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Title: Poems
Author: Thompson, Francis
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Poems" ***


Transcribed from the September 1909 Burns and Oates edition by David
Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org

                          [Picture: Book cover]



                                  POEMS


                                BY FRANCIS
                                 THOMPSON

                                * * * * *

                             BURNS AND OATES
                            28 Orchard Street
                                  London
                                    W



CONTENTS.

                                              PAGE
Dedication                                     vii
                LOVE IN DIAN’S LAP
      I.  Before Her Portrait in Youth           3
     II.  To a Poet Breaking Silence             5
    III.  Manus Animam Pinxit                    8
     IV.  A Carrier-Song                        11
      V.  Scala Jacobi Portaque Eburnea         15
     VI.  Gilded Gold                           16
    VII.  Her Portrait                          18
               MISCELLANEOUS POEMS
To the Dead Cardinal of Westminster             29
A Fallen Yew                                    37
Dream-Tryst                                     41
A Corymbus for Autumn                           42
The Hound of Heaven                             48
A Judgment in Heaven                            53
                POEMS ON CHILDREN
Daisy                                           65
The Making of Viola                             68
To My Godchild                                  72
To Poppy                                        75
To Monica Thought Dying                         79



DEDICATION.
TO WILFRID AND ALICE MEYNELL.


   IF the rose in meek duty
      May dedicate humbly
   To her grower the beauty
      Wherewith she is comely;
   If the mine to the miner
      The jewels that pined in it,
   Earth to diviner
      The springs he divined in it;
   To the grapes the wine-pitcher
      Their juice that was crushed in it,
   Viol to its witcher
      The music lay hushed in it;
   If the lips may pay Gladness
      In laughters she wakened,
   And the heart to its sadness
      Weeping unslakened,
   If the hid and sealed coffer,
      Whose having not his is,
   To the loosers may proffer
      Their finding—here this is;
   Their lives if all livers
      To the Life of all living,—
   To you, O dear givers!
      I give your own giving.



Love in Dian’s Lap.


I.
BEFORE HER PORTRAIT IN YOUTH.


   AS lovers, banished from their lady’s face
         And hopeless of her grace,
   Fashion a ghostly sweetness in its place,
         Fondly adore
   Some stealth-won cast attire she wore,
         A kerchief or a glove:
         And at the lover’s beck
      Into the glove there fleets the hand,
      Or at impetuous command
   Up from the kerchief floats the virgin neck:
   So I, in very lowlihead of love,—
         Too shyly reverencing
      To let one thought’s light footfall smooth
   Tread near the living, consecrated thing,—
      Treasure me thy cast youth.
   This outworn vesture, tenantless of thee,
         Hath yet my knee,
      For that, with show and semblance fair
         Of the past Her
   Who once the beautiful, discarded raiment bare,
         It cheateth me.
      As gale to gale drifts breath
      Of blossoms’ death,
   So dropping down the years from hour to hour
      This dead youth’s scent is wafted me to-day:
   I sit, and from the fragrance dream the flower.
         So, then, she looked (I say);
         And so her front sunk down
   Heavy beneath the poet’s iron crown:
         On her mouth museful sweet—
         (Even as the twin lips meet)
         Did thought and sadness greet:
            Sighs
         In those mournful eyes
      So put on visibilities;
   As viewless ether turns, in deep on deep, to dyes.
         Thus, long ago,
   She kept her meditative paces slow
   Through maiden meads, with wavèd shadow and gleam
   Of locks half-lifted on the winds of dream,
   Till love up-caught her to his chariot’s glow.
   Yet, voluntary, happier Proserpine!
         This drooping flower of youth thou lettest fall
         I, faring in the cockshut-light, astray,
            Find on my ’lated way,
         And stoop, and gather for memorial,
   And lay it on my bosom, and make it mine.
   To this, the all of love the stars allow me,
         I dedicate and vow me.
         I reach back through the days
   A trothed hand to the dead the last trump shall not raise.
         The water-wraith that cries
   From those eternal sorrows of thy pictured eyes
   Entwines and draws me down their soundless intricacies!



II.
TO A POET BREAKING SILENCE.


   TOO wearily had we and song
   Been left to look and left to long,
   Yea, song and we to long and look,
   Since thine acquainted feet forsook
   The mountain where the Muses hymn
   For Sinai and the Seraphim.
   Now in both the mountains’ shine
   Dress thy countenance, twice divine!
   From Moses and the Muses draw
   The Tables of thy double Law!
   His rod-born fount and Castaly
   Let the one rock bring forth for thee,
   Renewing so from either spring
   The songs which both thy countries sing:
   Or we shall fear lest, heavened thus long,
   Thou should’st forget thy native song,
   And mar thy mortal melodies
   With broken stammer of the skies.

      Ah! let the sweet birds of the Lord
   With earth’s waters make accord;
   Teach how the crucifix may be
   Carven from the laurel-tree,
   Fruit of the Hesperides
   Burnish take on Eden-trees,
   The Muses’ sacred grove be wet
   With the red dew of Olivet,
   And Sappho lay her burning brows
   In white Cecilia’s lap of snows!

      Thy childhood must have felt the stings
   Of too divine o’ershadowings;
   Its odorous heart have been a blossom
   That in darkness did unbosom,
   Those fire-flies of God to invite,
   Burning spirits, which by night
   Bear upon their laden wing
   To such hearts impregnating.
   For flowers that night-wings fertilize
   Mock down the stars’ unsteady eyes,
   And with a happy, sleepless glance
   Gaze the moon out of countenance.
   I think thy girlhood’s watchers must
   Have took thy folded songs on trust,
   And felt them, as one feels the stir
   Of still lightnings in the hair,
   When conscious hush expects the cloud
   To speak the golden secret loud
   Which tacit air is privy to;
   Flasked in the grape the wine they knew,
   Ere thy poet-mouth was able
   For its first young starry babble.
   Keep’st thou not yet that subtle grace?
   Yea, in this silent interspace,
   God sets His poems in thy face!

      The loom which mortal verse affords,
   Out of weak and mortal words,
   Wovest thou thy singing-weed in,
   To a rune of thy far Eden.
   Vain are all disguises!  Ah,
   Heavenly _incognita_!
   Thy mien bewrayeth through that wrong
   The great Uranian House of Song!
   As the vintages of earth
   Taste of the sun that riped their birth,
   We know what never cadent Sun
   Thy lampèd clusters throbbed upon,
   What plumed feet the winepress trod;
   Thy wine is flavorous of God.
   Whatever singing-robe thou wear
   Has the Paradisal air;
   And some gold feather it has kept
   Shows what Floor it lately swept!



III.
“MANUS ANIMAM PINXIT.”


   LADY who hold’st on me dominion!
   Within your spirit’s arms I stay me fast
         Against the fell
   Immitigate ravening of the gates of hell;
   And claim my right in you, most hardly won,
   Of chaste fidelity upon the chaste:
   Hold me and hold by me, lest both should fall
   (O in high escalade high companion!)
   Even in the breach of Heaven’s assaulted wall.
   Like to a wind-sown sapling grow I from
   The clift, Sweet, of your skyward-jetting soul,—
   Shook by all gusts that sweep it, overcome
   By all its clouds incumbent: O be true
   To your soul, dearest, as my life to you!
   For if that soil grow sterile, then the whole
   Of me must shrivel, from the topmost shoot
   Of climbing poesy, and my life, killed through,
   Dry down and perish to the foodless root.

   Sweet Summer! unto you this swallow drew,
   By secret instincts inappeasable,
         That did direct him well,
   Lured from his gelid North which wrought him wrong,
         Wintered of sunning song;—
   By happy instincts inappeasable,
         Ah yes! that led him well,
   Lured to the untried regions and the new
         Climes of auspicious you;
   To twitter there, and in his singing dwell.
         But ah! if you, my Summer, should grow waste,
         With grieving skies o’ercast,
   For such migration my poor wing was strong
   But once; it has no power to fare again
         Forth o’er the heads of men,
   Nor other Summers for its Sanctuary:
         But from your mind’s chilled sky
   It needs must drop, and lie with stiffened wings
         Among your soul’s forlornest things;
   A speck upon your memory, alack!
   A dead fly in a dusty window-crack.

