+arms so cheerily, as it turns its great white stones for its master, the
+floury miller by the door.
+
+These things delight me. I am in a land where Time has lagged, where
+simple people timorously hug the Past. How far away now seems the
+welter and swelter of the city, the hectic sophistication of the
+streets. The sense of wonder is strong in me again, the joy of looking
+at familiar things as if one were seeing them for the first time.
+
+
+
+
+The Wonderer
+
+
+
+ I wish that I could understand
+ The moving marvel of my Hand;
+ I watch my fingers turn and twist,
+ The supple bending of my wrist,
+ The dainty touch of finger-tip,
+ The steel intensity of grip;
+ A tool of exquisite design,
+ With pride I think: "It's mine! It's mine!"
+
+ Then there's the wonder of my Eyes,
+ Where hills and houses, seas and skies,
+ In waves of light converge and pass,
+ And print themselves as on a glass.
+ Line, form and color live in me;
+ I am the Beauty that I see;
+ Ah! I could write a book of size
+ About the wonder of my Eyes.
+
+ What of the wonder of my Heart,
+ That plays so faithfully its part?
+ I hear it running sound and sweet;
+ It does not seem to miss a beat;
+ Between the cradle and the grave
+ It never falters, stanch and brave.
+ Alas! I wish I had the art
+ To tell the wonder of my Heart.
+
+ Then oh! but how can I explain
+ The wondrous wonder of my Brain?
+ That marvelous machine that brings
+ All consciousness of wonderings;
+ That lets me from myself leap out
+ And watch my body walk about;
+ It's hopeless--all my words are vain
+ To tell the wonder of my Brain.
+
+ But do not think, O patient friend,
+ Who reads these stanzas to the end,
+ That I myself would glorify. . . .
+ You're just as wonderful as I,
+ And all Creation in our view
+ Is quite as marvelous as you.
+ Come, let us on the sea-shore stand
+ And wonder at a grain of sand;
+ And then into the meadow pass
+ And marvel at a blade of grass;
+ Or cast our vision high and far
+ And thrill with wonder at a star;
+ A host of stars--night's holy tent
+ Huge-glittering with wonderment.
+
+ If wonder is in great and small,
+ Then what of Him who made it all?
+ In eyes and brain and heart and limb
+ Let's see the wondrous work of Him.
+ In house and hill and sward and sea,
+ In bird and beast and flower and tree,
+ In everything from sun to sod,
+ The wonder and the awe of God.
+
+
+
+August 9, 1914.
+
+For some time the way has been growing wilder. Thickset hedges have
+yielded to dykes of stone, and there is every sign that I am approaching
+the rugged region of the coast. At each point of vantage I can see a
+Cross, often a relic of the early Christians, stumpy and corroded. Then
+I come on a slab of gray stone upstanding about fifteen feet. Like a
+sentinel on that solitary plain it overwhelms me with a sense of
+mystery.
+
+But as I go on through this desolate land these stones become more and
+more familiar. Like soldiers they stand in rank, extending over the
+moor. The sky is cowled with cloud, save where a sullen sunset shoots
+blood-red rays across the plain. Bathed in that sinister light stands my
+army of stone, and a wind swooping down seems to wail amid its ranks.
+As in a glass darkly I can see the skin-clad men, the women with their
+tangled hair, the beast-like feast, the cowering terror of the night.
+Then the sunset is cut off suddenly, and a clammy mist shrouds that
+silent army. So it is almost with a shudder I take my last look at the
+Stones of Carnac.
+
+But now my pilgrimage is drawing to an end. A painter friend who lives
+by the sea has asked me to stay with him awhile. Well, I have walked a
+hundred miles, singing on the way. I have dreamed and dawdled, planned,
+exulted. I have drunk buckets of cider, and eaten many an omelette that
+seemed like a golden glorification of its egg. It has all been very
+sweet, but it will also be sweet to loaf awhile.
+
+
+
+
+Oh, It Is Good
+
+
+
+ Oh, it is good to drink and sup,
+ And then beside the kindly fire
+ To smoke and heap the faggots up,
+ And rest and dream to heart's desire.
+
+ Oh, it is good to ride and run,
+ To roam the greenwood wild and free;
+ To hunt, to idle in the sun,
+ To leap into the laughing sea.
+
+ Oh, it is good with hand and brain
+ To gladly till the chosen soil,
+ And after honest sweat and strain
+ To see the harvest of one's toil.
+
+ Oh, it is good afar to roam,
+ And seek adventure in strange lands;
+ Yet oh, so good the coming home,
+ The velvet love of little hands.
+
+ So much is good. . . . We thank Thee, God,
+ For all the tokens Thou hast given,
+ That here on earth our feet have trod
+ Thy little shining trails of Heaven.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+August 10, 1914.
+
+I am living in a little house so near the sea that at high tide I can
+see on my bedroom wall the reflected ripple of the water. At night I
+waken to the melodious welter of waves; or maybe there is a great
+stillness, and then I know that the sand and sea-grass are lying naked
+to the moon. But soon the tide returns, and once more I hear the
+roistering of the waves.
+
+Calvert, my friend, is a lover as well as a painter of nature. He rises
+with the dawn to see the morning mist kindle to coral and the sun's edge
+clear the hill-crest. As he munches his coarse bread and sips his white
+wine, what dreams are his beneath the magic changes of the sky! He will
+paint the same scene under a dozen conditions of light. He has looked so
+long for Beauty that he has come to see it everywhere.
+
+I love this friendly home of his. A peace steals over my spirit, and I
+feel as if I could stay here always. Some day I hope that I too may
+have such an one, and that I may write like this:
+
+
+
+
+I Have Some Friends
+
+
+
+ I have some friends, some worthy friends,
+ And worthy friends are rare:
+ These carpet slippers on my feet,
+ That padded leather chair;
+ This old and shabby dressing-gown,
+ So well the worse of wear.
+
+ I have some friends, some honest friends,
+ And honest friends are few;
+ My pipe of briar, my open fire,
+ A book that's not too new;
+ My bed so warm, the nights of storm
+ I love to listen to.
+
+ I have some friends, some good, good friends,
+ Who faithful are to me:
+ My wrestling partner when I rise,
+ The big and burly sea;
+ My little boat that's riding there
+ So saucy and so free.
+
+ I have some friends, some golden friends,
+ Whose worth will not decline:
+ A tawny Irish terrier, a purple shading pine,
+ A little red-roofed cottage that
+ So proudly I call mine.
+
+ All other friends may come and go,
+ All other friendships fail;
+ But these, the friends I've worked to win,
+ Oh, they will never stale;
+ And comfort me till Time shall write
+ The finish to my tale.
+
+
+
+Calvert tries to paint more than the thing he sees; he tries to paint
+behind it, to express its spirit. He believes that Beauty is God made
+manifest, and that when we discover Him in Nature we discover Him in
+ourselves.
+
+But Calvert did not always see thus. At one time he was a Pagan,
+content to paint the outward aspect of things. It was after his little
+child died he gained in vision. Maybe the thought that the dead are
+lost to us was too unbearable. He had to believe in a coming together
+again.
+
+
+
+
+The Quest
+
+
+
+ I sought Him on the purple seas,
+ I sought Him on the peaks aflame;
+ Amid the gloom of giant trees
+ And canyons lone I called His name;
+ The wasted ways of earth I trod:
+ In vain! In vain! I found not God.
+
+ I sought Him in the hives of men,
+ The cities grand, the hamlets gray,
+ The temples old beyond my ken,
+ The tabernacles of to-day;
+ All life that is, from cloud to clod
+ I sought. . . . Alas! I found not God.
+
+ Then after roamings far and wide,
+ In streets and seas and deserts wild,
+ I came to stand at last beside
+ The death-bed of my little child.
+ Lo! as I bent beneath the rod
+ I raised my eyes . . . and there was God.
+
+
+
+A golden mile of sand swings hammock-like between two tusks of rock. The
+sea is sleeping sapphire that wakes to cream and crash upon the beach.
+There is a majesty in the detachment of its lazy waves, and it is good
+in the night to hear its friendly roar. Good, too, to leap forth with
+the first sunshine and fall into its arms, to let it pummel the body to
+living ecstasy and send one to breakfast glad-eyed and glowing.
+
+Behind the house the greensward slopes to a wheat-field that is like a
+wall of gold. Here I lie and laze away the time, or dip into a favorite
+book, Stevenson's _Letters_ or Belloc's _Path to Rome_. Bees drone in
+the wild thyme; a cuckoo keeps calling, a lark spills jeweled melody.
+Then there is a seeming silence, but it is the silence of a deeper
+sound.
+
+After all, Silence is only man's confession of his deafness. Like Death,
+like Eternity, it is a word that means nothing. So lying there I hear
+the breathing of the trees, the crepitation of the growing grass, the
+seething of the sap and the movements of innumerable insects. Strange
+how I think with distaste of the spurious glitter of Paris, of my
+garret, even of my poor little book.
+
+I watch the wife of my friend gathering poppies in the wheat. There is a
+sadness in her face, for it is only a year ago they lost their little
+one. Often I see her steal away to the village graveyard, sitting
+silent for long and long.
+
+
+
+
+The Comforter
+
+
+
+ As I sat by my baby's bed
+ That's open to the sky,
+ There fluttered round and round my head
+ A radiant butterfly.
+
+ And as I wept--of hearts that ache
+ The saddest in the land--
+ It left a lily for my sake,
+ And lighted on my hand.
+
+ I watched it, oh, so quietly,
+ And though it rose and flew,
+ As if it fain would comfort me
+ It came and came anew.
+
+ Now, where my darling lies at rest,
+ I do not dare to sigh,
+ For look! there gleams upon my breast
+ A snow-white butterfly.
+
+
+
+My friends will have other children, and if some day they should read
+this piece of verse, perhaps they will think of the city lad who used to
+sit under the old fig-tree in the garden and watch the lizards sun
+themselves on the time-worn wall.
