



Produced by Les Bowler





NEW POEMS,

By Francis Thompson.


          Dedication to Coventry Patmore.


          Lo, my book thinks to look Time's leaguer down,
          Under the banner of your spread renown!
          Or if these levies of impuissant rhyme
          Fall to the overthrow of assaulting Time,
          Yet this one page shall fend oblivious shame,
          Armed with your crested and prevailing Name.


 Note.--This dedication was written while the dear friend and great
 Poet to whom it was addressed yet lived.  It is left as he saw it--
 the last verses of mine that were ever to pass under his eyes.

                                                 F. T.



Contents.


     SIGHT AND INSIGHT.


     The mistress of vision.
     Contemplation.
     'By reason of Thy law.'
     The dread of height.
     Orient ode.
     New Year's chimes.
     From the night of forebeing.
     Any saint.
     Assumpta Maria.
     The after woman.
     Grace of the way.
     Retrospect.



     A NARROW VESSEL.


     A girl's sin--in her eyes.
     A girl's sin--in his eyes.
     Love declared.
     The way of a maid.
     Beginning of the end.
     Penelope.
     The end of it.
     Epilogue.



     MISCELLANEOUS ODES.


     Ode to the setting sun.
     A captain of song.
     Against Urania.
     An anthem of earth.



     MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.


     'Ex ore infantium.'
     A question.
     Field-flower.
     The cloud's swan-song.
     To the sinking sun.
     Grief's harmonics.
     Memorat memoria.
     July fugitive.
     To a snow-flake.
     Nocturn.
     A May burden.
     A dead astronomer.
     'Chose vue.'
     'Whereto art thou come.'
     Heaven and hell.
     To a child.
     Hermes.
     House of bondage.
     The heart.
     A sunset.
     Heard on the mountain.



     ULTIMA.


     Love's almsman plaineth his fare.
     A holocaust.
     Beneath a photograph.
     After her going.
     My lady the tyranness.
     Unto this last.
     Ultimum.
     Envoy.




SIGHT AND INSIGHT.




     'Wisdom is easily seen by them that love her, and is found
               by them that seek her.
     To think therefore upon her is perfect understanding.'

                                            WISDOM, vi.




THE MISTRESS OF VISION.

               I

          Secret was the garden;
          Set i' the pathless awe
          Where no star its breath can draw.
          Life, that is its warden,
     Sits behind the fosse of death.  Mine eyes saw not,
            and I saw.

               II

          It was a mazeful wonder;
          Thrice three times it was enwalled
          With an emerald--
          Seal-ed so asunder.
     All its birds in middle air hung a-dream, their
            music thralled.

               III

          The Lady of fair weeping,
          At the garden's core,
          Sang a song of sweet and sore
          And the after-sleeping;
     In the land of Luthany, and the tracts of Elenore.

               IV

          With sweet-panged singing,
          Sang she through a dream-night's day;
          That the bowers might stay,
          Birds bate their winging,
     Nor the wall of emerald float in wreath-ed haze away.

               V

          The lily kept its gleaming,
          In her tears (divine conservers!)
          Wash-ed with sad art;
          And the flowers of dreaming
          Pal-ed not their fervours,
          For her blood flowed through their nervures;
     And the roses were most red, for she dipt them in
            her heart.

               VI

          There was never moon,
          Save the white sufficing woman:
          Light most heavenly-human--
          Like the unseen form of sound,
          Sensed invisibly in tune,--
          With a sun-deriv-ed stole
          Did inaureole
          All her lovely body round;
     Lovelily her lucid body with that light was inter-
            strewn.

               VII

          The sun which lit that garden wholly,
          Low and vibrant visible,
          Tempered glory woke;
          And it seem-ed solely
          Like a silver thurible
          Solemnly swung, slowly,
     Fuming clouds of golden fire, for a cloud of incense-
            smoke.

               VIII

          But woe's me, and woe's me,
          For the secrets of her eyes!
          In my visions fearfully
          They are ever shown to be
          As fring-ed pools, whereof each lies
          Pallid-dark beneath the skies
          Of a night that is
          But one blear necropolis.
     And her eyes a little tremble, in the wind of her
            own sighs.

               IX

          Many changes rise on
          Their phantasmal mysteries.
          They grow to an horizon
          Where earth and heaven meet;
          And like a wing that dies on
          The vague twilight-verges,
          Many a sinking dream doth fleet
          Lessening down their secrecies.
          And, as dusk with day converges,
          Their orbs are troublously
     Over-gloomed and over-glowed with hope and fear
            of things to be.

               X

          There is a peak on Himalay,
          And on the peak undeluged snow,
          And on the snow not eagles stray;
          There if your strong feet could go,--
          Looking over tow'rd Cathay
          From the never-deluged snow--
          Farthest ken might not survey
     Where the peoples underground dwell whom
            antique fables know.

               XI

          East, ah, east of Himalay,
          Dwell the nations underground;
          Hiding from the shock of Day,
          For the sun's uprising-sound:
          Dare not issue from the ground
          At the tumults of the Day,
          So fearfully the sun doth sound
          Clanging up beyond Cathay;
     For the great earthquaking sunrise rolling up
            beyond Cathay.

               XII

          Lend me, O lend me
          The terrors of that sound,
          That its music may attend me.
          Wrap my chant in thunders round;
     While I tell the ancient secrets in that Lady's
            singing found.

               XIII

          On Ararat there grew a vine,
          When Asia from her bathing rose;
          Our first sailor made a twine
          Thereof for his prefiguring brows.
          Canst divine
     Where, upon our dusty earth, of that vine a cluster
            grows?

               XIV

          On Golgotha there grew a thorn
          Round the long-prefigured Brows.
          Mourn, O mourn!
     For the vine have we the spine?  Is this all the
            Heaven allows?

               XV

          On Calvary was shook a spear;
          Press the point into thy heart--
          Joy and fear!
     All the spines upon the thorn into curling tendrils
            start.

               XVI

          O, dismay!
          I, a wingless mortal, sporting
          With the tresses of the sun?
          I, that dare my hand to lay
          On the thunder in its snorting?
          Ere begun,
     Falls my singed song down the sky, even the old
            Icarian way.

               XVII

          From the fall precipitant
          These dim snatches of her chant
          Only have remain-ed mine;--
          That from spear and thorn alone
          May be grown
     For the front of saint or singer any divinizing twine.

               XVIII

          Her song said that no springing
          Paradise but evermore
          Hangeth on a singing
          That has chords of weeping,
          And that sings the after-sleeping
          To souls which wake too sore.
     'But woe the singer, woe!' she said; 'beyond the
            dead his singing-lore,
          All its art of sweet and sore,
          He learns, in Elenore!'

               XIX

          Where is the land of Luthany,
          Where is the tract of Elenore?
          I am bound therefor.

               XX

          'Pierce thy heart to find the key;
          With thee take
          Only what none else would keep;
          Learn to dream when thou dost wake,
          Learn to wake when thou dost sleep.
          Learn to water joy with tears,
          Learn from fears to vanquish fears;
          To hope, for thou dar'st not despair,
          Exult, for that thou dar'st not grieve;
          Plough thou the rock until it bear;
          Know, for thou else couldst not believe;
          Lose, that the lost thou may'st receive;
          Die, for none other way canst live.
          When earth and heaven lay down their veil,
          And that apocalypse turns thee pale;
          When thy seeing blindeth thee
          To what thy fellow-mortals see;
          When their sight to thee is sightless;
          Their living, death; their light, most light-
            less;
          Search no more--
     Pass the gates of Luthany, tread the region Elenore.'

               XXI

          Where is the land of Luthany,
          And where the region Elenore?
          I do faint therefor.
          'When to the new eyes of thee
          All things by immortal power,
          Near or far,
          Hiddenly
          To each other link-ed are,
          That thou canst not stir a flower
          Without troubling of a star;
          When thy song is shield and mirror
          To the fair snake-curl-ed Pain,
          Where thou dar'st affront her terror
          That on her thou may'st attain
          Persean conquest; seek no more,
          O seek no more!
     Pass the gates of Luthany, tread the region Elenore.'

               XXII

          So sang she, so wept she,
          Through a dream-night's day;
          And with her magic singing kept she--
          Mystical in music--
          That garden of enchanting
          In visionary May;
          Swayless for my spirit's haunting,
     Thrice-threefold walled with emerald from our mor-
            tal mornings grey.

               XXIII

          And as a necromancer
          Raises from the rose-ash
          The ghost of the rose;
          My heart so made answer
          To her voice's silver plash,--
          Stirred in reddening flash,
     And from out its mortal ruins the purpureal phantom
            blows.

               XXIV

          Her tears made dulcet fretting,
          Her voice had no word,
          More than thunder or the bird.
          Yet, unforgetting,
     The ravished soul her meanings knew.  Mine ears
            heard not, and I heard.

               XXV

          When she shall unwind
          All those wiles she wound about me,
          Tears shall break from out me,
          That I cannot find
     Music in the holy poets to my wistful want, I doubt
            me!




CONTEMPLATION.


     This morning saw I, fled the shower,
     The earth reclining in a lull of power:
     The heavens, pursuing not their path,
     Lay stretched out naked after bath,
     Or so it seemed; field, water, tree, were still,
     Nor was there any purpose on the calm-browed hill.

     The hill, which sometimes visibly is
     Wrought with unresting energies,
     Looked idly; from the musing wood,
     And every rock, a life renewed
     Exhaled like an unconscious thought
     When poets, dreaming unperplexed,
     Dream that they dream of nought.
     Nature one hour appears a thing unsexed,
     Or to such serene balance brought
     That her twin natures cease their sweet alarms,
     And sleep in one another's arms.
     The sun with resting pulses seems to brood,
     And slacken its command upon my unurged blood.

     The river has not any care
     Its passionless water to the sea to bear;
     The leaves have brown content;
     The wall to me has freshness like a scent,
     And takes half animate the air,
     Making one life with its green moss and stain;
     And life with all things seems too perfect blent
     For anything of life to be aware.
     The very shades on hill, and tree, and plain,
     Where they have fallen doze, and where they doze remain.

     No hill can idler be than I;
     No stone its inter-particled vibration
     Investeth with a stiller lie;
     No heaven with a more urgent rest betrays
     The eyes that on it gaze.
     We are too near akin that thou shouldst cheat
     Me, Nature, with thy fair deceit.

     In poets floating like a water-flower
     Upon the bosom of the glassy hour,
     In skies that no man sees to move,
     Lurk untumultuous vortices of power,
     For joy too native, and for agitation
     Too instant, too entire for sense thereof,
     Motion like gnats when autumn suns are low,
     Perpetual as the prisoned feet of love
     On the heart's floors with pain-ed pace that go.
     From stones and poets you may know,
     Nothing so active is, as that which least seems so.

     For he, that conduit running wine of song,
     Then to himself does most belong,
     When he his mortal house unbars
     To the importunate and thronging feet
     That round our corporal walls unheeded beat;
     Till, all containing, he exalt
     His stature to the stars, or stars
     Narrow their heaven to his fleshly vault:
     When, like a city under ocean,
     To human things he grows a desolation,
     And is made a habitation
     For the fluctuous universe
     To lave with unimpeded motion.
     He scarcely frets the atmosphere
     With breathing, and his body shares
     The immobility of rocks;
     His heart's a drop-well of tranquillity;
     His mind more still is than the limbs of fear,
     And yet its unperturbed velocity
     The spirit of the simoom mocks.
     He round the solemn centre of his soul
     Wheels like a dervish, while his being is
     Streamed with the set of the world's harmonies,
     In the long draft of whatsoever sphere
     He lists the sweet and clear
     Clangour of his high orbit on to roll,
     So gracious is his heavenly grace;
     And the bold stars does hear,
     Every one in his airy soar,
     For evermore
     Shout to each other from the peaks of space,
     As thwart ravines of azure shouts the mountaineer.




'BY REASON OF THY LAW'.

     Here I make oath--
     Although the heart that knows its bitterness
     Hear loath,
     And credit less--
     That he who kens to meet Pain's kisses fierce
     Which hiss against his tears,
     Dread, loss, nor love frustrate,
     Nor all iniquity of the froward years
     Shall his inur-ed wing make idly bate,
     Nor of the appointed quarry his staunch sight
     To lose observance quite;
     Seal from half-sad and all-elate
     Sagacious eyes
     Ultimate Paradise;
     Nor shake his certitude of haughty fate.

     Pacing the burning shares of many dooms,
     I with stern tread do the clear-witting stars
     To judgment cite,
     If I have borne aright
     The proving of their pure-willed ordeal.
     From food of all delight
     The heavenly Falconer my heart debars,
     And tames with fearful glooms
     The haggard to His call;
     Yet sometimes comes a hand, sometimes a voice withal,
     And she sits meek now, and expects the light.

     In this Avernian sky,
     This sultry and incumbent canopy
     Of dull and doomed regret;
     Where on the unseen verges yet, O yet,
     At intervals,
     Trembles, and falls,
     Faint lightning of remembered transient sweet--
     Ah, far too sweet
     But to be sweet a little, a little sweet, and fleet;
     Leaving this pallid trace,
     This loitering and most fitful light a space,
     Still some sad space,
     For Grief to see her own poor face:-

     Here where I keep my stand
     With all o'er-anguished feet,
     And no live comfort near on any hand;
     Lo, I proclaim the unavoided term,
     When this morass of tears, then drained and firm,
     Shall be a land--
     Unshaken I affirm--
     Where seven-quired psalterings meet;
     And all the gods move with calm hand in hand,
     And eyes that know not trouble and the worm.




THE DREAD OF HEIGHT.

          If ye were blind, ye should have no sin:  but now ye say:  We
               see:  your sin remaineth.            JOHN ix. 41.


     Not the Circean wine
     Most perilous is for pain:
     Grapes of the heavens' star-loaden vine,
     Whereto the lofty-placed
     Thoughts of fair souls attain,
     Tempt with a more retributive delight,
     And do disrelish all life's sober taste.
     'Tis to have drunk too well
     The drink that is divine,
     Maketh the kind earth waste,
     And breath intolerable.

     Ah me!
     How shall my mouth content it with mortality?
     Lo, secret music, sweetest music,
     From distances of distance drifting its lone flight,
     Down the arcane where Night would perish in night,
     Like a god's loosened locks slips undulously:
     Music that is too grievous of the height
     For safe and low delight,
     Too infinite,
     For bounded hearts which yet would girth the sea!

     So let it be,
     Though sweet be great, and though my heart be small:
     So let it be,
     O music, music, though you wake in me
     No joy, no joy at all;
     Although you only wake
     Uttermost sadness, measure of delight,
     Which else I could not credit to the height,
     Did I not know,
     That ill is statured to its opposite;
     Did I not know,
     And even of sadness so,
     Of utter sadness make,
     Of extreme sad a rod to mete
     The incredible excess of unsensed sweet,
     And mystic wall of strange felicity.
     So let it be,
     Though sweet be great, and though my heart be small,
     And bitter meat
     The food of gods for men to eat;
     Yea, John ate daintier, and did tread
     Less ways of heat,
     Than whom to their wind-carpeted
     High banquet-hall,
     And golden love-feasts, the fair stars entreat.

     But ah withal,
     Some hold, some stay,
     O difficult Joy, I pray,
     Some arms of thine,
     Not only, only arms of mine!
     Lest like a weary girl I fall
     From clasping love so high,
     And lacking thus thine arms, then may
     Most hapless I
     Turn utterly to love of basest rate;
     For low they fall whose fall is from the sky.
     Yea, who me shall secure
     But I of height grown desperate
     Surcease my wing, and my lost fate
     Be dashed from pure
     To broken writhings in the shameful slime:
     Lower than man, for I dreamed higher,
     Thrust down, by how much I aspire,
     And damned with drink of immortality?
     For such things be,
     Yea, and the lowest reach of reeky Hell
     Is but made possible
     By forta'en breath of Heaven's austerest clime.

     These tidings from the vast to bring
     Needeth not doctor nor divine,
     Too well, too well
     My flesh doth know the heart-perturbing thing;
     That dread theology alone
     Is mine,
     Most native and my own;
     And ever with victorious toil
     When I have made
     Of the deific peaks dim escalade,
     My soul with anguish and recoil
     Doth like a city in an earthquake rock,
     As at my feet the abyss is cloven then,
     With deeper menace than for other men,
     Of my potential cousinship with mire;
     That all my conquered skies do grow a hollow mock,
     My fearful powers retire,
     No longer strong,
     Reversing the shook banners of their song.