            O therefore you who are
         What words, being to such mysteries
         As raiment to the body is,
            Should rather hide than tell;
         Chaste and intelligential love:
            Whose form is as a grove
   Hushed with the cooing of an unseen dove;
   Whose spirit to my touch thrills purer far
   Than is the tingling of a silver bell;
   Whose body other ladies well might bear
   As soul,—yea, which it profanation were
   For all but you to take as fleshly woof,
         Being spirit truest proof;
   Whose spirit sure is lineal to that
         Which sang _Magnificat_:
            Chastest, since such you are,
            Take this curbed spirit of mine,
   Which your own eyes invest with light divine,
   For lofty love and high auxiliar
            In daily exalt emprise
            Which outsoars mortal eyes;
         This soul which on your soul is laid,
         As maid’s breast against breast of maid;
   Beholding how your own I have engraved
   On it, and with what purging thoughts have laved
   This love of mine from all mortality
   Indeed the copy is a painful one,
            And with long labour done!
   O if you doubt the thing you are, lady,
            Come then, and look in me;
   Your beauty, Dian, dress and contemplate
   Within a pool to Dian consecrate!
   Unveil this spirit, lady, when you will,
   For unto all but you ’tis veilèd still:
   Unveil, and fearless gaze there, you alone,
   And if you love the image—’tis your own!



IV.
A CARRIER SONG.


                                    I.

   SINCE you have waned from us,
      Fairest of women!
   I am a darkened cage
      Song cannot hymn in.
   My songs have followed you,
      Like birds the summer;
   Ah! bring them back to me,
      Swiftly, dear comer!
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!

                                   II.

   Where wings to rustle use,
      But this poor tarrier—
   Searching my spirit’s eaves—
      Find I for carrier.
   Ah! bring them back to me
      Swiftly, sweet comer!
   Swift, swift, and bring with you
      Song’s Indian summer!
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!

                                   III.

   Whereso your angel is,
      My angel goeth;
   I am left guardianless,
      Paradise knoweth!
   I have no Heaven left
      To weep my wrongs to;
   Heaven, when you went from us;
      Went with my songs too.
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!

                                   IV.

   I have no angels left
      Now, Sweet, to pray to:
   Where you have made your shrine
      They are away to.
   They have struck Heaven’s tent,
      And gone to cover you:
   Whereso you keep your state
      Heaven is pitched over you!
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!

                                    V.

   She that is Heaven’s Queen
      Her title borrows,
   For that she pitiful
      Beareth our sorrows.
   So thou, _Regina mî_,
      _Spes infirmorum_;
   With all our grieving crowned
      _Mater dolorum_!
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!

                                   VI.

   Yet, envious coveter
   Of other’s grieving!
   This lonely longing yet
      ’Scapeth your reaving.
   Cruel! to take from a
      Sinner his Heaven!
   Think you with contrite smiles
      To be forgiven?
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!

                                   VII.

   Penitent! give me back
      Angels, and Heaven;
   Render your stolen self,
      And be forgiven!
   How frontier Heaven from you?
      For my soul prays, Sweet,
   Still to your face in Heaven,
      Heaven in your face, Sweet!
         _Seraphim_,
         _Her to hymn_,
         _Might leave their portals_;
         _And at my feet learn_
         _The harping of mortals_!



V.
SCALA JACOBI PORTAQUE EBURNEA.


   HER soul from earth to Heaven lies,
   Like the ladder of the vision,
         Whereon go
         To and fro,
   In ascension and demission,
   Star-flecked feet of Paradise.

   Now she is drawn up from me,
   All my angels, wet-eyed, tristful,
         Gaze from great
         Heaven’s gate
   Like pent children, very wistful,
   That below a playmate see.

   Dream-dispensing face of hers!
   Ivory port which loosed upon me
         Wings, I wist,
         Whose amethyst
   Trepidations have forgone me,—
   Hesper’s filmy traffickers!



VI.
GILDED GOLD.


   THOU dost to rich attire a grace,
   To let it deck itself with thee,
   And teachest pomp strange cunning ways
   To be thought simplicity.
   But lilies, stolen from grassy mold,
   No more curlèd state unfold
   Translated to a vase of gold;
   In burning throne though they keep still
   Serenities unthawed and chill.
   Therefore, albeit thou’rt stately so,
   In statelier state thou us’dst to go.

   Though jewels should phosphoric burn
   Through those night-waters of thine hair,
   A flower from its translucid urn
   Poured silver flame more lunar-fair.
   These futile trappings but recall
   Degenerate worshippers who fall
   In purfled kirtle and brocade
   To ’parel the white Mother-Maid.
   For, as her image stood arrayed
   In vests of its self-substance wrought

   To measure of the sculptor’s thought—
   Slurred by those added braveries;
   So for thy spirit did devise
   Its Maker seemly garniture,
   Of its own essence parcel pure,—
   From grave simplicities a dress,
   And reticent demurenesses,
   And love encinctured with reserve;
   Which the woven vesture should subserve.
   For outward robes in their ostents
   Should show the soul’s habiliments.
   Therefore I say,—Thou’rt fair even so,
   But better Fair I use to know.

   The violet would thy dusk hair deck
   With graces like thine own unsought.
   Ah! but such place would daze and wreck
   Its simple, lowly rustic thought.
   For so advancèd, dear, to thee,
   It would unlearn humility!
   Yet do not, with an altered look,
   In these weak numbers read rebuke;
   Which are but jealous lest too much
   God’s master-piece thou shouldst retouch.
   Where a sweetness is complete,
   Add not sweets unto the sweet!
   Or, as thou wilt, for others so
   In unfamiliar richness go;
   But keep for mine acquainted eyes
   The fashions of thy Paradise.



VII.
HER PORTRAIT.


   OH, but the heavenly grammar did I hold
   Of that high speech which angels’ tongues turn gold!
   So should her deathless beauty take no wrong,
   Praised in her own great kindred’s fit and cognate tongue.
   Or if that language yet with us abode.
   Which Adam in the garden talked with God!
   But our untempered speech descends—poor heirs!
   Grimy and rough-cast still from Babel’s bricklayers:
   Curse on the brutish jargon we inherit,
   Strong but to damn, not memorise, a spirit!
   A cheek, a lip, a limb, a bosom, they
   Move with light ease in speech of working-day;
   And women we do use to praise even so.
   But here the gates we burst, and to the temple go.
   Their praise were her dispraise; who dare, who dare,
   Adulate the seraphim for their burning hair?
   How, if with them I dared, here should I dare it?
   How praise the woman, who but know the spirit?
   How praise the colour of her eyes, uncaught
   While they were coloured with her varying thought
   How her mouth’s shape, who only use to know
   What tender shape her speech will fit it to?
   Or her lips’ redness, when their joinèd veil
   Song’s fervid hand has parted till it wore them pale?

      If I would praise her soul (temerarious if!),
   All must be mystery and hieroglyph.
   Heaven, which not oft is prodigal of its more
   To singers, in their song too great before;
   By which the hierarch of large poesy is
   Restrained to his once sacred benefice;
   Only for her the salutary awe
   Relaxes and stern canon of its law;
   To her alone concedes pluralities,
   In her alone to reconcile agrees
   The Muse, the Graces, and the Charities;
   To her, who can the trust so well conduct
   To her it gives the use, to us the usufruct.

   What of the dear administress then may
   I utter, though I spoke her own carved perfect way?
   What of her daily gracious converse known,
   Whose heavenly despotism must needs dethrone
   And subjugate all sweetness but its own?
   Deep in my heart subsides the infrequent word,
   And there dies slowly throbbing like a wounded bird.
   What of her silence, that outsweetens speech?
   What of her thoughts, high marks for mine own thoughts to reach?
   Yet (Chaucer’s antique sentence so to turn),
   Most gladly will she teach, and gladly learn;
   And teaching her, by her enchanting art,
   The master threefold learns for all he can impart.
   Now all is said, and all being said,—aye me!
   There yet remains unsaid the very She.
   Nay, to conclude (so to conclude I dare),
   If of her virtues you evade the snare,
   Then for her faults you’ll fall in love with her.