+
+
+
+
+The Other One
+
+
+
+ "Gather around me, children dear;
+ The wind is high and the night is cold;
+ Closer, little ones, snuggle near;
+ Let's seek a story of ages old;
+ A magic tale of a bygone day,
+ Of lovely ladies and dragons dread;
+ Come, for you're all so tired of play,
+ We'll read till it's time to go to bed."
+
+ So they all are glad, and they nestle in,
+ And squat on the rough old nursery rug,
+ And they nudge and hush as I begin,
+ And the fire leaps up and all's so snug;
+ And there I sit in the big arm-chair,
+ And how they are eager and sweet and wise,
+ And they cup their chins in their hands and stare
+ At the heart of the flame with thoughtful eyes.
+
+ And then, as I read by the ruddy glow
+ And the little ones sit entranced and still . . .
+ _He_'s drawing near, ah! I know, I know
+ He's listening too, as he always will.
+ He's there--he's standing beside my knee;
+ I see him so well, my wee, wee son. . . .
+ Oh, children dear, don't look at me--
+ I'm reading now for--the Other One.
+
+ For the firelight glints in his golden hair,
+ And his wondering eyes are fixed on my face,
+ And he rests on the arm of my easy-chair,
+ And the book's a blur and I lose my place:
+ And I touch my lips to his shining head,
+ And my voice breaks down and--the story's done. . . .
+ Oh, children, kiss me and go to bed:
+ Leave me to think of the Other One.
+
+ Of the One who will never grow up at all,
+ Who will always be just a child at play,
+ Tender and trusting and sweet and small,
+ Who will never leave me and go away;
+ Who will never hurt me and give me pain;
+ Who will comfort me when I'm all alone;
+ A heart of love that's without a stain,
+ Always and always my own, my own.
+
+ Yet a thought shines out from the dark of pain,
+ And it gives me hope to be reconciled:
+ _That each of us must be born again,
+ And live and die as a little child;
+ So that with souls all shining white,
+ White as snow and without one sin,
+ We may come to the Gates of Eternal Light,
+ Where only children may enter in._
+
+ So, gentle mothers, don't ever grieve
+ Because you have lost, but kiss the rod;
+ From the depths of your woe be glad, believe
+ You've given an angel unto God.
+ Rejoice! You've a child whose youth endures,
+ Who comes to you when the day is done,
+ Wistful for love, oh, yours, just yours,
+ Dearest of all, the Other One.
+
+
+
+
+Catastrophe
+
+
+
+Brittany, August 14, 1914.
+
+And now I fear I must write in another strain. Up to this time I have
+been too happy. I have existed in a magic Bohemia, largely of my own
+making. Hope, faith, enthusiasm have been mine. Each day has had its
+struggle, its failure, its triumph. However, that is all ended. During
+the past week we have lived breathlessly. For in spite of the exultant
+sunshine our spirits have been under a cloud, a deepening shadow of
+horror and calamity. . . . WAR.
+
+Even as I write, in our little village steeple the bells are ringing
+madly, and in every little village steeple all over the land. As he
+hears it the harvester checks his scythe on the swing; the clerk throws
+down his pen; the shopkeeper puts up his shutters. Only in the cafes
+there is a clamor of voices and a drowning of care.
+
+For here every man must fight, every home give tribute. There is no
+question, no appeal. By heredity and discipline all minds are shaped to
+this great hour. So to-morrow each man will seek his barracks and
+become a soldier as completely as if he had never been anything else.
+With the same docility as he dons his baggy red trousers will he let
+some muddle-headed General hurl him to destruction for some dubious
+gain. To-day a father, a home-maker; to-morrow fodder for cannon. So
+they all go without hesitation, without bitterness; and the great
+military machine that knows not humanity swings them to their fate. I
+marvel at the sense of duty, the resignation, the sacrifice. It is
+magnificent, it is FRANCE.
+
+And the Women. Those who wait and weep. Ah! to-day I have not seen one
+who did not weep. Yes, one. She was very old, and she stood by her
+garden gate with her hand on the uplifted latch. As I passed she looked
+at me with eyes that did not see. She had no doubt sons and grandsons
+who must fight, and she had good reason, perhaps, to remember the war of
+_soixante-dix_. When I passed an hour later she was still there, her
+hand on the uplifted latch.
+
+
+August 30th.
+
+The men have gone. Only remain graybeards, women and children. Calvert
+and I have been helping our neighbors to get in the harvest. No doubt we
+aid; but there with the old men and children a sense of uneasiness and
+even shame comes over me. I would like to return to Paris, but the
+railway is mobilized. Each day I grow more discontented. Up there in
+the red North great things are doing and I am out of it. I am thoroughly
+unhappy.
+
+Then Calvert comes to me with a plan. He has a Ford car. We will all
+three go to Paris. He intends to offer himself and his car to the Red
+Cross. His wife will nurse. So we are very happy at the solution, and
+to-morrow we are off.
+
+
+Paris.
+
+Back again. Closed shutters, deserted streets. How glum everything is!
+Those who are not mobilized seem uncertain how to turn. Every one buys
+the papers and reads grimly of disaster. No news is bad news.
+
+I go to my garret as to a beloved friend. Everything is just as I left
+it, so that it seems I have never been away. I sigh with relief and
+joy. I will take up my work again. Serene above the storm I will watch
+and wait. Although I have been brought up in England I am American born.
+My country is not concerned.
+
+So, going to the Dome Cafe, I seek some of my comrades. Strange! They
+have gone. MacBean, I am told, is in England. By dyeing his hair and
+lying about his age he has managed to enlist in the Seaforth
+Highlanders. Saxon Dane too. He has joined the Foreign Legion, and
+even now may be fighting.
+
+Well, let them go. I will keep out of the mess. But why did they go? I
+wish I knew. War is murder. Criminal folly. Against Humanity.
+Imperialism is at the root of it. We are fools and dupes. Yes, I will
+think and write of other things. . . .
+
+_MacBean has enlisted_.
+
+I hate violence. I would not willingly cause pain to anything
+breathing. I would rather be killed than kill. I will stand above the
+Battle and watch it from afar.
+
+_Dane is in the Foreign Legion_.
+
+How disturbing it all is! One cannot settle down to anything. Every day
+I meet men who tell the most wonderful stories in the most casual way.
+I envy them. I too want to have experiences, to live where life's beat
+is most intense. But that's a poor reason for going to war.
+
+And yet, though I shrink from the idea of fighting, I might in some way
+help those who are. MacBean and Dane, for example. Sitting lonely in
+the Dome, I seem to see their ghosts in the corner. MacBean listening
+with his keen, sarcastic smile, Saxon Dane banging his great hairy fist
+on the table till the glasses jump. Where are they now? Living a life
+that I will never know. When they come back, if they ever do, shall I
+not feel shamed in their presence? Oh, this filthy war! Things were
+going on so beautifully. We were all so happy, so full of ambition, of
+hope; laughing and talking over pipe and bowl, and in our garrets
+seeking to realize our dreams. Ah, these days will never come again!
+
+Then, as I sit there, Calvert seeks me out. He has joined an ambulance
+corps that is going to the Front. Will I come in?
+
+"Yes," I say; "I'll do anything."
+
+So it is all settled. To-morrow I give up my freedom.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK FOUR ~~ WINTER
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+
+The Somme Front, January 1915.
+
+There is an avenue of noble beeches leading to the Chateau, and in the
+shadow of each glimmers the pale oblong of an ambulance. We have to keep
+them thus concealed, for only yesterday morning a Taube flew over. The
+beggars are rather partial to Red Cross cars. One of our chaps, taking
+in a load of wounded, was chased and pelted the other day.
+
+The Chateau seems all spires and towers, the glorified dream of a
+Parisian pastrycook. On its terrace figures in khaki are lounging. They
+are the volunteers, the owner-drivers of the Corps, many of them men of
+wealth and title. Curious to see one who owns all the coal in two
+counties proudly signing for his _sou_ a day; or another, who lives in a
+Fifth Avenue palace, contentedly sleeping on the straw-strewn floor of a
+hovel.
+
+Here is a rhyme I have made of such an one:
+
+
+
+
+Priscilla
+
+
+
+ Jerry MacMullen, the millionaire,
+ Driving a red-meat bus out there--
+ How did he win his _Croix de Guerre_?
+ Bless you, that's all old stuff:
+ Beast of a night on the Verdun road,
+ Jerry stuck with a woeful load,
+ Stalled in the mud where the red lights glowed,
+ Prospect devilish tough.
+
+ "Little Priscilla" he called his car,
+ Best of our battered bunch by far,
+ Branded with many a bullet scar,
+ Yet running so sweet and true.
+ Jerry he loved her, knew her tricks;
+ Swore: "She's the beat of the best big six,
+ And if ever I get in a deuce of a fix
+ Priscilla will pull me through."
+
+ "Looks pretty rotten right now," says he;
+ "Hanged if the devil himself could see.
+ Priscilla, it's up to you and me
+ To show 'em what we can do."
+ Seemed that Priscilla just took the word;
+ Up with a leap like a horse that's spurred,
+ On with the joy of a homing bird,
+ Swift as the wind she flew.
+
+ Shell-holes shoot at them out of the night;
+ A lurch to the left, a wrench to the right,
+ Hands grim-gripping and teeth clenched tight,
+ Eyes that glare through the dark.
+ "Priscilla, you're doing me proud this day;
+ Hospital's only a league away,
+ And, honey, I'm longing to hit the hay,
+ So hurry, old girl. . . . But hark!"
+
+ Howl of a shell, harsh, sudden, dread;
+ Another . . . another. . . . "Strike me dead
+ If the Huns ain't strafing the road ahead
+ So the convoy can't get through!
+ A barrage of shrap, and us alone;
+ Four rush-cases--you hear 'em moan?
+ Fierce old messes of blood and bone. . . .
+ Priscilla, what shall we do?"
+
+ Again it seems that Priscilla hears.
+ With a rush and a roar her way she clears,
+ Straight at the hell of flame she steers,
+ Full at its heart of wrath.
+ Fury of death and dust and din!
+ Havoc and horror! She's in, she's in;
+ She's almost over, she'll win, she'll win!
+ _Woof! Crump!_ right in the path.
