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Title: Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth
Author: Meredith, George
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


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EARTH ***



WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.


    THE SHAVING OF SHAGPAT: AN ARABIAN ENTERTAINMENT.
    THE ORDEAL OF RICHARD FEVEREL.
    EVAN HARRINGTON.
    EMILIA IN ENGLAND.
    VITTORIA.
    BEAUCHAMP’S CAREER.
    THE EGOIST.
    &c. &c.


_Forthcoming Publications in Verse._

    POEMS.
    THE SENTIMENTALISTS: A COMEDY.



    POEMS AND LYRICS

    OF

    THE JOY OF EARTH

[Illustration]



    POEMS AND LYRICS

    OF

    THE JOY OF EARTH


    BY
    GEORGE MEREDITH


    London
    MACMILLAN AND CO.
    1883


_Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, _Edinburgh_.



INSCRIBED TO

JAMES COTTER MORISON


                                * * * *
    _Antistans mihi milibus trecentis._



CONTENTS.


                                                         PAGE
    THE WOODS OF WESTERMAIN                                 1

    A BALLAD OF PAST MERIDIAN                              28

    THE DAY OF THE DAUGHTER OF HADES                       30

    THE LARK ASCENDING                                     64

    PHOEBUS WITH ADMETUS                                   71

    MELAMPUS                                               79

    LOVE IN THE VALLEY                                     87

    THE THREE SINGERS TO YOUNG BLOOD                      101

    THE ORCHARD AND THE HEATH                             105

    MARTIN’S PUZZLE                                       109

    EARTH AND MAN                                         115

    A BALLAD OF FAIR LADIES IN REVOLT                     130


    SONNETS.

    LUCIFER IN STARLIGHT                                  157

    THE STAR SIRIUS                                       158

    SENSE AND SPIRIT                                      159

    EARTH’S SECRET                                        160

    THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE                             161

    THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE--_Continued_                162

    INTERNAL HARMONY                                      163

    GRACE AND LOVE                                        164

    APPRECIATION                                          165

    THE DISCIPLINE OF WISDOM                              166

    THE STATE OF AGE                                      167

    PROGRESS                                              168

    THE WORLD’S ADVANCE                                   169

    A CERTAIN PEOPLE                                      170

    THE GARDEN OF EPICURUS                                171

    A LATER ALEXANDRIAN                                   172

    AN ORSON OF THE MUSE                                  173

    THE POINT OF TASTE                                    174

    CAMELUS SALTAT                                        175

    CAMELUS SALTAT--_Continued_                           176

    TO J. M.                                              177

    TO A FRIEND LOST                                      178

    MY THEME                                              179

    MY THEME--_Continued_                                 180

    TIME AND SENTIMENT                                    181



THE WOODS OF WESTERMAIN.


  I.

  Enter these enchanted woods,
        You who dare.
  Nothing harms beneath the leaves
  More than waves a swimmer cleaves.
  Toss your heart up with the lark,
  Foot at peace with mouse and worm,
        Fair you fare.
  Only at a dread of dark
  Quaver, and they quit their form:
  Thousand eyeballs under hoods
        Have you by the hair.
  Enter these enchanted woods,
        You who dare.


  II.

  Here the snake across your path
  Stretches in his golden bath:
  Mossy-footed squirrels leap
  Soft as winnowing plumes of Sleep:
  Yaffles on a chuckle skim
  Low to laugh from branches dim:
  Up the pine, where sits the star,
  Rattles deep the moth-winged jar.
  Each has business of his own;
  But should you distrust a tone,
        Then beware.
  Shudder all the haunted roods,
  All the eyeballs under hoods
        Shroud you in their glare.
  Enter these enchanted woods,
        You who dare.


  III.

  Open hither, open hence,
  Scarce a bramble weaves a fence,
  Where the strawberry runs red,
  With white star-flower overhead;
  Cumbered by dry twig and cone,
  Shredded husks of seedlings flown,
  Mine of mole and spotted flint:
  Of dire wizardry no hint,
  Save mayhap the print that shows
  Hasty outward-tripping toes,
  Heels to terror, on the mould.
  These, the woods of Westermain,
  Are as others to behold,
  Rich of wreathing sun and rain;
  Foliage lustreful around
  Shadowed leagues of slumbering sound.
  Wavy tree-tops, yellow whins,
  Shelter eager minikins,
  Myriads, free to peck and pipe:
  Would you better? would you worse?
  You with them may gather ripe
  Pleasures flowing not from purse.
  Quick and far as Colour flies
  Taking the delighted eyes,
  You of any well that springs
  May unfold the heaven of things;
  Have it homely and within,
  And thereof its likeness win,
  Will you so in soul’s desire:
  This do sages grant t’ the lyre.
  This is being bird and more,
  More than glad musician this;
  Granaries you will have a store
  Past the world of woe and bliss;
  Sharing still its bliss and woe;
  Harnessed to its hungers, no.
  On the throne Success usurps,
  You shall seat the joy you feel
  Where a race of water chirps,
  Twisting hues of flourished steel:
  Or where light is caught in hoop
  Up a clearing’s leafy rise,
  Where the crossing deerherds troop
  Classic splendours, knightly dyes.
  Or, where old-eyed oxen chew
  Speculation with the cud,
  Read their pool of vision through,
  Back to hours when mind was mud;
  Nigh the knot, which did untwine
  Timelessly to drowsy suns;
  Seeing Earth a slimy spine,
  Heaven a space for winging tons.
  Farther, deeper, may you read,
  Have you sight for things afield,
  Where peeps she, the Nurse of seed,
  Cloaked, but in the peep revealed;
  Showing a kind face and sweet:
  Look you with the soul you see ’t.
  Glory narrowing to grace,
  Grace to glory magnified,
  Following that will you embrace
  Close in arms or aëry wide.
  Banished is the white Foam-born
  Not from here, nor under ban
  Phoebus lyrist, Phoebe’s horn,
  Pipings of the reedy Pan.
  Loved of Earth of old they were,
  Loving did interpret her;
  And the sterner worship bars
  None whom Song has made her stars.
  You have seen the huntress moon
  Radiantly facing dawn,
  Dusky meads between them strewn
  Glimmering like downy awn:
  Argent Westward glows the hunt,
  East the blush about to climb;
  One another fair they front,
  Transient, yet outshine the time;
  Even as dewlight off the rose
  In the mind a jewel sows.
  Thus opposing grandeurs live
  Here if Beauty be their dower;
  Doth she of her spirit give,
  Fleetingness will spare her flower.
  This is in the tune we play,
  Which no spring of strength would quell;
  In subduing does not slay;
  Guides the channel, guards the well:
  Tempered holds the young blood-heat,
  Yet through measured grave accord,
  Hears the heart of wildness beat
  Like a centaur’s hoof on sward.
  Drink the sense the notes infuse,
  You a larger self will find:
  Sweetest fellowship ensues
  With the creatures of your kind.
  Ay, and Love, if Love it be
  Flaming over _I_ and _ME_,
  Love meet they who do not shove
  Cravings in the van of Love.
  Courtly dames are here to woo,
  Knowing love if it be true.
  Reverence the blossom-shoot
  Fervently, they are the fruit.
  Mark them stepping, hear them talk,
  Goddess, is no myth inane,
  You will say of those who walk
  In the woods of Westermain.
  Waters that from throat and thigh
  Dart the sun his arrows back;
  Leaves that on a woodland sigh
  Chat of secret things no lack;
  Shadowy branch-leaves, waters clear,
  Bare or veiled they move sincere;
  Not by slavish terrors tripped;
  Being anew in nature dipped,
  Growths of what they step on, these;
  With the roots the grace of trees.
  Casket-breasts they give, nor hide,
  For a tyrant’s flattered pride,
  Mind, which nourished not by light,
  Lurks the shuffling trickster sprite:
  Whereof are strange tales to tell;
  Some in blood writ, tombed in bell.
  Here the ancient battle ends,
  Joining two astonished friends,
  Who the kiss can give and take
  With more warmth than in that world
  Where the tiger claws the snake,
  Snake her tiger clasps infurled,
  And the issue of their fight
  Peoples lands in snarling plight.
  Here her splendid beast she leads
  Silken-leashed and decked with weeds
  Wild as he, but breathing faint
  Sweetness of unfelt constraint.
  Love, the great volcano, flings
  Fires of lower Earth to sky;
  Love, the sole permitted, sings
  Sovereignly of _ME_ and _I_.
  Bowers he has of sacred shade,
  Spaces of superb parade,
  Voiceful ... But bring you a note
  Wrangling, howsoe’er remote,
  Discords out of discord spin
  Round and round derisive din:
  Sudden will a pallor pant
  Chill at screeches miscreant;
  Owls or spectres, thick they flee;
  Nightmare upon horror broods;
  Hooded laughter, monkish glee,
      Gaps the vital air.
  Enter these enchanted woods
      You who dare.


  IV.