     Ah, for a heart less native to high Heaven,
     A hooded eye, for jesses and restraint,
     Or for a will accipitrine to pursue!
     The veil of tutelar flesh to simple livers given,
     Or those brave-fledging fervours of the Saint,
     Whose heavenly falcon-craft doth never taint,
     Nor they in sickest time their ample virtue mew.




ORIENT ODE.

     Lo, in the sanctuaried East,
     Day, a dedicated priest
     In all his robes pontifical exprest,
     Lifteth slowly, lifteth sweetly,
     From out its Orient tabernacle drawn,
     Yon orb-ed sacrament confest
     Which sprinkles benediction through the dawn;
     And when the grave procession's ceased,
     The earth with due illustrious rite
     Blessed,--ere the frail fingers featly
     Of twilight, violet-cassocked acolyte,
     His sacerdotal stoles unvest--
     Sets, for high close of the mysterious feast,
     The sun in august exposition meetly
     Within the flaming monstrance of the West.
     O salutaris hostia,
     Quae coeli pandis ostium!
     Through breach-ed darkness' rampart, a
     Divine assaulter, art thou come!
     God whom none may live and mark!
     Borne within thy radiant ark,
     While the Earth, a joyous David,
     Dances before thee from the dawn to dark.
     The moon, O leave, pale ruined Eve;
     Behold her fair and greater daughter {1}
     Offers to thee her fruitful water,
     Which at thy first white Ave shall conceive!
     Thy gazes do on simple her
     Desirable allures confer;
     What happy comelinesses rise
     Beneath thy beautifying eyes!
     Who was, indeed, at first a maid
     Such as, with sighs, misgives she is not fair,
     And secret views herself afraid,
     Till flatteries sweet provoke the charms they swear:
     Yea, thy gazes, blissful lover,
     Make the beauties they discover!
     What dainty guiles and treacheries caught
     From artful prompting of love's artless thought
     Her lowly loveliness teach her to adorn,
     When thy plumes shiver against the conscious gates of morn!

     And so the love which is thy dower,
     Earth, though her first-frightened breast
     Against the exigent boon protest,
     (For she, poor maid, of her own power
     Has nothing in herself, not even love,
     But an unwitting void thereof),
     Gives back to thee in sanctities of flower;
     And holy odours do her bosom invest,
     That sweeter grows for being prest:
     Though dear recoil, the tremorous nurse of joy,
     From thine embrace still startles coy,
     Till Phosphor lead, at thy returning hour,
     The laughing captive from the wishing West.

     Nor the majestic heavens less
     Thy formidable sweets approve,
     Thy dreads and thy delights confess,
     That do draw, and that remove.
     Thou as a lion roar'st, O Sun,
     Upon thy satellites' vex-ed heels;
     Before thy terrible hunt thy planets run;
     Each in his frighted orbit wheels,
     Each flies through inassuageable chase,
     Since the hunt o' the world begun,
     The puissant approaches of thy face,
     And yet thy radiant leash he feels.
     Since the hunt o' the world begun,
     Lashed with terror, leashed with longing,
     The mighty course is ever run;
     Pricked with terror, leashed with longing,
     Thy rein they love, and thy rebuke they shun.
     Since the hunt o' the world began,
     With love that trembleth, fear that loveth,
     Thou join'st the woman to the man;
     And Life with Death
     In obscure nuptials moveth,
     Commingling alien, yet affin-ed breath.

     Thou art the incarnated Light
     Whose Sire is aboriginal, and beyond
     Death and resurgence of our day and night;
     From him is thy vicegerent wand
     With double potence of the black and white.
     Giver of Love, and Beauty, and Desire,
     The terror, and the loveliness, and purging,
     The deathfulness and lifefulness of fire!
     Samson's riddling meanings merging
     In thy twofold sceptre meet:
     Out of thy minatory might,
     Burning Lion, burning Lion,
     Comes the honey of all sweet,
     And out of thee, the eater, comes forth meat.
     And though, by thine alternate breath,
     Every kiss thou dost inspire
     Echoeth
     Back from the windy vaultages of death;
     Yet thy clear warranty above
     Augurs the wings of death too must
     Occult reverberations stir of love
     Crescent and life incredible;
     That even the kisses of the just
     Go down not unresurgent to the dust.
     Yea, not a kiss which I have given,
     But shall tri-umph upon my lips in heaven,
     Or cling a shameful fungus there in hell.
     Know'st thou me not, O Sun?  Yea, well
     Thou know'st the ancient miracle,
     The children know'st of Zeus and May;
     And still thou teachest them, O splendent Brother,
     To incarnate, the antique way,
     The truth which is their heritage from their Sire
     In sweet disguise of flesh from their sweet Mother.
     My fingers thou hast taught to con
     Thy flame-chorded psalterion,
     Till I can translate into mortal wire--
     Till I can translate passing well--
     The heavenly harping harmony,
     Melodious, sealed, inaudible,
     Which makes the dulcet psalter of the world's desire.
     Thou whisperest in the Moon's white ear,
     And she does whisper into mine,--
     By night together, I and she--
     With her virgin voice divine,
     The things I cannot half so sweetly tell
     As she can sweetly speak, I sweetly hear.

     By her, the Woman, does Earth live, O Lord,
     Yet she for Earth, and both in thee.
     Light out of Light!
     Resplendent and prevailing Word
     Of the Unheard!
     Not unto thee, great Image, not to thee
     Did the wise heathen bend an idle knee;
     And in an age of faith grown frore
     If I too shall adore,
     Be it accounted unto me
     A bright sciential idolatry!
     God has given thee visible thunders
     To utter thine apocalypse of wonders;
     And what want I of prophecy,
     That at the sounding from thy station
     Of thy flagrant trumpet, see
     The seals that melt, the open revelation?
     Or who a God-persuading angel needs,
     That only heeds
     The rhetoric of thy burning deeds?
     Which but to sing, if it may be,
     In worship-warranting moiety,
     So I would win
     In such a song as hath within
     A smouldering core of mystery,
     Brimm-ed with nimbler meanings up
     Than hasty Gideons in their hands may sup;--
     Lo, my suit pleads
     That thou, Isaian coal of fire,
     Touch from yon altar my poor mouth's desire,
     And the relucent song take for thy sacred meeds.

     To thine own shape
     Thou round'st the chrysolite of the grape,
     Bind'st thy gold lightnings in his veins;
     Thou storest the white garners of the rains.
     Destroyer and preserver, thou
     Who medicinest sickness, and to health
     Art the unthank-ed marrow of its wealth;
     To those apparent sovereignties we bow
     And bright appurtenances of thy brow!
     Thy proper blood dost thou not give,
     That Earth, the gusty Maenad, drink and dance?
     Art thou not life of them that live?
     Yea, in glad twinkling advent, thou dost dwell
     Within our body as a tabernacle!
     Thou bittest with thine ordinance
     The jaws of Time, and thou dost mete
     The unsustainable treading of his feet.
     Thou to thy spousal universe
     Art Husband, she thy Wife and Church;
     Who in most dusk and vidual curch,
     Her Lord being hence,
     Keeps her cold sorrows by thy hearse.
     The heavens renew their innocence
     And morning state
     But by thy sacrament communicate:
     Their weeping night the symbol of our prayers,
     Our darkened search,
     And sinful vigil desolate.
     Yea, biune in imploring dumb,
     Essential Heavens and corporal Earth await,
     The Spirit and the Bride say:  Come!
     Lo, of thy Magians I the least
     Haste with my gold, my incenses and myrrhs,
     To thy desired epiphany, from the spiced
     Regions and odorous of Song's traded East.
     Thou, for the life of all that live
     The victim daily born and sacrificed;
     To whom the pinion of this longing verse
     Beats but with fire which first thyself did give,
     To thee, O Sun--or is't perchance, to Christ?

     Ay, if men say that on all high heaven's face
     The saintly signs I trace
     Which round my stol-ed altars hold their solemn place,
     Amen, amen!  For oh, how could it be,--
     When I with wing-ed feet had run
     Through all the windy earth about,
     Quested its secret of the sun,
     And heard what thing the stars together shout,--
     I should not heed thereout
     Consenting counsel won:-
     'By this, O Singer, know we if thou see.
     When men shall say to thee:  Lo! Christ is here,
     When men shall say to thee:  Lo! Christ is there,
     Believe them:  yea, and this--then art thou seer,
     When all thy crying clear
     Is but:  Lo here! lo there!--ah me, lo everywhere!'

     {1} The earth.




NEW YEAR'S CHIMES.

     What is the song the stars sing?
       (And a million songs are as song of one.)
     This is the song the stars sing:
       Sweeter song's none.

     One to set, and many to sing,
       (And a million songs are as song of one),
     One to stand, and many to cling,
     The many things, and the one Thing,
       The one that runs not, the many that run.

     The ever new weaveth the ever old
       (And a million songs are as song of one).
     Ever telling the never told;
     The silver saith, and the said is gold,
       And done ever the never done.

     The chase that's chased is the Lord o' the chase
       (And a million songs are as song of one),
     And the pursued cries on the race;
       And the hounds in leash are the hounds that run.

     Hidden stars by the shown stars' sheen;
       (And a million suns are but as one);
     Colours unseen by the colours seen,
     And sounds unheard heard sounds between,
       And a night is in the light of the sun.

     An ambuscade of light in night,
       (And a million secrets are but as one),
     And a night is dark in the sun's light,
       And a world in the world man looks upon.

     Hidden stars by the shown stars' wings,
       (And a million cycles are but as one),
     And a world with unapparent strings
     Knits the simulant world of things;
       Behold, and vision thereof is none.

     The world above in the world below
       (And a million worlds are but as one),
     And the One in all; as the sun's strength so
     Strives in all strength, glows in all glow
       Of the earth that wits not, and man thereon.

     Braced in its own fourfold embrace
       (And a million strengths are as strength of one),
     And round it all God's arms of grace,
     The world, so as the Vision says,
       Doth with great lightning-tramples run.

     And thunder bruiteth into thunder,
       (And a million sounds are as sound of one),
     From stellate peak to peak is tossed a voice of wonder,
     And the height stoops down to the depths thereunder,
       And sun leans forth to his brother-sun.

     And the more ample years unfold
       (With a million songs as song of one),
     A little new of the ever old,
     A little told of the never told,
       Added act of the never done.

     Loud the descant, and low the theme,
       (A million songs are as song of one);
     And the dream of the world is dream in dream,
     But the one Is is, or nought could seem;
       And the song runs round to the song begun.

     This is the song the stars sing,
       (Ton-ed all in time);
     Tintinnabulous, tuned to ring
     A multitudinous-single thing,
       Rung all in rhyme.




FROM THE NIGHT OF FOREBEING.
     An ode after Easter.

     In the chaos of preordination, and night of our forebeings.--

                                           SIR THOMAS BROWNE.

     Et lux in tenebris erat, et tenebrae eam non comprehenderunt.--

                                           ST. JOHN.

     Cast wide the folding doorways of the East,
     For now is light increased!
     And the wind-besomed chambers of the air,
     See they be garnished fair;
     And look the ways exhale some precious odours,
     And set ye all about wild-breathing spice,
     Most fit for Paradise.
     Now is no time for sober gravity,
     Season enough has Nature to be wise;
     But now distinct, with raiment glittering free,
     Shake she the ringing rafters of the skies
     With festal footing and bold joyance sweet,
     And let the earth be drunken and carouse!
     For lo, into her house
     Spring is come home with her world-wandering feet,
     And all things are made young with young desires;
     And all for her is light increased
     In yellow stars and yellow daffodils,
     And East to West, and West to East,
     Fling answering welcome-fires,
     By dawn and day-fall, on the jocund hills.
     And ye, winged minstrels of her fair meinie,
     Being newly coated in glad livery,
     Upon her steps attend,
     And round her treading dance and without end
     Reel your shrill lutany.
     What popular breath her coming does out-tell
     The garrulous leaves among!
     What little noises stir and pass
     From blade to blade along the voluble grass!
     O Nature, never-done
     Ungaped-at Pentecostal miracle,
     We hear thee, each man in his proper tongue!
     Break, elemental children, break ye loose
     From the strict frosty rule
     Of grey-beard Winter's school.
     Vault, O young winds, vault in your tricksome courses
     Upon the snowy steeds that reinless use
     In coerule pampas of the heaven to run;
     Foaled of the white sea-horses,
     Washed in the lambent waters of the sun.
     Let even the slug-abed snail upon the thorn
     Put forth a conscious horn!
     Mine elemental co-mates, joy each one;
     And ah, my foster-brethren, seem not sad--
     No, seem not sad,
     That my strange heart and I should be so little glad.
     Suffer me at your leafy feast
     To sit apart, a somewhat alien guest,
     And watch your mirth,
     Unsharing in the liberal laugh of earth;
     Yet with a sympathy,
     Begot of wholly sad and half-sweet memory--
     The little sweetness making grief complete;
     Faint wind of wings from hours that distant beat,
     When I, I too,
     Was once, O wild companions, as are you,
     Ran with such wilful feet.
     Wraith of a recent day and dead,
     Risen wanly overhead,
     Frail, strengthless as a noon-belated moon,
     Or as the glazing eyes of watery heaven,
     When the sick night sinks into deathly swoon.

     A higher and a solemn voice
     I heard through your gay-hearted noise;
     A solemn meaning and a stiller voice
     Sounds to me from far days when I too shall rejoice,
     Nor more be with your jollity at strife.
     O prophecy
     Of things that are, and are not, and shall be!
     The great-vanned Angel March
     Hath trumpeted
     His clangorous 'Sleep no more' to all the dead--
     Beat his strong vans o'er earth, and air, and sea.
     And they have heard;
     Hark to the Jubilate of the bird
     For them that found the dying way to life!
     And they have heard,
     And quicken to the great precursive word;
     Green spray showers lightly down the cascade of the larch;
     The graves are riven,
     And the Sun comes with power amid the clouds of heaven!
     Before his way
     Went forth the trumpet of the March;
     Before his way, before his way
     Dances the pennon of the May!
     O earth, unchilded, widowed Earth, so long
     Lifting in patient pine and ivy-tree
     Mournful belief and steadfast prophecy,
     Behold how all things are made true!
     Behold your bridegroom cometh in to you,
     Exceeding glad and strong.
     Raise up your eyes, O raise your eyes abroad!
     No more shall you sit sole and vidual,
     Searching, in servile pall,
     Upon the hieratic night the star-sealed sense of all:
     Rejoice, O barren, and look forth abroad!
     Your children gathered back to your embrace
     See with a mother's face.
     Look up, O mortals, and the portent heed;
     In very deed,
     Washed with new fire to their irradiant birth,
     Reintegrated are the heavens and earth!
     From sky to sod,
     The world's unfolded blossom smells of God.

     O imagery
     Of that which was the first, and is the last!
     For as the dark, profound nativity,
     God saw the end should be,
     When the world's infant horoscope He cast.
     Unshackled from the bright Phoebean awe,
     In leaf, flower, mould, and tree,
     Resolved into dividual liberty,
     Most strengthless, unparticipant, inane,
     Or suffered the ill peace of lethargy,
     Lo, the Earth eased of rule:
     Unsummered, granted to her own worst smart
     The dear wish of the fool--
     Disintegration, merely which man's heart
     For freedom understands,
     Amid the frog-like errors from the damp
     And quaking swamp
     Of the low popular levels spawned in all the lands.
     But thou, O Earth, dost much disdain
     The bondage of thy waste and futile reign,
     And sweetly to the great compulsion draw
     Of God's alone true-manumitting law,
     And Freedom, only which the wise intend,
     To work thine innate end.
     Over thy vacant counterfeit of death
     Broods with soft urgent breath
     Love, that is child of Beauty and of Awe:
     To intercleavage of sharp warring pain,
     As of contending chaos come again,
     Thou wak'st, O Earth,
     And work'st from change to change and birth to birth
     Creation old as hope, and new as sight;
     For meed of toil not vain,
     Hearing once more the primal fiat toll:-
     'Let there be light!'
     And there is light!
     Light flagrant, manifest;
     Light to the zenith, light from pole to pole;
     Light from the East that waxeth to the West,
     And with its puissant goings-forth
     Encroaches on the South and on the North;
     And with its great approaches does prevail
     Upon the sullen fastness of the height,
     And summoning its levied power
     Crescent and confident through the crescent hour,
     Goes down with laughters on the subject vale.
     Light flagrant, manifest;
     Light to the sentient closeness of the breast,
     Light to the secret chambers of the brain!
     And thou up-floatest, warm, and newly-bathed,
     Earth, through delicious air,
     And with thine own apparent beauties swathed,
     Wringing the waters from thine arborous hair;
     That all men's hearts, which do behold and see,
     Grow weak with their exceeding much desire,
     And turn to thee on fire,
     Enamoured with their utter wish of thee,
     Anadyomene!
     What vine-outquickening life all creatures sup,
     Feel, for the air within its sapphire cup
     How it does leap, and twinkle headily!
     Feel, for Earth's bosom pants, and heaves her scarfing sea;
     And round and round in bacchanal rout reel the swift spheres
     intemperably!