+
+ Little Priscilla skids and stops,
+ Jerry MacMullen sways and flops;
+ Bang in his map the crash he cops;
+ Shriek from the car: "Mon Dieu!"
+ One of the _blesses_ hears him say,
+ Just at the moment he faints away:
+ "Reckon this isn't my lucky day,
+ Priscilla, it's up to you."
+
+ Sergeant raps on the doctor's door;
+ "Car in the court with _couches_ four;
+ Driver dead on the dashboard floor;
+ Strange how the bunch got here."
+ "No," says the Doc, "this chap's alive;
+ But tell me, how could a man contrive
+ With both arms broken, a car to drive?
+ Thunder of God! it's queer."
+
+ Same little _blesse_ makes a spiel;
+ Says he: "When I saw our driver reel,
+ A Strange Shape leapt to the driving wheel
+ And sped us safe through the night."
+ But Jerry, he says in his drawling tone:
+ "Rats! Why, Priscilla came in on her own.
+ Bless her, she did it alone, alone. . . ."
+ _Hanged if I know who's right._
+
+
+
+As I am sitting down to my midday meal an orderly gives me a telegram:
+
+_Hill 71. Two couches. Send car at once._
+
+The uptilted country-side is a checker-board of green and gray, and,
+except where groves of trees rise like islands, cultivated to the last
+acre. But as we near the firing-line all efforts to till the land cease,
+and the ungathered beets of last year have grown to seed. Amid rank
+unkempt fields I race over a road that is pitted with obus-holes; I pass
+a line of guns painted like snakes, and drawn by horses dyed khaki-
+color; then soldiers coming from the trenches, mud-caked and ineffably
+weary; then a race over a bit of road that is exposed; then, buried in
+the hill-side, the dressing station.
+
+The two wounded are put into my car. From hip to heel one is swathed in
+bandages; the other has a great white turban on his head, with a red
+patch on it that spreads and spreads. They stare dully, but make no
+sound. As I crank the car there is a shrill screaming noise. . . .
+About thirty yards away I hear an explosion like a mine-blast, followed
+by a sudden belch of coal-black smoke. I stare at it in a dazed way.
+Then the doctor says: "Don't trouble to analyze your sensations. Better
+get off. You're only drawing their fire."
+
+Here is one of my experiences:
+
+
+
+
+A Casualty
+
+
+
+ That boy I took in the car last night,
+ With the body that awfully sagged away,
+ And the lips blood-crisped, and the eyes flame-bright,
+ And the poor hands folded and cold as clay--
+ Oh, I've thought and I've thought of him all the day.
+
+ For the weary old doctor says to me:
+ "He'll only last for an hour or so.
+ Both of his legs below the knee
+ Blown off by a bomb. . . . So, lad, go slow,
+ And please remember, he doesn't know."
+
+ So I tried to drive with never a jar;
+ And there was I cursing the road like mad,
+ When I hears a ghost of a voice from the car:
+ "Tell me, old chap, have I 'copped it' bad?"
+ So I answers "No," and he says, "I'm glad."
+
+ "Glad," says he, "for at twenty-two
+ Life's so splendid, I hate to go.
+ There's so much good that a chap might do,
+ And I've fought from the start and I've suffered so.
+ 'Twould be hard to get knocked out now, you know."
+
+ "Forget it," says I; then I drove awhile,
+ And I passed him a cheery word or two;
+ But he didn't answer for many a mile,
+ So just as the hospital hove in view,
+ Says I: "Is there nothing that I can do?"
+
+ Then he opens his eyes and he smiles at me;
+ And he takes my hand in his trembling hold;
+ "Thank you--you're far too kind," says he:
+ "I'm awfully comfy--stay . . . let's see:
+ I fancy my blanket's come unrolled--
+ My _feet_, please wrap 'em--they're cold . . . they're cold."
+
+
+
+ There is a city that glitters on the plain. Afar off we can see
+ its tall cathedral spire, and there we often take our wounded
+ from the little village hospitals to the rail-head. Tragic little buildings,
+ these emergency hospitals--town-halls, churches, schools;
+ their cots are never empty, their surgeons never still.
+
+ So every day we get our list of cases and off we go, a long line of cars
+ swishing through the mud. Then one by one we branch off
+ to our village hospital, puzzling out the road on our maps.
+ Arrived there, we load up quickly.
+
+ The wounded make no moan. They lie, limp, heavily bandaged,
+ with bare legs and arms protruding from their blankets.
+ They do not know where they are going; they do not care.
+ Like live stock, they are labeled and numbered. An orderly brings along
+ their battle-scarred equipment, throwing open their rifles
+ to see that no charge remains. Sometimes they shake our hands
+ and thank us for the drive.
+
+ In the streets of the city I see French soldiers wearing the _Fourragere_.
+ It is a cord of green, yellow or red, and corresponds to
+ the _Croix de Guerre_, the _Medaille militaire_ and the Legion of Honor.
+ The red is the highest of all, and has been granted only to
+ one or two regiments. This incident was told to me by a man who saw it:
+
+
+
+
+The Blood-Red _Fourragere_
+
+
+
+ What was the blackest sight to me
+ Of all that campaign?
+ _A naked woman tied to a tree
+ With jagged holes where her breasts should be,
+ Rotting there in the rain._
+
+ On we pressed to the battle fray,
+ Dogged and dour and spent.
+ Sudden I heard my Captain say:
+ "_Voila!_ Kultur has passed this way,
+ And left us a monument."
+
+ So I looked and I saw our Colonel there,
+ And his grand head, snowed with the years,
+ Unto the beat of the rain was bare;
+ And, oh, there was grief in his frozen stare,
+ And his cheeks were stung with tears!
+
+ Then at last he turned from the woeful tree,
+ And his face like stone was set;
+ "Go, march the Regiment past," said he,
+ "That every father and son may see,
+ And none may ever forget."
+
+ Oh, the crimson strands of her hair downpoured
+ Over her breasts of woe;
+ And our grim old Colonel leaned on his sword,
+ And the men filed past with their rifles lowered,
+ Solemn and sad and slow.
+
+ But I'll never forget till the day I die,
+ As I stood in the driving rain,
+ And the jaded columns of men slouched by,
+ How amazement leapt into every eye,
+ Then fury and grief and pain.
+
+ And some would like madmen stand aghast,
+ With their hands upclenched to the sky;
+ And some would cross themselves as they passed,
+ And some would curse in a scalding blast,
+ And some like children cry.
+
+ Yea, some would be sobbing, and some would pray,
+ And some hurl hateful names;
+ But the best had never a word to say;
+ They turned their twitching faces away,
+ And their eyes were like hot flames.
+
+ They passed; then down on his bended knee
+ The Colonel dropped to the Dead:
+ "Poor martyred daughter of France!" said he,
+ "O dearly, dearly avenged you'll be
+ Or ever a day be sped!"
+
+ Now they hold that we are the best of the best,
+ And each of our men may wear,
+ Like a gash of crimson across his chest,
+ As one fierce-proved in the battle-test,
+ The blood-red _Fourragere_.
+
+ For each as he leaps to the top can see,
+ Like an etching of blood on his brain,
+ A wife or a mother lashed to a tree,
+ With two black holes where her breasts should be,
+ Left to rot in the rain.
+
+ So we fight like fiends, and of us they say
+ That we neither yield nor spare.
+ Oh, we have the bitterest debt to pay. . . .
+ Have we paid it?-- Look--how we wear to-day
+ Like a trophy, gallant and proud and gay,
+ Our blood-red _Fourragere_.
+
+
+
+It is often weary waiting at the little _poste de secours_. Some of us
+play solitaire, some read a "sixpenny", some doze or try to talk in bad
+French to the _poilus_. Around us is discomfort, dirt and drama.
+
+For my part, I pass the time only too quickly, trying to put into verse
+the incidents and ideas that come my way. In this way I hope to collect
+quite a lot of stuff which may some day see itself in print.
+
+Here is one of my efforts:
+
+
+
+
+Jim
+
+
+ Never knew Jim, did you? Our boy Jim?
+ Bless you, there was the likely lad;
+ Supple and straight and long of limb,
+ Clean as a whistle, and just as glad.
+ Always laughing, wasn't he, dad?
+ Joy, pure joy to the heart of him,
+ And, oh, but the soothering ways he had,
+ Jim, our Jim!
+
+ But I see him best as a tiny tot,
+ A bonny babe, though it's me that speaks;
+ Laughing there in his little cot,
+ With his sunny hair and his apple cheeks.
+ And my! but the blue, blue eyes he'd got,
+ And just where his wee mouth dimpled dim
+ Such a fairy mark like a beauty spot--
+ That was Jim.
+
+ Oh, the war, the war! How my eyes were wet!
+ But he says: "Don't be sorrowing, mother dear;
+ You never knew me to fail you yet,
+ And I'll be back in a year, a year."
+ 'Twas at Mons he fell, in the first attack;
+ For so they said, and their eyes were dim;
+ But I laughed in their faces: "He'll come back,
+ Will my Jim."
+
+ Now, we'd been wedded for twenty year,
+ And Jim was the only one we'd had;
+ So when I whispered in father's ear,
+ He wouldn't believe me--would you, dad?
+ There! I must hurry . . . hear him cry?
+ My new little baby. . . . See! that's him.
+ What are we going to call him? Why,
+ Jim, just Jim.
+
+ Jim! For look at him laughing there
+ In the same old way in his tiny cot,
+ With his rosy cheeks and his sunny hair,
+ And look, just look . . . his beauty spot
+ In the selfsame place. . . . Oh, I can't explain,
+ And of course you think it's a mother's whim,
+ But I know, I know it's my boy again,
+ Same wee Jim.
+
+ Just come back as he said he would;
+ Come with his love and his heart of glee.
+ Oh, I cried and I cried, but the Lord was good;
+ From the shadow of Death he set Jim free.
+ So I'll have him all over again, you see.
+ Can you wonder my mother-heart's a-brim?
+ Oh, how happy we're going to be!
+ Aren't we, Jim?
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+In Picardy,
+
+January 1915.