  You must love the light so well
  That no darkness will seem fell.
  Love it so you could accost
  Fellowly a livid ghost.
  Whish! the phantom wisps away,
  Owns him smoke to cocks of day.
  In your breast the light must burn
  Fed of you, like corn in quern
  Ever plumping while the wheel
  Speeds the mill and drains the meal.
  Light to light sees little strange,
  Only features heavenly new;
  Then you touch the nerve of Change,
  Then of Earth you have the clue;
  Then her two-sexed meanings melt
  Through you, wed the thought and felt.
  Sameness locks no scurfy pond
  Here for Custom, crazy-fond:
  Change is on the wing to bud
  Rose in brain from rose in blood.
  Wisdom throbbing shall you see
  Central in complexity;
  From her pasture ’mid the beasts
  Rise to her ethereal feasts,
  Not, though lightnings track your wit
  Starward, scorning them you quit:
  For be sure the bravest wing
  Preens it in our common spring,
  Thence along the vault to soar,
  You with others, gathering more,
  Glad of more, till you reject
  Your proud title of elect,
  Perilous even here, while few
  Roam the arched greenwood with you.
      Heed that snare.
  Muffled by his cavern-cowl
  Squats the scaly Dragon-fowl,
  Who was lord ere light you drank,
  And lest blood of knightly rank
  Stream, let not your fair princess
  Stray: he holds the leagues in stress,
      Watches keenly there.
  Oft has he been riven; slain
  Is no force in Westermain.
  Wait, and we shall forge him curbs,
  Put his fangs to uses, tame,
  Teach him, quick as cunning herbs,
  How to cure him sick and lame.
  Much restricted, much enringed,
  Much he frets, the hooked and winged,
      Never known to spare.
  ’Tis enough: the name of Sage
  Hits no thing in nature, nought;
  Man the least, save when grave Age
  From yon Dragon guards his thought.
  Eye him when you hearken dumb
  To what words from Wisdom come.
  When she says how few are by
  Listening to her, eye his eye.
  Him shall Change, transforming late,
  Wonderously renovate.
  Hug himself the creature may:
  What he hugs is loathed decay.
  Crying, slip thy scales, and slough!
  Change will strip his armour off;
  Make of him who was all maw,
  Inly only thrilling-shrewd,
  Such a servant as none saw
  Through his days of dragonhood.
  Days when growling o’er his bone,
  Sharpened he for mine and thine;
  Sensitive within alone;
  Scaly as in clefts of pine.
  Change, the strongest son of Life,
  Has the Spirit here to wife.
  Lo, their young of vivid breed,
  Bear the lights that onward speed,
  Threading thickets, mounting glades,
  Up the verdurous colonnades,
  Round the fluttered curves, and down,
  Out of sight of Earth’s blue crown,
  Whither, in her central space,
  Spouts the Fount and Lure o’ the chase.
  Fount unresting, Lure divine!
  There meet all: too late look most.
  Fire in water hued as wine,
  Springs amid a shadowy host;
  Circled: one close-headed mob,
  Breathless, scanning divers heaps
  Where a Heart begins to throb,
  Where it ceases, slow, with leaps
  And ’tis very strange, ’tis said,
  How you spy in each of them
  Semblance of that Dragon red,
  As the oak in bracken-stem.
  And ’tis said how each and each:
  Which commences, which subsides:
  First my Dragon! doth beseech
  Her who food for all provides.
  And she answers with no sign;
  Utters neither yea nor nay;
  Fires the water hued as wine;
  Kneads another spark in clay.
  Terror is about her hid;
  Silence of the thunders locked;
  Lightnings lining the shut lid;
  Fixity on quaking rocked.
  Lo, you look at Flow and Drought
  Interflashed and interwrought:
  Ended is begun, begun
  Ended, quick as torrents run.
  Young Impulsion spouts to sink;
  Luridness and lustre link;
  ’Tis your come and go of breath;
  Mirrored pants the Life, the Death;
  Each of either reaped and sown:
  Rosiest rosy wanes to crone.
  See you so? your senses drift;
  ’Tis a shuttle weaving swift.
  Look with spirit past the sense,
  Spirit shines in permanence.
  That is She, the view of whom
  Is the dust within the tomb,
  Is the inner blush above,
  Look to loathe, or look to love;
  Think her Lump, or know her Flame;
  Dread her scourge, or read her aim;
  Shoot your hungers from their nerve;
  Or, in her example, serve.
  Some have found her sitting grave;
  Laughing, some; or, browed with sweat,
  Hurling dust of fool and knave
  In a hissing smithy’s jet.
  More it were not well to speak;
  Burn to see, you need but seek.
  Once beheld she gives the key
  Airing every doorway, she.
  Little can you stop or steer
  Ere of her you are the sëer.
  On the surface she will witch,
  Rendering Beauty yours, but gaze
  Under, and the soul is rich
  Past computing, past amaze.
  Then is courage that endures
  Even her awful tremble yours.
  Then, the reflex of that Fount
  Spied below, with Reason mount
  Lordly and a quenchless force,
  Lighting Pain to its mad source,
  Scaring Fear till Fear escapes,
  Shot through all its phantom shapes.
  Then your spirit will perceive
  Fleshly seed of fleshly sins;
  Where the passions interweave,
  How the serpent tangle spins
  Of the sense of Earth misprised,
  Brainlessly unrecognised;
  She being Spirit in her clods,
  Footway to the God of Gods.
  Then for you are pleasures pure,
  Sureties as the stars are sure:
  Not the wanton beckoning flags
  Which, of flattery and delight,
  Wax to the grim Habit-Hags
  Riding souls of men to night:
  Pleasures that through blood run sane,
  Quickening spirit from the brain.
  Each of each in sequent birth,
  Blood and brain and spirit, three
  (Say the deepest gnomes of Earth),
  Join for true felicity.
  Are they parted, then expect
  Some one sailing will be wrecked:
  Separate hunting are they sped,
  Scan the morsel coveted.
  Earth that Triad is: she hides
  Joy from him who that divides;
  Showers it when the three are one
  Glassing her in union.
  Earth your haven, Earth your helm,
  You command a double realm;
  Labouring here to pay your debt,
  Till your little sun shall set;
  Leaving her the future task:
  Loving her too well to ask.
  Eglantine that climbs the yew,
  She her darkest wreathes for those
  Knowing her the Ever-new,
  And themselves the kin o’ the rose.
  Life, the chisel, axe and sword,
  Wield who have her depths explored:
  Life, the dream, shall be their robe,
  Large as air about the globe;
  Life, the question, hear its cry
  Echoed with concordant Why;
  Life, the small self-dragon ramped,
  Thrill for service to be stamped.
  Ay, and over every height
  Life for them shall wave a wand:
  That, the last, where sits affright,
  Homely shows the stream beyond.
  Love the light and be its lynx,
  You will track her and attain;
  Read her as no cruel Sphinx
  In the woods of Westermain.
  Daily fresh the woods are ranged;
  Glooms which otherwhere appal,
  Sounded: here, their worths exchanged,
  Urban joins with pastoral:
  Little lost, save what may drop
  Husk-like, and the mind preserves.
  Natural overgrowths they lop,
  Yet from nature neither swerves,
  Trained or savage: for this cause:
  Of our Earth they ply the laws,
  Have in Earth their feeding root,
  Mind of man and bent of brute.
  Hear that song; both wild and ruled.
  Hear it: is it wail or mirth?
  Ordered, bubbled, quite unschooled?
  None, and all: it springs of Earth.
  O but hear it! ’tis the mind;
  Mind that with deep Earth unites,
  Round the solid trunk to wind
  Rings of clasping parasites.
  Music have you there to feed
  Simplest and most soaring need.
  Free to wind, and in desire
  Winding, they to her attached
  Feel the trunk a spring of fire,
  And ascend to heights unmatched,
  Whence the tidal world is viewed
  As a sea of windy wheat,
  Momently black, barren, rude;
  Golden-brown, for harvest meet,
  Dragon-reaped from folly-sown;
  Bride-like to the sickle-blade:
  Quick it varies, while the moan,
  Moan of a sad creature strayed,
  Chiefly is its voice. So flesh
  Conjures tempest-flails to thresh
  Good from worthless. Some clear lamps
  Light it; more of dead marsh-damps.
  Monster is it still, and blind,
  Fit but to be led by Pain.
  Glance we at the paths behind,
  Fruitful sight has Westermain.
  There we laboured, and in turn
  Forward our blown lamps discern,
  As you see on the dark deep
  Far the loftier billows leap,
        Foam for beacon bear.
  Hither, hither, if you will,
  Drink instruction, or instil,
  Run the woods like vernal sap,
  Crying, hail to luminousness!
        But have care.
  In yourself may lurk the trap:
  On conditions they caress.
  Here you meet the light invoked:
  Here is never secret cloaked.
  Doubt you with the monster’s fry
  All his orbit may exclude;
  Are you of the stiff, the dry,
  Cursing the not understood;
  Grasp you with the monster’s claws;
  Govern with his truncheon-saws;
  Hate, the shadow of a grain;
  You are lost in Westermain:
  Earthward swoops a vulture sun,
  Nighted upon carrion:
  Straightway venom winecups shout
  Toasts to One whose eyes are out:
  Flowers along the reeling floor
  Drip henbane and hellebore:
  Beauty, of her tresses shorn,
  Shrieks as nature’s maniac:
  Hideousness on hoof and horn
  Tumbles, yapping in her track:
  Haggard Wisdom, stately once,
  Leers fantastical and trips:
  Allegory drums the sconce,
  Impiousness nibblenips.
  Imp that dances, imp that flits,
  Imp o’ the demon-growing girl,
  Maddest! whirl with imp o’ the pits
  Round you, and with them you whirl
  Fast where pours the fountain-rout
  Out of Him whose eyes are out:
  Multitudes on multitudes,
  Drenched in wallowing devilry:
  And you ask where you may be,
        In what reek of a lair
  Given to bones and ogre-broods:
        And they yell you Where.
  Enter these enchanted woods,
        You who dare.



A BALLAD OF PAST MERIDIAN.


  I.

  Last night returning from my twilight walk
  I met the gray mist Death, whose eyeless brow
  Was bent on me, and from his hand of chalk
  He reached me flowers as from a withered bough:
  O Death, what bitter nosegays givest thou!


  II.

  Death said, I gather, and pursued his way.
  Another stood by me, a shape in stone,
  Sword-hacked and iron-stained, with breasts of clay,
  And metal veins that sometimes fiery shone:
  O Life, how naked and how hard when known!


  III.

  Life said, As thou hast carved me, such am I.
  Then memory, like the nightjar on the pine,
  And sightless hope, a woodlark in night sky,
  Joined notes of Death and Life till night’s decline:
  Of Death, of Life, those inwound notes are mine.



THE DAY OF THE DAUGHTER OF HADES.


  I.

  He who has looked upon Earth
  Deeper than flower and fruit,
  Losing some hue of his mirth,
  As the tree striking rock at the root,
  Unto him shall the marvellous tale
  Of Callistes more humanly come
  With the touch on his breast than a hail
        From the markets that hum.


  II.

  Now the youth footed swift to the dawn.
  ’Twas the season when wintertide,
  In the higher rock-hollows updrawn,
  Leaves meadows to bud, and he spied,
  By light throwing shallow shade,
  Between the beam and the gloom,
  Sicilian Enna, whose Maid
  Such aspect wears in her bloom
  Underneath since the Charioteer
  Of Darkness whirled her away,
  On a reaped afternoon of the year,
  Nigh the poppy-droop of Day.
  O and naked of her, all dust,
  The majestic Mother and Nurse,
  Ringing cries to the God, the Just,
  Curled the land with the blight of her curse:
  Recollected of this glad isle
  Still quaking. But now more fair,
  And momently fraying the while
  The veil of the shadows there,
  Soft Enna that prostrate grief
  Sang through, and revealed round the vines,
  Bronze-orange, the crisp young leaf,
  The wheat-blades tripping in lines,
  A hue unillumined by sun
  Of the flowers flooding grass as from founts:
  All the penetrable dun
        Of the Morn ere she mounts.


  III.

  Nor had saffron and sapphire and red
  Waved aloft to their sisters below,
  When gaped by the rock-channel head
  Of the lake, black, a cave at one blow,
  Reverberant over the plain:
  A sound oft fearfully swung
  For the coming of wrathful rain:
  And forth, like the dragon-tongue
  Of a fire beaten flat by the gale,
  But more as the smoke to behold,
  A chariot burst. Then a wail
  Quivered high of the love that would fold
  Bliss immeasurable, bigger than heart,
  Though a God’s: and the wheels were stayed,
  And the team of the chariot swart
  Reared in marble, the six, dismayed,
  Like hoofs that by night plashing sea
  Curve and ramp from the vast swan-wave:
  For, lo, the Great Mother, She!
  And Callistes gazed, he gave
  His eyeballs up to the sight:
  The embrace of the Twain, of whom
  To men are their day, their night,
  Mellow fruits and the shearing tomb:
  Our Lady of the Sheaves
  And the Lily of Hades, the Sweet
  Of Enna: he saw through leaves
  The Mother and Daughter meet.
  They stood by the chariot-wheel,
  Embraced, very tall, most like
  Fellow poplars, wind-taken, that reel
  Down their shivering columns and strike
  Head to head, crossing throats: and apart,
  For the feast of the look, they drew,
  Which Darkness no longer could thwart;
  And they broke together anew,
  Exulting to tears, flower and bud.
  But the mate of the Rayless was grave:
  She smiled like Sleep on its flood,
  That washes of all we crave:
  Like the trance of eyes awake
  And the spirit enshrouded, she cast
  The wan underworld on the lake.
      They were so, and they passed.


  IV.

  He tells it, who knew the law
  Upon mortals: he stood alive
  Declaring that this he saw:
      He could see, and survive.


  V.

  Now the youth was not ware of the beams
  With the grasses intertwined,
  For each thing seen, as in dreams,
  Came stepping to rear through his mind,
  Till it struck his remembered prayer
  To be witness of this which had flown
  Like a smoke melted thinner than air,
  That the vacancy doth disown.
  And viewing a maiden, he thought
  It might now be morn, and afar
  Within him the memory wrought
  Of a something that slipped from the car
  When those, the august, moved by:
  Perchance a scarf, and perchance
  This maiden. She did not fly,
  Nor started at his advance:
  She looked, as when infinite thirst
  Pants pausing to bless the springs,
  Refreshed, unsated. Then first
  He trembled with awe of the things
  He had seen; and he did transfer,
  Divining and doubting in turn,
  His reverence unto her;
  Nor asked what he crouched to learn:
  The whence of her, whither, and why
  Her presence there, and her name,
  Her parentage: under which sky
  Her birth, and how hither she came,
  So young, a virgin, alone,
  Unfriended, having no fear,
  As Oreads have; no moan,
  Like the lost upon earth; no tear;
  Not a sign of the torch in the blood,
  Though her stature had reached the height
  When mantles a tender rud
  In maids that of youths have sight,
  If maids of our seed they be:
  For he said: A glad vision art thou!
  And she answered him: Thou to me!
      As men utter a vow.


  VI.

  Then said she, quick as the cries
  Of the rainy cranes: Light! light!
  And Helios rose in her eyes,
  That were full as the dew-balls bright,
  Relucent to him as dews
  Unshaded. Breathing, she sent
  Her voice to the God of the Muse,
  And along the vale it went,
  Strange to hear: not thin, not shrill;
  Sweet, but no young maid’s throat:
  The echo beyond the hill
  Ran falling on half the note:
  And under the shaken ground
  Where the Hundred-headed groans
  By the roots of great Ætna bound,
  As of him were hollow tones
  Of wondering roared: a tale
  Repeated to sunless halls.
  But now off the face of the vale
  Shadows fled in a breath, and the walls
  Of the lake’s rock-head were gold,
  And the breast of the lake, that swell
  Of the crestless long wave rolled
  To shore-bubble, pebble and shell.
  A morning of radiant lids
  O’er the dance of the earth opened wide:
  The bees chose their flowers, the snub kids
  Upon hindlegs went sportive, or plied,
  Nosing, hard at the dugs to be filled:
  There was milk, honey, music to make:
  Up their branches the little birds billed:
  Chirrup, drone, bleat and buzz ringed the lake.
  O shining in sunlight, chief
  After water and water’s caress,
  Was the young bronze-orange leaf,
  That clung to the tree as a tress,
  Shooting lucid tendrils to wed
  With the vine-hook tree or pole,
  Like Arachne launched out on her thread.
  Then the maiden her dusky stole
  In the span of the black-starred zone,
  Gathered up for her footing fleet.
  As one that had toil of her own
  She followed the lines of wheat
  Tripping straight through the field, green blades,
  To the groves of olive gray,
  Downy-gray, golden-tinged: and to glades
  Where the pear-blossom thickens the spray
  In a night, like the snow-packed storm:
  Pear, apple, almond, plum:
  Not wintry now: pushing, warm!
  And she touched them with finger and thumb,
  As the vine-hook closes: she smiled,
  Recounting again and again,
  Corn, wine, fruit, oil! like a child,
  With the meaning known to men.
  For hours in the track of the plough
  And the pruning-knife she stepped,
  And of how the seed works, and of how
  Yields the soil, she seemed adept.
  Then she murmured that name of the dearth,
  The Beneficent, Hers, who bade
  Our husbandmen sow for the birth
  Of the grain making earth full glad.
  She murmured that Other’s: the dirge
  Of life-light: for whose dark lap
  Our locks are clipped on the verge
  Of the realm where runs no sap.
  She said: We have looked on both!
  And her eyes had a wavering beam
  Of various lights, like the froth
  Of the storm-swollen ravine stream
  In flame of the bolt. What links
  Were these which had made him her friend?
  He eyed her, as one who drinks,
      And would drink to the end.


  VII.