   Alas, and I have spoken of her Muse—
   Her Muse, that died with her auroral dews!
   Learn, the wise cherubim from harps of gold
   Seduce a trepidating music manifold;
   But the superior seraphim do know
   None other music but to flame and glow.
   So she first lighted on our frosty earth,
   A sad musician, of cherubic birth,
   Playing to alien ears—which did not prize
   The uncomprehended music of the skies—
   The exiled airs of her far Paradise.
   But soon from her own harpings taking fire,
   In love and light her melodies expire.
   Now Heaven affords her, for her silenced hymn,
   A double portion of the seraphim.

      At the rich odours from her heart that rise,
   My soul remembers its lost Paradise,
   And antenatal gales blow from Heaven’s shores of spice;
   I grow essential all, uncloaking me
   From this encumbering virility,
   And feel the primal sex of heaven and poetry:
   And parting from her, in me linger on
   Vague snatches of Uranian antiphon.

      How to the petty prison could she shrink
   Of femineity?—Nay, but I think
   In a dear courtesy her spirit would
   Woman assume, for grace to womanhood.
   Or, votaress to the virgin Sanctitude
   Of reticent withdrawal’s sweet, courted pale,
   She took the cloistral flesh, the sexual veil,
   Of her sad, aboriginal sisterhood;
   The habit of cloistral flesh which founding Eve indued.

      Thus do I know her: but for what men call
   Beauty—the loveliness corporeal,
   Its most just praise a thing unproper were
   To singer or to listener, me or her.
   She wears that body but as one indues
   A robe, half careless, for it is the use;
   Although her soul and it so fair agree,
   We sure may, unattaint of heresy,
   Conceit it might the soul’s begetter be.
   The immortal could we cease to contemplate,
   The mortal part suggests its every trait.
   God laid His fingers on the ivories
   Of her pure members as on smoothèd keys,
   And there out-breathed her spirit’s harmonies
   I’ll speak a little proudly:—I disdain
   To count the beauty worth my wish or gaze,
   Which the dull daily fool can covet or obtain.
   I do confess the fairness of the spoil,
   But from such rivalry it takes a soil.
   For her I’ll proudlier speak:—how could it be
   That I should praise the gilding on the psaltery?
   ’Tis not for her to hold that prize a prize,
   Or praise much praise, though proudest in its wise,
   To which even hopes of merely women rise.
   Such strife would to the vanquished laurels yield,
   Against _her_ suffered to have lost a field.
   Herself must with herself be sole compeer,
   Unless the people of her distant sphere
   Some gold migration send to melodise the year.
   But first our hearts must burn in larger guise,
   To reformate the uncharitable skies,
   And so the deathless plumage to acclimatise:
   Since this, their sole congener in our clime,
   Droops her sad, ruffled thoughts for half the shivering time.

      Yet I have felt what terrors may consort
   In women’s cheeks, the Graces’ soft resort;
   My hand hath shook at gentle hands’ access,
   And trembled at the waving of a tress;
   My blood known panic fear, and fled dismayed,
   Where ladies’ eyes have set their ambuscade.
   The rustle of a robe hath been to me
   The very rattle of love’s musketry;
   Although my heart hath beat the loud advance,
   I have recoiled before a challenging glance,
   Proved gay alarms where warlike ribbons dance.
   And from it all, this knowledge have I got,—
   The whole that others have, is less than they have not;
   All which makes other women noted fair,
   Unnoted would remain and overshone in her.

   How should I gauge what beauty is her dole,
   Who cannot see her countenance for her soul;
   As birds see not the casement for the sky?
   And as ’tis check they prove its presence by,
   I know not of her body till I find
   My flight debarred the heaven of her mind.
   Hers is the face whence all should copied be,
   Did God make replicas of such as she;
   Its presence felt by what it does abate,
   Because the soul shines through tempered and mitigate:
   Where—as a figure labouring at night
   Beside the body of a splendid light—
   Dark Time works hidden by its luminousness;
   And every line he labours to impress
   Turns added beauty, like the veins that run
   Athwart a leaf which hangs against the sun.

   There regent Melancholy wide controls;
   There Earth- and Heaven-Love play for aureoles;
   There Sweetness out of Sadness breaks at fits,
   Like bubbles on dark water, or as flits
   A sudden silver fin through its deep infinites;
   There amorous Thought has sucked pale Fancy’s breath,
   And Tenderness sits looking toward the lands of death
   There Feeling stills her breathing with her hand,
   And Dream from Melancholy part wrests the wand
   And on this lady’s heart, looked you so deep,
   Poor Poetry has rocked himself to sleep:
   Upon the heavy blossom of her lips
   Hangs the bee Musing; nigh her lids eclipse
   Each half-occulted star beneath that lies;
   And in the contemplation of those eyes,
   Passionless passion, wild tranquillities.

                                * * * * *



EPILOGUE.


                          TO THE POET’S SITTER,
      _Wherein he excuseth himself for the manner of the Portrait_.

   ALAS! now wilt thou chide, and say (I deem),
   My figured descant hides the simple theme:
   Or in another wise reproving, say
   I ill observe thine own high reticent way.
   Oh, pardon, that I testify of thee
   What thou couldst never speak, nor others be!

   Yet (for the book is not more innocent
   Of what the gazer’s eyes makes so intent),
   She will but smile, perhaps, that I find my fair
   Sufficing scope in such strait theme as her.
   “Bird of the sun! the stars’ wild honey-bee!
   Is your gold browsing done so thoroughly?
   Or sinks a singèd wing to narrow nest in me?”
   (Thus she might say: for not this lowly vein
   Out-deprecates her deprecating strain.)
   Oh, you mistake, dear lady, quite; nor know
   Ether was strict as you, its loftiness as low!

   The heavens do not advance their majesty
   Over their marge; beyond his empery
   The ensigns of the wind are not unfurled,
   His reign is hooped in by the pale o’ the world.
   ’Tis not the continent, but the contained,
   That pleasaunce makes or prison, loose or chained.
   Too much alike or little captives me,
   For all oppression is captivity.
   What groweth to its height demands no higher;
   The limit limits not, but the desire.
   Give but my spirit its desirèd scope,—
   A giant in a pismire, I not grope;
   Deny it,—and an ant, with on my back
   A firmament, the skiey vault will crack.
   Our minds make their own Termini, nor call
   The issuing circumscriptions great or small;
   So high constructing Nature lessons to us all:
   Who optics gives accommodate to see
   Your countenance large as looks the sun to be,
   And distant greatness less than near humanity.

   We, therefore, with a sure instinctive mind,
   An equal spaciousness of bondage find
   In confines far or near, of air or our own kind.
   Our looks and longings, which affront the stars,
   Most richly bruised against their golden bars,
   Delighted captives of their flaming spears,
   Find a restraint restrainless which appears
   As that is, and so simply natural,
   In you;—the fair detention freedom call,
   And overscroll with fancies the loved prison-wall.

   Such sweet captivity, and only such,
   In you, as in those golden bars, we touch!
   Our gazes for sufficing limits know
   The firmament above, your face below;
   Our longings are contented with the skies,
   Contented with the heaven, and your eyes.
   My restless wings, that beat the whole world through,
   Flag on the confines of the sun and you;
   And find the human pale remoter of the two.



Miscellaneous Poems.


TO THE DEAD CARDINAL OF WESTMINSTER.


   I WILL not perturbate
   Thy Paradisal state
            With praise
      Of thy dead days;

   To the new-heavened say,—
   “Spirit, thou wert fine clay:”
            This do,
      Thy praise who knew.

   Therefore my spirit clings
   Heaven’s porter by the wings,
            And holds
      Its gated golds

   Apart, with thee to press
   A private business;—
            Whence,
      Deign me audience.

   Anchorite, who didst dwell
   With all the world for cell
            My soul
      Round me doth roll

   A sequestration bare.
   Too far alike we were,
            Too far
      Dissimilar.

   For its burning fruitage I
   Do climb the tree o’ the sky;
            Do prize
      Some human eyes.

   _You_ smelt the Heaven-blossoms,
   And all the sweet embosoms
            The dear
      Uranian year.

   Those Eyes my weak gaze shuns,
   Which to the suns are Suns.
            Did
      Not affray your lid.