+
+The road lies amid a malevolent heath. It seems to lead us right into
+the clutch of the enemy; for the star-shells, that at first were
+bursting overhead, gradually encircle us. The fields are strangely
+sinister; the splintered trees are like giant toothpicks. There is a
+lisping and a twanging overhead.
+
+As we wait at the door of the dugout that serves as a first-aid dressing
+station, I gaze up into that mysterious dark, so alive with musical
+vibrations. Then a small shadow detaches itself from the greater
+shadow, and a gray-bearded sentry says to me: "You'd better come in out
+of the bullets."
+
+So I keep under cover, and presently they bring my load. Two men drip
+with sweat as they carry their comrade. I can see that they all three
+belong to the Foreign Legion. I think for a moment of Saxon Dane. How
+strange if some day I should carry him! Half fearfully I look at my
+passenger, but he is a black man. Such things only happen in fiction.
+
+This is what I have written of the finest troops in the Army of France:
+
+
+
+
+Kelly of the Legion
+
+
+ Now Kelly was no fighter;
+ He loved his pipe and glass;
+ An easygoing blighter,
+ Who lived in Montparnasse.
+ But 'mid the tavern tattle
+ He heard some guinney say:
+ "When France goes forth to battle,
+ The Legion leads the way.
+
+ _"The scourings of creation,
+ Of every sin and station,
+ The men who've known damnation,
+ Are picked to lead the way."_
+
+ Well, Kelly joined the Legion;
+ They marched him day and night;
+ They rushed him to the region
+ Where largest loomed the fight.
+ "Behold your mighty mission,
+ Your destiny," said they;
+ "By glorious tradition
+ The Legion leads the way.
+
+ _"With tattered banners flying
+ With trail of dead and dying,
+ On! On! All hell defying,
+ The Legion sweeps the way."_
+
+ With grim, hard-bitten faces,
+ With jests of savage mirth,
+ They swept into their places,
+ The men of iron worth;
+ Their blooded steel was flashing;
+ They swung to face the fray;
+ Then rushing, roaring, crashing,
+ The Legion cleared the way.
+
+ _The trail they blazed was gory;
+ Few lived to tell the story;
+ Through death they plunged to glory;
+ But, oh, they cleared the way!_
+
+ Now Kelly lay a-dying,
+ And dimly saw advance,
+ With split new banners flying,
+ The _fantassins_ of France.
+ Then up amid the _melee_
+ He rose from where he lay;
+ "Come on, me boys," says Kelly,
+ "The Layjun lades the way!"
+
+ _Aye, while they faltered, doubting
+ (Such flames of doom were spouting),
+ He caught them, thrilled them, shouting:
+ "The Layjun lades the way!"_
+
+ They saw him slip and stumble,
+ Then stagger on once more;
+ They marked him trip and tumble,
+ A mass of grime and gore;
+ They watched him blindly crawling
+ Amid hell's own affray,
+ And calling, calling, calling:
+ "The Layjun lades the way!"
+
+ _And even while they wondered,
+ The battle-wrack was sundered;
+ To Victory they thundered,
+ But . . . Kelly led the way._
+
+ Still Kelly kept agoing;
+ Berserker-like he ran;
+ His eyes with fury glowing,
+ A lion of a man;
+ His rifle madly swinging,
+ His soul athirst to slay,
+ His slogan ringing, ringing,
+ "The Layjun lades the way!"
+
+ _Till in a pit death-baited,
+ Where Huns with Maxims waited,
+ He plunged . . . and there, blood-sated,
+ To death he stabbed his way._
+
+ Now Kelly was a fellow
+ Who simply loathed a fight:
+ He loved a tavern mellow,
+ Grog hot and pipe alight;
+ I'm sure the Show appalled him,
+ And yet without dismay,
+ When Death and Duty called him,
+ He up and led the way.
+
+ _So in Valhalla drinking
+ (If heroes meek and shrinking
+ Are suffered there), I'm thinking
+ 'Tis Kelly leads the way._
+
+
+
+We have just had one of our men killed, a young sculptor of immense
+promise.
+
+When one thinks of all the fine work he might have accomplished, it
+seems a shame. But, after all, to-morrow it may be the turn of any of
+us. If it should be mine, my chief regret will be for work undone.
+
+Ah! I often think of how I will go back to the Quarter and take up the
+old life again. How sweet it will all seem. But first I must earn the
+right. And if ever I do go back, how I will find Bohemia changed!
+Missing how many a face!
+
+It was in thinking of our lost comrade I wrote the following:
+
+
+
+
+The Three Tommies
+
+
+
+ That Barret, the painter of pictures, what feeling for color he had!
+ And Fanning, the maker of music, such melodies mirthful and mad!
+ And Harley, the writer of stories, so whimsical, tender and glad!
+
+ To hark to their talk in the trenches, high heart unfolding to heart,
+ Of the day when the war would be over, and each would be true to his part,
+ Upbuilding a Palace of Beauty to the wonder and glory of Art . . .
+
+ Yon's Barret, the painter of pictures, yon carcass that rots on the wire;
+ His hand with its sensitive cunning is crisped to a cinder with fire;
+ His eyes with their magical vision are bubbles of glutinous mire.
+
+ Poor Fanning! He sought to discover the symphonic note of a shell;
+ There are bits of him broken and bloody, to show you the place where he fell;
+ I've reason to fear on his exquisite ear the rats have been banqueting well.
+
+ And speaking of Harley, the writer, I fancy I looked on him last,
+ Sprawling and staring and writhing in the roar of the battle blast;
+ Then a mad gun-team crashed over, and scattered his brains as it passed.
+
+ Oh, Harley and Fanning and Barret, they were bloody good mates o' mine;
+ Their bodies are empty bottles; Death has guzzled the wine;
+ What's left of them's filth and corruption. . . . Where is the Fire Divine?
+
+ I'll tell you. . . . At night in the trenches, as I watch and I do my part,
+ Three radiant spirits I'm seeing, high heart revealing to heart,
+ And they're building a peerless palace to the splendor and triumph of Art.
+
+ Yet, alas! for the fame of Barret, the glory he might have trailed!
+ And alas! for the name of Fanning, a star that beaconed and paled,
+ Poor Harley, obscure and forgotten. . . .
+ Well, who shall say that they failed!
+
+ No, each did a Something Grander than ever he dreamed to do;
+ And as for the work unfinished, all will be paid their due;
+ The broken ends will be fitted, the balance struck will be true.
+
+ So painters, and players, and penmen, I tell you: Do as you please;
+ Let your fame outleap on the trumpets, you'll never rise up to these--
+ To three grim and gory Tommies, down, down on your bended knees!
+
+
+
+Daventry, the sculptor, is buried in a little graveyard near one of our
+posts. Just now our section of the line is quiet, so I often go and sit
+there. Stretching myself on a flat stone, I dream for hours.
+
+Silence and solitude! How good the peace of it all seems! Around me the
+grasses weave a pattern, and half hide the hundreds of little wooden
+crosses. Here is one with a single name:
+
+
+ AUBREY.
+
+ Who was Aubrey I wonder? Then another:
+
+ _To Our Beloved Comrade._
+
+
+Then one which has attached to it, in the cheapest of little frames, the
+crude water-color daub of a child, three purple flowers standing in a
+yellow vase. Below it, painfully printed, I read:
+
+ _To My Darling Papa--Thy Little Odette._
+
+
+And beyond the crosses many fresh graves have been dug. With hungry open
+mouths they wait. Even now I can hear the guns that are going to feed
+them. Soon there will be more crosses, and more and more. Then they
+will cease, and wives and mothers will come here to weep.
+
+Ah! Peace so precious must be bought with blood and tears. Let us honor
+and bless the men who pay, and envy them the manner of their dying; for
+not all the jeweled orders on the breasts of the living can vie in glory
+with the little wooden cross the humblest of these has won. . . .
+
+
+
+
+The Twa Jocks
+
+
+
+ Says Bauldy MacGreegor frae Gleska tae Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye:
+ "That's whit I hate maist aboot fechtin'--it makes ye sae deevilish dry;
+ Noo jist hae a keek at yon ferm-hoose them Gairmans are poundin' sae fine,
+ Weel, think o' it, doon in the dunnie there's bottles and bottles o' wine.
+ A' hell's fairly belchin' oot yonner, but oh, lad, I'm ettlin' tae try. . . ."
+ _"If it's poose she'll be with ye whateffer,"
+ says Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye._
+
+ Says Bauldy MacGreegor frae Gleska: "Whit price fur a funeral wreath?
+ We're dodgin' a' kinds o' destruction, an' jist by the skin o' oor teeth.
+ Here, spread yersel oot on yer belly, and slither along in the glaur;
+ Confoond ye, ye big Hielan' deevil! Ye don't realize there's a war.
+ Ye think that ye're back in Dunvegan, and herdin' the wee bits o' kye."
+ _"She'll neffer trink wine in Dunfegan," says Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye._
+
+ Says Bauldy MacGreegor frae Gleska: "Thank goodness! the ferm-hoose at last;
+ There's no muckle left but the cellar, an' even that's vanishin' fast.
+ Look oot, there's the corpse o' a wumman, sair mangelt and deid by her lane.
+ Quick! Strike a match. . . . Whit did I tell ye!
+ A hale bonny box o' shampane;
+ Jist knock the heid aff o' a bottle. . . .
+ Haud on, mon, I'm hearing a cry. . . ."
+ _"She'll think it's a wean that wass greetin',"
+ says Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye._
+
+ Says Bauldy MacGreegor frae Gleska:
+ "Ma conscience! I'm hanged but yer richt.
+ It's yin o' thae waifs of the war-field, a' sobbin' and shakin' wi' fricht.
+ Wheesht noo, dear, we're no gaun tae hurt ye.
+ We're takin' ye hame, my wee doo!
+ We've got tae get back wi' her, Hecky. Whit mercy we didna get fou!
+ We'll no touch a drap o' that likker--
+ that's hard, man, ye canna deny. . . ."
+ _"It's the last thing she'll think o' denyin',"
+ says Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye._
+
+ Says Bauldy MacGreegor frae Gleska: "If I should get struck frae the rear,
+ Ye'll tak' and ye'll shield the wee lassie, and rin for the lines like a deer.