  Now the meadows with crocus besprent,
  And the asphodel woodsides she left,
  And the lake-slopes, the ravishing scent
  Of narcissus, dark-sweet, for the cleft
  That tutors the torrent-brook,
  Delaying its forceful spleen
  With many a wind and crook
  Through rock to the broad ravine.
  By the hyacinth-bells in the brakes,
  And the shade-loved white windflower, half hid,
  And the sun-loving lizards and snakes
  On the cleft’s barren ledges, that slid
  Out of sight, smooth as waterdrops, all,
  At a snap of twig or bark
  In the track of the foreign foot-fall,
  She climbed to the pine-forest dark,
  Overbrowing an emerald chine
  Of the grass-billows. Thence, as a wreath,
  Running poplar and cypress to pine,
  The lake-banks are seen, and beneath,
  Vineyard, village, groves, rivers, towers, farms,
  The citadel watching the bay,
  The bay with the town in its arms,
  The town shining white as the spray
  Of the sapphire sea-wave on the rock,
  Where the rock stars the girdle of sea,
  White-ringed, as the midday flock,
  Clipped by heat, rings the round of the tree.
  That hour of the piercing shaft
  Transfixes bough-shadows, confused
  In veins of fire, and she laughed,
  With her quiet mouth amused,
  To see the whole flock, adroop,
  Asleep, hug the tree-stem as one,
  Imperceptibly filling the loop
  Of its shade at a slant of sun.
  The pipes under pent of the crag,
  Where the goatherds in piping recline,
  Have whimsical stops, burst and flag
  Uncorrected as outstretched swine:
  For the fingers are slack and unsure,
  And the wind issues querulous:--thorns
  And snakes!--but she listened demure,
  Comparing day’s music with morn’s.
  Of the gentle spirit that slips
  From the bark of the tree she discoursed,
  And of her of the wells, whose lips
  Are coolness enchanting, rock-sourced.
  And much of the sacred loon,
  The frolic, the Goatfoot God,
  For stories of indolent noon
  In the pineforest’s odorous nod,
  She questioned, not knowing: he can
  Be waspish, irascible, rude,
  He is oftener friendly to man,
  And ever to beasts and their brood.
  For the which did she love him well,
  She said, and his pipes of the reed,
  His twitched lips puffing to tell
  In music his tears and his need,
  Against the sharp catch of his hurt.
  Not as shepherds of Pan did she speak,
  Nor spake as the schools, to divert,
  But fondly, perceiving him weak
  Before Gods, and to shepherds a fear,
  A holiness, horn and heel.
  All this she had learnt in her ear
  From Callistes, and taught him to feel.
  Yea, the solemn divinity flushed
  Through the shaggy brown skin of the beast,
  And the steeps where the cataract rushed,
  And the wilds where the forest is priest,
  Were his temple to clothe him in awe,
  While she spake: ’twas a wonder: she read
  The haunts of the beak and the claw
  As plain as the land of bread,
  But Cities and martial States,
  Whither soon the youth veered his theme,
  Were impervious barrier-gates
  To her: and that ship, a trireme,
  Nearing harbour, scarce wakened her glance,
  Though he dwelt on the message it bore
  Of sceptre and sword and lance
  To the bee-swarms black on the shore,
  Which were audible almost,
  So black they were. It befel
  That he called up the warrior host
  Of the Song pouring hydromel
  In thunder, the wide-winged Song,
  And he named with his boyish pride
  The heroes, the noble throng
  Past Acheron now, foul tide!
  With his joy of the godlike band
  And the verse divine, he named
  The chiefs pressing hot on the strand,
  Seen of Gods, of Gods aided, and maimed.
  The fleetfoot and ireful; the King;
  Him, the prompter in stratagem,
  Many-shifted and masterful: Sing,
  O Muse! But she cried: Not of them!
  She breathed as if breath had failed,
  And her eyes, while she bade him desist,
  Held the lost-to-light ghosts gray-mailed,
  As you see the gray river-mist
  Hold shapes on the yonder bank.
  A moment her body waned,
  The light of her sprang and sank:
  Clear feature, and she breathed deep.
  She wore the wan smile he had seen,
  As the flow of the river of Sleep,
  On the mouth of the Shadow-Queen.
  In sunlight she craved to bask,
  Saying: Life! And who was she? who?
  Of what issue? He dared not ask,
      For that partly he knew.


  VIII.

  A noise of the hollow ground
  Turned the eye to the ear in debate:
  Not the soft overflowing of sound
  Of the pines, ranked, lofty, straight,
  Barely swayed to some whispers remote,
  Some swarming whispers above:
  Not the pines with the faint airs afloat,
  Hush-hushing the nested-dove:
  It was not the pines, or the rout
  Oft heard from mid-forest in chase,
  But the long muffled roar of a shout
  Subterranean. Sharp grew her face.
  She rose, yet not moved by affright;
  ’Twas rather good haste to use
  Her holiday of delight
  In the beams of the God of the Muse.
  And the steeps of the forest she crossed,
  On its dry red sheddings and cones
  Up the paths by roots green-mossed,
  Spotted amber, and old mossed stones.
  Then out where the brook-torrent starts
  To her leap, and from bend to curve
  A hurrying elbow darts
  For the instant-glancing swerve,
  Decisive, with violent will
  In the action formed, like hers,
  The maiden’s, ascending; and still
  Ascending, the bud of the furze,
  The broom, and all blue-berried shoots
  Of stubborn and prickly kind,
  The juniper flat on its roots,
  The dwarf rhododaphne, behind
  She left, and the mountain sheep
  Far behind, goat, herbage and flower.
  The island was hers, and the deep,
  All heaven, a golden hour.
  Then with wonderful voice that rang
  Through air as the swan’s nigh death,
  Of the glory of Light she sang,
  She sang of the rapture of Breath.
  Nor ever, says he who heard,
  Heard Earth in her boundaries broad,
  From bosom of singer or bird
  A sweetness thus rich of the God
  Whose harmonies always are sane.
  She sang of furrow and seed,
  The burial, birth of the grain,
  The growth, and the showers that feed,
  And the green blades waxing mature
  For the husbandman’s armful brown.
  O, the song in its burden ran pure,
  And burden to song was a crown.
  Callistes, a singer, skilled
  In the gift he could measure and praise,
  By a rival’s art was thrilled,
  Though she sang but a Song of Days,
  Where the husbandman’s toil and strife
  Little varies to strife and toil:
  But the milky kernel of life,
  With her numbered: corn, wine, fruit, oil!
  The song did give him to eat:
  Gave the first rapt vision of Good,
  And the fresh young sense of Sweet:
  The grace of the battle for food,
  With the issue Earth cannot refuse
  When men to their labour are sworn.
  ’Twas a song of the God of the Muse
      To the forehead of Morn.


  IX.

  Him loved she. Lo, now was he veiled:
  Over sea stood a swelled cloud-rack:
  The fishing-boat havenward sailed,
  Bent abeam, with a whitened track,
  Surprised, fast hauling the net
  As it flew: sea dashed, earth shook.
  She said: Is it night? O not yet!
  With a travail of thoughts in her look.
  The mountain heaved up to its peak:
  Sea darkened: earth gathered her fowl:
  Of bird or of branch rose the shriek.
  Night? but never so fell a scowl
  Wore night, nor the sky since then
  When ocean ran swallowing shore,
  And the Gods looked down for men.
  Broke tempest with that stern roar
  Never yet, save when black on the whirl
  Rode wrath of a sovereign Power.
  Then the youth and the shuddering girl,
  Dim as shades in the angry shower,
  Joined hands and descended a maze
  Of the paths that were racing alive
  Round boulder and bush, cleaving ways,
  Incessant, with sound of a hive.
  The height was a fountain-urn
  Pouring streams, and the whole solid height
  Leaped, chasing at every turn
  The pair in one spirit of flight
  To the folding pine-forest. Yet here,
  Like the pause to things hunted, in doubt,
  The stillness bred spectral fear
  Of the awfulness ranging without,
  And imminent. Downward they fled,
  From under the haunted roof,
  To the valley aquake with the tread
  Of an iron-resounding hoof,
  As of legions of thunderful horse
  Broken loose and in line tramping hard.
  For the rage of a hungry force
  Roamed blind of its mark over sward:
  They saw it rush dense in the cloak
  Of its travelling swathe of steam;
  All the vale through a thin thread-smoke
  Was thrown back to distance extreme:
  And dull the full breast of it blinked,
  Like a buckler of steel breathed o’er,
  Diminished, in strangeness distinct,
  Glowing cold, unearthly, hoar:
  An Enna of fields beyond sun,
  Out of light, in a lurid web,
  And the traversing fury spun
  Up and down with a wave’s flow and ebb;
  As the wave breaks to grasp and to spurn,
  Retire, and in ravenous greed,
  Inveterate, swell its return.
  Up and down, as if wringing from speed
  Sights that made the unsighted appear,
  Delude and dissolve, on it scoured.
  Lo, a sea upon land held career
  Through the plain of the vale half-devoured.
  Callistes of home and escape
  Muttered swiftly, unwitting of speech.
  She gazed at the Void of shape,
  She put her white hand to his reach,
  Saying: Now have we looked on the Three.
  And divided from day, from night,
  From air that is breath, stood she,
          Like the vale, out of light.


  X.

  Then again in disorderly words
  He muttered of home, and was mute,
  With the heart of the cowering birds
  Ere they burst off the fowler’s foot.
  He gave her some redness that streamed
  Through her limbs in a flitting glow.
  The sigh of our life she seemed,
  The bliss of it clothing in woe.
  Frailer than flower when the round
  Of the sickle encircles it: strong
  To tell of the things profound,
  Our inmost uttering song,
  Unspoken. So stood she awhile
  In the gloom of the terror afield,
  And the silence about her smile
  Said more than of tongue is revealed.
  I have breathed: I have gazed: I have been:
  It said: and not joylessly shone
  The remembrance of light through the screen
  Of a face that seemed shadow and stone.
  She led the youth trembling, appalled,
  To the lake-banks he saw sink and rise
  Like a panic-struck breast. Then she called,
  And the hurricane blackness had eyes.
  It launched like the Thunderer’s bolt.
  Pale she drooped, and the youth by her side
  Would have clasped her and dared a revolt
  Sacrilegious as ever defied
  High Olympus, but vainly for strength
  His compassionate heart shook a frame
  Stricken rigid to ice all its length.
  On amain the black traveller came.
  Lo, a chariot, cleaving the storm,
  Clove the fountaining lake with a plough,
  And the lord of the steeds was in form
  He, the God of implacable brow,
  Darkness: he: he in person: he raged
  Through the wave like a boar of the wilds
  From the hunters and hounds disengaged,
  And a name shouted hoarsely: his child’s.
  Horror melted in anguish to hear.
  Lo, the wave hissed apart for the path
  Of the terrible Charioteer,
  With the foam and torn features of wrath,
  Hurled aloft on each arm in a sheet;
  And the steeds clove it, rushing at land
  Like the teeth of the famished at meat.
        Then he swept out his hand.


  XI.

  This, no more, doth Callistes recall:
  He saw, ere he dropped in swoon,
  On the maiden the chariot fall,
  As a thundercloud swings on the moon.
  Forth, free of the deluge, one cry
  From the vanishing gallop rose clear:
  And: Skiágeneia! the sky
  Rang: Skiágeneia! the sphere.
  And she left him therewith, to rejoice,
  Repine, yearn, and know not his aim,
  The life of their day in her voice,
        Left her life in her name.


  XII.

  Now the valley in ruin of fields
  And fair meadowland, showing at eve
  Like the spear-pitted warrior’s shields
  After battle, bade men believe
  That no other than wrathfullest God
  Had been loose on her beautiful breast,
  Where the flowery grass was clod,
  Wheat and vine as a trailing nest.
  The valley, discreet in grief,
  Disclosed but the open truth,
  And Enna had hope of the sheaf:
  There was none for the desolate youth
  Devoted to mourn and to crave.
  Of the secret he had divined
  Of his friend of a day would he rave:
  How for light of our earth she pined:
  For the olive, the vine and the wheat,
  Burning through with inherited fire:
  And when Mother went Mother to meet,
  She was prompted by simple desire
  In the day-destined car to have place
  At the skirts of the Goddess, unseen,
  And be drawn to the dear earth’s face.
  She was fire for the blue and the green
  Of our earth, dark fire; athirst
  As a seed of her bosom for dawn,
  White air that had robed and nursed
  Her mother. Now was she gone
  With the Silent, the God without tear,
  Like a bud peeping out of its sheath
  To be sundered and stamped with the sere.
  And Callistes to her beneath,
  As she to our beams, extinct,
  Strained arms: he was shade of her shade
  In division so were they linked.
  But the song which had betrayed
  Her flight to the cavernous ear
  For its own keenly wakeful: that song
  Of the sowing and reaping, and cheer
  Of the husbandman’s heart made strong
  Through droughts and deluging rains
  With his faith in the Great Mother’s love:
  O the joy of the breath she sustains,
  And the lyre of the light above,
  And the first rapt vision of Good,
  And the fresh young sense of Sweet:
  That song the youth ever pursued
  In the track of her footing fleet.
  For men to be profited much
  By her day upon earth did he sing:
  Of her voice, and her steps, and her touch
  On the blossoms of tender Spring,
  Immortal: and how in her soul
  She is with them, and tearless abides,
  Folding grain of a love for one goal
  In patience, past flowing of tides.
  And if unto him she was tears,
  He wept not: he wasted within:
  Seeming sane in the song, to his peers,
  Only crazed where the cravings begin.
  Our Lady of Gifts prized he less
  Than her issue in darkness: the dim
  Lost Skiágeneia’s caress
  Of our earth made it richest for him.
  And for that was a curse on him raised,
  And he withered rathe, dry to his prime,
  Though the bounteous Giver be praised
  Through the island with rites of old time
  Exceedingly fervent, and reaped
  Veneration for teachings devout,
  Pious hymns when the corn-sheaves are heaped,
  And the wine-presses ruddily spout,
  And the olive and apple are juice
  At a touch light as hers lost below.
  Whatsoever to men is of use
  Sprang his worship of them who bestow,
  In a measure of songs unexcelled:
  But that soul loving earth and the sun
  From her home of the shadows he held
  For his beacon where beam there is none:
  And to join her, or have her brought back,
  In his frenzy the singer would call,
  Till he followed where never was track,
        On the path trod of all.