   The carpet was let down
   (With golden mouldings strown)
            For you
      Of the angels’ blue.

   But I, ex-Paradised,
   The shoulder of your Christ
            Find high
      To lean thereby.

   So flaps my helpless sail,
   Bellying with neither gale,
            Of Heaven
      Nor Orcus even.

   Life is a coquetry
   Of Death, which wearies me,
            Too sure
      Of the amour;

   A tiring-room where I
   Death’s divers garments try,
            Till fit
      Some fashion sit.

   It seemeth me too much
   I do rehearse for such
            A mean
      And single scene.

   The sandy glass hence bear—
   Antique remembrancer;
            My veins
      Do spare its pains.

   With secret sympathy
   My thoughts repeat in me
            Infirm
      The turn o’ the worm

   Beneath my appointed sod:
   The grave is in my blood;
            I shake
      To winds that take

   Its grasses by the top;
   The rains thereon that drop
            Perturb
      With drip acerb

   My subtly answering soul;
   The feet across its knoll
            Do jar
      Me from afar.

   As sap foretastes the spring;
   As Earth ere blossoming
            Thrills
      With far daffodils,

   And feels her breast turn sweet
   With the unconceivèd wheat;
            So doth
      My flesh foreloathe

   The abhorrèd spring of Dis,
   With seething presciences
            Affirm
      The preparate worm.

   I have no thought that I,
   When at the last I die,
            Shall reach
      To gain your speech.

   But you, should that be so,
   May very well, I know,
            May well
      To me in hell

   With recognising eyes
   Look from your Paradise—
            “God bless
      Thy hopelessness!”

   Call, holy soul, O call
   The hosts angelical,
            And say,—
      “See, far away

   “Lies one I saw on earth;
   One stricken from his birth
            With curse
      Of destinate verse.

   “What place doth He ye serve
   For such sad spirit reserve,—
            Given,
      In dark lieu of Heaven,

   “The impitiable Dæmon,
   Beauty, to adore and dream on,
            To be
      Perpetually

   “Hers, but she never his?
   He reapeth miseries,
            Foreknows
      His wages woes;

   “He lives detachèd days;
   He serveth not for praise;
            For gold
      He is not sold;

   “Deaf is he to world’s tongue;
   He scorneth for his song
            The loud
      Shouts of the crowd;

   “He asketh not world’s eyes;
   Not to world’s ears he cries;
            Saith,—‘These
      Shut, if ye please;’

   “He measureth world’s pleasure,
   World’s ease as Saints might measure;
            For hire
      Just love entire

   “He asks, not grudging pain;
   And knows his asking vain,
            And cries—
      ‘Love! Love!’ and dies;

   “In guerdon of long duty,
   Unowned by Love or Beauty;
            And goes—
      Tell, tell, who knows!

   “Aliens from Heaven’s worth,
   Fine beasts who nose i’ the earth,
            Do there
      Reward prepare.

   “But are _his_ great desires
   Food but for nether fires?
            Ah me,
      A mystery!

   “Can it be his alone,
   To find when all is known,
            That what
      He solely sought

   “Is lost, and thereto lost
   All that its seeking cost?
            That he
      Must finally,

   “Through sacrificial tears,
   And anchoretic years,
            Tryst
      With the sensualist?”

   So ask; and if they tell
   The secret terrible,
            Good friend,
      I pray thee send

   Some high gold embassage
   To teach my unripe age.
            Tell!
      Lest my feet walk hell.



A FALLEN YEW.


   IT seemed corrival of the world’s great prime,
      Made to un-edge the scythe of Time,
         And last with stateliest rhyme.

   No tender Dryad ever did indue
      That rigid chiton of rough yew,
         To fret her white flesh through:

   But some god like to those grim Asgard lords,
      Who walk the fables of the hordes
         From Scandinavian fjords,

   Upheaved its stubborn girth, and raised unriven,
      Against the whirl-blast and the levin,
         Defiant arms to Heaven.

   When doom puffed out the stars, we might have said,
      It would decline its heavy head,
         And see the world to bed.

   For this firm yew did from the vassal leas,
      And rain and air, its tributaries,
         Its revenues increase,

   And levy impost on the golden sun,
      Take the blind years as they might run,
         And no fate seek or shun.

   But now our yew is strook, is fallen—yea
      Hacked like dull wood of every day
         To this and that, men say.

   Never!—To Hades’ shadowy shipyards gone,
      Dim barge of Dis, down Acheron
         It drops, or Lethe wan.

   Stirred by its fall—poor destined bark of Dis!—
      Along my soul a bruit there is
         Of echoing images,

   Reverberations of mortality:
      Spelt backward from its death, to me
         Its life reads saddenedly.

   Its breast was hollowed as the tooth of eld;
      And boys, their creeping unbeheld,
         A laughing moment dwelled.

   Yet they, within its very heart so crept,
      Reached not the heart that courage kept
         With winds and years beswept.

   And in its boughs did close and kindly nest
      The birds, as they within its breast,
         By all its leaves caressed.

   But bird nor child might touch by any art
      Each other’s or the tree’s hid heart,
         A whole God’s breadth apart;

   The breadth of God, he breadth of death and life!
      Even so, even so, in undreamed strife
         With pulseless Law, the wife,—

   The sweetest wife on sweetest marriage-day,—
      Their souls at grapple in mid-way,
         Sweet to her sweet may say:

   “I take you to my inmost heart, my true!”
      Ah, fool! but there is one heart you
         Shall never take him to!

   The hold that falls not when the town is got,
      The heart’s heart, whose immurèd plot
         Hath keys yourself keep not!

   Its ports you cannot burst—you are withstood—
      For him that to your listening blood
         Sends precepts as he would.

   Its gates are deaf to Love, high summoner;
      Yea, Love’s great warrant runs not there:
         You are your prisoner.

   Yourself are with yourself the sole consortress
      In that unleaguerable fortress;
         It knows you not for portress

   Its keys are at the cincture hung of God;
      Its gates are trepidant to His nod;
         By Him its floors are trod.

   And if His feet shall rock those floors in wrath,
      Or blest aspersion sleek His path,
         Is only choice it hath.

   Yea, in that ultimate heart’s occult abode
      To lie as in an oubliette of God,
         Or as a bower untrod,

   Built by a secret Lover for His Spouse;—
      Sole choice is this your life allows,
         Sad tree, whose perishing boughs
            So few birds house!



DREAM-TRYST.


   THE breaths of kissing night and day
      Were mingled in the eastern Heaven:
   Throbbing with unheard melody
      Shook Lyra all its star-chord seven:
         When dusk shrunk cold, and light trod shy,
            And dawn’s grey eyes were troubled grey;
         And souls went palely up the sky,
            And mine to Lucidé.

   There was no change in her sweet eyes
      Since last I saw those sweet eyes shine;
   There was no change in her deep heart
      Since last that deep heart knocked at mine.
         Her eyes were clear, her eyes were Hope’s,
            Wherein did ever come and go
         The sparkle of the fountain-drops
            From her sweet soul below.

   The chambers in the house of dreams
      Are fed with so divine an air,
   That Time’s hoar wings grow young therein,
      And they who walk there are most fair.
         I joyed for me, I joyed for her,
            Who with the Past meet girt about:
         Where our last kiss still warms the air,
         Nor can her eyes go out.



A CORYMBUS FOR AUTUMN.


         HEARKEN my chant, ’tis
   As a Bacchante’s,
   A grape-spurt, a vine-splash, a tossed tress, flown vaunt ’tis!
         Suffer my singing,
   Gipsy of Seasons, ere thou go winging;
         Ere Winter throws
         His slaking snows
   In thy feasting-flagon’s impurpurate glows!
   The sopped sun—toper as ever drank hard—
         Stares foolish, hazed,
         Rubicund, dazed,
   Totty with thine October tankard.
   Tanned maiden! with cheeks like apples russet,
      And breast a brown agaric faint-flushing at tip,
   And a mouth too red for the moon to buss it,
      But her cheek unvow its vestalship;
         Thy mists enclip
   Her steel-clear circuit illuminous,
         Until it crust
         Rubiginous
   With the glorious gules of a glowing rust.
   Far other saw we, other indeed,
         The crescent moon, in the May-days dead,
         Fly up with its slender white wings spread
   Out of its nest in the sea’s waved mead!
   How are the veins of thee, Autumn, laden?
               Umbered juices,
               And pulpèd oozes
      Pappy out of the cherry-bruises,
   Froth the veins of thee, wild, wild maiden!
               With hair that musters
               In globèd clusters,
      In tumbling clusters, like swarthy grapes,
   Round thy brow and thine ears o’ershaden;
   With the burning darkness of eyes like pansies,
               Like velvet pansies
               Wherethrough escapes
   The splendid might of thy conflagrate fancies;
      With robe gold-tawny not hiding the shapes
               Of the feet whereunto it falleth down,
            Thy naked feet unsandallèd;
   With robe gold-tawny that does not veil
            Feet where the red
            Is meshed in the brown,
   Like a rubied sun in a Venice-sail.