+ God! Wis that the breenge o' a bullet? I'm thinkin' it's cracket ma spine.
+ I'm doon on ma knees in the glabber; I'm fearin', auld man, I've got mine.
+ Here, quick! Pit yer erms roon the lassie.
+ Noo, rin, lad! good luck and good-by. . . .
+ _"Hoots, mon! it's ye baith she'll be takin',"
+ says Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye._
+
+ Says Corporal Muckle frae Rannoch: "Is that no' a picture tae frame?
+ Twa sair woundit Jocks wi' a lassie jist like ma wee Jeannie at hame.
+ We're prood o' ye baith, ma brave heroes. We'll gie ye a medal, I think."
+ Says Bauldy MacGreegor frae Gleska: "I'd raither ye gied me a drink.
+ I'll no speak for Private MacCrimmon, but oh, mon, I'm perishin' dry. . . ."
+ _"She'll wush that Loch Lefen wass whuskey," says Hecky MacCrimmon frae Skye._
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+
+Near Albert,
+
+February 1915.
+
+Over the spine of the ridge a horned moon of reddish hue peers through
+the splintered, hag-like trees. Where the trenches are, rockets are
+rising, green and red. I hear the coughing of the Maxims, the peevish
+nagging of the rifles, the boom of a "heavy" and the hollow sound of its
+exploding shell.
+
+Running the car into the shadow of a ruined house, I try to sleep. But a
+battery starts to blaze away close by, and the flame lights up my
+shelter. Near me some soldiers are in deep slumber; one stirs in his
+sleep as a big rat runs over him, and I know by experience that when one
+is sleeping a rat feels as heavy as a sheep.
+
+But how _can_ one possibly sleep? Out there in the dark there is the
+wild tattoo of a thousand rifles; and hark! that dull roar is the
+explosion of a mine. There! the purring of the rapid firers. Desperate
+things are doing. There will be lots of work for me before this night
+is over. What a cursed place!
+
+As I cannot sleep, I think of a story I heard to-day. It is of a
+Canadian Colonel, and in my mind I shape it like this:
+
+
+
+
+His Boys
+
+
+
+ "I'm going, Billy, old fellow. Hist, lad! Don't make any noise.
+ There's Boches to beat all creation, the pitch of a bomb away.
+ I've fixed the note to your collar, you've got to get back to my Boys,
+ You've got to get back to warn 'em before it's the break of day."
+
+ The order came to go forward to a trench-line traced on the map;
+ I knew the brass-hats had blundered, I knew and I told 'em so;
+ I knew if I did as they ordered I would tumble into a trap,
+ And I tried to explain, but the answer came like a pistol: "Go."
+
+ Then I thought of the Boys I commanded--I always called them "my Boys"--
+ The men of my own recruiting, the lads of my countryside;
+ Tested in many a battle, I knew their sorrows and joys,
+ And I loved them all like a father, with more than a father's pride.
+
+ To march my Boys to a shambles as soon as the dawn of day;
+ To see them helplessly slaughtered, if all that I guessed was true;
+ My Boys that trusted me blindly, I thought and I tried to pray,
+ And then I arose and I muttered: "It's either them or it's you."
+
+ I rose and I donned my rain-coat; I buckled my helmet tight.
+ I remember you watched me, Billy, as I took my cane in my hand;
+ I vaulted over the sandbags into the pitchy night,
+ Into the pitted valley that served us as No Man's Land.
+
+ I strode out over the hollow of hate and havoc and death,
+ From the heights the guns were angry, with a vengeful snarling of steel;
+ And once in a moment of stillness I heard hard panting breath,
+ And I turned . . . it was you, old rascal, following hard on my heel.
+
+ I fancy I cursed you, Billy; but not so much as I ought!
+ And so we went forward together, till we came to the valley rim,
+ And then a star-shell sputtered . . . it was even worse than I thought,
+ For the trench they told me to move in was packed with Boche to the brim.
+
+ They saw me too, and they got me; they peppered me till I fell;
+ And there I scribbled my message with my life-blood ebbing away;
+ "Now, Billy, you fat old duffer, you've got to get back like hell;
+ And get them to cancel that order before it's the dawn of day.
+
+ "Billy, old boy, I love you, I kiss your shiny black nose;
+ Now, home there. . . . Hurry, you devil,
+ or I'll cut you to ribands. . . . See . . ."
+ Poor brute! he's off! and I'm dying. . . . I go as a soldier goes.
+ I'm happy. My Boys, God bless 'em! . . . It had to be them or me.
+
+
+
+Ah! I never was intended for a job like this. I realize it more and
+more every day, but I will stick it out till I break down. To be
+nervous, over-imaginative, terribly sensitive to suffering, is a poor
+equipment for the man who starts out to drive wounded on the
+battlefield. I am haunted by the thought that my car may break down
+when I have a load of wounded. Once indeed it did, and a man died while
+I waited for help. Now I never look at what is given me. It might
+unnerve me.
+
+I have been at it for over six months without a rest. When an attack
+has been going on I have worked day and night, until as I drove I wanted
+to fall asleep at the wheel.
+
+The winter has been trying; there is rain one day, frost the next. Mud
+up to the axles. One sleeps in lousy barns or dripping dugouts. Cold,
+hunger, dirt, I know them all singly and together. My only consolation
+is that the war must soon be over, and that I will have helped. When I
+have time and am not too tired, I comfort myself with scribbling.
+
+
+
+
+The Booby-Trap
+
+
+
+ I'm crawlin' out in the mangolds to bury wot's left o' Joe--
+ Joe, my pal, and a good un (God! 'ow it rains and rains).
+ I'm sick o' seein' him lyin' like a 'eap o' offal, and so
+ I'm crawlin' out in the beet-field to bury 'is last remains.
+
+ 'E might 'a bin makin' munitions--'e 'adn't no need to go;
+ An' I tells 'im strite, but 'e arnsers, "'Tain't no use chewin' the fat;
+ I've got to be doin' me dooty wiv the rest o' the boys" . . . an' so
+ Yon's 'im, yon blob on the beet-field wot I'm tryin' so 'ard to git at.
+
+ There was five of us lads from the brickyard; 'Enry was gassed at Bapome,
+ Sydney was drowned in a crater, 'Erbert was 'alved by a shell;
+ Joe was the pick o' the posy, might 'a bin sifely at 'ome,
+ Only son of 'is mother, 'er a widder as well.
+
+ She used to sell bobbins and buttons--'ad a plice near the Waterloo Road;
+ A little, old, bent-over lydy, wiv glasses an' silvery 'air;
+ Must tell 'er I planted 'im nicely,
+ cheer 'er up like. . . . (Well, I'm blowed,
+ That bullet near catched me a biffer)--I'll see the old gel if I'm spared.
+
+ She'll tike it to 'eart, pore ol' lydy, fer 'e was 'er 'ope and 'er joy;
+ 'Is dad used to drink like a knot-'ole, she kept the 'ome goin', she did:
+ She pinched and she scriped fer 'is scoolin', 'e was sich a fine 'andsome boy
+ ('Alf Flanders seems packed on me panties)--
+ 'e's 'andsome no longer, pore kid!
+
+ This bit o' a board that I'm packin' and draggin' around in the mire,
+ I was tickled to death when I found it. Says I, "'Ere's a nice little glow."
+ I was chilled and wet through to the marrer, so I started to make me a fire;
+ And then I says: "No; 'ere, Goblimy, it'll do for a cross for Joe."
+
+ Well, 'ere 'e is. Gawd! 'Ow one chinges a-lyin' six weeks in the rain.
+ Joe, me old pal, 'ow I'm sorry; so 'elp me, I wish I could pray.
+ An' now I 'ad best get a-diggin' 'is grave (it seems more like a drain)--
+ And I 'opes that the Boches won't git me till I gits 'im safe planted away.
+
+ (_As he touches the body there is a tremendous explosion.
+ He falls back shattered._)
+
+ A booby-trap! Ought to 'a known it! If that's not a bastardly trick!
+ Well, one thing, I won't be long goin'. Gawd! I'm a 'ell of a sight.
+ Wish I'd died fightin' and killin'; that's wot it is makes me sick. . . .
+ Ah, Joe! we'll be pushin' up dysies . . .
+ together, old Chummie . . . good-night!
+
+
+
+To-day I heard that MacBean had been killed in Belgium. I believe he
+turned out a wonderful soldier. Saxon Dane, too, has been missing for
+two months. We know what that means.
+
+It is odd how one gets callous to death, a mediaeval callousness. When
+we hear that the best of our friends have gone West, we have a moment of
+the keenest regret; but how soon again we find the heart to laugh! The
+saddest part of loss, I think, is that one so soon gets over it.
+
+Is it that we fail to realize it all? Is it that it seems a strange and
+hideous dream, from which we will awake and rub our eyes?
+
+Oh, how bitter I feel as the days go by! It is creeping more and more
+into my verse. Read this:
+
+
+
+
+Bonehead Bill
+
+
+
+ I wonder 'oo and wot 'e was,
+ That 'Un I got so slick.
+ I couldn't see 'is face because
+ The night was 'ideous thick.
+ I just made out among the black
+ A blinkin' wedge o' white;
+ Then _biff!_ I guess I got 'im _crack_--
+ The man I killed last night.
+
+ I wonder if account o' me
+ Some wench will go unwed,
+ And 'eaps o' lives will never be,
+ Because 'e's stark and dead?
+ Or if 'is missis damns the war,
+ And by some candle light,
+ Tow-headed kids are prayin' for
+ The Fritz I copped last night.
+
+ I wonder, 'struth, I wonder why
+ I 'ad that 'orful dream?
+ I saw up in the giddy sky
+ The gates o' God agleam;
+ I saw the gates o' 'eaven shine
+ Wiv everlastin' light:
+ And then . . . I knew that I'd got mine,
+ As 'e got 'is last night.
+
+ Aye, bang beyond the broodin' mists
+ Where spawn the mother stars,
+ I 'ammered wiv me bloody fists
+ Upon them golden bars;
+ I 'ammered till a devil's doubt
+ Fair froze me wiv affright:
+ To fink wot God would say about
+ The bloke I corpsed last night.