THE LARK ASCENDING.


  He rises and begins to round,
  He drops the silver chain of sound
  Of many links without a break,
  In chirrup, whistle, slur and shake,
  All intervolved and spreading wide,
  Like water-dimples down a tide
  Where ripple ripple overcurls
  And eddy into eddy whirls;
  A press of hurried notes that run
  So fleet they scarce are more than one,
  Yet changeingly the trills repeat
  And linger ringing while they fleet,
  Sweet to the quick o’ the ear, and dear
  To her beyond the handmaid ear,
  Who sits beside our inner springs,
  Too often dry for this he brings,
  Which seems the very jet of earth
  At sight of sun, her music’s mirth,
  As up he wings the spiral stair,
  A song of light, and pierces air
  With fountain ardour, fountain play,
  To reach the shining tops of day,
  And drink in everything discerned
  An ecstasy to music turned,
  Impelled by what his happy bill
  Disperses; drinking, showering still,
  Unthinking save that he may give
  His voice the outlet, there to live
  Renewed in endless notes of glee,
  So thirsty of his voice is he,
  For all to hear and all to know
  That he is joy, awake, aglow,
  The tumult of the heart to hear
  Through pureness filtered crystal-clear,
  And know the pleasure sprinkled bright
  By simple singing of delight,
  Shrill, irreflective, unrestrained,
  Rapt, ringing, on the jet sustained
  Without a break, without a fall,
  Sweet-silvery, sheer lyrical,
  Perennial, quavering up the chord
  Like myriad dews of sunny sward
  That trembling into fulness shine,
  And sparkle dropping argentine;
  Such wooing as the ear receives
  From zephyr caught in choric leaves
  Of aspens when their chattering net
  Is flushed to white with shivers wet;
  And such the water-spirit’s chime
  On mountain heights in morning’s prime,
  Too freshly sweet to seem excess,
  Too animate to need a stress;
  But wider over many heads
  The starry voice ascending spreads,
  Awakening, as it waxes thin,
  The best in us to him akin;
  And every face to watch him raised,
  Puts on the light of children praised,
  So rich our human pleasure ripes
  When sweetness on sincereness pipes,
  Though nought be promised from the seas,
  But only a soft-ruffling breeze
  Sweep glittering on a still content,
  Serenity in ravishment.

  For singing till his heaven fills,
  ’Tis love of earth that he instils,
  And ever winging up and up,
  Our valley is his golden cup,
  And he the wine which overflows
  To lift us with him as he goes:
  The woods and brooks, the sheep and kine
  He is, the hills, the human line,
  The meadows green, the fallows brown,
  The dreams of labour in the town;
  He sings the sap, the quickened veins,
  The wedding song of sun and rains
  He is, the dance of children, thanks
  Of sowers, shout of primrose-banks,
  And eye of violets while they breathe;
  All these the circling song will wreathe,
  And you shall hear the herb and tree,
  The better heart of men shall see,
  Shall feel celestially, as long
  As you crave nothing save the song.

  Was never voice of ours could say
  Our inmost in the sweetest way,
  Like yonder voice aloft, and link
  All hearers in the song they drink:
  Our wisdom speaks from failing blood,
  Our passion is too full in flood,
  We want the key of his wild note
  Of truthful in a tuneful throat,
  The song seraphically free
  Of taint of personality,
  So pure that it salutes the suns
  The voice of one for millions,
  In whom the millions rejoice
  For giving their one spirit voice.

  Yet men have we, whom we revere,
  Now names, and men still housing here,
  Whose lives, by many a battle-dint
  Defaced, and grinding wheels on flint,
  Yield substance, though they sing not, sweet
  For song our highest heaven to greet:
  Whom heavenly singing gives us new,
  Enspheres them brilliant in our blue,
  From firmest base to farthest leap,
  Because their love of Earth is deep,
  And they are warriors in accord
  With life to serve and pass reward,
  So touching purest and so heard
  In the brain’s reflex of yon bird:
  Wherefore their soul in me, or mine,
  Through self-forgetfulness divine,
  In them, that song aloft maintains,
  To fill the sky and thrill the plains
  With showerings drawn from human stores,
  As he to silence nearer soars,
  Extends the world at wings and dome,
  More spacious making more our home,
  Till lost on his aërial rings
  In light, and then the fancy sings.



PHOEBUS WITH ADMETUS.


  I.

  When by Zeus relenting the mandate was revoked,
    Sentencing to exile the bright Sun-God,
  Mindful were the ploughmen of who the steer had yoked,
    Who: and what a track showed the upturned sod!
  Mindful were the shepherds as now the noon severe
    Bent a burning eyebrow to brown evetide,
  How the rustic flute drew the silver to the sphere,
    Sister of his own, till her rays fell wide.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  II.

  Chirping none the scarlet cicalas crouched in ranks:
    Slack the thistle-head piled its down-silk gray:
  Scarce the stony lizard sucked hollows in his flanks:
    Thick on spots of umbrage our drowsed flocks lay.
  Sudden bowed the chestnuts beneath a wind unheard,
    Lengthened ran the grasses, the sky grew slate:
  Then amid a swift flight of winged seed white as curd,
    Clear of limb a Youth smote the master’s gate.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  III.

  Water, first of singers, o’er rocky mount and mead,
    First of earthly singers, the sun-loved rill,
  Sang of him, and flooded the ripples on the reed,
    Seeking whom to waken and what ear fill.
  Water, sweetest soother to kiss a wound and cool,
    Sweetest and divinest, the sky-born brook,
  Chuckled, with a whimper, and made a mirror-pool
    Round the guest we welcomed, the strange hand shook.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  IV.

  Many swarms of wild bees descended on our fields:
    Stately stood the wheatstalk with head bent high:
  Big of heart we laboured at storing mighty yields,
    Wool and corn, and clusters to make men cry!
  Hand-like rushed the vintage; we strung the bellied skins
    Plump, and at the sealing the Youth’s voice rose:
  Maidens clung in circle, on little fists their chins;
    Gentle beasties through pushed a cold long nose.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  V.

  Foot to fire in snowtime we trimmed the slender shaft:
    Often down the pit spied the lean wolf’s teeth
  Grin against his will, trapped by masterstrokes of craft;
    Helpless in his froth-wrath as green logs seethe!
  Safe the tender lambs tugged the teats, and winter sped
    Whirled before the crocus, the year’s new gold.
  Hung the hooky beak up aloft the arrowhead
    Reddened through his feathers for our dear fold.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  VI.

  Tales we drank of giants at war with gods above:
    Rocks were they to look on, and earth climbed air!
  Tales of search for simples, and those who sought of love
    Ease because the creature was all too fair.
  Pleasant ran our thinking that while our work was good
    Sure as fruits for sweat would the praise come fast.
  He that wrestled stoutest and tamed the billow-brood
    Danced in rings with girls, like a sail-flapped mast.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  VII.

  Lo, the herb of healing, when once the herb is known,
    Shines in shady woods bright as new-sprung flame.
  Ere the string was tightened we heard the mellow tone,
    After he had taught how the sweet sounds came.
  Stretched about his feet, labour done, ’twas as you see
    Red pomegranates tumble and burst hard rind.
  So began contention to give delight and be
    Excellent in things aimed to make like kind.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.


  VIII.

  You with shelly horns, rams! and, promontory goats,
    You whose browsing beards dip in coldest dew!
  Bulls, that walk the pastures in kingly-flashing coats!
    Laurel, ivy, vine, wreathed for feasts not few!
  You that build the shade-roof, and you that court the rays,
    You that leap besprinkling the rock stream-rent:
  He has been our fellow, the morning of our days!
    Us he chose for housemates, and this way went.
              God! of whom music
              And song and blood are pure,
              The day is never darkened
              That had thee here obscure.



MELAMPUS.


  I.

  With love exceeding a simple love of the things
    That glide in grasses and rubble of woody wreck;
  Or change their perch on a beat of quivering wings
    From branch to branch, only restful to pipe and peck;
  Or, bristled, curl at a touch their snouts in a ball;
    Or cast their web between bramble and thorny hook;
  The good physician Melampus, loving them all,
    Among them walked, as a scholar who reads a book.


  II.

  For him the woods were a home and gave him the key
    Of knowledge, thirst for their treasures in herbs and flowers.
  The secrets held by the creatures nearer than we
    To earth he sought, and the link of their life with ours:
  And where alike we are, unlike where, and the veined
    Division, veined parallel, of a blood that flows
  In them, in us, from the source by man unattained
    Save marks he well what the mystical woods disclose.


  III.

  And this he deemed might be boon of love to a breast
    Embracing tenderly each little motive shape,
  The prone, the flitting, who seek their food whither best
    Their wits direct, whither best from their foes escape:
  For closer drawn to our mother’s natural milk,
    As babes they learn where her motherly help is great:
  They know the juice for the honey, juice for the silk,
    And need they medical antidotes find them straight.


  IV.

  Of earth and sun they are wise, they nourish their broods,
    Weave, build, hive, burrow and battle, take joy and pain
  Like swimmers varying billows: never in woods
    Runs white insanity fleeing itself: all sane
  The woods revolve: as the tree its shadowing limns
    To some resemblance in motion, the rooted life
  Restrains disorder: you hear the primitive hymns
    Of earth in woods issue wild of the web of strife.


  V.

  Now sleeping once on a day of marvellous fire,
    A brood of snakes he had cherished in grave regret
  That death his people had dealt their dam and their sire,
    Through savage dread of them, crept to his neck, and set
  Their tongues to lick him: the swift affectionate tongue
    Of each ran licking the slumberer: then his ears
  A forked red tongue tickled shrewdly: sudden upsprung,
    He heard a voice piping: Ay, for he has no fears!


  VI.

  A bird said that, in the notes of birds, and the speech
    Of men, it seemed: and another renewed: He moves
  To learn and not to pursue, he gathers to teach;
    He feeds his young as do we, and as we love loves.
  No fears have I of a man who goes with his head
    To earth, chance looking aloft at us, kind of hand:
  I feel to him as to earth of whom we are fed;
    I pipe him much for his good could he understand.


  VII.

  Melampus touched at his ears, laid finger on wrist:
    He was not dreaming, he sensibly felt and heard.
  Above, through leaves, where the tree-twigs thick intertwist,
    He spied the birds and the bill of the speaking bird.
  His cushion mosses in shades of various green,
    The lumped, the antlered, he pressed, while the sunny snake
  Slipped under: draughts he had drunk of clear Hippocrene,
    It seemed, and sat with a gift of the Gods awake.


  VIII.

  Divinely thrilled was the man, exultingly full,
    As quick well-waters that come of the heart of earth,
  Ere yet they dart in a brook are one bubble-pool
    To light and sound, wedding both at the leap of birth.
  The soul of light vivid shone, a stream within stream;
    The soul of sound from a musical shell outflew;
  Where others hear but a hum and see but a beam,
    The tongue and eye of the fountain of life he knew.


  IX.

  He knew the Hours: they were round him, laden with seed
    Of hours bestrewn upon vapour, and one by one
  They winged as ripened in fruit the burden decreed
    For each to scatter; they flushed like the buds in sun,
  Bequeathing seed to successive similar rings,
    Their sisters, bearers to men of what men have earned:
  He knew them, talked with the yet unreddened; the stings,
    The sweets, they warmed at their bosoms divined, discerned.


  X.

  Not unsolicited, sought by diligent feet,
    By riddling fingers expanded, oft watched in growth
  With brooding deep as the noon-ray’s quickening wheat,
    Ere touch’d, the pendulous flower of the plants of sloth,
  The plants of rigidness, answered question and squeeze,
    Revealing wherefore it bloomed uninviting, bent,
  Yet making harmony breathe of life and disease,
    The deeper chord of a wonderful instrument.


  XI.

  So passed he luminous-eyed for earth and the fates
    We arm to bruise or caress us: his ears were charged
  With tones of love in a whirl of voluble hates,
    With music wrought of distraction his heart enlarged.
  Celestial-shining, though mortal, singer, though mute,
    He drew the Master of harmonies, voiced or stilled,
  To seek him; heard at the silent medicine-root
    A song, beheld in fulfilment the unfulfilled.


  XII.

  Him Phoebus, lending to darkness colour and form
    Of light’s excess, many lessons and counsels gave,
  Showed Wisdom lord of the human intricate swarm,
    And whence prophetic it looks on the hives that rave,
  And how acquired, of the zeal of love to acquire,
    And where it stands, in the centre of life a sphere;
  And Measure, mood of the lyre, the rapturous lyre,
    He said was Wisdom, and struck him the notes to hear.


  XIII.

  Sweet, sweet: ’twas glory of vision, honey, the breeze
    In heat, the run of the river on root and stone,
  All senses joined, as the sister Pierides
    Are one, uplifting their chorus, the Nine, his own.
  In stately order, evolved of sound into sight,
    From sight to sound intershifting, the man descried
  The growths of Earth, his adored, like day out of night,
    Ascend in song, seeing nature and song allied.


  XIV.

  And there vitality, there, there solely in song,
    Resides, where Earth and her uses to men, their needs,
  Their forceful cravings, the theme are: there is it strong,
    The Master said: and the studious eye that reads,
  (Yea, even as Earth to the crown of Gods on the mount),
    In links divine with the lyrical tongue is bound.
  Pursue thy craft: it is music drawn of a fount
    To spring perennial; well-spring is common ground.


  XV.