   The wassailous heart of the Year is thine!
   His Bacchic fingers disentwine
            His coronal
            At thy festival;
   His revelling fingers disentwine
            Leaf, flower, and all,
            And let them fall
   Blossom and all in thy wavering wine.
   The Summer looks out from her brazen tower,
      Through the flashing bars of July,
   Waiting thy ripened golden shower;
      Whereof there cometh, with sandals fleet,
            The North-west flying viewlessly,
      With a sword to sheer, and untameable feet,
            And the gorgon-head of the Winter shown
            To stiffen the gazing earth as stone.

      In crystal Heaven’s magic sphere
            Poised in the palm of thy fervid hand,
      Thou seest the enchanted shows appear
      That stain Favonian firmament;
      Richer than ever the Occident
            Gave up to bygone Summer’s wand.
   Day’s dying dragon lies drooping his crest,
   Panting red pants into the West.
   Or the butterfly sunset claps its wings
      With flitter alit on the swinging blossom,
   The gusty blossom, that tosses and swings,
      Of the sea with its blown and ruffled bosom;
   Its ruffled bosom wherethrough the wind sings
   Till the crispèd petals are loosened and strown
            Overblown, on the sand;
            Shed, curling as dead
         Rose-leaves curl, on the fleckèd strand.
   Or higher, holier, saintlier when, as now,
   All nature sacerdotal seems, and thou.
         The calm hour strikes on yon golden gong,
            In tones of floating and mellow light
         A spreading summons to even-song:
            See how there
            The cowlèd night
         Kneels on the Eastern sanctuary-stair.
   What is this feel of incense everywhere?
      Clings it round folds of the blanch-amiced clouds,
   Upwafted by the solemn thurifer,
               The mighty spirit unknown,
   That swingeth the slow earth before the embannered Throne?
      Or is’t the Season under all these shrouds
   Of light, and sense, and silence, makes her known
            A presence everywhere,
            An inarticulate prayer,
   A hand on the soothed tresses of the air?
            But there is one hour scant
   Of this Titanian, primal liturgy;
            As there is but one hour for me and thee,
      Autumn, for thee and thine hierophant,
            Of this grave ending chant.
            Round the earth still and stark
   Heaven’s death-lights kindle, yellow spark by spark,
   Beneath the dreadful catafalque of the dark.

            And I had ended there:
   But a great wind blew all the stars to flare,
   And cried, “I sweep the path before the moon!
   Tarry ye now the coming of the moon,
            For she is coming soon;”
   Then died before the coming of the moon.
   And she came forth upon the trepidant air,
            In vesture unimagined-fair,
            Woven as woof of flag-lilies;
            And curdled as of flag-lilies
            The vapour at the feet of her,
   And a haze about her tinged in fainter wise.
      As if she had trodden the stars in press,
      Till the gold wine spurted over her dress,
      Till the gold wine gushed out round her feet;
            Spouted over her stainèd wear,
      And bubbled in golden froth at her feet,
            And hung like a whirlpool’s mist round her.
      Still, mighty Season, do I see’t,
      Thy sway is still majestical!
      Thou hold’st of God, by title sure,
   Thine indefeasible investiture,
      And that right round thy locks are native to;
   The heavens upon thy brow imperial,
            This huge terrene thy ball,
   And o’er thy shoulders thrown wide air’s depending pall.
      What if thine earth be blear and bleak of hue?
            Still, still the skies are sweet!
      Still, Season, still thou hast thy triumphs there!
            How have I, unaware,
   Forgetful of my strain inaugural,
      Cleft the great rondure of thy reign complete,
   Yielding thee half, who hast indeed the all?
         I will not think thy sovereignty begun
            But with the shepherd sun
         That washes in the sea the stars’ gold fleeces
            Or that with day it ceases,
         Who sets his burning lips to the salt brine,
            And purples it to wine;
         While I behold how ermined Artemis
            Ordainèd weed must wear,
            And toil thy business;
            Who witness am of her,
         Her too in autumn turned a vintager;
         And, laden with its lampèd clusters bright,
         The fiery-fruited vineyard of this night.



THE HOUND OF HEAVEN.


   I FLED Him, down the nights and down the days;
      I fled Him, down the arches of the years;
   I fled Him, down the labyrinthine ways
      Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears
   I hid from Him, and under running laughter.
                  Up vistaed hopes, I sped;
                  And shot, precipitated
   Adown Titanic glooms of chasmed fears,
      From those strong Feet that followed, followed after.
                  But with unhurrying chase,
                  And unperturbéd pace,
         Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
                  They beat—and a Voice beat
                  More instant than the Feet—
         “All things betray thee, who betrayest Me.”

                  I pleaded, outlaw-wise,
   By many a hearted casement, curtained red,
      Trellised with intertwining charities;
   (For, though I knew His love Who followéd,
                  Yet was I sore adread
   Lest, having Him, I must have naught beside)
   But, if one little casement parted wide,
      The gust of His approach would clash it to
      Fear wist not to evade, as Love wist to pursue.
   Across the margent of the world I fled,
      And troubled the gold gateways of the stars,
      Smiting for shelter on their changèd bars;
                  Fretted to dulcet jars
   And silvern chatter the pale ports o’ the moon.
   I said to dawn: Be sudden—to eve: Be soon;
      With thy young skiey blossoms heap me over
                  From this tremendous Lover!
   Float thy vague veil about me, lest He see!
      I tempted all His servitors, but to find
   My own betrayal in their constancy,
   In faith to Him their fickleness to me,
      Their traitorous trueness, and their loyal deceit.
   To all swift things for swiftness did I sue;
      Clung to the whistling mane of every wind.
            But whether they swept, smoothly fleet,
         The long savannahs of the blue;
                  Or whether, Thunder-driven,
            They clanged his chariot ’thwart a heaven,
   Plashy with flying lightnings round the spurn o’ their feet:—
      Fear wist not to evade as Love wist to pursue.
            Still with unhurrying chase,
            And unperturbèd pace,
      Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
               Came on the following Feet,
               And a Voice above their beat—
         “Naught shelters thee, who wilt not shelter Me.”

   I sought no more that, after which I strayed,
         In face of man or maid;
   But still within the little children’s eyes
         Seems something, something that replies,
   _They_ at least are for me, surely for me!
   I turned me to them very wistfully;
   But just as their young eyes grew sudden fair
         With dawning answers there,
   Their angel plucked them from me by the hair.
   “Come then, ye other children, Nature’s—share
   With me” (said I) “your delicate fellowship;
         Let me greet you lip to lip,
         Let me twine with you caresses,
               Wantoning
         With our Lady-Mother’s vagrant tresses,
               Banqueting
         With her in her wind-walled palace,
         Underneath her azured daïs,
         Quaffing, as your taintless way is,
               From a chalice
   Lucent-weeping out of the dayspring.”
               So it was done:
   _I_ in their delicate fellowship was one—
   Drew the bolt of Nature’s secrecies.
         _I_ knew all the swift importings
         On the wilful face of skies;
         I knew how the clouds arise
         Spumèd of the wild sea-snortings;
               All that’s born or dies
         Rose and drooped with—made them shapers
   Of mine own moods, or wailful or divine—
         With them joyed and was bereaven.
         I was heavy with the even,
         When she lit her glimmering tapers
         Round the day’s dead sanctities.
         I laughed in the morning’s eyes.
   I triumphed and I saddened with all weather,
         Heaven and I wept together,
   And its sweet tears were salt with mortal mine;
   Against the red throb of its sunset-heart
               I laid my own to beat,
               And share commingling heat;
   But not by that, by that, was eased my human smart.
   In vain my tears were wet on Heaven’s grey cheek.
   For ah! we know not what each other says,
         These things and I; in sound _I_ speak—
   _Their_ sound is but their stir, they speak by silences.
   Nature, poor stepdame, cannot slake my drouth;
         Let her, if she would owe me,
   Drop yon blue bosom-veil of sky, and show me
         The breasts o’ her tenderness:
   Never did any milk of hers once bless
                  My thirsting mouth.
                  Nigh and nigh draws the chase,
                  With unperturbèd pace,
         Deliberate speed majestic instancy
                  And past those noisèd Feet
                  A voice comes yet more fleet—
      “Lo! naught contents thee, who content’st not Me.”