+
+ I 'ushed; I wilted wiv despair,
+ When, like a rosy flame,
+ I sees a angel standin' there
+ 'Oo calls me by me name.
+ 'E 'ad such soft, such shiny eyes;
+ 'E 'eld 'is 'and and smiled;
+ And through the gates o' Paradise
+ 'E led me like a child.
+
+ 'E led me by them golden palms
+ Wot 'ems that jeweled street;
+ And seraphs was a-singin' psalms,
+ You've no ideer 'ow sweet;
+ Wiv cheroobs crowdin' closer round
+ Than peas is in a pod,
+ 'E led me to a shiny mound
+ Where beams the throne o' God.
+
+ And then I 'ears God's werry voice:
+ "Bill 'agan, 'ave no fear.
+ Stand up and glory and rejoice
+ For 'im 'oo led you 'ere."
+ And in a nip I seemed to see:
+ Aye, like a flash o' light,
+ _My angel pal I knew to be
+ The chap I plugged last night._
+
+ Now, I don't claim to understand--
+ They calls me Bonehead Bill;
+ They shoves a rifle in me 'and,
+ And show me 'ow to kill.
+ Me job's to risk me life and limb,
+ But . . . be it wrong or right,
+ This cross I'm makin', it's for 'im,
+ The cove I croaked last night.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+A Lapse of Time and a Word of Explanation
+
+The American Hospital, Neuilly,
+
+January 1919.
+
+Four years have passed and it is winter again. Much has happened. When
+I last wrote, on the Somme in 1915, I was sickening with typhoid fever.
+All that spring I was in hospital.
+
+Nevertheless, I was sufficiently recovered to take part in the Champagne
+battle in the fall of that year, and to "carry on" during the following
+winter. It was at Verdun I got my first wound.
+
+In the spring of 1917 I again served with my Corps; but on the entry of
+the United States into the War I joined the army of my country. In the
+Argonne I had my left arm shot away.
+
+As far as time and health permitted, I kept a record of these years, and
+also wrote much verse. All this, however, has disappeared under
+circumstances into which there is no need to enter here. The loss was a
+cruel one, almost more so than that of my arm; for I have neither the
+heart nor the power to rewrite this material.
+
+And now, in default of something better, I have bundled together this
+manuscript, and have added to it a few more verses, written in
+hospitals. Let it represent me. If I can find a publisher for it, _tant
+mieux_. If not, I will print it at my own cost, and any one who cares
+for a copy can write to me--
+
+Stephen Poore,
+
+12 _bis_, Rue des Petits Moineaux,
+
+Paris.
+
+
+
+
+Michael
+
+
+
+ "There's something in your face, Michael, I've seen it all the day;
+ There's something quare that wasn't there when first ye wint away. . . ."
+
+ "It's just the Army life, mother, the drill, the left and right,
+ That puts the stiffinin' in yer spine and locks yer jaw up tight. . . ."
+
+ "There's something in your eyes, Michael, an' how they stare and stare--
+ You're lookin' at me now, me boy, as if I wasn't there. . . ."
+
+ "It's just the things I've seen, mother, the sights that come and come,
+ A bit o' broken, bloody pulp that used to be a chum. . . ."
+
+ "There's something on your heart, Michael, that makes ye wake at night,
+ And often when I hear ye moan, I trimble in me fright. . . ."
+
+ "It's just a man I killed, mother, a mother's son like me;
+ It seems he's always hauntin' me, he'll never let me be. . . ."
+
+ "But maybe he was bad, Michael, maybe it was right
+ To kill the inimy you hate in fair and honest fight. . . ."
+
+ "I did not hate at all, mother; he never did me harm;
+ I think he was a lad like me, who worked upon a farm. . . ."
+
+ "And what's it all about, Michael; why did you have to go,
+ A quiet, peaceful lad like you, and we were happy so? . . ."
+
+ "It's thim that's up above, mother, it's thim that sits an' rules;
+ We've got to fight the wars they make, it's us as are the fools. . . ."
+
+ "And what will be the end, Michael, and what's the use, I say,
+ Of fightin' if whoever wins it's us that's got to pay? . . ."
+
+ "Oh, it will be the end, mother, when lads like him and me,
+ That sweat to feed the ones above, decide that we'll be free. . . ."
+
+ "And when will that day come, Michael, and when will fightin' cease,
+ And simple folks may till their soil and live and love in peace? . . ."
+
+ "It's coming soon and soon, mother, it's nearer every day,
+ When only men who work and sweat will have a word to say;
+ When all who earn their honest bread in every land and soil
+ Will claim the Brotherhood of Man, the Comradeship of Toil;
+ When we, the Workers, all demand: 'What are we fighting for?' . . .
+ Then, then we'll end that stupid crime, that devil's madness--War."
+
+
+
+
+The Wife
+
+
+ "Tell Annie I'll be home in time
+ To help her with her Christmas-tree."
+ That's what he wrote, and hark! the chime
+ Of Christmas bells, and where is he?
+ And how the house is dark and sad,
+ And Annie's sobbing on my knee!
+
+ The page beside the candle-flame
+ With cruel type was overfilled;
+ I read and read until a name
+ Leapt at me and my heart was stilled:
+ My eye crept up the column--up
+ Unto its hateful heading: _Killed_.
+
+ And there was Annie on the stair:
+ "And will he not be long?" she said.
+ Her eyes were bright and in her hair
+ She'd twined a bit of riband red;
+ And every step was daddy's sure,
+ Till tired out she went to bed.
+
+ And there alone I sat so still,
+ With staring eyes that did not see;
+ The room was desolate and chill,
+ And desolate the heart of me;
+ Outside I heard the news-boys shrill:
+ "Another Glorious Victory!"
+
+ A victory. . . . Ah! what care I?
+ A thousand victories are vain.
+ Here in my ruined home I cry
+ From out my black despair and pain,
+ I'd rather, rather damned defeat,
+ And have my man with me again.
+
+ They talk to us of pride and power,
+ Of Empire vast beyond the sea;
+ As here beside my hearth I cower,
+ What mean such words as these to me?
+ Oh, will they lift the clouds that low'r,
+ Or light my load in years to be?
+
+ What matters it to us poor folk?
+ Who win or lose, it's we who pay.
+ Oh, I would laugh beneath the yoke
+ If I had _him_ at home to-day;
+ One's home before one's country comes:
+ Aye, so a million women say.
+
+ "Hush, Annie dear, don't sorrow so."
+ (How can I tell her?) "See, we'll light
+ With tiny star of purest glow
+ Each little candle pink and white."
+ (They make mistakes. I'll tell myself
+ I did not read that name aright.)
+ Come, dearest one; come, let us pray
+ Beside our gleaming Christmas-tree;
+ Just fold your little hands and say
+ These words so softly after me:
+ "God pity mothers in distress,
+ And little children fatherless."
+
+ _"God pity mothers in distress,
+ And little children fatherless."_
+
+ . . . . .
+
+ What's that?--a step upon the stair;
+ A shout!--the door thrown open wide!
+ My hero and my man is there,
+ And Annie's leaping by his side. . . .
+ The room reels round, I faint, I fall. . . .
+ "O God! Thy world is glorified."
+
+
+
+
+Victory Stuff
+
+
+
+ What d'ye think, lad; what d'ye think,
+ As the roaring crowds go by?
+ As the banners flare and the brasses blare
+ And the great guns rend the sky?
+ As the women laugh like they'd all gone mad,
+ And the champagne glasses clink:
+ Oh, you're grippin' me hand so tightly, lad,
+ I'm a-wonderin': what d'ye think?
+
+ D'ye think o' the boys we used to know,
+ And how they'd have topped the fun?
+ Tom and Charlie, and Jack and Joe--
+ Gone now, every one.
+ How they'd have cheered as the joy-bells chime,
+ And they grabbed each girl for a kiss!
+ And now--they're rottin' in Flanders slime,
+ And they gave their lives--for _this_.
+
+ Or else d'ye think of the many a time
+ We wished we too was dead,
+ Up to our knees in the freezin' grime,
+ With the fires of hell overhead;
+ When the youth and the strength of us sapped away,
+ And we cursed in our rage and pain?
+ And yet--we haven't a word to say. . . .
+ We're glad. We'd do it again.
+
+ I'm scared that they pity us. Come, old boy,
+ Let's leave them their flags and their fuss.
+ We'd surely be hatin' to spoil their joy
+ With the sight of such wrecks as us.
+ Let's slip away quietly, you and me,
+ And we'll talk of our chums out there:
+ _You with your eyes that'll never see,
+ Me that's wheeled in a chair._
+
+
+
+
+Was It You?
+
+
+
+ "Hullo, young Jones! with your tie so gay
+ And your pen behind your ear;
+ Will you mark my cheque in the usual way?
+ For I'm overdrawn, I fear."
+ Then you look at me in a manner bland,
+ As you turn your ledger's leaves,
+ And you hand it back with a soft white hand,
+ And the air of a man who grieves. . . .
+
+ _"Was it you, young Jones, was it you I saw
+ (And I think I see you yet)
+ With a live bomb gripped in your grimy paw
+ And your face to the parapet?
+ With your lips asnarl and your eyes gone mad
+ With a fury that thrilled you through. . . .
+ Oh, I look at you now and I think, my lad,
+ Was it you, young Jones, was it you?_
+
+ "Hullo, young Smith, with your well-fed look
+ And your coat of dapper fit,
+ Will you recommend me a decent book
+ With nothing of War in it?"
+ Then you smile as you polish a finger-nail,
+ And your eyes serenely roam,
+ And you suavely hand me a thrilling tale
+ By a man who stayed at home.
+
+ _"Was it you, young Smith, was it you I saw
+ In the battle's storm and stench,
+ With a roar of rage and a wound red-raw
+ Leap into the reeking trench?
+ As you stood like a fiend on the firing-shelf
+ And you stabbed and hacked and slew. . . .
+ Oh, I look at you and I ask myself,
+ Was it you, young Smith, was it you?_
+
+ "Hullo, old Brown, with your ruddy cheek
+ And your tummy's rounded swell,
+ Your garden's looking jolly _chic_
+ And your kiddies awf'ly well.