  Melampus dwelt among men: physician and sage,
    He served them, loving them, healing them; sick or maimed,
  Or them that frenzied in some delirious rage
    Outran the measure, his juice of the woods reclaimed.
  He played on men, as his master, Phoebus, on strings
    Melodious: as the God did he drive and check,
  Through love exceeding a simple love of the things
    That glide in grasses and rubble of woody wreck.



LOVE IN THE VALLEY.


  Under yonder beech-tree single on the green-sward,
    Couched with her arms behind her golden head,
  Knees and tresses folded to slip and ripple idly,
    Lies my young love sleeping in the shade.
  Had I the heart to slide an arm beneath her,
    Press her parting lips as her waist I gather slow,
  Waking in amazement she could not but embrace me:
    Then would she hold me and never let me go?

         *       *       *       *       *

  Shy as the squirrel and wayward as the swallow,
    Swift as the swallow along the river’s light
  Circleting the surface to meet his mirrored winglets,
    Fleeter she seems in her stay than in her flight.
  Shy as the squirrel that leaps among the pine-tops,
    Wayward as the swallow overhead at set of sun,
  She whom I love is hard to catch and conquer,
    Hard, but O the glory of the winning were she won!

         *       *       *       *       *

  When her mother tends her before the laughing mirror,
    Tying up her laces, looping up her hair,
  Often she thinks, were this wild thing wedded,
    More love should I have, and much less care.
  When her mother tends her before the lighted mirror
    Loosening her laces, combing down her curls,
  Often she thinks, were this wild thing wedded,
    I should miss but one for many boys and girls.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Heartless she is as the shadow in the meadows
    Flying to the hills on a blue and breezy noon.
  No, she is athirst and drinking up her wonder:
    Earth to her is young as the slip of the new moon.
  Deals she an unkindness, ’tis but her rapid measure,
    Even as in a dance; and her smile can heal no less:
  Like the swinging May-cloud that pelts the flowers with hailstones
    Off a sunny border, she was made to bruise and bless.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Lovely are the curves of the white owl sweeping
    Wavy in the dusk lit by one large star.
  Lone on the fir-branch, his rattle-note unvaried,
    Brooding o’er the gloom, spins the brown eve-jar.
  Darker grows the valley, more and more forgetting:
    So were it with me if forgetting could be willed.
  Tell the grassy hollow that holds the bubbling well-spring,
    Tell it to forget the source that keeps it filled.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Stepping down the hill with her fair companions,
    Arm in arm, all against the raying West,
  Boldly she sings, to the merry tune she marches,
    Brave in her shape, and sweeter unpossessed.
  Sweeter, for she is what my heart first awaking
    Whispered the world was; morning light is she.
  Love that so desires would fain keep her changeless;
    Fain would fling the net, and fain have her free.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Happy happy time, when the white star hovers
    Low over dim fields fresh with bloomy dew,
  Near the face of dawn, that draws athwart the darkness,
    Threading it with colour, as yewberries the yew.
  Thicker crowd the shades while the grave East deepens
    Glowing, and with crimson a long cloud swells.
  Maiden still the morn is; and strange she is, and secret;
    Strange her eyes; her cheeks are cold as cold sea-shells.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Sunrays, leaning on our southern hills and lighting
    Wild cloud-mountains that drag the hills along,
  Oft ends the day of your shifting brilliant laughter
    Chill as a dull face frowning on a song.
  Ay, but shows the South-West a ripple-feathered bosom
    Blown to silver while the clouds are shaken and ascend
  Scaling the mid-heavens as they stream, there comes a sunset
    Rich, deep like love in beauty without end.

         *       *       *       *       *

  When at dawn she sighs, and like an infant to the window
    Turns grave eyes craving light, released from dreams,
  Beautiful she looks, like a white water-lily
    Bursting out of bud in havens of the streams.
  When from bed she rises clothed from neck to ankle
    In her long nightgown sweet as boughs of May,
  Beautiful she looks, like a tall garden lily
    Pure from the night, and splendid for the day.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Mother of the dews, dark eye-lashed twilight,
    Low-lidded twilight, o’er the valley’s brim,
  Rounding on thy breast sings the dew-delighted skylark,
    Clear as though the dewdrops had their voice in him.
  Hidden where the rose-flush drinks the rayless planet,
    Fountain-full he pours the spraying fountain-showers.
  Let me hear her laughter, I would have her ever
    Cool as dew in twilight, the lark above the flowers.

         *       *       *       *       *

  All the girls are out with their baskets for the primrose;
    Up lanes, woods through, they troop in joyful bands.
  My sweet leads: she knows not why, but now she loiters,
    Eyes the bent anemones, and hangs her hands.
  Such a look will tell that the violets are peeping,
    Coming the rose: and unaware a cry
  Springs in her bosom for odours and for colour,
    Covert and the nightingale; she knows not why.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Kerchiefed head and chin she darts between her tulips,
    Streaming like a willow gray in arrowy rain:
  Some bend beaten cheek to gravel, and their angel
    She will be; she lifts them, and on she speeds again.
  Black the driving raincloud breasts the iron gate-way:
    She is forth to cheer a neighbour lacking mirth.
  So when sky and grass met rolling dumb for thunder
    Saw I once a white dove, sole light of earth.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Prim little scholars are the flowers of her garden,
    Trained to stand in rows, and asking if they please.
  I might love them well but for loving more the wild ones:
    O my wild ones! they tell me more than these.
  You, my wild one, you tell of honied field-rose,
    Violet, blushing eglantine in life; and even as they,
  They by the wayside are earnest of your goodness,
    You are of life’s, on the banks that line the way.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Peering at her chamber the white crowns the red rose,
    Jasmine winds the porch with stars two and three.
  Parted is the window; she sleeps; the starry jasmine
    Breathes a falling breath that carries thoughts of me.
  Sweeter unpossessed, have I said of her my sweetest?
    Not while she sleeps: while she sleeps the jasmine breathes,
  Luring her to love; she sleeps; the starry jasmine
    Bears me to her pillow under white rose-wreaths.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Yellow with birdfoot-trefoil are the grass-glades;
    Yellow with cinquefoil of the dew-gray leaf;
  Yellow with stone-crop; the moss-mounds are yellow;
    Blue-necked the wheat sways, yellowing to the sheaf:
  Green-yellow bursts from the copse the laughing yaffle;
    Sharp as a sickle is the edge of shade and shine:
  Earth in her heart laughs looking at the heavens,
    Thinking of the harvest: I look and think of mine.

         *       *       *       *       *

  This I may know: her dressing and undressing
    Such a change of light shows as when the skies in sport
  Shift from cloud to moonlight; or edging over thunder
    Slips a ray of sun; or sweeping into port
  White sails furl; or on the ocean borders
    White sails lean along the waves leaping green.
  Visions of her shower before me, but from eyesight
    Guarded she would be like the sun were she seen.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Front door and back of the mossed old farmhouse
    Open with the morn, and in a breezy link
  Freshly sparkles garden to stripe-shadowed orchard,
    Green across a rill where on sand the minnows wink.
  Busy in the grass the early sun of summer
    Swarms, and the blackbird’s mellow fluting notes
  Call my darling up with round and roguish challenge:
    Quaintest, richest carol of all the singing throats!

         *       *       *       *       *

  Cool was the woodside: cool as her white dairy
    Keeping sweet the cream-pan; and there the boys from school,
  Cricketing below, rushed brown and red with sunshine;
    O the dark translucence of the deep-eyed cool!
  Spying from the farm, herself she fetched a pitcher
    Full of milk, and tilted for each in turn the beak.
  Then a little fellow, mouth up and on tiptoe,
    Said, ‘I will kiss you:’ she laughed and leaned her cheek.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Doves of the fir-wood walling high our red roof
    Through the long noon coo, crooning through the coo.
  Loose droop the leaves, and down the sleepy roadway
    Sometimes pipes a chaffinch; loose droops the blue.
  Cows flap a slow tail knee-deep in the river,
    Breathless, given up to sun and gnat and fly.
  Nowhere is she seen; and if I see her nowhere,
    Lightning may come, straight rains and tiger sky.

         *       *       *       *       *

  O the golden sheaf, the rustling treasure-armful
    O the nutbrown tresses nodding interlaced
  O the treasure-tresses one another over
    Nodding! O the girdle slack about the waist!
  Slain are the poppies that shot their random scarlet
    Quick amid the wheatears: wound about the waist,
  Gathered, see these brides of Earth one blush of ripeness!
    O the nutbrown tresses nodding interlaced!

         *       *       *       *       *

  Large and smoky red the sun’s cold disk drops,
    Clipped by naked hills, on violet shaded snow:
  Eastward large and still lights up a bower of moonrise,
    Whence at her leisure steps the moon aglow.
  Nightlong on black print-branches our beech-tree
    Gazes in this whiteness: nightlong could I.
  Here may life on death or death on life be painted.
    Let me clasp her soul to know she cannot die!

         *       *       *       *       *

  Gossips count her faults; they scour a narrow chamber
    Where there is no window, read not heaven or her.
  ‘When she was a tiny,’ one aged woman quavers,
    Plucks at my heart and leads me by the ear.
  Faults she had once as she learnt to run and tumbled:
    Faults of feature some see, beauty not complete.
  Yet, good gossips, beauty that makes holy
    Earth and air, may have faults from head to feet.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Hither she comes; she comes to me; she lingers,
    Deepens her brown eyebrows, while in new surprise
  High rise the lashes in wonder of a stranger;
    Yet am I the light and living of her eyes.
  Something friends have told her fills her heart to brimming,
    Nets her in her blushes, and wounds her, and tames.--
  Sure of her haven, O like a dove alighting,
    Arms up, she dropped: our souls were in our names.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Soon will she lie like a white-frost sunrise.
    Yellow oats and brown wheat, barley pale as rye,
  Long since your sheaves have yielded to the thresher,
    Felt the girdle loosened, seen the tresses fly.
  Soon will she lie like a blood-red sunset.
    Swift with the to-morrow, green-winged Spring!
  Sing from the South-West, bring her back the truants,
    Nightingale and swallow, song and dipping wing.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Soft new beech-leaves, up to beamy April
    Spreading bough on bough a primrose mountain, you,
  Lucid in the moon, raise lilies to the skyfields,
    Youngest green transfused in silver shining through:
  Fairer than the lily, than the wild white cherry:
    Fair as in image my seraph love appears
  Borne to me by dreams when dawn is at my eyelids:
    Fair as in the flesh she swims to me on tears.

         *       *       *       *       *

  Could I find a place to be alone with heaven,
    I would speak my heart out: heaven is my need.
  Every woodland tree is flushing like the dog-wood,
    Flashing like the whitebeam, swaying like the reed.
  Flushing like the dog-wood crimson in October;
    Streaming like the flag-reed South-West blown;
  Flashing as in gusts the sudden-lighted whitebeam:
    All seem to know what is for heaven alone.



THE THREE SINGERS TO YOUNG BLOOD.


  Carols nature, counsel men.
  Different notes as rook from wren
  Hear we when our steps begin,
  And the choice is cast within,
  Where a robber raven’s tale
  Urges passion’s nightingale.

  Hark to the three. Chimed they in one,
  Life were music of the sun.
  Liquid first, and then the caw,
  Then the cry that knows not law.


  I.

  As the birds do, so do we,
  Bill our mate, and choose our tree.
  Swift to building work addressed,
  Any straw will help a nest.
  Mates are warm, and this is truth,
  Glad the young that come of youth.
  They have bloom i’ the blood and sap
  Chilling at no thunder-clap.
  Man and woman on the thorn,
  Trust not Earth, and have her scorn.
  They who in her lead confide,
  Wither me if they spread not wide!
  Look for aid to little things,
  You will get them quick as wings,
  Thick as feathers; would you feed,
  Take the leap that springs the need.


  II.

  Contemplate the rutted road:
  Life is both a lure and goad.
  Each to hold in measure just,
  Trample appetite to dust.
  Mark the fool and wanton spin:
  Keep to harness as a skin.
  Ere you follow nature’s lead,
  Of her powers in you have heed;
  Else a shiverer you will find
  You have challenged humankind.
  Mates are chosen marketwise:
  Coolest bargainer best buys.
  Leap not, nor let leap the heart:
  Trot your track, and drag your cart.
  So your end may be in wool,
  Honoured, and with manger full.


  III.

  O the rosy light! it fleets.
  Dearer dying than all sweets.
  That is life: it waves and goes;
  Solely in that cherished Rose
  Palpitates, or else ’tis death.
  Call it love with all thy breath.
  Love! it lingers: Love! it nears:
  Love! O Love! the Rose appears,
  Blushful, magic, reddening air.
  Now the choice is on thee: dare!
  Mortal seems the touch, but makes
  Immortal the hand that takes.
  Feel what sea within thee shames
  Of its force all other claims,
  Drowns them. Clasp! the world will be
  Heavenly Rose to swelling sea.



THE ORCHARD AND THE HEATH.


  I chanced upon an early walk to spy
  A troop of children through an orchard gate:
      The boughs hung low, the grass was high;
      They had but to lift hands or wait
  For fruits to fill them; fruits were all their sky.

  They shouted, running on from tree to tree,
  And played the game the wind plays, on and round.
      ’Twas visible invisible glee
      Pursuing; and a fountain’s sound
  Of laughter spouted, pattering fresh on me.

  I could have watched them till the daylight fled,
  Their pretty bower made such a light of day.
      A small one tumbling sang, ‘Oh! head!’
      The rest to comfort her straightway
  Seized on a branch and thumped down apples red.

  The tiny creature flashing through green grass,
  And laughing with her feet and eyes among
      Fresh apples, while a little lass
      Over as o’er breeze-ripples hung:
  That sight I saw, and passed as aliens pass.