     My little-worlded self! the shadows pass
     In this thy sister-world, as in a glass,
     Of all processions that revolve in thee:
     Not only of cyclic Man
     Thou here discern'st the plan,
     Not only of cyclic Man, but of the cyclic Me.
     Not solely of Mortality's great years
     The reflex just appears,
     But thine own bosom's year, still circling round
     In ample and in ampler gyre
     Toward the far completion, wherewith crowned,
     Love unconsumed shall chant in his own furnace-fire.
     How many trampled and deciduous joys
     Enrich thy soul for joys deciduous still,
     Before the distance shall fulfil
     Cyclic unrest with solemn equipoise!
     Happiness is the shadow of things past,
     Which fools still take for that which is to be!
     And not all foolishly:
     For all the past, read true, is prophecy,
     And all the firsts are hauntings of some Last,
     And all the springs are flash-lights of one Spring.
     Then leaf, and flower, and falless fruit
     Shall hang together on the unyellowing bough;
     And silence shall be Music mute
     For her surcharg-ed heart.  Hush thou!
     These things are far too sure that thou should'st dream
     Thereof, lest they appear as things that seem.

     Shade within shade! for deeper in the glass
     Now other imaged meanings pass;
     And as the man, the poet there is read.
     Winter with me, alack!
     Winter on every hand I find:
     Soul, brain, and pulses dead;
     The mind no further by the warm sense fed,
     The soul weak-stirring in the arid mind,
     More tearless-weak to flash itself abroad
     Than the earth's life beneath the frost-scorched sod.
     My lips have drought, and crack,
     By laving music long unvisited.
     Beneath the austere and macerating rime
     Draws back constricted in its icy urns
     The genial flame of Earth, and there
     With torment and with tension does prepare
     The lush disclosures of the vernal time.
     All joys draw inward to their icy urns,
     Tormented by constraining rime,
     And there
     With undelight and throe prepare
     The bounteous efflux of the vernal time.
     Nor less beneath compulsive Law
     Rebuk-ed draw
     The numb-ed musics back upon my heart;
     Whose yet-triumphant course I know
     And prevalent pulses forth shall start,
     Like cataracts that with thunderous hoof charge the disbanding snow.
     All power is bound
     In quickening refusal so;
     And silence is the lair of sound;
     In act its impulse to deliver,
     With fluctuance and quiver
     The endeavouring thew grows rigid;
     Strong
     From its retracted coil strikes the resilient song.

     Giver of spring,
     And song, and every young new thing!
     Thou only seest in me, so stripped and bare,
     The lyric secret waiting to be born,
     The patient term allowed
     Before it stretch and flutteringly unfold
     Its rumpled webs of amethyst-freaked, diaphanous gold.
     And what hard task abstracts me from delight,
     Filling with hopeless hope and dear despair
     The still-born day and parch-ed fields of night,
     That my old way of song, no longer fair,
     For lack of serene care,
     Is grown a stony and a weed-choked plot,
     Thou only know'st aright,
     Thou only know'st, for I know not.
     How many songs must die that this may live!
     And shall this most rash hope and fugitive,
     Fulfilled with beauty and with might
     In days whose feet are rumorous on the air,
     Make me forget to grieve
     For songs which might have been, nor ever were?
     Stern the denial, the travail slow,
     The struggling wall will scantly grow:
     And though with that dread rite of sacrifice
     Ordained for during edifice,
     How long, how long ago!
     Into that wall which will not thrive
     I build myself alive,
     Ah, who shall tell me will the wall uprise?
     Thou wilt not tell me, who dost only know!
     Yet still in mind I keep,
     He which observes the wind shall hardly sow,
     He which regards the clouds shall hardly reap.
     Thine ancient way!  I give,
     Nor wit if I receive;
     Risk all, who all would gain:  and blindly.  Be it so.

     'And blindly,' said I?--No!
     That saying I unsay:  the wings
     Hear I not in praevenient winnowings
     Of coming songs, that lift my hair and stir it?
     What winds with music wet do the sweet storm foreshow!
     Utter stagnation
     Is the solstitial slumber of the spirit,
     The blear and blank negation of all life:
     But these sharp questionings mean strife, and strife
     Is the negation of negation.
     The thing from which I turn my troubled look
     Fearing the gods' rebuke;
     That perturbation putting glory on,
     As is the golden vortex in the West
     Over the foundered sun;
     That--but low breathe it, lest the Nemesis
     Unchild me, vaunting this--
     Is bliss, the hid, hugged, swaddled bliss!
     O youngling Joy carest!
     That on my now first-mothered breast
     Pliest the strange wonder of thine infant lip,
     What this aghast surprise of keenest panging,
     Wherefrom I blench, and cry thy soft mouth rest?
     Ah hold, withhold, and let the sweet mouth slip!
     So, with such pain, recoils the woolly dam,
     Unused, affrighted, from her yeanling lamb:
     I, one with her in cruel fellowship,
     Marvel what unmaternal thing I am.

     Nature, enough! within thy glass
     Too many and too stern the shadows pass.
     In this delighted season, flaming
     For thy resurrection-feast,
     Ah, more I think the long ensepulture cold,
     Than stony winter rolled
     From the unsealed mouth of the holy East;
     The snowdrop's saintly stoles less heed
     Than the snow-cloistered penance of the seed.
     'Tis the weak flesh reclaiming
     Against the ordinance
     Which yet for just the accepting spirit scans.
     Earth waits, and patient heaven,
     Self-bonded God doth wait
     Thrice-promulgated bans
     Of his fair nuptial-date.
     And power is man's,
     With that great word of 'wait,'
     To still the sea of tears,
     And shake the iron heart of Fate.
     In that one word is strong
     An else, alas, much-mortal song;
     With sight to pass the frontier of all spheres,
     And voice which does my sight such wrong.

     Not without fortitude I wait
     The dark majestical ensuit
     Of destiny, nor peevish rate
     Calm-knowledged Fate.
     I, that no part have in the time's bragged way,
     And its loud bruit
     I, in this house so rifted, marred,
     So ill to live in, hard to leave;
     I, so star-weary, over-warred,
     That have no joy in this your day--
     Rather foul fume englutting, that of day
     Confounds all ray--
     But only stand aside and grieve;
     I yet have sight beyond the smoke,
     And kiss the gods' feet, though they wreak
     Upon me stroke and again stroke;
     And this my seeing is not weak.
     The Woman I behold, whose vision seek
     All eyes and know not; t'ward whom climb
     The steps o' the world, and beats all wing of rhyme,
     And knows not; 'twixt the sun and moon
     Her inexpressible front enstarred
     Tempers the wrangling spheres to tune;
     Their divergent harmonies
     Concluded in the concord of her eyes,
     And vestal dances of her glad regard.
     I see, which fretteth with surmise
     Much heads grown unsagacious-grey,
     The slow aim of wise-hearted Time,
     Which folded cycles within cycles cloak:
     We pass, we pass, we pass; this does not pass away,
     But holds the furrowing earth still harnessed to its yoke.
     The stars still write their golden purposes
     On heaven's high palimpsest, and no man sees,
     Nor any therein Daniel; I do hear
     From the revolving year
     A voice which cries:
     'All dies;
     Lo, how all dies!  O seer,
     And all things too arise:
     All dies, and all is born;
     But each resurgent morn, behold, more near the Perfect Morn.'

     Firm is the man, and set beyond the cast
     Of Fortune's game, and the iniquitous hour,
     Whose falcon soul sits fast,
     And not intends her high sagacious tour
     Or ere the quarry sighted; who looks past
     To slow much sweet from little instant sour,
     And in the first does always see the last.




ANY SAINT.

     His shoulder did I hold
     Too high that I, o'erbold
           Weak one,
        Should lean thereon.

     But He a little hath
     Declined His stately path
           And my
        Feet set more high;

     That the slack arm may reach
     His shoulder, and faint speech
           Stir
        His unwithering hair.

     And bolder now and bolder
     I lean upon that shoulder
           So dear
        He is and near:

     And with His aureole
     The tresses of my soul
           Are blent
        In wished content.

     Yes, this too gentle Lover
     Hath flattering words to move her
           To pride
        By His sweet side.

     Ah, Love! somewhat let be!
     Lest my humility
           Grow weak
        When thou dost speak!

     Rebate thy tender suit,
     Lest to herself impute
           Some worth
        Thy bride of earth!

     A maid too easily
     Conceits herself to be
           Those things
        Her lover sings;

     And being straitly wooed,
     Believes herself the Good
           And Fair
        He seeks in her.

     Turn something of Thy look,
     And fear me with rebuke,
           That I
        May timorously

     Take tremors in Thy arms,
     And with contriv-ed charms
           Allure
        A love unsure.

     Not to me, not to me,
     Builded so flawfully,
           O God,
        Thy humbling laud!

     Not to this man, but Man,--
     Universe in a span;
           Point
        Of the spheres conjoint;

     In whom eternally
     Thou, Light, dost focus Thee!--
           Didst pave
        The way o' the wave;

     Rivet with stars the Heaven,
     For causeways to Thy driven
           Car
        In its coming far

     Unto him, only him;
     In Thy deific whim
           Didst bound
        Thy works' great round

     In this small ring of flesh;
     The sky's gold-knotted mesh
           Thy wrist
        Did only twist

     To take him in that net.--
     Man! swinging-wicket set
           Between
        The Unseen and Seen;

     Lo, God's two worlds immense,
     Of spirit and of sense,
           Wed
        In this narrow bed;

     Yea, and the midge's hymn
     Answers the seraphim
           Athwart
        Thy body's court!

     Great arm-fellow of God!
     To the ancestral clod
           Kin,
        And to cherubin;

     Bread predilectedly
     O' the worm and Deity!
           Hark,
        O God's clay-sealed Ark,

     To praise that fits thee, clear
     To the ear within the ear,
           But dense
        To clay-sealed sense.

     All the Omnific made
     When in a word he said,
           (Mystery!)
        He uttered THEE;

     Thee His great utterance bore,
     O secret metaphor
           Of what
        Thou dream'st no jot!

     Cosmic metonymy!
     Weak world-unshuttering key!
           One
        Seal of Solomon!

     Trope that itself not scans
     Its huge significance,
           Which tries
        Cherubic eyes.

     Primer where the angels all
     God's grammar spell in small,
           Nor spell
        The highest too well.

     Point for the great descants
     Of starry disputants;
           Equation
        Of creation.

     Thou meaning, couldst thou see,
     Of all which dafteth thee;
           So plain,
        It mocks thy pain;

     Stone of the Law indeed,
     Thine own self couldst thou read;
           Thy bliss
        Within thee is.

     Compost of Heaven and mire,
     Slow foot and swift desire!
           Lo,
        To have Yes, choose No;

     Gird, and thou shalt unbind;
     Seek not, and thou shalt find;
           To eat,
        Deny thy meat;

     And thou shalt be fulfilled
     With all sweet things unwilled:
           So best
        God loves to jest

     With children small--a freak
     Of heavenly hide-and-seek
           Fit
        For thy wayward wit,

     Who art thyself a thing
     Of whim and wavering;
           Free
        When His wings pen thee;

     Sole fully blest, to feel
     God whistle thee at heel;
           Drunk up
        As a dew-drop,

     When He bends down, sun-wise,
     Intemperable eyes;
           Most proud,
        When utterly bowed.

     To feel thyself and be
     His dear nonentity--
           Caught
        Beyond human thought

     In the thunder-spout of Him,
     Until thy being dim,
           And be
        Dead deathlessly.

     Stoop, stoop; for thou dost fear
     The nettle's wrathful spear,
           So slight
        Art thou of might!

     Rise; for Heaven hath no frown
     When thou to thee pluck'st down,
           Strong clod!
        The neck of God.




ASSUMPTA MARIA.

     'Thou needst not sing new songs, but say the old.'--COWLEY.


     Mortals, that behold a Woman,
       Rising 'twixt the Moon and Sun;
     Who am I the heavens assume? an
       All am I, and I am one.

     Multitudinous ascend I,
       Dreadful as a battle arrayed,
     For I bear you whither tend I;
       Ye are I:  be undismayed!
     I, the Ark that for the graven
       Tables of the Law was made;
     Man's own heart was one, one Heaven,
       Both within my womb were laid.
         For there Anteros with Eros
           Heaven with man conjoin-ed was,--
         Twin-stone of the Law, Ischyros,
           Agios Athanatos.

     I, the flesh-girt Paradises
       Gardenered by the Adam new,
     Daintied o'er with sweet devices
       Which He loveth, for He grew.
     I, the boundless strict savannah
       Which God's leaping feet go through;
     I, the heaven whence the Manna,
       Weary Israel, slid on you!
         He the Anteros and Eros,
           I the body, He the Cross;
         He upbeareth me, Ischyros,
           Agios Athanatos!

     I am Daniel's mystic Mountain,
       Whence the mighty stone was rolled;
     I am the four Rivers' fountain,
       Watering Paradise of old;
     Cloud down-raining the Just One am,
       Danae of the Shower of Gold;
     I the Hostel of the Sun am;
       He the Lamb, and I the Fold.
         He the Anteros and Eros,
           I the body, He the Cross;
         He is fast to me, Ischyros,
           Agios Athanatos!

     I, the presence-hall where Angels
       Do enwheel their plac-ed King--
     Even my thoughts which, without change else,
       Cyclic burn and cyclic sing.
     To the hollow of Heaven transplanted,
       I a breathing Eden spring,
     Where with venom all outpanted
       Lies the slimed Curse shrivelling.
         For the brazen Serpent clear on
           That old fang-ed knowledge shone;
         I to Wisdom rise, Ischyron,
           Agion Athanaton!

     See in highest heaven pavilioned
       Now the maiden Heaven rest,
     The many-breasted sky out-millioned
       By the splendours of her vest.
     Lo, the Ark this holy tide is
       The un-handmade Temple's guest,
     And the dark Egyptian bride is
       Whitely to the Spouse-Heart prest!
         He the Anteros and Eros,
           Nail me to Thee, sweetest Cross!
         He is fast to me, Ischyros,
           Agios Athanatos!

     'Tell me, tell me, O Belov-ed,
       Where Thou dost in mid-day feed!
     For my wanderings are reprov-ed,
       And my heart is salt with need.'
     'Thine own self not spellest God in,
       Nor the lisping papyrus reed?
     Follow where the flocks have trodden,
       Follow where the shepherds lead.'
         He, the Anteros and Eros,
           Mounts me in AEgyptic car,
         Twin-yoked; leading me, Ischyros,
           Trembling to the untempted Far.

     'Make me chainlets, silvern, golden,
       I that sow shall surely reap;
     While as yet my Spouse is holden
       Like a Lion in mountained sleep.'
     'Make her chainlets, silvern, golden,
       She hath sown and she shall reap;
     Look up to the mountains olden,
       Whence help comes with lioned leap.'
         By what gushed the bitter Spear on,
           Pain, which sundered, maketh one;
         Crucified to Him, Ischyron,
           Agion Athanaton!

     Then commanded and spake to me
       He who framed all things that be;
     And my Maker entered through me,
       In my tent His rest took He.
     Lo! He standeth, Spouse and Brother;
       I to Him, and He to me,
     Who upraised me where my mother
       Fell, beneath the apple-tree.
         Risen 'twixt Anteros and Eros,
           Blood and Water, Moon and Sun,
         He upbears me, He Ischyros,
           I bear Him, the Athanaton!

     Where is laid the Lord arisen?
       In the light we walk in gloom;
     Though the sun has burst his prison,
       We know not his biding-room.
     Tell us where the Lord sojourneth,
       For we find an empty tomb.
     'Whence He sprung, there He returneth,
       Mystic Sun,--the Virgin's Womb.'
         Hidden Sun, His beams so near us,
           Cloud enpillared as He was
         From of old, there He, Ischyros,
           Waits our search, Athanatos.

     Who will give Him me for brother,
       Counted of my family,
     Sucking the sweet breasts of my Mother?--
       I His flesh, and mine is He;
     To my Bread myself the bread is,
       And my Wine doth drink me:  see,
     His left hand beneath my head is,
       His right hand embraceth me!
         Sweetest Anteros and Eros,
           Lo, her arms He leans across;
         Dead that we die not, stooped to rear us,
           Thanatos Athanatos.