+ Then you beam at me in your cheery way
+ As you swing your water-can;
+ And you mop your brow and you blithely say:
+ 'What about golf, old man?'
+
+ _"Was it you, old Brown, was it you I saw
+ Like a bull-dog stick to your gun,
+ A cursing devil of fang and claw
+ When the rest were on the run?
+ Your eyes aflame with the battle-hate. . . .
+ As you sit in the family pew,
+ And I see you rising to pass the plate,
+ I ask: Old Brown, was it you?_
+
+ "Was it me and you? Was it you and me?
+ (Is that grammar, or is it not?)
+ Who groveled in filth and misery,
+ Who gloried and groused and fought?
+ Which is the wrong and which is the right?
+ Which is the false and the true?
+ The man of peace or the man of fight?
+ Which is the ME and the YOU?"
+
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+
+
+Les Grands Mutiles
+
+
+
+ _I saw three wounded of the war:
+ And the first had lost his eyes;
+ And the second went on wheels and had
+ No legs below the thighs;
+ And the face of the third was featureless,
+ And his mouth ran cornerwise.
+ So I made a rhyme about each one,
+ And this is how my fancies run._
+
+
+
+
+The Sightless Man
+
+
+ Out of the night a crash,
+ A roar, a rampart of light;
+ A flame that leaped like a lash,
+ Searing forever my sight;
+ Out of the night a flash,
+ Then, oh, forever the Night!
+
+ Here in the dark I sit,
+ I who so loved the sun;
+ Supple and strong and fit,
+ In the dark till my days be done;
+ Aye, that's the hell of it,
+ Stalwart and twenty-one.
+
+ Marie is stanch and true,
+ Willing to be my wife;
+ Swears she has eyes for two . . .
+ Aye, but it's long, is Life.
+ What is a lad to do
+ With his heart and his brain at strife?
+
+ There now, my pipe is out;
+ No one to give me a light;
+ I grope and I grope about.
+ Well, it is nearly night;
+ Sleep may resolve my doubt,
+ Help me to reason right. . . .
+
+ (_He sleeps and dreams._)
+
+ I heard them whispering there by the bed . . .
+ Oh, but the ears of the blind are quick!
+ Every treacherous word they said
+ Was a stab of pain and my heart turned sick.
+ Then lip met lip and they looked at me,
+ Sitting bent by the fallen fire,
+ And they laughed to think that I couldn't see;
+ But I felt the flame of their hot desire.
+ He's helping Marie to work the farm,
+ A dashing, upstanding chap, they say;
+ And look at me with my flabby arm,
+ And the fat of sloth, and my face of clay--
+ Look at me as I sit and sit,
+ By the side of a fire that's seldom lit,
+ Sagging and weary the livelong day,
+ When every one else is out on the field,
+ Sowing the seed for a golden yield,
+ Or tossing around the new-mown hay. . . .
+
+ Oh, the shimmering wheat that frets the sky,
+ Gold of plenty and blue of hope,
+ I'm seeing it all with an inner eye
+ As out of the door I grope and grope.
+ And I hear my wife and her lover there,
+ Whispering, whispering, round the rick,
+ Mocking me and my sightless stare,
+ As I fumble and stumble everywhere,
+ Slapping and tapping with my stick;
+ Old and weary at thirty-one,
+ Heartsick, wishing it all was done.
+ Oh, I'll tap my way around to the byre,
+ And I'll hear the cows as they chew their hay;
+ There at least there is none to tire,
+ There at least I am not in the way.
+ And they'll look at me with their velvet eyes
+ And I'll stroke their flanks with my woman's hand,
+ And they'll answer to me with soft replies,
+ And somehow I fancy they'll understand.
+ And the horses too, they know me well;
+ I'm sure that they pity my wretched lot,
+ And the big fat ram with the jingling bell . . .
+ Oh, the beasts are the only friends I've got.
+ And my old dog, too, he loves me more,
+ I think, than ever he did before.
+ Thank God for the beasts that are all so kind,
+ That know and pity the helpless blind!
+
+ Ha! they're coming, the loving pair.
+ My hand's a-shake as my pipe I fill.
+ What if I steal on them unaware
+ With a reaping-hook, to kill, to kill? . . .
+ I'll do it . . . they're there in the mow of hay,
+ I hear them saying: "He's out of the way!"
+ Hark! how they're kissing and whispering. . . .
+ Closer I creep . . . I crouch . . . I spring. . . .
+
+ (_He wakes._)
+
+ Ugh! What a horrible dream I've had!
+ And it isn't real . . . I'm glad, I'm glad!
+ Marie is good and Marie is true . . .
+ But now I know what it's best to do.
+ I'll sell the farm and I'll seek my kind,
+ I'll live apart with my fellow-blind,
+ And we'll eat and drink, and we'll laugh and joke,
+ And we'll talk of our battles, and smoke and smoke;
+ And brushes of bristle we'll make for sale,
+ While one of us reads a book of Braille.
+ And there will be music and dancing too,
+ And we'll seek to fashion our life anew;
+ And we'll walk the highways hand in hand,
+ The Brotherhood of the Sightless Band;
+ Till the years at last shall bring respite
+ And our night is lost in the Greater Night.
+
+
+
+
+The Legless Man
+
+
+
+ (_The Dark Side_)
+
+ _My mind goes back to Fumin Wood, and how we stuck it out,
+ Eight days of hunger, thirst and cold, mowed down by steel and flame;
+ Waist-deep in mud and mad with woe, with dead men all about,
+ We fought like fiends and waited for relief that never came.
+ Eight days and nights they rolled on us in battle-frenzied mass!
+ "Debout les morts!" We hurled them back. By God! they did not pass._
+
+ They pinned two medals on my chest, a yellow and a brown,
+ And lovely ladies made me blush, such pretty words they said.
+ I felt a cheerful man, almost, until my eyes went down,
+ And there I saw the blankets--how they sagged upon my bed.
+ And then again I drank the cup of sorrow to the dregs:
+ Oh, they can keep their medals if they give me back my legs.
+
+ I think of how I used to run and leap and kick the ball,
+ And ride and dance and climb the hills and frolic in the sea;
+ And all the thousand things that now I'll never do at all. . . .
+ _Mon Dieu!_ there's nothing left in life, it often seems to me.
+ And as the nurses lift me up and strap me in my chair,
+ If they would chloroform me off I feel I wouldn't care.
+
+ Ah yes! we're "heroes all" to-day--they point to us with pride;
+ To-day their hearts go out to us, the tears are in their eyes!
+ But wait a bit; to-morrow they will blindly look aside;
+ No more they'll talk of what they owe, the dues of sacrifice
+ (One hates to be reminded of an everlasting debt).
+ It's all in human nature. Ah! the world will soon forget.
+
+ _My mind goes back to where I lay wound-rotted on the plain,
+ And ate the muddy mangold roots, and drank the drops of dew,
+ And dragged myself for miles and miles when every move was pain,
+ And over me the carrion-crows were retching as they flew.
+ Oh, ere I closed my eyes and stuck my rifle in the air
+ I wish that those who picked me up had passed and left me there._
+
+
+
+
+ (_The Bright Side_)
+
+ Oh, one gets used to everything!
+ I hum a merry song,
+ And up the street and round the square
+ I wheel my chair along;
+ For look you, how my chest is sound
+ And how my arms are strong!
+
+ Oh, one gets used to anything!
+ It's awkward at the first,
+ And jolting o'er the cobbles gives
+ A man a grievous thirst;
+ But of all ills that one must bear
+ That's surely not the worst.
+
+ For there's the cafe open wide,
+ And there they set me up;
+ And there I smoke my _caporal_
+ Above my cider cup;
+ And play _manille_ a while before
+ I hurry home to sup.
+
+ At home the wife is waiting me
+ With smiles and pigeon-pie;
+ And little Zi-Zi claps her hands
+ With laughter loud and high;
+ And if there's cause to growl, I fail
+ To see the reason why.
+
+ And all the evening by the lamp
+ I read some tale of crime,
+ Or play my old accordion
+ With Marie keeping time,
+ Until we hear the hour of ten
+ From out the steeple chime.
+
+ Then in the morning bright and soon,
+ No moment do I lose;
+ Within my little cobbler's shop
+ To gain the silver _sous_
+ (Good luck one has no need of legs
+ To make a pair of shoes).
+
+ And every Sunday--oh, it's then
+ I am the happy man;
+ They wheel me to the river-side,
+ And there with rod and can
+ I sit and fish and catch a dish
+ Of _goujons_ for the pan.
+
+ Aye, one gets used to everything,
+ And doesn't seem to mind;
+ Maybe I'm happier than most
+ Of my two-legged kind;
+ For look you at the darkest cloud,
+ Lo! how it's silver-lined.
+
+
+
+
+The Faceless Man
+
+
+
+ _I'm dead._
+ Officially I'm dead. Their hope is past.
+ How long I stood as missing! Now, at last
+ I'm dead.
+ Look in my face--no likeness can you see,
+ No tiny trace of him they knew as "me".
+ How terrible the change!
+ Even my eyes are strange.
+ So keyed are they to pain,
+ That if I chanced to meet
+ My mother in the street
+ She'd look at me in vain.
+
+ When she got home I think she'd say:
+ "I saw the saddest sight to-day--
+ A _poilu_ with no face at all.
+ Far better in the fight to fall
+ Than go through life like that, I think.
+ Poor fellow! how he made me shrink.
+ No face. Just eyes that seemed to stare
+ At me with anguish and despair.
+ This ghastly war! I'm almost cheered
+ To think my son who disappeared,
+ My boy so handsome and so gay,
+ Might have come home like him to-day."
+
+ I'm dead. I think it's better to be dead
+ When little children look at you with dread;
+ And when you know your coming home again
+ Will only give the ones who love you pain.
+ Ah! who can help but shrink? One cannot blame.
+ They see the hideous husk, not, not the flame
+ Of sacrifice and love that burns within;
+ While souls of satyrs, riddled through with sin,
+ Have bodies fair and excellent to see.