   Naked I wait Thy love’s uplifted stroke!
   My harness piece by piece Thou hast hewn from me,
                  And smitten me to my knee;
         I am defenceless utterly,
         I slept, methinks, and woke,
   And, slowly gazing, find me stripped in sleep.
   In the rash lustihead of my young powers,
         I shook the pillaring hours
   And pulled my life upon me; grimed with smears,
   I stand amid the dust o’ the mounded years—
   My mangled youth lies dead beneath the heap.
   My days have crackled and gone up in smoke,
   Have puffed and burst as sun-starts on a stream.
         Yea, faileth now even dream
   The dreamer, and the lute the lutanist;
   Even the linked fantasies, in whose blossomy twist
   I swung the earth a trinket at my wrist,
   Are yielding; cords of all too weak account
   For earth with heavy griefs so overplussed.
         Ah! is Thy love indeed
   A weed, albeit an amaranthine weed,
   Suffering no flowers except its own to mount?
         Ah! must—
         Designer infinite!—
   Ah! must Thou char the wood ere Thou canst limn with it?
   My freshness spent its wavering shower i’ the dust;
   And now my heart is as a broken fount,
   Wherein tear-drippings stagnate, spilt down ever
         From the dank thoughts that shiver
   Upon the sighful branches of my mind.
         Such is; what is to be?
   The pulp so bitter, how shall taste the rind?
   I dimly guess what Time in mists confounds;
   Yet ever and anon a trumpet sounds
   From the hid battlements of Eternity,
   Those shaken mists a space unsettle, then
   Round the half-glimpsèd turrets slowly wash again;
         But not ere him who summoneth
         I first have seen, enwound
   With grooming robes purpureal, cypress-crowned;
   His name I know, and what his trumpet saith.
   Whether man’s heart or life it be which yields
         Thee harvest, must Thy harvest fields
         Be dunged with rotten death?
               Now of that long pursuit
               Comes on at hand the bruit;
         That Voice is round me like a bursting sea:
               “And is thy earth so marred,
               Shattered in shard on shard?
         Lo, all things fly thee, for thou fliest Me!

         “Strange, piteous, futile thing!
   Wherefore should any set thee love apart?
   Seeing none but I makes much of naught” (He said),
   “And human love needs human meriting:
         How hast thou merited—
   Of all man’s clotted clay the dingiest clot?
         Alack, thou knowest not
   How little worthy of any love thou art!
   Whom wilt thou find to love ignoble thee,
         Save Me, save only Me?
   All which I took from thee I did but take,
         Not for thy harms,
   But just that thou might’st seek it in My arms.
         All which thy child’s mistake
   Fancies as lost, I have stored for thee at home:
         Rise, clasp My hand, and come.”

               Halts by me that footfall:
               Is my gloom, after all,
         Shade of His hand, outstretched caressingly?
               “Ah, fondest, blindest, weakest,
               I am He Whom thou seekest!
         Thou dravest love from thee, who dravest Me.”



A JUDGMENT IN HEAVEN. {55}


   ATHWART the sod which is treading for God * the poet paced with his
   splendid eyes;
   Paradise-verdure he stately passes * to win to the Father of Paradise,
   Through the conscious and palpitant grasses * of inter-tangled
   relucent dyes.

   The angels a-play on its fields of Summer * (their wild wings rustled
   his guides’ cymars)
   Looked up from disport at the passing comer, * as they pelted each
   other with handfuls of stars;
   And the warden-spirits with startled feet rose, * hand on sword, by
   their tethered cars.

   With plumes night-tinctured englobed and cinctured, * of Saints, his
   guided steps held on
   To where on the far crystálline pale * of that transtellar Heaven
   there shone
   The immutable crocean dawn * effusing from the Father’s Throne.

   Through the reverberant Eden-ways * the bruit of his great advent
   driven,
   Back from the fulgent justle and press * with mighty echoing so was
   given,
   As when the surly thunder smites * upon the clangèd gates of Heaven.

   Over the bickering gonfalons, * far-ranged as for Tartarean wars,
   Went a waver of ribbèd fire *—as night-seas on phosphoric bars
   Like a flame-plumed fan shake slowly out * their ridgy reach of
   crumbling stars.

   At length to where on His fretted Throne * sat in the heart of His
   aged dominions
   The great Triune, and Mary nigh, * lit round with spears of their
   hauberked minions,
   The poet drew, in the thunderous blue * involvèd dread of those
   mounted pinions.

   As in a secret and tenebrous cloud * the watcher from the disquiet
   earth
   At momentary intervals * beholds from its raggèd rifts break forth
   The flash of a golden perturbation, * the travelling threat of a
   witchèd birth;

   Till heavily parts a sinister chasm, * a grisly jaw, whose verges
   soon,
   Slowly and ominously filled * by the on-coming plenilune,
   Supportlessly congest with fire, * and suddenly spit forth the moon:—

   With beauty, not terror, through tangled error * of night-dipt plumes
   so burned their charge;
   Swayed and parted the globing clusters * so,—disclosed from their
   kindling marge,
   Roseal-chapleted, splendent-vestured, * the singer there where God’s
   light lay large.

   Hu, hu! a wonder! a wonder! see, * clasping the singer’s glories
   clings
   A dingy creature, even to laughter * cloaked and clad in patchwork
   things,
   Shrinking close from the unused glows * of the seraphs’ versicoloured
   wings.

   A rhymer, rhyming a futile rhyme, * he had crept for convoy through
   Eden-ways
   Into the shade of the poet’s glory, * darkened under his prevalent
   rays,
   Fearfully hoping a distant welcome * as a poor kinsman of his lays.

   The angels laughed with a lovely scorning: *—“Who has done this sorry
   deed in
   The garden of our Father, God? * ’mid his blossoms to sow this weed
   in?
   Never our fingers knew this stuff: * not so fashion the looms of
   Eden!”

   The singer bowed his brow majestic, * searching that patchwork through
   and through,
   Feeling God’s lucent gazes traverse * his singing-stoling and spirit
   too:
   The hallowed harpers were fain to frown * on the strange thing come
   ’mid their sacred crew,
   Only the singer that was earth * his fellow-earth and his own self
   knew.

   But the poet rent off robe and wreath, * so as a sloughing serpent
   doth,
   Laid them at the rhymer’s feet, * shed down wreath and raiment both,
   Stood in a dim and shamèd stole, * like the tattered wing of a musty
   moth.

   “Thou gav’st the weed and wreath of song, * the weed and wreath are
   solely Thine,
   And this dishonest vesture * is the only vesture that is mine;
   The life _I_ textured, Thou the song *—_my_ handicraft is not divine!”

   He wrested o’er the rhymer’s head * that garmenting which wrought him
   wrong;
   A flickering tissue argentine * down dripped its shivering silvers
   long:—
   “Better thou wov’st thy woof of life * than thou didst weave thy woof
   of song!”

   Never a chief in Saintdom was, * but turned him from the Poet then;
   Never an eye looked mild on him * ’mid all the angel myriads ten,
   Save sinless Mary, and sinful Mary *—the Mary titled Magdalen.

   “Turn yon robe,” spake Magdalen, * “of torn bright song, and see and
   feel.”
   They turned the raiment, saw and felt * what their turning did reveal—
   All the inner surface piled * with bloodied hairs, like hairs of
   steel.