     Who is She, in candid vesture,
       Rushing up from out the brine?
     Treading with resilient gesture
       Air, and with that Cup divine?
     She in us and we in her are,
       Beating Godward:  all that pine,
     Lo, a wonder and a terror!
       The Sun hath blushed the Sea to Wine!
         He the Anteros and Eros,
           She the Bride and Spirit; for
         Now the days of promise near us,
           And the Sea shall be no more.

     Open wide thy gates, O Virgin,
       That the King may enter thee!
     At all gates the clangours gurge in,
       God's paludament lightens, see!
     Camp of Angels!  Well we even
       Of this thing may doubtful be,--
     If thou art assumed to Heaven,
       Or is Heaven assumed to thee!
         Consummatum.  Christ the promised,
           Thy maiden realm is won, O Strong!
         Since to such sweet Kingdom comest,
           Remember me, poor Thief of Song!

     Cadent fails the stars along:-
       Mortals, that behold a woman
         Rising 'twixt the Moon and Sun;
       Who am I the heavens assume? an
         All am I, and I am one.




THE AFTER WOMAN.

     Daughter of the ancient Eve,
     We know the gifts ye gave--and give.
     Who knows the gifts which YOU shall give,
     Daughter of the newer Eve?
     You, if my soul be augur, you
     Shall--O what shall you not, Sweet, do?
     The celestial traitress play,
     And all mankind to bliss betray;
     With sacrosanct cajoleries
     And starry treachery of your eyes,
     Tempt us back to Paradise!
     Make heavenly trespass;--ay, press in
     Where faint the fledge-foot seraphin,
     Blest Fool!  Be ensign of our wars,
     And shame us all to warriors!
     Unbanner your bright locks,--advance
     Girl, their gilded puissance,
     I' the mystic vaward, and draw on
     After the lovely gonfalon
     Us to out-folly the excess
     Of your sweet foolhardiness;
     To adventure like intense
     Assault against Omnipotence!

     Give me song, as She is, new,
     Earth should turn in time thereto!
     New, and new, and thrice so new,
     All old sweets, New Sweet, meant you!
     Fair, I had a dream of thee,
     When my young heart beat prophecy,
     And in apparition elate
     Thy little breasts knew wax-ed great,
     Sister of the Canticle,
     And thee for God grown marriageable.
     How my desire desired your day,
     That, wheeled in rumour on its way,
     Shook me thus with presentience!  Then
     Eden's lopped tree shall shoot again:
     For who Christ's eyes shall miss, with those
     Eyes for evident nuncios?
     Or who be tardy to His call
     In your accents augural?

     Who shall not feel the Heavens hid
     Impend, at tremble of your lid,
     And divine advent shine avowed
     Under that dim and lucid cloud;
     Yea, 'fore the silver apocalypse
     Fail, at the unsealing of your lips?
     When to love YOU is (O Christ's Spouse!)
     To love the beauty of His house;
     Then come the Isaian days; the old
     Shall dream; and our young men behold
     Vision--yea, the vision of Thabor mount,
     Which none to other shall recount,
     Because in all men's hearts shall be
     The seeing and the prophecy.
     For ended is the Mystery Play,
     When Christ is life, and you the way;
     When Egypt's spoils are Israel's right,
     And Day fulfils the married arms of Night.
     But here my lips are still.
     Until
     You and the hour shall be revealed,
     This song is sung and sung not, and its words are sealed.




GRACE OF THE WAY.

     'My brother!' spake she to the sun;
       The kindred kisses of the stars
     Were hers; her feet were set upon
       The moon.  If slumber solved the bars

     Of sense, or sense transpicuous grown
       Fulfill-ed seeing unto sight,
     I know not; nor if 'twas my own
       Ingathered self that made her night.

     The windy trammel of her dress,
       Her blown locks, took my soul in mesh;
     God's breath they spake, with visibleness
       That stirred the raiment of her flesh:

     And sensible, as her blown were,
       Beyond the precincts of her form
     I felt the woman flow from her--
       A calm of intempestuous storm.

     I failed against the affluent tide;
       Out of this abject earth of me
     I was translated and enskied
       Into the heavenly-regioned She.

     Now of that vision I bereaven
       This knowledge keep, that may not dim:-
     Short arm needs man to reach to Heaven,
       So ready is Heaven to stoop to him.

     Which sets, to measure of man's feet,
       No alien Tree for trysting-place;
     And who can read, may read the sweet
       Direction in his Lady's face.

     And pass and pass the daily crowd,
       Unwares, occulted Paradise;
     Love the lost plot cries silver-loud,
       Nor any know the tongue he cries.

     The light is in the darkness, and
       The darkness doth not comprehend:
     God hath no haste; and God's sons stand
       Yet a Day, tarrying for the end.

     Dishonoured Rahab still hath hid,
       Yea still, within her house of shame,
     The messengers by Jesus bid
       Forerun the coming of His Name.

     The Word was flesh, and crucified,
       From the beginning, and blasphemed:
     Its profaned raiment men divide,
       Damned by what, reverenced, had redeemed.

     Thy Lady, was thy heart not blind,
       One hour gave to thy witless trust
     The key thou go'st about to find;
       And thou hast dropped it in the dust.

     Of her, the Way's one mortal grace,
       Own, save thy seeing be all forgot,
     That truly, God was in this place,
       And thou, unbless-ed, knew'st it not.

     But some have eyes, and will not see;
       And some would see, and have not eyes;
     And fail the tryst, yet find the Tree,
       And take the lesson for the prize.




RETROSPECT.

     Alas, and I have sung
     Much song of matters vain,
     And a heaven-sweetened tongue
     Turned to unprofiting strain
     Of vacant things, which though
     Even so they be, and throughly so,
     It is no boot at all for thee to know,
     But babble and false pain.

     What profit if the sun
     Put forth his radiant thews,
     And on his circuit run,
     Even after my device, to this and to that use;
     And the true Orient, Christ,
     Make not His cloud of thee?
     I have sung vanity,
     And nothing well devised.

     And though the cry of stars
     Give tongue before his way
     Goldenly as I say,
     And each from wide Saturnus to hot Mars
     He calleth by its name,
     Lest that its bright feet stray;
     And thou have lore of all,
     But to thine own Sun's call
     Thy path disorbed hast never wit to tame;
     It profits not withal,
     And my rede is but lame.

     Only that, 'mid vain vaunt
     Of wisdom ignorant,
     A little kiss upon the feet of Love
     My hasty verse has stayed
     Sometimes a space to plant:
     It has not wholly strayed,
     Not wholly missed near sweet, fanning proud plumes above.

     Therefore I do repent
     That with religion vain,
     And misconceiv-ed pain,
     I have my music bent
     To waste on bootless things its skiey-gendered rain:
     Yet shall a wiser day
     Fulfil more heavenly way,
     And with approv-ed music clear this slip
     I trust in God most sweet;
     Meantime the silent lip,
     Meantime the climbing feet.





A NARROW VESSEL.





Being a little dramatic sequence on the aspect of primitive girl-
     nature
     towards a love beyond its capacities.




A GIRL'S SIN.

     I.--In her eyes.

     Cross child! red, and frowning so?
       'I, the day just over,
     Gave a lock of hair to--no!
       How DARE you say, my lover?'

     He asked you?--Let me understand;
       Come, child, let me sound it!
     'Of course, he WOULD have asked it, and--
       And so--somehow--he--found it.

     'He told it out with great loud eyes--
       Men have such little wit!
     His sin I ever will chastise
       Because I gave him it.

     'Shameless in me the gift, alas!
       In him his open bliss:
     But for the privilege he has
       A thousand he shall miss!

     'His eyes, where once I dreadless laughed,
       Call up a burning blot:
     I hate him, for his shameful craft
       That asked by asking not!'

     Luckless boy! and all for hair
       He never asked, you said?
     'Not just--but then he gazed--I swear
       He gazed it from my head!

     'His silence on my cheek like breath
       I felt in subtle way;
     More sweet than aught another saith
       Was what he did not say.

     'He'll think me vanquished, for this lapse,
       Who should be above him;
     Perhaps he'll think me light; perhaps--
       Perhaps he'll think I--love him!

     'Are his eyes conscious and elate,
       I hate him that I blush;
     Or are they innocent, still I hate--
       They mean a thing's to hush.

     'Before he nought amiss could do,
       Now all things show amiss;
     'Twas all my fault, I know that true,
       But all my fault was his.

     'I hate him for his mute distress,
       'Tis insult he should care!
     Because my heart's all humbleness,
       All pride is in my air.

     'With him, each favour that I do
       Is bold suit's hallowing text;
     Each gift a bastion levelled, to
       The next one and the next.

     'Each wish whose grant may him befall
       Is clogged by those withstood;
     He trembles, hoping one means all,
       And I, lest perhaps it should.

     'Behind me piecemeal gifts I cast,
       My fleeing self to save;
     And that's the thing must go at last,
       For that's the thing he'd have.

     'My lock the enforc-ed steel did grate
       To cut; its root-thrills came
     Down to my bosom.  It might sate
       His lust for my poor shame!

     'His sifted dainty this should be
       For a score ambrosial years!
     But his too much humility
       Alarums me with fears.

     'My gracious grace a breach he counts
       For graceless escalade;
     And, though he's silent ere he mounts,
       My watch is not betrayed.

     'My heart hides from my soul he's sweet:
       Ah dread, if he divine!
     One touch, I might fall at his feet,
       And he might rise from mine.

     'To hear him praise my eyes' brown gleams
       Was native, safe delight;
     But now it usurpation seems,
       Because I've given him right.

     'Before I'd have him not remove,
       Now would not have him near;
     With sacrifice I called on Love,
       And the apparition's Fear.'

     Foolish to give it!--'Twas my whim,
       When he might parted be,
     To think that I should stay by him
       In a little piece of me.

     'He always said my hair was soft--
       What touches he will steal!
     Each touch and look (and he'll look oft)
       I almost thought I'd feel.

     'And then, when first he saw the hair,
       To think his dear amazement!
     As if he wished from skies a star,
       And found it in his casement.

     'He's kiss the lock--and I had toyed
       With dreamed delight of this:
     But ah, in proof, delight was void--
       I could not SEE his kiss!'

     So, fond one, half this agony
       Were spared, which my hand hushes,
     Could you have played, Sweet, the sweet spy,
       And blushed not for your blushes!




A GIRL'S SIN.

     II.--In his eyes.

     Can I forget her cruelty
     Who, brown miracle, gave you me?
     Or with unmoisted eyes think on
     The proud surrender overgone,
     (Lowlihead in haughty dress),
     Of the tender tyranness?
     And ere thou for my joy was given,
     How rough the road to that blest heaven!
     With what pangs I fore-expiated
     Thy cold outlawry from her head;
     How was I trampled and brought low,
     Because her virgin neck was so;
     How thralled beneath the jealous state
     She stood at point to abdicate;
     How sacrificed, before to me
     She sacrificed her pride and thee;
     How did she, struggling to abase
     Herself to do me strange, sweet grace,
     Enforce unwitting me to share
     Her throes and abjectness with her;
     Thence heightening that hour when her lover
     Her grace, with trembling, should discover,
     And in adoring trouble be
     Humbled at her humility!
     And with what pitilessness was I
     After slain, to pacify
     The uneasy manes of her shame,
     Her haunting blushes!--Mine the blame:
     What fair injustice did I rue
     For what I--did not tempt her to?
     Nor aught the judging maid might win
     Me to assoil from HER sweet sin.
     But nought were extreme punishment
     For that beyond-divine content,
     When my with-thee-first-giddied eyes
     Stooped ere their due on Paradise!
     O hour of consternating bliss
     When I heavened me in thy kiss;
     Thy softness (daring overmuch!)
     Profan-ed with my licensed touch;
     Worshipped, with tears, on happy knee,
     Her doubt, her trust, her shyness free,
     Her timorous audacity!




LOVE DECLARED.

     I looked, she drooped, and neither spake, and cold,
     We stood, how unlike all forecasted thought
     Of that desir-ed minute!  Then I leaned
     Doubting; whereat she lifted--oh, brave eyes
     Unfrighted:--forward like a wind-blown flame
     Came bosom and mouth to mine!
                                That falling kiss
     Touching long-laid expectance, all went up
     Suddenly into passion; yea, the night
     Caught, blazed, and wrapt us round in vibrant fire.


        Time's beating wing subsided, and the winds
     Caught up their breathing, and the world's great pulse
     Stayed in mid-throb, and the wild train of life
     Reeled by, and left us stranded on a hush.
     This moment is a statue unto Love
     Carved from a fair white silence.
                                Lo, he stands
     Within us--are we not one now, one, one roof,
     His roof, and the partition of weak flesh
     Gone down before him, and no more, for ever?--
     Stands like a bird new-lit, and as he lit,
     Poised in our quiet being; only, only
     Within our shaken hearts the air of passion,
     Cleft by his sudden coming, eddies still
     And whirs round his enchanted movelessness.


     A film of trance between two stirrings!  Lo,
     It bursts; yet dream's snapped links cling round the limbs
     Of waking:  like a running evening stream
     Which no man hears, or sees, or knows to run,
     (Glazed with dim quiet), save that there the moon
     Is shattered to a creamy flicker of flame,
     Our eyes' sweet trouble were hid, save that the love
     Trembles a little on their impassioned calms.




THE WAY OF A MAID.

     The lover whose soul shaken is
     In some decuman billow of bliss,
     Who feels his gradual-wading feet
     Sink in some sudden hollow of sweet,
     And 'mid love's us-ed converse comes
     Sharp on a mood which all joy sums--
     An instant's fine compendium of
     The liberal-leav-ed writ of love;
     His abashed pulses beating thick
     At the exigent joy and quick,
     Is dumbed, by aiming utterance great
     Up to the miracle of his fate.
     The wise girl, such Icarian fall
     Saved by her confidence that she's small,--
     As what no kindred word will fit
     Is uttered best by opposite,
     Love in the tongue of hate exprest,
     And deepest anguish in a jest,--
     Feeling the infinite must be
     Best said by triviality,
     Speaks, where expression bates its wings,
     Just happy, alien, little things;
     What of all words is in excess
     Implies in a sweet nothingness,
     With dailiest babble shows her sense
     That full speech were full impotence;
     And while she feels the heavens lie bare,
     She only talks about her hair.


     BEGINNING OF END.


     She was aweary of the hovering
     Of Love's incessant tumultuous wing;
     Her lover's tokens she would answer not--
     'Twere well she should be strange with him somewhat:
     A pretty babe, this Love,--but fie on it,
     That would not suffer her lay it down a whit!
     Appointed tryst defiantly she balked,
     And with her lightest comrade lightly walked,
     Who scared the chidden Love to hide apart,
     And peep from some unnoticed corner of her heart.
     She thought not of her lover, deem it not
     (There yonder, in the hollow, that's HIS cot),
     But she forgot not that he was forgot.
     She saw him at his gate, yet stilled her tongue--
     So weak she felt her, that she would feel strong,
     And she must punish him for doing him wrong:
     Passed, unoblivious of oblivion still;
     And if she turned upon the brow o' the hill,
     It was so openly, so lightly done,
     You saw she thought he was not thought upon.
     He through the gate went back in bitterness;
     She that night woke and stirred, with no distress,
     Glad of her doing,--sedulous to be glad,
     Lest perhaps her foolish heart suspect that it was sad.


     PENELOPE.


     Love, like a wind, shook wide your blosmy eyes,
     You trembled, and your breath came sobbing-wise
        For that you loved me.

     You were so kind, so sweet, none could withhold
     To adore, but that you were so strange, so cold;
        For that you loved me.

     Like to a box of spikenard did you break
     Your heart about my feet.  What words you spake!
        For that you loved me.

     Life fell to dust without me; so you tried
     All carefullest ways to drive me from your side,
        For that you loved me.

     You gave yourself as children give, that weep
     And snatch back, with--'I meant you not to keep!'
        For that you loved me.

     I am no woman, girl, nor ever knew
     That love could teach all ways that hate could do
        To her that loved me.

     Have less of love, or less of woman in
     Your love, or loss may even from this begin--
        That you so love me.

     For, wild Penelope, the web you wove
     You still unweave, unloving all your love;
        Is this to love me,

     Or what rights have I that scorn could deny?
     Even of your love, alas, poor Love must die,
        If so you love me!


     THE END OF IT.