  My footpath left the pleasant farms and lanes,
  Soft cottage-smoke, straight cocks a-crow, gay flowers;
      Beyond the wheel-ruts of the wains,
      Across a heath I walked for hours,
  And met its rival tenants, rays and rains.

  Still in my view mile-distant firs appeared,
  When, under a patched channel-bank enriched
      With foxglove whose late bells drooped seared,
      Behold, a family had pitched
  Their camp, and labouring the low tent upreared.

  Here, too, were many children, quick to scan
  A new thing coming; swarthy cheeks, white teeth:
      In many-coloured rags they ran,
      Like iron runlets of the heath.
  Dispersed lay broth-pot, sticks, and drinking-can.

  Three girls, with shoulders like a boat at sea
  Tipped sideways by the wave (their clothing slid
      From either ridge unequally),
      Lean, swift, and voluble, bestrid
  A starting-point, unfrocked to the bent knee.

  They raced; their brothers yelled them on, and broke
  In act to follow, but as one they snuffed
      Wood-fumes, and by the fire that spoke
      Of provender, its pale flame puffed,
  And rolled athwart dwarf furzes gray-blue smoke.

  Soon on the dark edge of a ruddier gleam,
  The mother-pot perusing, all, stretched flat,
      Paused for its bubbling-up supreme:
      A dog upright in circle sat,
  And oft his nose went with the flying steam.

  I turned and looked on heaven awhile, where now
  The moor-faced sunset broaden’d with red light;
      Threw high aloft a golden bough,
      And seemed the desert of the night
  Far down with mellow orchards to endow.



MARTIN’S PUZZLE.


  I.

  There she goes up the street with her book in her hand,
    And her Good morning, Martin! Ay, lass, how d’ye do?
  Very well, thank you, Martin!--I can’t understand!
    I might just as well never have cobbled a shoe!
  I can’t understand it. She talks like a song;
    Her voice takes your ear like the ring of a glass;
  She seems to give gladness while limping along,
    Yet sinner ne’er suffer’d like that little lass.


  II.

  First, a fool of a boy ran her down with a cart.
    Then, her fool of a father--a blacksmith by trade--
  Why the deuce does he tell us it half broke his heart!
    His heart!--where’s the leg of the poor little maid!
  Well, that’s not enough; they must push her downstairs,
    To make her go crooked: but why count the list?
  If it’s right to suppose that our human affairs
    Are all ordered by heaven--there, bang goes my fist!


  III.

  For if angels can look on such sights--never mind!
    When you’re next to blaspheming, it’s best to be mum.
  The parson declares that her woes weren’t designed;
    But, then, with the parson it’s all kingdom-come.
  Lose a leg, save a soul--a convenient text;
    I call it Tea doctrine, not savouring of God.
  When poor little Molly wants ‘chastening,’ why, next
    The Archangel Michael might taste of the rod.


  IV.

  But, to see the poor darling go limping for miles
    To read books to sick people!--and just of an age
  When girls learn the meaning of ribands and smiles!
    Makes me feel like a squirrel that turns in a cage.
  The more I push thinking the more I revolve:
    I never get farther:--and as to her face,
  It starts up when near on my puzzle I solve,
    And says, ‘This crush’d body seems such a sad case.’


  V.

  Not that she’s for complaining: she reads to earn pence;
    And from those who can’t pay, simple thanks are enough.
  Does she leave lamentation for chaps without sense?
    Howsoever, she’s made up of wonderful stuff.
  Ay, the soul in her body must be a stout cord;
    She sings little hymns at the close of the day,
  Though she has but three fingers to lift to the Lord,
    And only one leg to kneel down with to pray.


  VI.

  What I ask is, Why persecute such a poor dear,
    If there’s Law above all? Answer that if you can!
  Irreligious I’m not; but I look on this sphere
    As a place where a man should just think like a man.
  It isn’t fair dealing! But, contrariwise,
    Do bullets in battle the wicked select?
  Why, then it’s all chance-work! And yet, in her eyes,
    She holds a fixed something by which I am checked.


  VII.

  Yonder riband of sunshine aslope on the wall,
    If you eye it a minute’ll have the same look:
  So kind! and so merciful! God of us all!
    It’s the very same lesson we get from the Book.
  Then, is Life but a trial? Is that what is meant?
    Some must toil, and some perish, for others below;
  The injustice to each spreads a common content;
    Ay! I’ve lost it again, for it can’t be quite so.


  VIII.

  She’s the victim of fools: that seems nearer the mark.
    On earth there are engines and numerous fools.
  Why the Lord can permit them, we’re still in the dark;
    He does, and in some sort of way they’re his tools.
  It’s a roundabout way, with respect let me add,
    If Molly goes crippled that we may be taught:
  But, perhaps, it’s the only way, though it’s so bad;
    In that case we’ll bow down our heads,--as we ought.


  IX.

  But the worst of me is, that when I bow my head,
    I perceive a thought wriggling away in the dust,
  And I follow its tracks, quite forgetful, instead
    Of humble acceptance: for, question I must!
  Here’s a creature made carefully--carefully made!
    Put together with craft, and then stamped on, and why?
  The answer seems nowhere: it’s discord that’s played.
    The sky’s a blue dish!--an implacable sky!


  X.

  Stop a moment. I seize an idea from the pit.
    They tell us that discord, though discord, alone,
  Can be harmony when the notes properly fit:
    Am I judging all things from a single false tone?
  Is the Universe one immense Organ, that rolls
    From devils to angels? I’m blind with the sight.
  It pours such a splendour on heaps of poor souls!
    I might try at kneeling with Molly to-night.



EARTH AND MAN.


  I.

  On her great venture, Man,
  Earth gazes while her fingers dint the breast
  Which is his well of strength, his home of rest,
  And fair to scan.


  II.

  More aid than that embrace,
  That nourishment, she cannot give: his heart
  Involves his fate; and she who urged the start
  Abides the race.


  III.

  For he is in the lists
  Contentious with the elements, whose dower
  First sprang him; for swift vultures to devour
  If he desists.


  IV.

  His breath of instant thirst
  Is warning of a creature matched with strife,
  To meet it as a bride, or let fall life
  On life’s accursed.


  V.

  No longer forth he bounds
  The lusty animal, afield to roam,
  But peering in Earth’s entrails, where the gnome
  Strange themes propounds.


  VI.

  By hunger sharply sped
  To grasp at weapons ere he learns their use,
  In each new ring he bears a giant’s thews,
  An infant’s head.


  VII.

  And ever that old task
  Of reading what he is and whence he came,
  Whither to go, finds wilder letters flame
  Across her mask.


  VIII.

  She hears his wailful prayer,
  When now to the Invisible he raves
  To rend him from her, now his mother craves
  Her calm, her care.


  IX.

  The thing that shudders most
  Within him is the burden of his cry.
  Seen of his dread, she is to his blank eye
  The eyeless Ghost.


  X.

  Or sometimes she will seem
  Heavenly, but her blush, soon wearing white,
  Veils like a gorsebush in a web of blight,
  With gold-buds dim.


  XI.

  Once worshipped Prime of Powers,
  She still was the Implacable: as a beast,
  She struck him down and dragged him from the feast
  She crowned with flowers.


  XII.

  Her pomp of glorious hues,
  Her revelries of ripeness, her kind smile
  Her songs, her peeping faces, lure awhile
  With symbol-clues.


  XIII.

  The mystery she holds
  For him, inveterately he strains to see,
  And sight of his obtuseness is the key
  Among those folds.


  XIV.

  He may entreat, aspire,
  He may despair, and she has never heed.
  She drinking his warm sweat will soothe his need,
  Not his desire.


  XV.

  She prompts him to rejoice,
  Yet scares him on the threshold with the shroud.
  He deems her cherishing of her best-endowed
  A wanton’s choice.


  XVI.

  Albeit thereof he has found
  Firm roadway between lustfulness and pain;
  Has half transferred the battle to his brain,
  From bloody ground;


  XVII.

  He will not read her good,
  Or wise, but with the passion Self obscures;
  Through that old devil of the thousand lures,
  Through that dense hood:


  XVIII.

  Through terror, through distrust;
  The greed to touch, to view, to have, to live
  Through all that makes of him a sensitive
  Abhorring dust.


  XIX.

  Behold his wormy home!
  And he the wind-whipped, anywhither wave
  Crazily tumbled on a shingle-grave
  To waste in foam.


  XX.

  Therefore the wretch inclines
  Afresh to the Invisible, who, he saith,
  Can raise him high: with vows of living faith
  For little signs.


  XXI.

  Some signs he must demand,
  Some proofs of slaughtered nature; some prized few,
  To satisfy the senses it is true,
  And in his hand,


  XXII.

  This miracle which saves
  Himself, himself doth from extinction clutch,
  By virtue of his worth, contrasting much
  With brutes and knaves.


  XXIII.

  From dust, of him abhorred,
  He would be snatched by Grace discovering worth.
  ‘Sever me from the hollowness of Earth!
  Me take, dear Lord!’


  XXIV.

  She hears him. Him she owes
  For half her loveliness a love well won
  By work that lights the shapeless and the dun,
  Their common foes.


  XXV.

  He builds the soaring spires,
  That sing his soul in stone: of her he draws,
  Though blind to her, by spelling at her laws,
  Her purest fires.


  XXVI.

  Through him hath she exchanged,
  For the gold harvest-robes, the mural crown,
  Her haggard quarry-features and thick frown
  Where monsters ranged.


  XXVII.

  And order, high discourse,
  And decency, than which is life less dear,
  She has of him: the lyre of language clear,
  Love’s tongue and source.


  XXVIII.

  She hears him, and can hear
  With glory in his gains by work achieved:
  With grief for grief that is the unperceived
  In her so near.


  XXIX.

  If he aloft for aid
  Imploring storms, her essence is the spur.
  His cry to heaven is a cry to her
  He would evade.


  XXX.

  Not elsewhere can he tend.
  Those are her rules which bid him wash foul sins;
  Those her revulsions from the skull that grins
  To ape his end.


  XXXI.

  And her desires are those
  For happiness, for lastingness, for light.
  ’Tis she who kindles in his haunting night
  The hoped dawn-rose.


  XXXII.

  Fair fountains of the dark
  Daily she waves him, that his inner dream
  May clasp amid the glooms a springing beam,
  A quivering lark:


  XXXIII.

  This life and her to know
  For Spirit: with awakenedness of glee
  To feel stern joy her origin: not he
  The child of woe.


  XXXIV.

  But that the senses still
  Usurp the station of their issue mind,
  He would have burst the chrysalis of the blind:
  As yet he will;


  XXXV.

  As yet he will, she prays,
  Yet will when his distempered devil of Self;--
  The glutton for her fruits, the wily elf
  In shifting rays;--


  XXXVI.

  That captain of the scorned;
  The coveter of life in soul and shell,
  The fratricide, the thief, the infidel,
  The hoofed and horned;--


  XXXVII.

  He singularly doomed
  To what he execrates and writhes to shun;--
  When fire has passed him vapour to the sun,
  And sun relumed,


  XXXVIII.

  Then shall the horrid pall
  Be lifted, and a spirit nigh divine,
  ‘Live in thy offspring as I live in mine,’
  Will hear her call.


  XXXIX.

  Whence looks he on a land
  Whereon his labour is a carven page;
  And forth from heritage to heritage
  Nought writ on sand.


  XL.

  His fables of the Above,
  And his gapped readings of the crown and sword,
  The hell detested and the heaven adored,
  The hate, the love,


  XLI.

  The bright wing, the black hoof,
  He shall peruse, from Reason not disjoined,
  And never unfaith clamouring to be coined
  To faith by proof.


  XLII.

  She her just Lord may view,
  Not he, her creature, till his soul has yearned
  With all her gifts to reach the light discerned
  Her spirit through.


  XLIII.

  Then in him time shall run
  As in the hour that to young sunlight crows;
  And--‘If thou hast good faith it can repose,’
  She tells her son.


  XLIV.

  Meanwhile on him, her chief
  Expression, her great word of life, looks she;
  Twi-minded of him, as the waxing tree,
  Or dated leaf.



A BALLAD OF FAIR LADIES IN REVOLT.


  I.

    See the sweet women, friend, that lean beneath
    The ever-falling fountain of green leaves
    Round the white bending stem, and like a wreath
    Of our most blushful flower shine trembling through,
    To teach philosophers the thirst of thieves:
            Is one for me? is one for you?


  II.

  --Fair sirs, we give you welcome, yield you place,
    And you shall choose among us which you will,
    Without the idle pastime of the chase,
    If to this treaty you can well agree:
    To wed our cause, and its high task fulfil.
            He who’s for us, for him are we!


  III.

  --Most gracious ladies, nigh when light has birth,
    A troop of maids, brown as burnt heather-bells,
    And rich with life as moss-roots breathe of earth
    In the first plucking of them, past us flew
    To labour, singing rustic ritornells:
            Had they a cause? are they of you?


  IV.

  --Sirs, they are as unthinking armies are
    To thoughtful leaders, and our cause is theirs.
    When they know men they know the state of war:
    But now they dream like sunlight on a sea,
    And deem you hold the half of happy pairs.
            He who’s for us, for him are we!


  V.

  --Ladies, I listened to a ring of dames;
    Judicial in the robe and wig; secure
    As venerated portraits in their frames;
    And they denounced some insurrection new
    Against sound laws which keep you good and pure.
            Are you of them? are they of you?


  VI.

  --Sirs, they are of us, as their dress denotes,
    And by as much: let them together chime:
    It is an ancient bell within their throats,
    Pulled by an aged ringer; with what glee
    Befits the yellow yesterdays of time.
            He who’s for us, for him are we.


  VII.