   “Take, I pray, yon chaplet up, * thrown down ruddied from his head.”
   They took the roseal chaplet up, * and they stood astonishèd:
   Every leaf between their fingers, * as they bruised it, burst and
   bled.

   “See his torn flesh through those rents; * see the punctures round his
   hair,
   As if the chaplet-flowers had driven * deep roots in to nourish there—
   Lord, who gav’st him robe and wreath, * _what_ was this Thou gav’st
   for wear?”

   “Fetch forth the Paradisal garb!” * spake the Father, sweet and low;
   Drew them both by the frightened hand * where Mary’s throne made
   irised bow—
   “Take, Princess Mary, of thy good grace, * two spirits greater than
   they know.”

                                * * * * *



EPILOGUE.


   VIRTUE may unlock hell, or even
   A sin turn in the wards of Heaven,
   (As ethics of the text-book go),
   So little men their own deeds know,
   Or through the intricate _mêlée_
   Guess whitherward draws the battle-sway;
   So little, if they know the deed,
   Discern what therefrom shall succeed.
   To wisest moralists ’tis but given
   To work rough border-law of Heaven,
   Within this narrow life of ours,
   These marches ’twixt delimitless Powers.
   Is it, if Heaven the future showed,
   Is it the all-severest mode
   To see ourselves with the eyes of God?
   God rather grant, at His assize,
   He see us not with our own eyes!

   Heaven, which man’s generations draws
   Nor deviates into replicas,
   Must of as deep diversity
   In judgment as creation be.
   There is no expeditious road
   To pack and label men for God,
   And save them by the barrel-load.
   Some may perchance, with strange surprise,
   Have blundered into Paradise.
   In vasty dusk of life abroad,
   They fondly thought to err from God,
   Nor knew the circle that they trod;
   And wandering all the night about,
   Found them at morn where they set out.
   Death dawned; Heaven lay in prospect wide:—
   Lo! they were standing by His side!

   The rhymer a life uncomplex,
   With just such cares as mortals vex,
   So simply felt as all men feel,
   Lived purely out to his soul’s weal.
   A double life the Poet lived,
   And with a double burthen grieved;
   The life of flesh and life of song,
   The pangs to both lives that belong;
   Immortal knew and mortal pain,
   Who in two worlds could lose and gain.
   And found immortal fruits must be
   Mortal through his mortality.
   The life of flesh and life of song!
   If one life worked the other wrong,
   What expiating agony
   May for him damned to poesy
   Shut in that little sentence be—
   What deep austerities of strife—
   “He lived his life.”  He lived _his_ life!



Poems on Children.


DAISY.


   WHERE the thistle lifts a purple crown
      Six foot out of the turf,
   And the harebell shakes on the windy hill—
      O the breath of the distant surf!—

   The hills look over on the South,
      And southward dreams the sea;
   And, with the sea-breeze hand in hand,
      Came innocence and she.

   Where ’mid the gorse the raspberry
      Red for the gatherer springs,
   Two children did we stray and talk
      Wise, idle, childish things.

   She listened with big-lipped surprise,
      Breast-deep mid flower and spine:
   Her skin was like a grape, whose veins
      Run snow instead of wine.

   She knew not those sweet words she spake,
      Nor knew her own sweet way;
   But there’s never a bird, so sweet a song
      Thronged in whose throat that day!

   Oh, there were flowers in Storrington
      On the turf and on the spray;
   But the sweetest flower on Sussex hills
      Was the Daisy-flower that day!

   Her beauty smoothed earth’s furrowed face!
      She gave me tokens three:—
   A look, a word of her winsome mouth,
      And a wild raspberry.

   A berry red, a guileless look,
      A still word,—strings of sand!
   And yet they made my wild, wild heart
      Fly down to her little hand.

   For standing artless as the air,
      And candid as the skies,
   She took the berries with her hand,
      And the love with her sweet eyes.

   The fairest things have fleetest end:
      Their scent survives their close,
   But the rose’s scent is bitterness
      To him that loved the rose!

   She looked a little wistfully,
      Then went her sunshine way:—
   The sea’s eye had a mist on it,
      And the leaves fell from the day.

   She went her unremembering way,
      She went and left in me
   The pang of all the partings gone,
      And partings yet to be.

   She left me marvelling why my soul
      Was sad that she was glad;
   At all the sadness in the sweet,
      The sweetness in the sad.

   Still, still I seemed to see her, still
      Look up with soft replies,
   And take the berries with her hand,
      And the love with her lovely eyes.

   Nothing begins, and nothing ends,
      That is not paid with moan;
   For we are born in other’s pain,
      And perish in our own.



THE MAKING OF VIOLA.


                                    I.

_The Father of Heaven_.

   Spin, daughter Mary, spin,
   Twirl your wheel with silver din;
   Spin, daughter Mary, spin,
         Spin a tress for Viola.

_Angels_.

   Spin, Queen Mary, a
   Brown tress for Viola!

                                   II.

_The Father of Heaven_.

   Weave, hands angelical,
   Weave a woof of flesh to pall—
   Weave, hands angelical—
         Flesh to pall our Viola.

_Angels_.

   Weave, singing brothers, a
   Velvet flesh for Viola!

                                   III.

_The Father of Heaven_.

   Scoop, young Jesus, for her eyes,
   Wood-browned pools of Paradise—
   Young Jesus, for the eyes,
         For the eyes of Viola.

_Angels_.

   Tint, Prince Jesus, a
   Duskèd eye for Viola!

                                   IV.

_The Father of Heaven_.

   Cast a star therein to drown,
   Like a torch in cavern brown,
   Sink a burning star to drown
         Whelmed in eyes of Viola.

_Angels_.

   Lave, Prince Jesus, a
   Star in eyes of Viola!

                                    V.

_The Father of Heaven_.

   Breathe, Lord Paraclete,
   To a bubbled crystal meet—
   Breathe, Lord Paraclete—
         Crystal soul for Viola.

_Angels_.

   Breathe, Regal Spirit, a
   Flashing soul for Viola!

                                   VI.

_The Father of Heaven_.

   Child-angels, from your wings
   Fall the roseal hoverings,
   Child-angels, from your wings,
         On the cheeks of Viola.

_Angels_.

   Linger, rosy reflex, a
   Quenchless stain, on Viola!

_All things being accomplished_, _saith the Father of Heaven_.

   Bear her down, and bearing, sing,
   Bear her down on spyless wing,
   Bear her down, and bearing, sing,
         With a sound of viola.

_Angels_.

   Music as her name is, a
   Sweet sound of Viola!

                                  VIII.

   Wheeling angels, past espial,
   Danced her down with sound of viol;
   Wheeling angels, past espial,
         Descanting on “Viola.”

Angels.

   Sing, in our footing, a
   Lovely lilt of “Viola!”

                                   IX.

   Baby smiled, mother wailed,
   Earthward while the sweetling sailed;
   Mother smiled, baby wailed,
         When to earth came Viola.

And her elders shall say:—

   So soon have we taught you a
   Way to weep, poor Viola!

                                    X.

   Smile, sweet baby, smile,
   For you will have weeping-while;
   Native in your Heaven is smile,—
         But your weeping, Viola?

   Whence your smiles we know, but ah?
   Whence your weeping, Viola?—
   Our first gift to you is a
   Gift of tears, my Viola!



TO MY GODCHILD
FRANCIS M. W. M.


   THIS labouring, vast, Tellurian galleon,
   Riding at anchor off the orient sun,
   Had broken its cable, and stood out to space
   Down some frore Arctic of the aërial ways:
   And now, back warping from the inclement main,
   Its vaporous shroudage drenched with icy rain,
   It swung into its azure roads again;
   When, floated on the prosperous sun-gale, you
   Lit, a white halcyon auspice, ’mid our frozen crew.

   To the Sun, stranger, surely you belong,
   Giver of golden days and golden song;
   Nor is it by an all-unhappy plan
   You bear the name of me, his constant Magian.
   Yet ah! from any other that it came,
   Lest fated to my fate you be, as to my name.
   When at the first those tidings did they bring,
   My heart turned troubled at the ominous thing:
   Though well may such a title him endower,
   For whom a poet’s prayer implores a poet’s power.
   The Assisian, who kept plighted faith to three,
   To Song, to Sanctitude, and Poverty,
   (In two alone of whom most singers prove
   A fatal faithfulness of during love!);
   He the sweet Sales, of whom we scarcely ken
   How God he could love more, he so loved men;
   The crown and crowned of Laura and Italy;
   And Fletcher’s fellow—from these, and not from me,
   Take you your name, and take your legacy!