     She did not love to love; but hated him
     For making her to love, and so her whim
     From passion taught misprision to begin;
     And all this sin
     Was because love to cast out had no skill
     Self, which was regent still.
     Her own self-will made void her own self's will


     EPILOGUE.


     If I have studied here in part
     A tale as old as maiden's heart,
        'Tis that I do see herein
        Shadow of more piteous sin.

     She, that but giving part, not whole,
     Took even the part back, is the Soul:
        And that so disdain-ed Lover--
        Best unthought, since Love is over.

     Love to invite, desire, and fear,
     And Love's exactions cost too dear
        Count for Love's possession,--ah,
        Thy way, misera Anima!

     To give the pledge, and yet be pined
     That a pledge should have force to bind,
        This, O Soul, too often still
        Is the recreance of thy will!

     Out of Love's arms to make fond chain,
     And, because struggle bringeth pain,
        Hate Love for Love's sweet constraint,
        Is the way of Souls that faint.

     Such a Soul, for saddest end,
     Finds Love the foe in Love the friend;
        And--ah, grief incredible!--
        Treads the way of Heaven, to Hell.





MISCELLANEOUS ODES.





ODE TO THE SETTING SUN.

     PRELUDE.

     The wailful sweetness of the violin
       Floats down the hush-ed waters of the wind,
     The heart-strings of the throbbing harp begin
       To long in aching music.  Spirit-pined,

     In wafts that poignant sweetness drifts, until
       The wounded soul ooze sadness.  The red sun,
     A bubble of fire, drops slowly toward the hill,
       While one bird prattles that the day is done.

     O setting Sun, that as in reverent days
       Sinkest in music to thy smooth-ed sleep,
     Discrowned of homage, though yet crowned with rays,
       Hymned not at harvest more, though reapers reap:

     For thee this music wakes not.  O deceived,
       If thou hear in these thoughtless harmonies
     A pious phantom of adorings reaved,
       And echo of fair ancient flatteries!

     Yet, in this field where the Cross planted reigns,
       I know not what strange passion bows my head
     To thee, whose great command upon my veins
       Proves thee a god for me not dead, not dead!

     For worship it is too incredulous,
       For doubt--oh, too believing-passionate!
     What wild divinity makes my heart thus
       A fount of most baptismal tears?--Thy straight

     Long beam lies steady on the Cross.  Ah me!
       What secret would thy radiant finger show?
     Of thy bright mastership is this the key?
       Is THIS thy secret, then?  And is it woe?

     Fling from thine ear the burning curls, and hark
       A song thou hast not heard in Northern day;
     For Rome too daring, and for Greece too dark,
       Sweet with wild wings that pass, that pass away!


     ODE.

     Alpha and Omega, sadness and mirth,
       The springing music, and its wasting breath--
     The fairest things in life are Death and Birth,
       And of these two the fairer thing is Death.
     Mystical twins of Time inseparable,
       The younger hath the holier array,
         And hath the awfuller sway:
       It is the falling star that trails the light,
       It is the breaking wave that hath the might,
     The passing shower that rainbows maniple.
       Is it not so, O thou down-stricken Day,
     That draw'st thy splendours round thee in thy fall?
     High was thine Eastern pomp inaugural;
     But thou dost set in statelier pageantry,
       Lauded with tumults of a firmament:
     Thy visible music-blasts make deaf the sky,
       Thy cymbals clang to fire the Occident,
     Thou dost thy dying so triumphally:
     I SEE the crimson blaring of thy shawms!
         Why do those lucent palms
     Strew thy feet's failing thicklier than their might,
     Who dost but hood thy glorious eyes with night,
     And vex the heels of all the yesterdays?
         Lo! this loud, lackeying praise
     Will stay behind to greet the usurping moon,
       When they have cloud-barred over thee the West.
     Oh, shake the bright dust from thy parting shoon!
       The earth not paeans thee, nor serves thy hest,
     Be godded not by Heaven! avert thy face,
         And leave to blank disgrace
     The oblivious world! unsceptre thee of state and place!

     Ha! but bethink thee what thou gazedst on,
       Ere yet the snake Decay had venomed tooth;
     The name thou bar'st in those vast seasons gone--
         Candid Hyperion,
       Clad in the light of thine immortal youth!
         Ere Dionysus bled thy vines,
     Or Artemis drave her clamours through the wood,
         Thou saw'st how once against Olympus' height
           The brawny Titans stood,
     And shook the gods' world 'bout their ears, and how
     Enceladus (whom Etna cumbers now)
       Shouldered me Pelion with its swinging pines,
     The river unrecked, that did its broken flood
     Spurt on his back:  before the mountainous shock
           The rank-ed gods dislock,
     Scared to their skies; wide o'er rout-trampled night
     Flew spurned the pebbled stars:  those splendours then
       Had tempested on earth, star upon star
       Mounded in ruin, if a longer war
     Had quaked Olympus and cold-fearing men.
           Then did the ample marge
           And circuit of thy targe
         Sullenly redden all the vaward fight,
           Above the blusterous clash
           Wheeled thy swung falchion's flash
         And hewed their forces into splintered flight.

     Yet ere Olympus thou wast, and a god!
         Though we deny thy nod,
     We cannot spoil thee of thy divinity.
         What know we elder than thee?
     When thou didst, bursting from the great void's husk,
     Leap like a lion on the throat o' the dusk;
         When the angels rose-chapleted
           Sang each to other,
         The vaulted blaze overhead
         Of their vast pinions spread,
           Hailing thee brother;
     How chaos rolled back from the wonder,
     And the First Morn knelt down to thy visage of thunder!
         Thou didst draw to thy side
         Thy young Auroral bride,
       And lift her veil of night and mystery;
         Tellus with baby hands
         Shook off her swaddling-bands,
       And from the unswath-ed vapours laughed to thee.

     Thou twi-form deity, nurse at once and sire!
       Thou genitor that all things nourishest!
       The earth was suckled at thy shining breast,
     And in her veins is quick thy milky fire.
     Who scarfed her with the morning? and who set
     Upon her brow the day-fall's carcanet?
         Who queened her front with the enrondured moon?
         Who dug night's jewels from their vaulty mine
           To dower her, past an eastern wizard's dreams,
       When hovering on him through his haschish-swoon,
         All the rained gems of the old Tartarian line
     Shiver in lustrous throbbings of tinged flame?
           Whereof a moiety in the Paolis' seams
           Statelily builded their Venetian name.
             Thou hast enwoof-ed her
             An empress of the air,
     And all her births are propertied by thee:
             Her teeming centuries
             Drew being from thine eyes:
     Thou fatt'st the marrow of all quality.

     Who lit the furnace of the mammoth's heart?
       Who shagged him like Pilatus' ribb-ed flanks?
             Who raised the columned ranks
     Of that old pre-diluvian forestry,
     Which like a continent torn oppressed the sea,
       When the ancient heavens did in rains depart,
           While the high-danc-ed whirls
     Of the tossed scud made hiss thy drench-ed curls?
           Thou rear'dst the enormous brood;
           Who hast with life imbued
         The lion maned in tawny majesty,
           The tiger velvet-barred,
           The stealthy-stepping pard,
         And the lithe panther's flexuous symmetry.

     How came the entomb-ed tree a light-bearer,
           Though sunk in lightless lair?
           Friend of the forgers of earth,
         Mate of the earthquake and thunders volcanic,
         Clasped in the arms of the forces Titanic
           Which rock like a cradle the girth
             Of the ether-hung world;
         Swart son of the swarthy mine,
         When flame on the breath of his nostrils feeds
           How is his countenance half-divine,
           Like thee in thy sanguine weeds?
         Thou gavest him his light,
         Though sepultured in night
       Beneath the dead bones of a perished world;
         Over his prostrate form
         Though cold, and heat, and storm,
       The mountainous wrack of a creation hurled.
         Who made the splendid rose
         Saturate with purple glows;
     Cupped to the marge with beauty; a perfume-press
         Whence the wind vintages
     Gushes of warm-ed fragrance richer far
       Than all the flavorous ooze of Cyprus' vats?
     Lo, in yon gale which waves her green cymar,
         With dusky cheeks burnt red
         She sways her heavy head,
     Drunk with the must of her own odorousness;
       While in a moted trouble the vexed gnats
     Maze, and vibrate, and tease the noontide hush.
       Who girt dissolv-ed lightnings in the grape?
     Summered the opal with an Irised flush?
       Is it not thou that dost the tulip drape,
         And huest the daffodilly,
         Yet who hast snowed the lily,
     And her frail sister, whom the waters name,
       Dost vestal-vesture 'mid the blaze of June,
       Cold as the new-sprung girlhood of the moon
     Ere Autumn's kiss sultry her cheek with flame?
         Thou sway'st thy sceptred beam
         O'er all delight and dream,
       Beauty is beautiful but in thy glance:
         And like a jocund maid
         In garland-flowers arrayed,
       Before thy ark Earth keeps her sacred dance.

     And now, O shaken from thine antique throne,
       And sunken from thy coerule empery,
     Now that the red glare of thy fall is blown
       In smoke and flame about the windy sky,
     Where are the wailing voices that should meet
       From hill, stream, grove, and all of mortal shape
     Who tread thy gifts, in vineyards as stray feet
       Pulp the globed weight of juiced Iberia's grape?
         Where is the threne o' the sea?
         And why not dirges thee
     The wind, that sings to himself as he makes stride
       Lonely and terrible on the Andean height?
         Where is the Naiad 'mid her sworded sedge?
       The Nymph wan-glimmering by her wan fount's verge?
     The Dryad at timid gaze by the wood-side?
         The Oread jutting light
       On one up-strain-ed sole from the rock-ledge?
         The Nereid tip-toe on the scud o' the surge,
     With whistling tresses dank athwart her face,
     And all her figure poised in lithe Circean grace?
         Why withers their lament?
         Their tresses tear-besprent,
       Have they sighed hence with trailing garment-gem?
         O sweet, O sad, O fair!
         I catch your flying hair,
       Draw your eyes down to me, and dream on them!

     A space, and they fleet from me.  Must ye fade--
     O old, essential candours, ye who made
       The earth a living and a radiant thing--
         And leave her corpse in our strained, cheated arms?
         Lo ever thus, when Song with chorded charms
     Draws from dull death his lost Eurydice,
       Lo ever thus, even at consummating,
       Even in the swooning minute that claims her his,
       Even as he trembles to the impassioned kiss
       Of reincarnate Beauty, his control
       Clasps the cold body, and foregoes the soul!
         Whatso looks lovelily
     Is but the rainbow on life's weeping rain.
     Why have we longings of immortal pain,
     And all we long for mortal?  Woe is me,
     And all our chants but chaplet some decay,
     As mine this vanishing--nay, vanished Day.
     The low sky-line dusks to a leaden hue,
       No rift disturbs the heavy shade and chill,
     Save one, where the charred firmament lets through
       The scorching dazzle of Heaven; 'gainst which the hill,
         Out-flattened sombrely,
     Stands black as life against eternity.
         Against eternity?
         A rifting light in me
       Burns through the leaden broodings of the mind:
         O bless-ed Sun, thy state
         Uprisen or derogate
       Dafts me no more with doubt; I seek and find.

         If with exultant tread
           Thou foot the Eastern sea,
           Or like a golden bee
         Sting the West to angry red,
         Thou dost image, thou dost follow
           That King-Maker of Creation,
         Who, ere Hellas hailed Apollo,
           Gave thee, angel-god, thy station;
     Thou art of Him a type memorial.
       Like Him thou hang'st in dreadful pomp of blood
           Upon thy Western rood;
       And His stained brow did veil like thine to night,
           Yet lift once more Its light,
     And, risen, again departed from our ball,
     But when It set on earth arose in Heaven.
     Thus hath He unto death His beauty given:
     And so of all which form inheriteth
         The fall doth pass the rise in worth;
     For birth hath in itself the germ of death,
       But death hath in itself the germ of birth.
     It is the falling acorn buds the tree,
     The falling rain that bears the greenery,
       The fern-plants moulder when the ferns arise.
       For there is nothing lives but something dies,
     And there is nothing dies but something lives.
           Till skies be fugitives,
     Till Time, the hidden root of change, updries,
     Are Birth and Death inseparable on earth;
     For they are twain yet one, and Death is Birth.

     AFTER-STRAIN.

     Now with wan ray that other sun of Song
       Sets in the bleakening waters of my soul:
     One step, and lo! the Cross stands gaunt and long
       'Twixt me and yet bright skies, a presaged dole.

     Even so, O Cross! thine is the victory.
       Thy roots are fast within our fairest fields;
     Brightness may emanate in Heaven from thee,
       Here thy dread symbol only shadow yields.

     Of reap-ed joys thou art the heavy sheaf
       Which must be lifted, though the reaper groan;
     Yea, we may cry till Heaven's great ear be deaf,
       But we must bear thee, and must bear alone.

     Vain were a Simon; of the Antipodes
       Our night not borrows the superfluous day.
     Yet woe to him that from his burden flees!
       Crushed in the fall of what he cast away.

     Therefore, O tender Lady, Queen Mary,
       Thou gentleness that dost enmoss and drape
     The Cross's rigorous austerity,
       Wipe thou the blood from wounds that needs must gape.

     'Lo, though suns rise and set, but crosses stay,
       I leave thee ever,' saith she, 'light of cheer.'
     'Tis so:  yon sky still thinks upon the Day,
       And showers aerial blossoms on his bier.

     Yon cloud with wrinkled fire is edg-ed sharp;
       And once more welling through the air, ah me!
     How the sweet viol plains him to the harp,
       Whose pang-ed sobbings throng tumultuously.

     Oh, this Medusa-pleasure with her stings!
       This essence of all suffering, which is joy!
     I am not thankless for the spell it brings,
       Though tears must be told down for the charmed toy.

     No; while soul, sky, and music bleed together,
       Let me give thanks even for those griefs in me,
     The restless windward stirrings of whose feather
       Prove them the brood of immortality.

     My soul is quitted of death-neighbouring swoon,
       Who shall not slake her immitigable scars
     Until she hear 'My sister!' from the moon,
       And take the kindred kisses of the stars.




A CAPTAIN OF SONG.

     (On a portrait of Coventry Patmore by J. S. Sargent, R.A.)

     Look on him.  This is he whose works ye know;
     Ye have adored, thanked, loved him,--no, not him!
     But that of him which proud portentous woe
     To its own grim
     Presentment was not potent to subdue,
     Nor all the reek of Erebus to dim.
     This, and not him, ye knew.
     Look on him now.  Love, worship if ye can,
     The very man.
     Ye may not.  He has trod the ways afar,
     The fatal ways of parting and farewell,
     Where all the paths of pain-ed greatness are;
     Where round and always round
     The abhorr-ed words resound,
     The words accursed of comfortable men,--
     'For ever'; and infinite glooms intolerable
     With spacious replication give again,
     And hollow jar,
     The words abhorred of comfortable men.
     You the stern pities of the gods debar
     To drink where he has drunk
     The moonless mere of sighs,
     And pace the places infamous to tell,
     Where God wipes not the tears from any eyes,
     Where-through the ways of dreadful greatness are
     He knows the perilous rout
     That all those ways about
     Sink into doom, and sinking, still are sunk.
     And if his sole and solemn term thereout
     He has attained, to love ye shall not dare
     One who has journeyed there;
     Ye shall mark well
     The mighty cruelties which arm and mar
     That countenance of control,
     With minatory warnings of a soul
     That hath to its own selfhood been most fell,
     And is not weak to spare:
     And lo, that hair
     Is blanch-ed with the travel-heats of hell.

     If any be
     That shall with rites of reverent piety
     Approach this strong
     Sad soul of sovereign Song,
     Nor fail and falter with the intimidate throng;
     If such there be,
     These, these are only they
     Have trod the self-same way;
     The never-twice-revolving portals heard
     Behind them clang infernal, and that word
     Abhorr-ed sighed of kind mortality,
     As he--
     Ah, even as he!




AGAINST URANIA.

     Lo I, Song's most true lover, plain me sore
     That worse than other women she can deceive,
     For she being goddess, I have given her more
     Than mortal ladies from their loves receive;
     And first of her embrace
     She was not coy, and gracious were her ways,
     That I forgot all virgins to adore;
     Nor did I greatly grieve
     To bear through arid days
     The pretty foil of her divine delays;
     And one by one to cast
     Life, love, and health,
     Content, and wealth,
     Before her, thinking ever on her praise,
     Until at last
     Nought had I left she would be gracious for.
     Now of her cozening I complain me sore,
     Seeing her uses,
     That still, more constantly she is pursued,
     And straitlier wooed,
     Her only-ador-ed favour more refuses,
     And leaves me to implore
     Remembered boon in bitterness of blood.