  --Sweet ladies, you with beauty, you with wit;
    Dowered of all favours and all blessed things
    Whereat the ruddy torch of Love is lit;
    Wherefore this vain and outworn strife renew,
    Which stays the tide no more than eddy-rings?
            Who is for love must be for you.


  VIII.

  --The manners of the market, honest sirs,
    ’Tis hard to quit when you behold the wares.
    You flatter us, or perchance our milliners
    You flatter; so this vain and outworn She
    May still be the charmed snake to your soft airs!
            A higher lord than Love claim we.


  IX.

  --One day, dear lady, missing the broad track,
    I came on a wood’s border, by a mead,
    Where golden May ran up to moted black:
    And there I saw Queen Beauty hold review,
    With Love before her throne in act to plead.
            Take him for me, take her for you.


  X.

  --Ingenious gentleman, the tale is known.
    Love pleaded sweetly: Beauty would not melt:
    She would not melt: he turned in wrath: her throne
    The shadow of his back froze witheringly,
    And sobbing at his feet Queen Beauty knelt.
            O not such slaves of Love are we!


  XI.

  --Love, lady, like the star above that lance
    Of radiance flung by sunset on ridged cloud,
    Sad as the last line of a brave romance!--
    Young Love hung dim, yet quivering round him threw
    Beams of fresh fire while Beauty waned and bowed.
            Scorn Love, and dread the doom for you.


  XII.

  --Called she not for her mirror, sir? Forth ran
    Her women: I am lost, she cried, when lo,
    Love in the form of an admiring man
    Once more in adoration bent the knee
    And brought the faded Pagan to full blow:
            For which her throne she gave: not we!


  XIII.

  --My version, madam, runs not to that end.
    A certain madness of an hour half past,
    Caught her like fever: her just lord no friend
    She fancied; aimed beyond beauty, and thence grew
    The prim acerbity, sweet Love’s outcast.
            Great heaven ward off that stroke from you!


  XIV.

  --Your prayer to heaven, good sir, is generous:
    How generous likewise that you do not name
    Offended nature! She from all of us
    Couched idle underneath our showering tree,
    May quite withhold her most destructive flame;
            And then what woeful women we!


  XV.

  --Quite, could not be, fair lady; yet your youth
    May run to drought in visionary schemes:
    And a late waking to perceive the truth,
    When day falls shrouding her supreme adieu,
    Shows darker wastes than unaccomplished dreams:
            And that may be in store for you.


  XVI.

  --O sir, the truth, the truth! is’t in the skies,
    Or in the grass, or in this heart of ours?
    But O the truth, the truth! the many eyes
    That look on it! the diverse things they see,
    According to their thirst for fruit or flowers!
            Pass on: it is the truth seek we.


  XVII.

  --Lady, there is a truth of settled laws
    That down the past burns like a great watch-fire.
    Let youth hail changeful mornings; but your cause,
    Whetting its edge to cut the race in two,
    Is felony: you forfeit the bright lyre,
            Much honour and much glory you!


  XVIII.

  --Sir, was it glory, was it honour, pride,
    And not as cat and serpent and poor slave,
    Wherewith we walked in union by your side?
    Spare to false womanliness her delicacy,
    Or bid true manliness give ear, we crave:
            In our defence thus chained are we.


  XIX.

  --Yours, madam, were the privileges of life
    Proper to man’s ideal; you were the mark
    Of action, and the banner in the strife:
    Yea, of your very weakness once you drew
    The strength that sounds the wells, outflies the lark:
            Wrapped in a robe of flame were you!


  XX.

  --Your friend looks thoughtful. Sir, when we were chill,
    You clothed us warmly; all in honour! when
    We starved you fed us; all in honour still:
    Oh, all in honour, ultra-honourably!
    Deep is the gratitude we owe to men,
            For privileged indeed were we!


  XXI.

  --You cite exceptions, madam, that are sad,
    But come in the red struggle of our growth
    Alas, that I should have to say it! bad
    Is two-sexed upon earth: this which you do
    Shows animal impatience, mental sloth:
            Man monstrous, pining seraphs you!


  XXII.

  --I fain would ask your friend ... but I will ask
    You, sir, how if in place of numbers vague,
    Your sad exceptions were to break that mask
    They wear for your cool mind historically,
    And blaze like black lists of a _present_ plague?
            But in that light behold them we.


  XXIII.

  --Your spirit breathes a mist upon our world,
    Lady, and like a rain to pierce the roof
    And drench the bed where toil-tossed man lies curled
    In his hard-earned oblivion! You are few,
    Scattered, ill-counselled, blinded: for a proof,
            I have lived, and have known none like you.


  XXIV.

  --We may be blind to men, sir: we embrace
    A future now beyond the fowler’s nets.
    Though few, we hold a promise for the race
    That was not at our rising: you are free
    To win brave mates; you lose but marionnettes.
            He who’s for us, for him are we.


  XXV.

  --Ah! madam, were they puppets who withstood
    Youth’s cravings for adventure to preserve
    The dedicated ways of womanhood?
    The light which leads us from the paths of rue,
    That light above us, never seen to swerve,
            Should be the home-lamp trimmed by you.


  XXVI.

  --Ah! sir, our worshipped posture we perchance
    Shall not abandon, though we see not how,
    Being to that lamp-post fixed, we may advance
    Beside our lords in any real degree,
    Unless we move: and to advance is now
            A sovereign need, think more than we.


  XXVII.

  --So push you out of harbour in small craft,
    With little seamanship; and comes a gale,
    The world will laugh, the world has often laughed,
    Lady, to see how bold when skies are blue,
    When black winds churn the deeps how panic-pale,
            How swift to the old nest fly you!


  XXVIII.

  --What thinks your friend, kind sir? We have escaped
    But partly that old half-tamed wild beast’s paw
    Whereunder woman, the weak thing, was shaped:
    Men too have known the cramping enemy
    In grim brute force, whom force of brain shall awe:
            Him our deliverer, await we!


  XXIX.

  --Delusions are with eloquence endowed,
    And yours might pluck an angel from the spheres
    To play in this revolt whereto you are vowed,
    Deliverer, lady! but like summer dew
    O’er fields that crack for rain your friends drop tears,
            Who see the awakening for you.


  XXX.

  --Is he our friend, there silent? he weeps not.
    O sir, delusion mounting like a sun
    On a mind blank as the white wife of Lot,
    Giving it warmth and movement! if this be
    Delusion, think of what thereby was won
            For men, and dream of what win we.


  XXXI.

  --Lady, the destiny of minor powers,
    Who would recast us, is but to convulse:
    You enter on a strife that frets and sours;
    You can but win sick disappointment’s hue;
    And simply an accelerated pulse,
            Some tonic you have drunk moves you.


  XXXII.

  --Thinks your friend so? Good sir, your wit is bright
    But wit that strives to speak the popular voice,
    Puts on its nightcap and puts out its light;
    Curfew, would seem your conqueror’s decree
    To women likewise: and we have no choice
            Save darkness or rebellion, we!


  XXXIII.

  --A plain safe intermediate way is cleft
    By reason foiling passion: you that rave
    Of mad alternatives to right and left
    Echo the tempter, madam: and ’tis due
    Unto your sex to shun it as the grave,
            This later apple offered you.


  XXXIV.

  --This apple is not ripe, it is not sweet;
    Nor rosy, sir, nor golden: eye and mouth
    Are little wooed by it; yet we would eat:
    We are somewhat tired of Eden, is our plea:
    We have thirsted long: this apple suits our drouth:
            ’Tis good for men to halve, think we.


  XXXV.

  --But say, what seek you, madam? ’Tis enough
    That you should have dominion o’er the springs
    Domestic and man’s heart: those ways, how rough,
    How vile, outside the stately avenue
    Where you walk sheltered by your angel’s wings,
            Are happily unknown to you.


  XXXVI.

  --We hear women’s shrieks on them. We like your phrase,
    Dominion domestic! And that roar,
    ‘What seek you?’ is of tyrants in all days.
    Sir, get you something of our purity,
    And we will of your strength: we ask no more.
            That is the sum of what seek we.


  XXXVII.

  --O for an image, madam, in one word,
    To show you, as the lightning night reveals,
    Your error and your perils: you have erred
    In mind only, and the perils that ensue
    Swift heels may soften; wherefore to swift heels
            Address your hopes of safety you!


  XXXVIII.

  --To err in mind, sir ... your friend smiles: he may!
    To err in mind, if err in mind we can,
    Is grievous error you do well to stay.
    But O how different from reality
    Men’s fiction is! how like you in the plan,
            Is woman, knew you her as we!


  XXXIX.

  --Look, lady, where yon river winds its line
    Toward sunset, and receives on breast and face
    The splendour of fair life: to be divine,
    ’Tis nature bids you be to nature true,
    Flowing with beauty, lending earth your grace,
            Reflecting heaven in clearness you.


  XL.

  --Sir, you speak well: your friend no word vouchsafes.
    To flow with beauty, breeding fools and worse,
    Cowards and worse: at such fair life she chafes
    Who is not wholly of the nursery,
    Nor of your schools: we share the primal curse:
            Together shake it off, say we!


  XLI.

  --Hear, then, my friend, madam! Tongue-restrained he stands
    Till words are thoughts, and thoughts, like swords enriched
    With traceries of the artificer’s hands,
    Are fire-proved steel to cut, fair flowers to view.
    Do I hear him? Oh, he is bewitched, bewitched!
              Heed him not! Traitress beauties you!


  XLII.

  --We have won a champion, sisters, and a sage!
  --Ladies, you win a guest to a good feast!
  --Sir spokesman, sneers are weakness veiling rage.
  --Of weakness, and wise men, you have the key.
  --Then are there fresher mornings mounting East
              Than ever yet have dawned, sing we!


  XLIII.

  --False ends as false began, madam, be sure!
  --What lure there is the pure cause purifies!
  --Who purifies the victim of the lure?
  --That soul which bids us our high light pursue.
  --Some heights are measured down: the wary wise
            Shun Reason in the masque with you!


  XLIV.

  --Sir, for the friend you bring us, take our thanks.
    Yes, Beauty was of old this barren goal;
    A thing with claws; and brute-like in her pranks!
    But could she give more loyal guarantee
    Than wooing wisdom, that in her a soul
            Has risen? Adieu: content are we!


  XLV.

    Those ladies led their captive to the flood’s
    Green edge. He floating with them seemed the most
    Fool-flushed old noddy ever crowned with buds.
    Happier than I! Then, why not wiser too?
    For he that lives with Beauty, he may boast
              His comrade over me and you.


  XLVI.

    Have women nursed some dream since Helen sailed
    Over the sea of blood the blushing star,
    That Beauty, whom frail man as Goddess hailed,
    When not possessing her (for such is he!),
    Might in a wondering season seen afar,
              Be tamed to say not ‘I,’ but ‘we’?


  XLVII.

    And shall they make of Beauty their estate,
    The fortress and the weapon of their sex?
    Shall she in her frost-brilliancy dictate,
    More queenly than of old, how we must woo,
    Ere she will melt? The halter’s on our necks,
              Kick as it likes us, I and you.


  XLVIII.

    Certain it is, if Beauty has disdained
    Her ancient conquests, with an aim thus high:
    If this, if that, if more, the fight is gained.
    But can she keep her followers without fee?
    Yet ah! to hear anew those ladies cry,
              He who’s for us, for him are we!



SONNETS



LUCIFER IN STARLIGHT.


  On a starred night Prince Lucifer uprose.
  Tired of his dark dominion swung the fiend
  Above the rolling ball in cloud part screened,
  Where sinners hugged their spectre of repose.
  Poor prey to his hot fit of pride were those.
  And now upon his Western wing he leaned,
  Now his huge bulk o’er Africa careened,
  Now the black planet shadowed Arctic snows.
  Soaring through wider zones that pricked his scars
  With memory of the old revolt from Awe,
  He reached a middle height, and at the stars,
  Which are the brain of heaven, he looked, and sank.
  Around the ancient track marched, rank on rank,
  The army of unalterable law.



THE STAR SIRIUS.


  Bright Sirius! that when Orion pales
  To dotlings under moonlight still art keen
  With cheerful fervour of a warrior’s mien
  Who holds in his great heart the battle-scales:
  Unquenched of flame though swift the flood assails,
  Reducing many lustrous to the lean:
  Be thou my star, and thou in me be seen
  To show what source divine is, and prevails.
  Long watches through, at one with godly night,
  I mark thee planting joy in constant fire;
  And thy quick beams, whose jets of life inspire
  Life to the spirit, passion for the light,
  Dark Earth since first she lost her lord from sight
  Has viewed and felt them sweep her as a lyre.



SENSE AND SPIRIT.


  The senses loving Earth or well or ill,
  Ravel yet more the riddle of our lot.
  The mind is in their trammels, and lights not
  By trimming fear-bred tales; nor does the will
  To find in nature things which less may chill
  An ardour that desires, unknowing what.
  Till we conceive her living we go distraught,
  At best but circle-windsails of a mill.
  Seeing she lives, and of her joy of life
  Creatively has given us blood and breath
  For endless war and never wound unhealed,
  The gloomy Wherefore of our battle-field
  Solves in the Spirit, wrought of her through strife
  To read her own and trust her down to death.



EARTH’S SECRET.


  Not solitarily in fields we find
  Earth’s secret open, though one page is there;
  Her plainest, such as children spell, and share
  With bird and beast; raised letters for the blind.
  Not where the troubled passions toss the mind,
  In turbid cities, can the key be bare.
  It hangs for those who hither thither fare,
  Close interthreading nature with our kind.
  They, hearing History speak, of what men were,
  And have become, are wise. The gain is great
  In vision and solidity; it lives.
  Yet at a thought of life apart from her,
  Solidity and vision lose their state,
  For Earth, that gives the milk, the spirit gives.



THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE.


  Thy greatest knew thee, Mother Earth; unsoured
  He knew thy sons. He probed from hell to hell
  Of human passions, but of love deflowered
  His wisdom was not, for he knew thee well.
  Thence came the honeyed corner at his lips,
  The conquering smile wherein his spirit sails
  Calm as the God who the white sea-wave whips,
  Yet full of speech and intershifting tales,
  Close mirrors of us: thence had he the laugh
  We feel is thine: broad as ten thousand beeves
  At pasture! thence thy songs, that winnow chaff
  From grain, bid sick Philosophy’s last leaves
  Whirl, if they have no response--they enforced
  To fatten Earth when from her soul divorced.



THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE:

CONTINUED.


  How smiles he at a generation ranked
  In gloomy noddings over life! They pass.
  Not he to feed upon a breast unthanked,
  Or eye a beauteous face in a cracked glass.
  But he can spy that little twist of brain
  Which moved some weighty leader of the blind,
  Unwitting ’twas the goad of personal pain,
  To view in curst eclipse our Mother’s mind,
  And show us of some rigid harridan
  The wretched bondmen till the end of time.
  O lived the Master now to paint us Man,
  That little twist of brain would ring a chime
  Of whence it came and what it caused, to start
  Thunders of laughter, clearing air and heart.



INTERNAL HARMONY.


  Assured of worthiness we do not dread
  Competitors; we rather give them hail
  And greeting in the lists where we may fail:
  Must, if we bear an aim beyond the head!
  My betters are my masters: purely fed
  By their sustainment I likewise shall scale
  Some rocky steps between the mount and vale;
  Meanwhile the mark I have and I will wed.
  So that I draw the breath of finer air,
  Station is nought, nor footways laurel-strewn,
  Nor rivals tightly belted for the race.
  Good speed to them! My place is here or there;
  My pride is that among them I have place:
  And thus I keep this instrument in tune.



GRACE AND LOVE.


  Two flower-enfolding crystal vases she
  I love fills daily, mindful but of one:
  And close behind pale morn she, like the sun
  Priming our world with light, pours, sweet to see,
  Clear water in the cup, and into me
  The image of herself: and that being done,
  Choice of what blooms round her fair garden run
  In climbers or in creepers or the tree,
  She ranges with unerring fingers fine,
  To harmony so vivid that through sight
  I hear, I have her heavenliness to fold
  Beyond the senses, where such love as mine,
  Such grace as hers, should the strange Fates withhold
  Their starry more from her and me, unite.



APPRECIATION.


  Earth was not Earth before her sons appeared,
  Nor Beauty Beauty ere young Love was born:
  And thou when I lay hidden wert as morn
  At city-windows, touching eyelids bleared;
  To none by her fresh wingedness endeared;
  Unwelcome unto revellers outworn.
  I the last echoes of Diana’s horn
  In woodland heard, and saw thee come, and cheered.
  No longer wert thou then mere light, fair soul!
  And more than simple duty moved thy feet.
  New colours rose in thee, from fear, from shame,
  From hope, effused: though not less pure a scroll
  May men read on the heart I taught to beat:
  That change in thee, if not thyself, I claim.



THE DISCIPLINE OF WISDOM.


  Rich labour is the struggle to be wise,
  While we make sure the struggle cannot cease.
  Else better were it in some bower of peace
  Slothful to swing, contending with the flies.
  You point at Wisdom fixed on lofty skies,
  As mid barbarian hordes a sculptured Greece:
  She falls. To live and shine, she grows her fleece,
  Is shorn, and rubs with follies and with lies.
  So following her, your hewing may attain
  The right to speak unto the mute, and shun
  That sly temptation of the illumined brain,
  Deliveries oracular, self-spun.
  Who sweats not with the flock will seek in vain
  To shed the words which are ripe fruit of sun.



THE STATE OF AGE.


  Rub thou thy battered lamp: nor claim nor beg
  Honours from aught about thee. Light the young.
  Thy frame is as a dusty mantle hung,
  O gray one! pendant on a loosened peg.
  Thou art for this our life an ancient egg,
  Or a tough bird: thou hast a rudderless tongue,
  Turning dead trifles, like the cock of dung;
  Which runs, Time’s contrast to thy halting leg.
  Nature, it is most sure, not thee admires.
  But hast thou in thy season set her fires
  To burn from Self to Spirit through the lash,
  Honoured the sons of Earth shall hold thee high:
  Yea, to spread light when thy proud letter I
  Drops prone and void as any thoughtless dash.



PROGRESS.


  In Progress you have little faith, say you:
  Men will maintain dear interests, wreak base hates,
  By force, and gentle women choose their mates
  Most amorously from the gilded fighting crew:
  The human heart Bellona’s mad halloo
  Will ever fire to dicing with the Fates.
  ‘Now at this time,’ says History, ‘those two States
  ‘Stood ready their past wrestling to renew.
  ‘They sharpened arms and showed them, like the brutes
  ‘Whose haunches quiver. But a yellow blight
  ‘Fell on their waxing harvests. They deferred
  ‘The bloody settlement of their disputes
  ‘Till God should bless them better.’ They did right.
  And naming Progress, both shall have the word.



THE WORLD’S ADVANCE.


  Judge mildly the tasked world; and disincline
  To brand it, for it bears a heavy pack.
  You have perchance observed the inebriate’s track
  At night when he has quitted the inn-sign:
  He plays diversions on the homeward line,
  Still that way bent albeit his legs are slack:
  A hedge may take him, but he turns not back,
  Nor turns this burdened world, of curving spine.
  ‘Spiral,’ the memorable Lady terms
  Our mind’s ascent: our world’s advance presents
  That figure on a flat; the way of worms.
  Cherish the promise of its good intents,
  And warn it, not one instinct to efface
  Ere Reason ripens for the vacant place.



A CERTAIN PEOPLE.


  As Puritans they prominently wax,
  And none more kindly gives and takes hard knocks.
  Strong psalmic chanting, like to nasal cocks,
  They join to thunderings of their hearty thwacks.
  But naughtiness, with hoggery, not lacks
  When Peace another door in them unlocks,
  Where conscience shows the eyeing of an ox
  Grown dully apprehensive of an Axe.
  Graceless they are when gone to frivolousness,
  Fearing the God they flout, the God they glut.
  They need their pious exercises less
  Than schooling in the Pleasures: fair belief
  That these are devilish only to their thief,
  Charged with an Axe nigh on the occiput.



THE GARDEN OF EPICURUS.


  That Garden of sedate Philosophy
  Once flourished, fenced from passion and mishap,
  A shining spot upon a shaggy map;
  Where mind and body, in fair junction free,
  Luted their joyful concord; like the tree
  From root to flowering twigs a flowing sap.
  Clear Wisdom found in tended Nature’s lap,
  Of gentlemen the happy nursery.
  That Garden would on light supremest verge,
  Were the long drawing of an equal breath
  Healthful for Wisdom’s head, her heart, her aims.
  Our world which for its Babels wants a scourge,
  And for its wilds a husbandman, acclaims
  The crucifix that came of Nazareth.



A LATER ALEXANDRIAN.


  An inspiration caught from dubious hues,
  Filled him, and mystic wrynesses he chased;
  For they lead farther than the single-faced,
  Wave subtler promise when desire pursues.
  The moon of cloud discoloured was his Muse,
  His pipe the reed of the old moaning waste.
  Love was to him with anguish fast enlaced,
  And Beauty where she walked blood-shot the dews.
  Men railed at such a singer; women thrilled
  Responsively: he sang not Nature’s own
  Divinest, but his lyric had a tone,
  As ’twere a forest-echo of her voice:
  What barrenly they yearn for seemed distilled
  From what they dread, who do through tears rejoice.



AN ORSON OF THE MUSE.


  Her son, albeit the Muse’s livery
  And measured courtly paces rouse his taunts,
  Naked and hairy in his savage haunts,
  To Nature only will he bend the knee;
  Spouting the founts of her distillery
  Like rough rock-sources; and his woes and wants
  Being Nature’s, civil limitation daunts
  His utterance never; the nymphs blush, not he.
  Him, when he blows of Earth, and Man, and Fate,
  The Muse will hearken to with graver ear
  Than many of her train can waken: him
  Would fain have taught what fruitful things and dear
  Must sink beneath the tidewaves, of their weight,
  If in no vessel built for sea they swim.



THE POINT OF TASTE.


  Unhappy poets of a sunken prime!
  You to reviewers are as ball to bat.
  They shadow you with Homer, knock you flat
  With Shakespeare: bludgeons brainingly sublime
  On you the excommunicates of Rhyme,
  Because you sing not in the living Fat.
  The wiry whizz of an intrusive gnat
  Is verse that shuns their self-producing time.
  Sound them their clocks, with loud alarum trump,
  Or watches ticking temporal at their fobs,
  You win their pleased attention. But, bright God
  O’ the lyre, what bully-drawlers they applaud!
  Rather for us a tavern-catch, and bump
  Chorus where Lumpkin with his Giles hobnobs.



CAMELUS SALTAT.


  What say you, critic, now you have become
  An author and maternal?--in this trap
  (To quote you) of poor hollow folk who rap
  On instruments as like as drum to drum.
  You snarled tut-tut for welcome to tum-tum,
  So like the nose fly-teased in its noon’s nap.
  You scratched an insect-slaughtering thunder-clap
  With that between the fingers and the thumb.
  It seemeth mad to quit the Olympian couch,
  Which bade our public gobble or reject.
  O spectacle of Peter, shrewdly pecked,
  Piper, by his own pepper from his pouch!
  What of the sneer, the jeer, the voice austere,
  You dealt?--the voice austere, the jeer, the sneer.



CAMELUS SALTAT: CONTINUED.


  Oracle of the market! thence you drew
  The taste which stamped you guide of the inept.--
  A north-sea pilot, Hildebrand yclept,
  A sturdy and a briny, once men knew.
  He loved small beer, and for that copious brew,
  To roll ingurgitation till he slept,
  Rations exchanged with flavour for the adept:
  And merrily plied him captain, mate and crew.
  At last this dancer to the Polar star
  Sank, washed out within, and overboard was pitched,
  To drink the sea and pilot him to land.
  O captain-critic! printed, neatly stitched,
  Know, while the pillory-eggs fly fast, they are
  Not eggs, but the drowned soul of Hildebrand.



TO J. M.


  Let Fate or Insufficiency provide
  Mean ends for men who what they are would be:
  Penned in their narrow day no change they see
  Save one which strikes the blow to brutes and pride.
  Our faith is ours and comes not on a tide:
  And whether Earth’s great offspring, by decree,
  Must rot if they abjure rapacity,
  Not argument but effort shall decide.
  They number many heads in that hard flock;
  Trim swordsmen they push forth; yet try thy steel.
  Thou fighting for poor humankind wilt feel
  The strength of Roland in thy wrist to hew
  A chasm sheer into the barrier rock,
  And bring the army of the faithful through.



TO A FRIEND LOST.

(T. T.)


  When I remember, friend, whom lost I call,
  Because a man beloved is taken hence,
  The tender humour and the fire of sense
  In your good eyes; how full of heart for all,
  And chiefly for the weaker by the wall,
  You bore that lamp of sane benevolence;
  Then see I round you Death his shadows dense
  Divide, and at your feet his emblems fall.
  For surely are you one with the white host,
  Spirits, whose memory in our vital air
  Through the great love of Earth they had: lo, these,
  Like beams that throw the path on tossing seas,
  Can bid us feel we keep them in the ghost,
  Partakers of a strife they joyed to share.



MY THEME.


  Of me and of my theme think what thou wilt:
  The song of gladness one straight bolt can check.
  But I have never stood at Fortune’s beck:
  Were she and her light crew to run atilt
  At my poor holding little would be spilt;
  Small were the praise for singing o’er that wreck.
  Who courts her dooms to strife his bended neck;
  He grasps a blade, not always by the hilt.
  Nathless she strikes at random, can be fell
  With other than those votaries she deals
  The black or brilliant from her thunder-rift.
  I say but that this love of Earth reveals
  A soul beside our own to quicken, quell,
  Irradiate, and through ruinous floods uplift.



MY THEME: CONTINUED.


  ’Tis true the wisdom that my mind exacts
  Through contemplation from a heart unbent
  By many tempests may be stained and rent:
  The summer flies it mightily attracts.
  Yet they seem choicer than your sons of facts,
  Which scarce give breathing of the sty’s content
  For their diurnal carnal nourishment:
  Which treat with Nature in official pacts.
  The deader body Nature could proclaim.
  Much life have neither. Let the heavens of wrath
  Rattle, then both scud scattering to froth.
  But during calms the flies of idle aim
  Less put the spirit out, less baffle thirst
  For light than swinish grunters, blest or curst.



TIME AND SENTIMENT.


  I see a fair young couple in a wood,
  And as they go, one bends to take a flower,
  That so may be embalmed their happy hour
  And in another day, a kindred mood,
  Haply together, or in solitude,
  Recovered what the teeth of Time devour,
  The joy, the bloom, and the illusive power,
  Wherewith by their young blood they are endued
  To move all enviable, framed in May,
  And of an aspect sisterly with Truth:
  Yet seek they with Time’s laughing things to wed:
  Who will be prompted on some pallid day
  To lift the hueless flower and show that dead,
  Even such, and by this token, is their youth.



PHOEBUS WITH ADMETUS.

The measure runs:

[Illustration]


MELAMPUS.

[Illustration]


LOVE IN THE VALLEY:

Trochaic, variable in short syllables according to stress of the accent.

  A sketch of this poem appeared in a volume published many years
  back, now extinct.



*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth" ***

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