   Or, if a right successive you declare
   When worms, for ivies, intertwine my hair,
   Take but this Poesy that now followeth
   My clayey hest with sullen servile breath,
   Made then your happy freedman by testating death.
   My song I do but hold for you in trust,
   I ask you but to blossom from my dust.
   When you have compassed all weak I began,
   Diviner poet, and ah! diviner man;
   The man at feud with the perduring child
   In you before song’s altar nobly reconciled;
   From the wise heavens I half shall smile to see
   How little a world, which owned you, needed me.
   If, while you keep the vigils of the night,
   For your wild tears make darkness all too bright,
   Some lone orb through your lonely window peeps,
   As it played lover over your sweet sleeps;
   Think it a golden crevice in the sky,
   Which I have pierced but to behold you by!

   And when, immortal mortal, droops your head,
   And you, the child of deathless song, are dead;
   Then, as you search with unaccustomed glance
   The ranks of Paradise for my countenance,
   Turn not your tread along the Uranian sod
   Among the bearded counsellors of God;
   For if in Eden as on earth are we,
   I sure shall keep a younger company:
   Pass where beneath their rangèd gonfalons
   The starry cohorts shake their shielded suns,
   The dreadful mass of their enridgèd spears;
   Pass where majestical the eternal peers,
   The stately choice of the great Saintdom, meet—
   A silvern segregation, globed complete
   In sandalled shadow of the Triune feet;
   Pass by where wait, young poet-wayfarer,
   Your cousined clusters, emulous to share
   With you the roseal lightnings burning ’mid their hair;
   Pass the crystalline sea, the Lampads seven:—
   Look for me in the nurseries of Heaven.



THE POPPY.
TO MONICA.


   SUMMER set lip to earth’s bosom bare.
   And left the flushed print in a poppy there:
   Like a yawn of fire from the grass it came,
   And the fanning wind puffed it to flapping flame.

   With burnt mouth red like a lion’s it drank
   The blood of the sun as he slaughtered sank,
   And dipped its cup in the purpurate shine
   When the eastern conduits ran with wine.

   Till it grew lethargied with fierce bliss,
   And hot as a swinked gipsy is,
   And drowsed in sleepy savageries,
   With mouth wide a-pout for a sultry kiss.

   A child and man paced side by side,
   Treading the skirts of eventide;
   But between the clasp of his hand and hers
   Lay, felt not, twenty withered years.

   She turned, with the rout of her dusk South hair,
   And saw the sleeping gipsy there;
   And snatched and snapped it in swift child’s whim,
   With—“Keep it, long as you live!”—to him.

   And his smile, as nymphs from their laving meres,
   Trembled up from a bath of tears;
   And joy, like a mew sea-rocked apart,
   Tossed on the wave of his troubled heart.

   For _he_ saw what she did not see,
   That—as kindled by its own fervency—
   The verge shrivelled inward smoulderingly:

   And suddenly ’twixt his hand and hers
   He knew the twenty withered years—
   No flower, but twenty shrivelled years.

   “Was never such thing until this hour,”
   Low to his heart he said; “the flower
   Of sleep brings wakening to me,
   And of oblivion memory.”

   “Was never this thing to me,” he said,
   “Though with bruisèd poppies my feet are red!”
   And again to his own heart very low:
   “O child!  I love, for I love and know;

   “But you, who love nor know at all
   The diverse chambers in Love’s guest-hall,
   Where some rise early, few sit long:
   In how differing accents hear the throng
   His great Pentecostal tongue;

   “Who know not love from amity,
   Nor my reported self from me;
   A fair fit gift is this, meseems,
   You give—this withering flower of dreams.

   “O frankly fickle, and fickly true,
   Do you know what the days will do to you?
   To your Love and you what the days will do,
   O frankly fickle, and fickly true?

   “You have loved me, Fair, three lives—or days:
   ’Twill pass with the passing of my face.
   But where _I_ go, your face goes too,
   To watch lest I play false to you.

   “I am but, my sweet, your foster-lover,
   Knowing well when certain years are over
   You vanish from me to another;
   Yet I know, and love, like the foster-mother.

   “So, frankly fickle, and fickly true!
   For my brief life—while I take from you
   This token, fair and fit, meseems,
   For me—this withering flower of dreams.”

                              * * * * * * *

   The sleep-flower sways in the wheat its head,
   Heavy with dreams, as that with bread:
   The goodly grain and the sun-flushed sleeper
   The reaper reaps, and Time the reaper.

   I hang ’mid men my needless head,
   And my fruit is dreams, as theirs is bread:
   The goodly men and the sun-hazed sleeper
   Time shall reap, but after the reaper
   The world shall glean of me, me the sleeper!

   Love! love! your flower of withered dream
   In leavèd rhyme lies safe, I deem,
   Sheltered and shut in a nook of rhyme,
   From the reaper man, and his reaper Time.

   Love! _I_ fall into the claws of Time:
   But lasts within a leavèd rhyme
   All that the world of me esteems—
   My withered dreams, my withered dreams.



TO MONICA THOUGHT DYING.


            YOU, O the piteous you!
            Who all the long night through
            Anticipatedly
            Disclose yourself to me
            Already in the ways
   Beyond our human comfortable days;
            How can you deem what Death
            Impitiably saith
            To me, who listening wake
            For your poor sake?
            When a grown woman dies
   You know we think unceasingly
   What things she said, how sweet, how wise;
   And these do make our misery.
            But you were (you to me
   The dead anticipatedly!)
   You—eleven years, was’t not, or so?—
            Were just a child, you know;
            And so you never said
   Things sweet immeditatably and wise
   To interdict from closure my wet eyes:
            But foolish things, my dead, my dead!
            Little and laughable,
            Your age that fitted well.
   And was it such things all unmemorable,
            Was it such things could make
   Me sob all night for your implacable sake?

            Yet, as you said to me,
   In pretty make-believe of revelry,
            So the night long said Death
            With his magniloquent breath;
            (And that remembered laughter
   Which in our daily uses followed after,
   Was all untuned to pity and to awe):
            “_A cup of chocolate_,
            _One farthing is the rate_,
            _You drink it through a straw_.”

            How could I know, how know
   Those laughing words when drenched with sobbing so?
   Another voice than yours, than yours, he hath!
            My dear, was’t worth his breath,
   His mighty utterance?—yet he saith, and saith!
   This dreadful Death to his own dreadfulness
            Doth dreadful wrong,
   This dreadful childish babble on his tongue!
   That iron tongue made to speak sentences,
   And wisdom insupportably complete,
   Why should it only say the long night through,
            In mimicry of you,—
            “_A cup of chocolate_,
            _One farthing is the rate_,
   _You drink it through a straw_, _a straw_, _a straw_!”
            Oh, of all sentences,
            Piercingly incomplete!
   Why did you teach that fatal mouth to draw,
            Child, impermissible awe,
            From your old trivialness?
            Why have you done me this
            Most unsustainable wrong,
            And into Death’s control
   Betrayed the secret places of my soul?
            Teaching him that his lips,
   Uttering their native earthquake and eclipse,
            Could never so avail
   To rend from hem to hem the ultimate veil
            Of this most desolate
   Spirit, and leave it stripped and desecrate,—
            Nay, never so have wrung
   From eyes and speech weakness unmanned, unmeet;
   As when his terrible dotage to repeat
   Its little lesson learneth at your feet;
            As when he sits among
            His sepulchres, to play
   With broken toys your hand has cast away,
   With derelict trinkets of the darling young.
   Why have you taught—that he might so complete
            His awful panoply
            From your cast playthings—why,
   This dreadful childish babble to his tongue,
            Dreadful and sweet?



FOOTNOTES


{55}  NOTE—I have throughout this poem used an asterisk to indicate the
caesura in the middle of the line, after the manner of the old Saxon
section-point.





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