     From mortal woman thou may'st know full well,
     O poet, that dost deem the fair and tall
     Urania of her ways not mutable,
     When things shall thee befall
     What thou art toil-ed in her sweet, wild spell.
     Do they strow for thy feet
     A little tender favour and deceit
     Over the sudden mouth of hidden hell?--
     As more intolerable
     Her pit, as her first kiss is heavenlier-sweet.
     Are they, the more thou sigh,
     Still the more watchful-cruel to deny?--
     Know this, that in her service thou shalt learn
     How harder than the heart of woman is
     The immortal cruelty
     Of the high goddesses.
     True is his witness who doth witness this,
     Whose gaze too early fell--
     Nor thence shall turn,
     Nor in those fires shall cease to weep and burn--
     Upon her ruinous eyes and ineludible.




AN ANTHEM OF EARTH.

     Proemion.

     Immeasurable Earth!
     Through the loud vast and populacy of Heaven,
     Tempested with gold schools of ponderous orbs,
     That cleav'st with deep-revolting harmonies
     Passage perpetual, and behind thee draw'st
     A furrow sweet, a cometary wake
     Of trailing music!  What large effluence,
     Not sole the cloudy sighing of thy seas,
     Nor thy blue-coifing air, encases thee
     From prying of the stars, and the broad shafts
     Of thrusting sunlight tempers?  For, dropped near
     From my remov-ed tour in the serene
     Of utmost contemplation, I scent lives.
     This is the efflux of thy rocks and fields,
     And wind-cuffed forestage, and the souls of men,
     And aura of all treaders over thee;
     A sentient exhalation, wherein close
     The odorous lives of many-throated flowers,
     And each thing's mettle effused; that so thou wear'st,
     Even like a breather on a frosty morn,
     Thy proper suspiration.  For I know,
     Albeit, with custom-dulled perceivingness,
     Nestled against thy breast, my sense not take
     The breathings of thy nostrils, there's no tree,
     No grain of dust, nor no cold-seeming stone,
     But wears a fume of its circumfluous self.
     Thine own life and the lives of all that live,
     The issue of thy loins,
     Is this thy gaberdine,
     Wherein thou walkest through thy large demesne
     And sphery pleasances,--
     Amazing the unstal-ed eyes of Heaven,
     And us that still a precious seeing have
     Behind this dim and mortal jelly.
                                       Ah!
     If not in all too late and frozen a day
     I come in rearward of the throats of song,
     Unto the deaf sense of the ag-ed year
     Singing with doom upon me; yet give heed!
     One poet with sick pinion, that still feels
     Breath through the Orient gateways closing fast,
     Fast closing t'ward the undelighted night!


     Anthem.


     In nescientness, in nescientness,
     Mother, we put these fleshly lendings on
     Thou yield'st to thy poor children; took thy gift
     Of life, which must, in all the after-days,
     Be craved again with tears,--
     With fresh and still-petitionary tears.
     Being once bound thine almsmen for that gift,
     We are bound to beggary, nor our own can call
     The journal dole of customary life,
     But after suit obsequious for't to thee.
     Indeed this flesh, O Mother,
     A beggar's gown, a client's badging,
     We find, which from thy hands we simply took,
     Nought dreaming of the after penury,
     In nescientness.

     In a little joy, in a little joy,
     We wear awhile thy sore insignia,
     Nor know thy heel o' the neck.  O Mother!  Mother!
     Then what use knew I of thy solemn robes,
     But as a child, to play with them?  I bade thee
     Leave thy great husbandries, thy grave designs,
     Thy tedious state which irked my ignorant years,
     Thy winter-watches, suckling of the grain,
     Severe premeditation taciturn
     Upon the brooded Summer, thy chill cares,
     And all thy ministries majestical,
     To sport with me, thy darling.  Thought I not
     Thou set'st thy seasons forth processional
     To pamper me with pageant,--thou thyself
     My fellow-gamester, appanage of mine arms?
     Then what wild Dionysia I, young Bacchanal,
     Danced in thy lap!  Ah for thy gravity!
     Then, O Earth, thou rang'st beneath me,
     Rocked to Eastward, rocked to Westward,
     Even with the shifted
     Poise and footing of my thought!
     I brake through thy doors of sunset,
     Ran before the hooves of sunrise,
     Shook thy matron tresses down in fancies
     Wild and wilful
     As a poet's hand could twine them;
     Caught in my fantasy's crystal chalice
     The Bow, as its cataract of colours
     Plashed to thee downward;
     Then when thy circuit swung to nightward,
     Night the abhorr-ed, night was a new dawning,
     Celestial dawning
     Over the ultimate marges of the soul;
     Dusk grew turbulent with fire before me,
     And like a windy arras waved with dreams.
     Sleep I took not for my bedfellow,
     Who could waken
     To a revel, an inexhaustible
     Wassail of orgiac imageries;
     Then while I wore thy sore insignia
     In a little joy, O Earth, in a little joy;
     Loving thy beauty in all creatures born of thee,
     Children, and the sweet-essenced body of woman;
     Feeling not yet upon my neck thy foot,
     But breathing warm of thee as infants breathe
     New from their mother's morning bosom.  So I,
     Risen from thee, restless winnower of the heaven,
     Most Hermes-like, did keep
     My vital and resilient path, and felt
     The play of wings about my fledg-ed heel--
     Sure on the verges of precipitous dream,
     Swift in its springing
     From jut to jut of inaccessible fancies,
     In a little joy.

     In a little thought, in a little thought,
     We stand and eye thee in a grave dismay,
     With sad and doubtful questioning, when first
     Thou speak'st to us as men:  like sons who hear
     Newly their mother's history, unthought
     Before, and say--'She is not as we dreamed:
     Ah me! we are beguiled!'  What art thou, then,
     That art not our conceiving?  Art thou not
     Too old for thy young children?  Or perchance,
     Keep'st thou a youth perpetual-burnishable
     Beyond thy sons decrepit?  It is long
     Since Time was first a fledgling;
     Yet thou may'st be but as a pendant bulla
     Against his stripling bosom swung.  Alack!
     For that we seem indeed
     To have slipped the world's great leaping-time, and come
     Upon thy pinched and dozing days:  these weeds,
     These corporal leavings, thou not cast'st us new,
     Fresh from thy craftship, like the lilies' coats,
     But foist'st us off
     With hasty tarnished piecings negligent,
     Snippets and waste
     From old ancestral wearings,
     That have seen sorrier usage; remainder-flesh
     After our father's surfeits; nay with chinks,
     Some of us, that if speech may have free leave
     Our souls go out at elbows.  We are sad
     With more than our sires' heaviness, and with
     More than their weakness weak; we shall not be
     Mighty with all their mightiness, nor shall not
     Rejoice with all their joy.  Ay, Mother!  Mother!
     What is this Man, thy darling kissed and cuffed,
     Thou lustingly engender'st,
     To sweat, and make his brag, and rot,
     Crowned with all honour and all shamefulness?
     From nightly towers
     He dogs the secret footsteps of the heavens,
     Sifts in his hands the stars, weighs them as gold-dust,
     And yet is he successive unto nothing
     But patrimony of a little mould,
     And entail of four planks.  Thou hast made his mouth
     Avid of all dominion and all mightiness,
     All sorrow, all delight, all topless grandeurs,
     All beauty, and all starry majesties,
     And dim transtellar things;--even that it may,
     Filled in the ending with a puff of dust,
     Confess--'It is enough.'  The world left empty
     What that poor mouthful crams.  His heart is builded
     For pride, for potency, infinity,
     All heights, all deeps, and all immensities,
     Arrased with purple like the house of kings,--
     To stall the grey-rat, and the carrion-worm
     Statelily lodge.  Mother of mysteries!
     Sayer of dark sayings in a thousand tongues,
     Who bringest forth no saying yet so dark
     As we ourselves, thy darkest!  We the young,
     In a little thought, in a little thought,
     At last confront thee, and ourselves in thee,
     And wake disgarmented of glory:  as one
     On a mount standing, and against him stands,
     On the mount adverse, crowned with westering rays,
     The golden sun, and they two brotherly
     Gaze each on each;
     He faring down
     To the dull vale, his Godhead peels from him
     Till he can scarcely spurn the pebble--
     For nothingness of new-found mortality--
     That mutinies against his gall-ed foot.
     Littly he sets him to the daily way,
     With all around the valleys growing grave,
     And known things changed and strange; but he holds on,
     Though all the land of light be widow-ed,
     In a little thought.

     In a little strength, in a little strength,
     We affront thy unveiled face intolerable,
     Which yet we do sustain.
     Though I the Orient never more shall feel
     Break like a clash of cymbals, and my heart
     Clang through my shaken body like a gong;
     Nor ever more with spurted feet shall tread
     I' the winepresses of song; nought's truly lost
     That moulds to sprout forth gain:  now I have on me
     The high Phoebean priesthood, and that craves
     An unrash utterance; not with flaunted hem
     May the Muse enter in behind the veil,
     Nor, though we hold the sacred dances good,
     Shall the holy Virgins maenadize:  ruled lips
     Befit a votaress Muse.
     Thence with no mutable, nor no gelid love,
     I keep, O Earth, thy worship,
     Though life slow, and the sobering Genius change
     To a lamp his gusty torch.  What though no more
     Athwart its roseal glow
     Thy face look forth triumphal?  Thou put'st on
     Strange sanctities of pathos; like this knoll
     Made derelict of day,
     Couchant and shadow-ed
     Under dim Vesper's overloosened hair:
     This, where emboss-ed with the half-blown seed
     The solemn purple thistle stands in grass
     Grey as an exhalation, when the bank
     Holds mist for water in the nights of Fall.
     Not to the boy, although his eyes be pure
     As the prime snowdrop is,
     Ere the rash Phoebus break her cloister
     Of sanctimonious snow;
     Or Winter fasting sole on Himalay
     Since those dove-nuncioed days
     When Asia rose from bathing;
     Not to such eyes,
     Uneuphrasied with tears, the hierarchical
     Vision lies unoccult, rank under rank
     Through all create down-wheeling, from the Throne
     Even to the bases of the pregnant ooze.
     This is the enchantment, this the exaltation,
     The all-compensating wonder,
     Giving to common things wild kindred
     With the gold-tesserate floors of Jove;
     Linking such heights and such humilities
     Hand in hand in ordinal dances,
     That I do think my tread,
     Stirring the blossoms in the meadow-grass,
     Flickers the unwithering stars.
     This to the shunless fardel of the world
     Nerves my uncurb-ed back; that I endure,
     The monstrous Temple's moveless caryatid,
     With wide eyes calm upon the whole of things,
     In a little strength.

     In a little sight, in a little sight,
     We learn from what in thee is credible
     The incredible, with bloody clutch and feet
     Clinging the painful juts of jagg-ed faith.
     Science, old noser in its prideful straw,
     That with anatomising scalpel tents
     Its three-inch of thy skin, and brags--'All's bare,'
     The eyeless worm, that boring works the soil,
     Making it capable for the crops of God;
     Against its own dull will
     Ministers poppies to our troublous thought,
     A Balaam come to prophecy,--parables,
     Nor of its parable itself is ware,
     Grossly unwotting; all things has expounded
     Reflux and influx, counts the sepulchre
     The seminary of being, and extinction
     The Ceres of existence:  it discovers
     Life in putridity, vigour in decay;
     Dissolution even, and disintegration,
     Which in our dull thoughts symbolise disorder,
     Finds in God's thoughts irrefragable order,
     And admirable the manner of our corruption
     As of our health.  It grafts upon the cypress
     The tree of Life--Death dies on his own dart
     Promising to our ashes perpetuity,
     And to our perishable elements
     Their proper imperishability; extracting
     Medicaments from out mortality
     Against too mortal cogitation; till
     Even of the caput mortuum we do thus
     Make a memento vivere.  To such uses
     I put the blinding knowledge of the fool,
     Who in no order seeth ordinance;
     Nor thrust my arm in nature shoulder-high,
     And cry--'There's nought beyond!'  How should I so,
     That cannot with these arms of mine engirdle
     All which I am; that am a foreigner
     In mine own region?  Who the chart shall draw
     Of the strange courts and vaulty labyrinths,
     The spacious tenements and wide pleasances,
     Innumerable corridors far-withdrawn,
     Where I wander darkling, of myself?
     Darkling I wander, nor I dare explore
     The long arcane of those dim catacombs,
     Where the rat memory does its burrows make,
     Close-seal them as I may, and my stolen tread
     Starts populace, a gens lucifuga;
     That too strait seems my mind my mind to hold,
     And I myself incontinent of me.
     Then go I, my foul-venting ignorance
     With scabby sapience plastered, aye forsooth!
     Clap my wise foot-rule to the walls o' the world,
     And vow--A goodly house, but something ancient,
     And I can find no Master?  Rather, nay,
     By baffled seeing, something I divine
     Which baffles, and a seeing set beyond;
     And so with strenuous gazes sounding down,
     Like to the day-long porer on a stream,
     Whose last look is his deepest, I beside
     This slow perpetual Time stand patiently,
     In a little sight.

     In a little dust, in a little dust,
     Earth, thou reclaim'st us, who do all our lives
     Find of thee but Egyptian villeinage.
     Thou dost this body, this enhavocked realm,
     Subject to ancient and ancestral shadows;
     Descended passions sway it; it is distraught
     With ghostly usurpation, dinned and fretted
     With the still-tyrannous dead; a haunted tenement,
     Peopled from barrows and outworn ossuaries.
     Thou giv'st us life not half so willingly
     As thou undost thy giving; thou that teem'st
     The stealthy terror of the sinuous pard,
     The lion maned with curl-ed puissance,
     The serpent, and all fair strong beasts of ravin,
     Thyself most fair and potent beast of ravin;
     And thy great eaters thou, the greatest, eat'st.
     Thou hast devoured mammoth and mastodon,
     And many a floating bank of fangs,
     The scaly scourges of thy primal brine,
     And the tower-crested plesiosaure.
     Thou fill'st thy mouth with nations, gorgest slow
     On purple aeons of kings; man's hulking towers
     Are carcase for thee, and to modern sun
     Disglutt'st their splintered bones.
     Rabble of Pharaohs and Arsacidae
     Keep their cold house within thee; thou hast sucked down
     How many Ninevehs and Hecatompyloi,
     And perished cities whose great phantasmata
     O'erbrow the silent citizens of Dis:-
     Hast not thy fill?
     Tarry awhile, lean Earth, for thou shalt drink,
     Even till thy dull throat sicken,
     The draught thou grow'st most fat on; hear'st thou not
     The world's knives bickering in their sheaths?  O patience!
     Much offal of a foul world comes thy way,
     And man's superfluous cloud shall soon be laid
     In a little blood.

     In a little peace, in a little peace,
     Thou dost rebate thy rigid purposes
     Of imposed being, and relenting, mend'st
     Too much, with nought.  The westering Phoebus' horse
     Paws i' the lucent dust as when he shocked
     The East with rising; O how may I trace
     In this decline that morning when we did
     Sport 'twixt the claws of newly-whelped existence,
     Which had not yet learned rending? we did then
     Divinely stand, not knowing yet against us
     Sentence had passed of life, nor commutation
     Petitioning into death.  What's he that of
     The Free State argues?  Tellus! bid him stoop,
     Even where the low hic jacet answers him;
     Thus low, O Man! there's freedom's seignory,
     Tellus' most reverend sole free commonweal,
     And model deeply-policied:  there none
     Stands on precedence, nor ambitiously
     Woos the impartial worm, whose favours kiss
     With liberal largesse all; there each is free
     To be e'en what he must, which here did strive
     So much to be he could not; there all do
     Their uses just, with no flown questioning.
     To be took by the hand of equal earth
     They doff her livery, slip to the worm,
     Which lacqueys them, their suits of maintenance,
     And that soiled workaday apparel cast,
     Put on condition:  Death's ungentle buffet
     Alone makes ceremonial manumission;
     So are the heavenly statutes set, and those
     Uranian tables of the primal Law.
     In a little peace, in a little peace,
     Like fierce beasts that a common thirst makes brothers,
     We draw together to one hid dark lake;
     In a little peace, in a little peace,
     We drain with all our burthens of dishonour
     Into the cleansing sands o' the thirsty grave.
     The fiery pomps, brave exhalations,
     And all the glistering shows o' the seeming world,
     Which the sight aches at, we unwinking see
     Through the smoked glass of Death; Death, wherewith's fined
     The muddy wine of life; that earth doth purge
     Of her plethora of man; Death, that doth flush
     The cumbered gutters of humanity;
     Nothing, of nothing king, with front uncrowned,
     Whose hand holds crownets; playmate swart o' the strong;
     Tenebrous moon that flux and refluence draws
     Of the high-tided man; skull-hous-ed asp
     That stings the heel of kings; true Fount of Youth,
     Where he that dips is deathless; being's drone-pipe;
     Whose nostril turns to blight the shrivelled stars,
     And thicks the lusty breathing of the sun;
     Pontifical Death, that doth the crevasse bridge
     To the steep and trifid God; one mortal birth
     That broker is of immortality.
     Under this dreadful brother uterine,
     This kinsman feared, Tellus, behold me come,
     Thy son stern-nursed; who mortal-motherlike,
     To turn thy weanlings' mouth averse, embitter'st
     Thine over-childed breast.  Now, mortal-sonlike,
     I thou hast suckled, Mother, I at last
     Shall sustenant be to thee.  Here I untrammel,
     Here I pluck loose the body's cerementing,
     And break the tomb of life; here I shake off
     The bur o' the world, man's congregation shun,
     And to the antique order of the dead
     I take the tongueless vows:  my cell is set
     Here in thy bosom; my little trouble is ended
     In a little peace.





MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.





'EX ORE INFANTIUM'.


     Little Jesus, wast Thou shy
     Once, and just so small as I?
     And what did it feel like to be
     Out of Heaven, and just like me?
     Didst Thou sometimes think of THERE,
     And ask where all the angels were?
     I should think that I would cry
     For my house all made of sky;
     I would look about the air,
     And wonder where my angels were;
     And at waking 'twould distress me--
     Not an angel there to dress me!
     Hadst Thou ever any toys,
     Like us little girls and boys?
     And didst Thou play in Heaven with all
     The angels that were not too tall,
     With stars for marbles?  Did the things
     Play Can you see me? through their wings?
     And did Thy Mother let Thee spoil
     Thy robes, with playing on OUR soil?
     How nice to have them always new
     In Heaven, because 'twas quite clean blue!

     Didst Thou kneel at night to pray,
     And didst Thou join Thy hands, this way?
     And did they tire sometimes, being young,
     And make the prayer seem very long?
     And dost Thou like it best, that we
     Should join our hands to pray to Thee?
     I used to think, before I knew,
     The prayer not said unless we do.
     And did Thy Mother at the night
     Kiss Thee, and fold the clothes in right?
     And didst Thou feel quite good in bed,
     Kissed, and sweet, and thy prayers said?

     Thou canst not have forgotten all
     That it feels like to be small:
     And Thou know'st I cannot pray
     To Thee in my father's way--
     When Thou wast so little, say,
     Couldst Thou talk Thy Father's way?--
     So, a little Child, come down
     And hear a child's tongue like Thy own;
     Take me by the hand and walk,
     And listen to my baby-talk.
     To Thy Father show my prayer
     (He will look, Thou art so fair),
     And say:  'O Father, I, Thy Son,
     Bring the prayer of a little one.'

     And He will smile, that children's tongue
     Has not changed since Thou wast young!




A QUESTION.

     O bird with heart of wassail,
       That toss the Bacchic branch,
     And slip your shaken music,
       An elfin avalanche;

     Come tell me, O tell me,
       My poet of the blue!
     What's YOUR thought of me, Sweet?--
       Here's MY thought of you.

     A small thing, a wee thing,
       A brown fleck of nought;
     With winging and singing
       That who could have thought?

     A small thing, a wee thing,
       A brown amaze withal,
     That fly a pitch more azure
       Because you're so small.

     Bird, I'm a small thing--
       My angel descries;
     With winging and singing
       That who could surmise?

     Ah, small things, ah, wee things,
       Are the poets all,
     Whose tour's the more azure
       Because they're so small.

     The angels hang watching
       The tiny men-things:-
     'The dear speck of flesh, see,
       With such daring wings!

     'Come, tell us, O tell us,
       Thou strange mortality!
     What's THY thought of us, Dear?--
       Here's OUR thought of thee.'

     'Alack! you tall angels,
       I can't think so high!
     I can't think what it feels like
       Not to be I.'

     Come tell me, O tell me,
       My poet of the blue!
     What's YOUR thought of me, Sweet?--
       Here's MY thought of you.




FIELD-FLOWER.

     A Phantasy.

     God took a fit of Paradise-wind,
       A slip of coerule weather,
     A thought as simple as Himself,
       And ravelled them together.
     Unto His eyes He held it there,
     To teach it gazing debonair
       With memory of what, perdie,
     A God's young innocences were.
     His fingers pushed it through the sod--
     It came up redolent of God,
     Garrulous of the eyes of God
       To all the breezes near it;
     Musical of the mouth of God
       To all had eyes to hear it;
     Mystical with the mirth of God,
       That glow-like did ensphere it.
         And--'Babble! babble! babble!' said;
          'I'll tell the whole world one day!'
         There was no blossom half so glad,
           Since sun of Christ's first Sunday.

     A poet took a flaw of pain,
       A hap of skiey pleasure,
     A thought had in his cradle lain,
       And mingled them in measure.
     That chrism he laid upon his eyes,
     And lips, and heart, for euphrasies,
       That he might see, feel, sing, perdie,
     The simple things that are the wise.
     Beside the flower he held his ways,
     And leaned him to it gaze for gaze--
     He took its meaning, gaze for gaze,
       As baby looks on baby;
     Its meaning passed into his gaze,
       Native as meaning may be;
     He rose with all his shining gaze
       As children's eyes at play be.
         And--'Babble! babble! babble!' said;
          'I'll tell the whole world one day!'
         There was no poet half so glad,
           Since man grew God that Sunday.




THE CLOUD'S SWAN-SONG.

     There is a parable in the pathless cloud,
     There's prophecy in heaven,--they did not lie,
     The Chaldee shepherds; seal-ed from the proud,
     To cheer the weighted heart that mates the seeing eye.

     A lonely man, oppressed with lonely ills,
     And all the glory fallen from my song,
     Here do I walk among the windy hills,
     The wind and I keep both one monotoning tongue.

     Like grey clouds one by one my songs upsoar
     Over my soul's cold peaks; and one by one
     They loose their little rain, and are no more;
     And whether well or ill, to tell me there is none.

     For 'tis an alien tongue, of alien things,
     From all men's care, how miserably apart!
     Even my friends say:  'Of what is this he sings?'
     And barren is my song, and barren is my heart.

     For who can work, unwitting his work's worth?
     Better, meseems, to know the work for naught,
     Turn my sick course back to the kindly earth,
     And leave to ampler plumes the jetting tops of thought.

     And visitations, that do often use,
     Remote, unhappy, inauspicious sense
     Of doom, and poets widowed of their muse,
     And what dark 'gan, dark ended, in me did commence.

     I thought of spirit wronged by mortal ills,
     And my flesh rotting on my fate's dull stake;
     And how self-scorn-ed they the bounty fills
     Of others, and the bread, even of their dearest, take.

     I thought of Keats, that died in perfect time,
     In predecease of his just-sickening song;
     Of him that set, wrapt in his radiant rhyme,
     Sunlike in sea.  Life longer had been life too long.

     But I, exanimate of quick Poesy,--
     O then, no more but even a soulless corse!
     Nay, my Delight dies not; 'tis I should be
     Her dead, a stringless harp on which she had no force.

     Of my wild lot I thought; from place to place,
     Apollo's song-bowed Scythian, I go on;
     Making in all my home, with pliant ways,
     But, provident of change, putting forth root in none.

     Now, with starved brain, sick body, patience galled
     With fardels even to wincing; from fair sky
     Fell sudden little rain, scarce to be called
     A shower, which of the instant was gone wholly by.

     What cloud thus died I saw not; heaven was fair.
     Methinks my angel plucked my locks:  I bowed
     My spirit, shamed; and looking in the air:-
     'Even so,' I said, 'even so, my brother the good Cloud?'

     It was a pilgrim of the fields of air,
     Its home was allwheres the wind left it rest,
     And in a little forth again did fare,
     And in all places was a stranger and a guest.

     It harked all breaths of heaven, and did obey
     With sweet peace their uncomprehended wills;
     It knew the eyes of stars which made no stay,
     And with the thunder walked upon the lonely hills.

     And from the subject earth it seemed to scorn,
     It drew the sustenance whereby it grew
     Perfect in bosom for the married Morn,
     And of his life and light full as a maid kissed new.

     Its also darkness of the face withdrawn,
     And the long waiting for the little light,
     So long in life so little.  Like a fawn
     It fled with tempest breathing hard at heel of flight;

     And having known full East, did not disdain
     To sit in shadow and oblivious cold,
     Save what all loss doth of its loss retain,
     And who hath held hath somewhat that he still must hold.

     Right poet! who thy rightness to approve,
     Having all liberty, didst keep all measure,
     And with a firmament for ranging, move
     But at the heavens' uncomprehended pleasure.

     With amplitude unchecked, how sweetly thou
     Didst wear the ancient custom of the skies,
     And yoke of used prescription; and thence how
     Find gay variety no license could devise!

     As we the quested beauties better wit
     Of the one grove our own than forests great,
     Restraint, by the delighted search of it,
     Turns to right scope.  For lovely moving intricate

     Is put to fair devising in the curb
     Of ordered limit; and all-changeful Hermes
     Is Terminus as well.  Yet we perturb
     Our souls for latitude, whose strength in bound and term is.

     How far am I from heavenly liberty,
     That play at policy with change and fate,
     Who should my soul from foreign broils keep free,
     In the fast-guarded frontiers of its single state!

     Could I face firm the Is, and with To-be
     Trust Heaven; to Heaven commit the deed, and do;
     In power contained, calm in infirmity,
     And fit myself to change with virtue ever new;

     Thou hadst not shamed me, cousin of the sky,
     Thou wandering kinsman, that didst sweetly live
     Unnoted, and unnoted sweetly die,
     Weeping more gracious song than any I can weave;

     Which these gross-tissued words do sorely wrong.
     Thou hast taught me on powerlessness a power;
     To make song wait on life, not life on song;
     To hold sweet not too sweet, and bread for bread though sour;

     By law to wander, to be strictly free.
     With tears ascended from the heart's sad sea,
     Ah, such a silver song to Death could I
     Sing, Pain would list, forgetting Pain to be,
     And Death would tarry marvelling, and forget to die!




TO THE SINKING SUN.

     How graciously thou wear'st the yoke
       Of use that does not fail!
     The grasses, like an anchored smoke,
       Ride in the bending gale;
     This knoll is snowed with blosmy manna,
       And fire-dropt as a seraph's mail.

     Here every eve thou stretchest out
       Untarnishable wing,
     And marvellously bring'st about
       Newly an olden thing;
     Nor ever through like-ordered heaven
       Moves largely thy grave progressing.

     Here every eve thou goest down
       Behind the self-same hill,
     Nor ever twice alike go'st down
       Behind the self-same hill;
     Nor like-ways is one flame-sopped flower
       Possessed with glory past its will.

     Not twice alike!  I am not blind,
       My sight is live to see;
     And yet I do complain of thy
       Weary variety.
     O Sun!  I ask thee less or more,
       Change not at all, or utterly!

     O give me unprevisioned new,
       Or give to change reprieve!
     For new in me is olden too,
       That I for sameness grieve.
     O flowers! O grasses! be but once
       The grass and flower of yester-eve!

     Wonder and sadness are the lot
       Of change:  thou yield'st mine eyes
     Grief of vicissitude, but not
       Its penetrant surprise.
     Immutability mutable
       Burthens my spirit and the skies.

     O altered joy, all joyed of yore,
       Plodding in unconned ways!
     O grief grieved out, and yet once more
       A dull, new, staled amaze!
     I dream, and all was dreamed before,
       Or dream I so? the dreamer says.




GRIEF'S HARMONICS.

     At evening, when the lank and rigid trees,
     To the mere forms of their sweet day-selves drying,
     On heaven's blank leaf seem pressed and flatten-ed;
     Or rather, to my sombre thoughts replying,
     Of plumes funereal the thin effigies;
     That hour when all old dead things seem most dead,
     And their death instant most and most undying,
     That the flesh aches at them; there stirred in me
     The babe of an unborn calamity,
     Ere its due time to be deliver-ed.
     Dead sorrow and sorrow unborn so blent their pain,
     That which more present was were hardly said,
     But both more NOW than any Now can be.
     My soul like sackcloth did her body rend,
     And thus with Heaven contend:-
     'Let pass the chalice of this coming dread,
     Or that fore-drained O bid me not re-drain!'
     So have I asked, who know my asking vain,
     Woe against woe in antiphon set over,
     That grief's soul transmigrates, and lives again,
     And in new pang old pang's incarnated.




MEMORAT MEMORIA.

     Come you living or dead to me, out of the silt of the Past,
     With the sweet of the piteous first, and the shame of the shameful
     last?
     Come with your dear and dreadful face through the passes of Sleep,
     The terrible mask, and the face it masked--the face you did not
     keep?
     You are neither two nor one--I would you were one or two,
     For your awful self is embalmed in the fragrant self I knew:
     And Above may ken, and Beneath may ken, what I mean by these words
     of whirl,
     But by my sleep that sleepeth not,--O Shadow of a Girl!--
     Nought here but I and my dreams shall know the secret of this
     thing:-
     For ever the songs I sing are sad with the songs I never sing,
     Sad are sung songs, but how more sad the songs we dare not sing!

     Ah, the ill that we do in tenderness, and the hateful horror of
     love!
     It has sent more souls to the unslaked Pit than it ever will draw
     above.
     I damned you, girl, with my pity, who had better by far been thwart,
     And drave you hard on the track to hell, because I was gentle of
     heart.
     I shall have no comfort now in scent, no ease in dew, for this;
     I shall be afraid of daffodils, and rose-buds are amiss;
     You have made a thing of innocence as shameful as a sin,
     I shall never feel a girl's soft arms without horror of the skin.
     My child! what was it that I sowed, that I so ill should reap?
     You have done this to me.  And I, what I to you?--It lies with
     Sleep.




JULY FUGITIVE.

     Can you tell me where has hid her
        Pretty Maid July?
     I would swear one day ago
        She passed by,
     I would swear that I do know
        The blue bliss of her eye:
     'Tarry, maid, maid,' I bid her;
        But she hastened by.
     Do you know where she has hid her,
        Maid July?

     Yet in truth it needs must be
        The flight of her is old;
     Yet in truth it needs must be,
        For her nest, the earth, is cold.
     No more in the pool-ed Even
        Wade her rosy feet,
     Dawn-flakes no more plash from them
        To poppies 'mid the wheat.
     She has muddied the day's oozes
        With her petulant feet;
     Scared the clouds that floated,
        As sea-birds they were,
     Slow on the coerule
        Lulls of the air,
     Lulled on the luminous
        Levels of air:
     She has chidden in a pet
        All her stars from her;
     Now they wander loose and sigh
        Through the turbid blue,
     Now they wander, weep, and cry--
        Yea, and I too--
     'Where are you, sweet July,
        Where are you?'

     Who hath beheld her footprints,
        Or the pathway she goes?
     Tell me, wind, tell me, wheat,
        Which of you knows?
     Sleeps she swathed in the flushed Arctic
        Night of the rose?
     Or lie her limbs like Alp-glow
        On the lily's snows?
     Gales, that are all-visitant,
        Find the runaway;
     And for him who findeth her
        (I do charge you say)
     I will throw largesse of broom
        Of this summer's mintage,
     I will broach a honey-bag
        Of the bee's best vintage.
     Breezes, wheat, flowers sweet,
        None of them knows!
     How then shall we lure her back
        From the way she goes?
     For it were a shameful thing,
        Saw we not this comer
     Ere Autumn camp upon the fields
        Red with rout of Summer.

     When the bird quits the cage,
        We set the cage outside,
     With seed and with water,
        And the door wide,
     Haply we may win it so
        Back to abide.
     Hang her cage of earth out
        O'er Heaven's sunward wall,
     Its four gates open, winds in watch
        By rein-ed cars at all;
     Relume in hanging hedgerows
        The rain-quenched blossom,
     And roses sob their tears out
        On the gale's warm heaving bosom;
     Shake the lilies till their scent
        Over-drip their rims;
     That our runaway may see
        We do know her whims:
     Sleek the tumbled waters out
        For her travelled limbs;
     Strew and smoothe blue night thereon,
        There will--O not doubt her!--
     The lovely sleepy lady lie,
        With all her stars about her!