+ _Mon Dieu!_ how different we all would be
+ If this our flesh was ordained to express
+ Our spirit's beauty or its ugliness.
+
+ (Oh, you who look at me with fear to-day,
+ And shrink despite yourselves, and turn away--
+ It was for you I suffered woe accurst;
+ For you I braved red battle at its worst;
+ For you I fought and bled and maimed and slew;
+ For you, for you!
+ For you I faced hell-fury and despair;
+ The reeking horror of it all I knew:
+ I flung myself into the furnace there;
+ I faced the flame that scorched me with its glare;
+ I drank unto the dregs the devil's brew--
+ Look at me now--for _you_ and _you_ and _you_. . . .)
+
+ . . . . .
+
+ I'm thinking of the time we said good-by:
+ We took our dinner in Duval's that night,
+ Just little Jacqueline, Lucette and I;
+ We tried our very utmost to be bright.
+ We laughed. And yet our eyes, they weren't gay.
+ I sought all kinds of cheering things to say.
+ "Don't grieve," I told them. "Soon the time will pass;
+ My next permission will come quickly round;
+ We'll all meet at the Gare du Montparnasse;
+ Three times I've come already, safe and sound."
+ (But oh, I thought, it's harder every time,
+ After a home that seems like Paradise,
+ To go back to the vermin and the slime,
+ The weariness, the want, the sacrifice.
+ "Pray God," I said, "the war may soon be done,
+ But no, oh never, never till we've won!")
+
+ Then to the station quietly we walked;
+ I had my rifle and my haversack,
+ My heavy boots, my blankets on my back;
+ And though it hurt us, cheerfully we talked.
+ We chatted bravely at the platform gate.
+ I watched the clock. My train must go at eight.
+ One minute to the hour . . . we kissed good-by,
+ Then, oh, they both broke down, with piteous cry.
+ I went. . . . Their way was barred; they could not pass.
+ I looked back as the train began to start;
+ Once more I ran with anguish at my heart
+ And through the bars I kissed my little lass. . . .
+
+ Three years have gone; they've waited day by day.
+ I never came. I did not even write.
+ For when I saw my face was such a sight
+ I thought that I had better . . . stay away.
+ And so I took the name of one who died,
+ A friendless friend who perished by my side.
+ In Prussian prison camps three years of hell
+ I kept my secret; oh, I kept it well!
+ And now I'm free, but none shall ever know;
+ They think I died out there . . . it's better so.
+
+ To-day I passed my wife in widow's weeds.
+ I brushed her arm. She did not even look.
+ So white, so pinched her face, my heart still bleeds,
+ And at the touch of her, oh, how I shook!
+ And then last night I passed the window where
+ They sat together; I could see them clear,
+ The lamplight softly gleaming on their hair,
+ And all the room so full of cozy cheer.
+ My wife was sewing, while my daughter read;
+ I even saw my portrait on the wall.
+ I wanted to rush in, to tell them all;
+ And then I cursed myself: "You're dead, you're dead!"
+ God! how I watched them from the darkness there,
+ Clutching the dripping branches of a tree,
+ Peering as close as ever I might dare,
+ And sobbing, sobbing, oh, so bitterly!
+
+ But no, it's folly; and I mustn't stay.
+ To-morrow I am going far away.
+ I'll find a ship and sail before the mast;
+ In some wild land I'll bury all the past.
+ I'll live on lonely shores and there forget,
+ Or tell myself that there has never been
+ The gay and tender courage of Lucette,
+ The little loving arms of Jacqueline.
+
+ A man lonely upon a lonely isle,
+ Sometimes I'll look towards the North and smile
+ To think they're happy, and they both believe
+ I died for France, and that I lie at rest;
+ And for my glory's sake they've ceased to grieve,
+ And hold my memory sacred. Ah! that's best.
+ And in that thought I'll find my joy and peace
+ As there alone I wait the Last Release.
+
+
+
+
+
+L'Envoi
+
+
+
+ _We've finished up the filthy war;
+ We've won what we were fighting for . . .
+ (Or have we? I don't know).
+ But anyway I have my wish:
+ I'm back upon the old Boul' Mich',
+ And how my heart's aglow!
+ Though in my coat's an empty sleeve,
+ Ah! do not think I ever grieve
+ (The pension for it, I believe,
+ Will keep me on the go).
+
+ So I'll be free to write and write,
+ And give my soul to sheer delight,
+ Till joy is almost pain;
+ To stand aloof and watch the throng,
+ And worship youth and sing my song
+ Of faith and hope again;
+ To seek for beauty everywhere,
+ To make each day a living prayer
+ That life may not be vain.
+
+ To sing of things that comfort me,
+ The joy in mother-eyes, the glee
+ Of little ones at play;
+ The blessed gentleness of trees,
+ Of old men dreaming at their ease
+ Soft afternoons away;
+ Of violets and swallows' wings,
+ Of wondrous, ordinary things
+ In words of every day.
+
+ To rhyme of rich and rainy nights,
+ When like a legion leap the lights
+ And take the town with gold;
+ Of taverns quaint where poets dream,
+ Of cafes gaudily agleam,
+ And vice that's overbold;
+ Of crystal shimmer, silver sheen,
+ Of soft and soothing nicotine,
+ Of wine that's rich and old,
+
+ Of gutters, chimney-tops and stars,
+ Of apple-carts and motor-cars,
+ The sordid and sublime;
+ Of wealth and misery that meet
+ In every great and little street,
+ Of glory and of grime;
+ Of all the living tide that flows--
+ From princes down to puppet shows--
+ I'll make my humble rhyme.
+
+ So if you like the sort of thing
+ Of which I also like to sing,
+ Just give my stuff a look;
+ And if you don't, no harm is done--
+
+ In writing it I've had my fun;
+ Good luck to you and every one--
+ And so
+ Here ends my book._
+
+
+
+
+
+Notes.
+
+
+While 'Stephen Poore' is a fictional character, he is real enough in
+some ways. Robert Service was himself in the Ambulance Corps, and his
+descriptions of 'Bohemia' of this day, and the emergence of war, bear
+striking similarities to the case of Alan Seeger--and, no doubt, a
+great many other 'war poets' of the "Great War". It has been said that
+every section of the trench had its own poet, and many of them, such as
+Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon, and Robert Graves, became famous for
+their poetry of the war. This book, in its way, presents a striking
+picture of the effect of the war on Europe--though it stops short of
+showing just how great the effect was.
+
+I hope you enjoyed Service's references to himself in the text, as
+"Sourdough Service"--but they should not be taken too seriously.
+
+The names of two great Russian composers, Tchaikovsky and Stravinsky,
+were originally spelled Tschaikowsky and Stravinski in "The Philistine
+and the Bohemian". These composers were contemporaries of the author,
+and due to the difficulty of transliterating from the Russian (Cyrillic)
+alphabet to the Roman Alphabet, hampered by different uses of Roman
+letters in various European languages, it is not until fairly recently
+that the current spellings have taken hold--and their grip is not yet
+firm. A couple of other names were given incorrectly in the same poem:
+Mallarme was spelled with one L, and E. Burne-Jones (a pre-Raphaelite
+painter and associate of Rossetti) was given as F. B. Jones. These
+names are corrected in this text, as is Synge, given as Singe in the
+original ("L'Escargot D'Or").
+
+The Introduction to Alan Seeger's Poems, written by William Archer, is
+included in the Project Gutenberg edition of Seeger's Poems, if you feel
+inclined to compare and contrast the cases.
+
+If you enjoy Service's style of poetry, I would like to recommend to you
+the works of A. B. 'Banjo' Paterson, an Australian poet, author of 'The
+Man from Snowy River' and 'Waltzing Matilda'. His style and his sense of
+humour are similar. Several of his works are available from Project
+Gutenberg.
+
+Alan R. Light, Monroe, North Carolina, June 1997.
+
+
+
+This list of books written by Robert Service is probably incomplete,
+possibly incorrect, but may serve as a starting point for those
+interested in his works.
+
+
+
+ Novels:
+ The Trail of '98--A Northland Romance (1910)
+ The Pretender
+ The Poisoned Paradise
+ The Roughneck
+ The Master of the Microbe
+ The House of Fear (1927)
+
+ Autobiography:
+
+ Ploughman of the Moon (1945) | A two-volume
+ Harper of Heaven (1948) | autobiography.
+
+ Miscellaneous:
+ Why Not Grow Young
+
+ Verse:
+ * The Spell of the Yukon (1907) a.k.a. Songs of a Sourdough
+ * Ballads of a Cheechako (1909)
+ [Note: A Sourdough is an old-timer, while a Cheechako is a newbie.]
+ * Rhymes of a Rolling Stone (1912)
+ * Rhymes of a Red Cross Man (1916)
+ * Ballads of a Bohemian (1921)
+ Bar-room Ballads (1940)
+ The Complete Poems (The first 6 books)
+ Songs of a Sunlover
+ Rhymes of a Roughneck
+ Lyrics of a Low Brow
+ Rhymes of a Rebel
+ The Collected Poems
+ Songs For My Supper (1953)
+ Rhymes For My Rags (1956)
+
+ * Books marked by an asterisk are presently online.
+
+
+
+
+About the Author
+
+Robert William Service was born 16 January 1874 in Preston, England, but
+also lived in Scotland before emigrating to Canada in 1894. Service went
+to the Yukon Territory in 1904 as a bank clerk, and became famous for
+his poems about this region, which are mostly in his first two books of
+poetry. He wrote quite a bit of prose as well, and worked as a reporter
+for some time, but those writings are not nearly as well known as his
+poems. He travelled around the world quite a bit, and narrowly escaped
+from France at the beginning of the Second World War, during which time
+he lived in Hollywood, California. He died 11 September 1958 in France.
+
+Incidentally, he played himself in a movie called "The Spoilers",
+starring John Wayne and Marlene Dietrich.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Ballads of a Bohemian, by Robert W. Service
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BALLADS OF A BOHEMIAN ***
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+***** This file should be named 995.txt or 995.zip *****
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+ http://www.gutenberg.org/9/9/995/
+
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