TO A SNOW-FLAKE.

     What heart could have thought you?--
     Past our devisal
     (O filigree petal!)
     Fashioned so purely,
     Fragilely, surely,
     From what Paradisal
     Imagineless metal,
     Too costly for cost?
     Who hammered you, wrought you,
     From argentine vapour?--
     'God was my shaper.
     Passing surmisal,
     He hammered, He wrought me,
     From curled silver vapour,
     To lust of His mind:-
     Thou could'st not have thought me!
     So purely, so palely,
     Tinily, surely,
     Mightily, frailly,
     Insculped and embossed,
     With His hammer of wind,
     And His graver of frost.'




NOCTURN.

     I walk, I only,
     Not I only wake;
     Nothing is, this sweet night,
     But doth couch and wake
     For its love's sake;
     Everything, this sweet night,
     Couches with its mate.
     For whom but for the stealthy-visitant sun
     Is the naked moon
     Tremulous and elate?
     The heaven hath the earth
     Its own and all apart;
     The hush-ed pool holdeth
     A star to its heart.
     You may think the rose sleepeth,
     But though she folded is,
     The wind doubts her sleeping;
     Not all the rose sleeps,
     But smiles in her sweet heart
     For crafty bliss.
     The wind lieth with the rose,
     And when he stirs, she stirs in her repose:
     The wind hath the rose,
     And the rose her kiss.
     Ah, mouth of me!
     Is it then that this
     Seemeth much to thee?--
     I wander only.
     The rose hath her kiss.




A MAY BURDEN.

     Through meadow-ways as I did tread,
     The corn grew in great lustihead,
     And hey! the beeches burgeon-ed.
        By Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
     It is the month, the jolly month,
     It is the jolly month of May.

     God ripe the wines and corn, I say
     And wenches for the marriage-day,
     And boys to teach love's comely play.
        By Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
     It is the month, the jolly month,
     It is the jolly month of May.

     As I went down by lane and lea,
     The daisies reddened so, pardie!
     'Blushets!' I said, 'I well do see,
        By Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
     The thing ye think of in this month,
     Heigho! this jolly month of May.'

     As down I went by rye and oats,
     The blossoms smelt of kisses; throats
     Of birds turned kisses into notes;
        By Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
     The kiss it is a growing flower,
     I trow, this jolly month of May!

     God send a mouth to every kiss,
     Seeing the blossom of this bliss
     By gathering doth grow, certes!
        By Godd-es fay, by Godd-es fay!
     Thy brow-garland pushed all aslant
     Tells--but I tell not, wanton May!

     NOTE. The first two stanzas are from a French original--I have
     forgotten what.




A DEAD ASTRONOMER.

     (Father Perry, S.J.)

     Starry amorist, starward gone,
     Thou art--what thou didst gaze upon!
     Passed through thy golden garden's bars,
     Thou seest the Gardener of the Stars.

     She, about whose moon-ed brows
     Seven stars make seven glows,
     Seven lights for seven woes;
     She, like thine own Galaxy,
     All lustres in one purity:-
     What said'st thou, Astronomer,
     When thou did'st discover HER?
     When thy hand its tube let fall,
     Thou found'st the fairest Star of all!




'CHOSE VUE'.

     A metrical caprice.

     Up she rose, fair daughter--well she was graced
     As a cloud her going, stept from her chair,
     As a summer-soft cloud, in her going paced,
     Down dropped her riband-band, and all her waving hair
     Shook like loosened music cadent to her waist;--
     Lapsing like music, wavery as water,
        Slid to her waist.




'WHERETO ART THOU COME?'

     'Friend, whereto art thou come?'  Thus Verity;
     Of each that to the world's sad Olivet
     Comes with no multitude, but alone by night,
     Lit with the one torch of his lifted soul,
     Seeking her that he may lay hands on her;
     Thus:  and waits answer from the mouth of deed.
     Truth is a maid, whom men woo diversely;
     This, as a spouse; that, as a light-o'-love,
     To know, and having known, to make his brag.
     But woe to him that takes the immortal kiss,
     And not estates her in his housing life,
     Mother of all his seed!  So he betrays,
     Not Truth, the unbetrayable, but himself:
     And with his kiss's rated traitor-craft,
     The Haceldama of a plot of days
     He buys, to consummate his Judasry
     Therein with Judas' guerdon of despair.




HEAVEN AND HELL.

     'Tis said there were no thought of hell,
        Save hell were taught; that there should be
     A Heaven for all's self-credible.
        Not so the thing appears to me.
     'Tis Heaven that lies beyond our sights,
        And hell too possible that proves;
     For all can feel the God that smites,
        But ah, how few the God that loves!




TO A CHILD.

     Whenas my life shall time with funeral tread
     The heavy death-drum of the beaten hours,
     Following, sole mourner, mine own manhood dead,
     Poor forgot corse, where not a maid strows flowers;
     When I you love am no more I you love,
     But go with unsubservient feet, behold
     Your dear face through changed eyes, all grim change prove;--
     A new man, mock-ed with misname of old;
     When shamed Love keep his ruined lodging, elf!
     When, ceremented in mouldering memory,
     Myself is hears-ed underneath myself,
     And I am but the monument of me:-
        O to that tomb be tender then, which bears
        Only the name of him it sepulchres!




HERMES.

     Soothsay.  Behold, with rod twy-serpented,
     Hermes the prophet, twining in one power
     The woman with the man.  Upon his head
     The cloudy cap, wherewith he hath in dower
     The cloud's own virtue--change and counterchange,
     To show in light, and to withdraw in pall,
     As mortal eyes best bear.  His lineage strange
     From Zeus, Truth's sire, and maiden May--the all-
     Illusive Nature.  His fledged feet declare
     That 'tis the nether self transdeified,
     And the thrice-furnaced passions, which do bear
     The poet Olympusward.  In him allied
        Both parents clasp; and from the womb of Nature
        Stern Truth takes flesh in shows of lovely feature.




HOUSE OF BONDAGE.

               I

     When I perceive Love's heavenly reaping still
     Regard perforce the clouds' vicissitude,
     That the fixed spirit loves not when it will,
     But craves its seasons of the flawful blood;
     When I perceive that the high poet doth
     Oft voiceless stray beneath the uninfluent stars,
     That even Urania of her kiss is loath,
     And Song's brave wings fret on their sensual bars;
     When I perceived the fullest-sail-ed sprite
     Lag at most need upon the leth-ed seas,
     The provident captainship oft voided quite,
     And lam-ed lie deep-draughted argosies;
        I scorn myself, that put for such strange toys
        The wit of man to purposes of boys.

               II

     The spirit's ark sealed with a little clay,
     Was old ere Memphis grew a memory; {2}
     The hand pontifical to break away
     That seal what shall surrender?  Not the sea
     Which did englut great Egypt and his war,
     Nor all the desert-drown-ed sepulchres.
     Love's feet are stained with clay and travel-sore,
     And dusty are Song's lucent wing and hairs.
     O Love, that must do courtesy to decay,
     Eat hasty bread standing with loins up-girt,
     How shall this stead thy feet for their sore way?
     Ah, Song, what brief embraces balm thy hurt!
        Had Jacob's toil full guerdon, casting his
        Twice-seven heaped years to burn in Rachel's kiss?

     {2} The Ark of the Egyptian temple was sealed with clay, which the
     Pontiff-king broke when he entered the inner shrine to offer
     worship.




THE HEART.

     Two Sonnets.

     (To my Critic, who had objected to the phrase--'The heart's burning
     floors.')

               I

     The heart you hold too small and local thing,
     Such spacious terms of edifice to bear.
     And yet, since Poesy first shook out her wing,
     The mighty Love has been impalaced there;
     That has she given him as his wide demesne,
     And for his sceptre ample empery;
     Against its door to knock has Beauty been
     Content; it has its purple canopy
     A dais for the sovereign lady spread
     Of many a lover, who the heaven would think
     Too low an awning for her sacred head.
     The world, from star to sea, cast down its brink--
        Yet shall that chasm, till He Who these did build
        An awful Curtius make Him, yawn unfilled.

               II

     O nothing, in this corporal earth of man,
     That to the imminent heaven of his high soul
     Responds with colour and with shadow, can
     Lack correlated greatness.  If the scroll
     Where thoughts lie fast in spell of hieroglyph
     Be mighty through its mighty habitants;
     If God be in His Name; grave potence if
     The sounds unbind of hieratic chants;
     All's vast that vastness means.  Nay, I affirm
     Nature is whole in her least things exprest,
     Nor know we with what scope God builds the worm.
     Our towns are copied fragments from our breast;
        And all man's Babylons strive but to impart
        The grandeurs of his Babylonian heart.




A SUNSET.

     From Hugo's 'Feuilles d'Automne'.

     I love the evenings, passionless and fair, I love the evens,
     Whether old manor-fronts their ray with golden fulgence leavens,
               In numerous leafage bosomed close;
     Whether the mist in reefs of fire extend its reaches sheer,
     Or a hundred sunbeams splinter in an azure atmosphere
               On cloudy archipelagos.

     Oh gaze ye on the firmament! a hundred clouds in motion,
     Up-piled in the immense sublime beneath the winds' commotion,
               Their unimagined shapes accord:
     Under their waves at intervals flames a pale levin through,
     As if some giant of the air amid the vapours drew
               A sudden elemental sword.

     The sun at bay with splendid thrusts still keeps the sullen fold;
     And momently at distance sets, as a cupola of gold,
               The thatched roof of a cot a-glance;
     Or on the blurred horizons joins his battle with the haze;
     Or pools the glooming fields about with inter-isolate blaze
               Great moveless meres of radiance.

     Then mark you how there hangs athwart the firmament's swept track
     Yonder a mighty crocodile with vast irradiant back,
               A triple row of pointed teeth?
     Under its burnished belly slips a ray of eventide,
     The flickerings of a hundred glowing clouds its tenebrous side
               With scales of golden mail ensheathe.

     Then mounts a palace, then the air vibrates--the vision flees.
     Confounded to its base, the fearful cloudy edifice
               Ruins immense in mounded wrack:
     Afar the fragments strew the sky, and each envermeiled cone
     Hangeth, peak downward, overhead, like mountains overthrown
               When the earthquake heaves its hugy back.

     These vapours with their leaden, golden, iron, bronz-ed glows,
     Where the hurricane, the waterspout, thunder, and hell repose,
               Muttering hoarse dreams of destined harms,
     'Tis God who hangs their multitude amid the skiey deep,
     As a warrior that suspendeth from the roof-tree of his keep
               His dreadful and resounding arms!

     All vanishes!  The sun, from topmost heaven precipitated,
     Like to a globe of iron which is tossed back fiery red
               Into the furnace stirred to fume,
     Shocking the cloudy surges, plashed from its impetuous ire,
     Even to the zenith spattereth in a flecking scud of fire
               The vaporous and inflam-ed spume.

     O contemplate the heavens! whenas the vein-drawn day dies pale,
     In every season, every place, gaze through their every veil,
               With love that has not speech for need;
     Beneath their solemn beauty is a mystery infinite:
     If winter hue them like a pall; or if the summer night
               Fantasy them with starry brede.




HEARD ON THE MOUNTAIN.

     From Hugo's 'Feuilles d'Automne'.

     Have you sometimes, calm, silent, let your tread aspirant rise
     Up to the mountain's summit, in the presence of the skies?
     Was't on the borders of the South? or on the Bretagne coast?
     And at the basis of the mount had you the Ocean tossed?
     And there, leaned o'er the wave and o'er the immeasurableness,
     Calm, silent, have you harkened what it says?  Lo, what it says!
     One day at least, whereon my thought, enlicens-ed to muse,
     Had drooped its wing above the beach-ed margent of the ooze,
     And, plunging from the mountain height into the immensity,
     Beheld upon one side the land, on the other side the sea.
     I harkened, comprehended,--never, as from those abysses,
     No, never issued from a mouth, nor moved an ear, such voice as this
     is!

     A sound it was, at outset, vast, immeasurable, confused,
     Vaguer than is the wind among the tufted trees effused,
     Full of magnificent accords, suave murmurs, sweet as is
     The evensong, and mighty as the shock of panoplies
     When the hoarse melee in its arms the closing squadrons grips,
     And pants, in furious breathings, from the clarions' brazen lips.
     Unutterable the harmony, unsearchable its deep,
     Whose fluid undulations round the world a girdle keep,
     And through the vasty heavens, which by its surges are washed young,
     Its infinite volutions roll, enlarging as they throng,
     Even to the profound arcane, whose ultimate chasms sombre
     Its shattered flood englut with time, with space and form and
     number.
     Like to another atmosphere with thin o'erflowing robe,
     The hymn eternal covers all the inundated globe:
     And the world, swathed about with this investuring symphony,
     Even as it trepidates in the air, so trepidates in the harmony.

     And pensive, I attended the ethereal lutany,
     Lost within this containing voice as if within the sea.

     Soon I distinguished, yet as tone which veils confuse and smother,
     Amid this voice two voices, one commingled with the other,
     Which did from off the land and seas even to the heavens aspire;
     Chanting the universal chant in simultaneous quire.
     And I distinguished them amid that deep and rumorous sound,
     As who beholds two currents thwart amid the fluctuous profound.

     The one was of the waters; a be-radiant hymnal speech!
     That was the voice o' the surges, as they parleyed each with each.
     The other, which arose from our abode terranean,
     Was sorrowful; and that, alack! the murmur was of man;
     And in this mighty quire, whose chantings day and night resound,
     Every wave had its utterance, and every man his sound.

     Now, the magnificent Ocean, as I said, unbannering
     A voice of joy, a voice of peace, did never stint to sing,
     Most like in Sion's temples to a psaltery psaltering,
     And to creation's beauty reared the great lauds of his song.
     Upon the gale, upon the squall, his clamour borne along
     Unpausingly arose to God in more triumphal swell;
     And every one among his waves, that God alone can quell,
     When the other of its song made end, into the singing pressed.
     Like that majestic lion whereof Daniel was the guest,
     At intervals the Ocean his tremendous murmur awed;
     And I, t'ward where the sunset fires fell shaggily and broad,
     Under his golden mane, methought, that I saw pass the hand of God.

     Meanwhile, and side by side with that august fan-faronnade,
     The other voice, like the sudden scream of a destrier affrayed,
     Like an infernal door that grates ajar its rusty throat,
     Like to a bow of iron that gnarls upon an iron rote,
     Grinded; and tears, and shriekings, the anathema, the lewd taunt,
     Refusal of viaticum, refusal of the font,
     And clamour, and malediction, and dread blasphemy, among
     That hurtling crowd of rumour from the diverse human tongue,
     Went by as who beholdeth, when the valleys thick t'ward night,
     The long drifts of the birds of dusk pass, blackening flight on
     flight.
     What was this sound whose thousand echoes vibrated unsleeping?
     Alas! the sound was earth's and man's, for earth and man were
     weeping.

     Brothers! of these two voices, strange most unimaginably,
     Unceasingly regenerated, dying unceasingly,
     Harken-ed of the Eternal throughout His Eternity,
     The one voice uttereth:  NATURE! and the other voice:  HUMANITY!

     Then I alit in reverie; for my ministering sprite
     Alack! had never yet deployed a pinion of an ampler flight,
     Nor ever had my shadow endured so large a day to burn:
     And long I rested dreaming, contemplating turn by turn
     Now that abyss obscure which lurked beneath the water's roll,
     And now that other untemptable abyss which opened in my soul.
     And I made question of me, to what issues are we here,
     Whither should tend the thwarting threads of all this ravelled gear;
     What doth the soul; to be or live if better worth it is;
     And why the Lord, Who, only, reads within that book of His,
     In fatal hymeneals hath eternally entwined
     The vintage-chant of nature with the dirging cry of humankind?

     (The metre of the second of these two translations is an experiment.
     The splendid fourteen-syllable metre of Chapman I have treated after
     the manner of Drydenian rhyming heroics; with the occasional
     triplet, and even the occasional Alexandrine, represented by a line
     of eight accents--a treatment which can well extend, I believe, the
     majestic resources of the metre.)





ULTIMA.





LOVE'S ALMSMAN PLAINETH HIS FARE.

     O you, love's mendicancy who never tried,
       How little of your almsman me you know!
     Your little languid hand in mine you slide,
       Like to a child says--'Kiss me and let me go!'
     And night for this is fretted with my tears,
       While I:-'How soon this heavenly neck doth tire
     Bending to me from its transtellar spheres!'
       Ah, heart all kneaded out of honey and fire!
     Who bound thee to a body nothing worth,
       And shamed thee much with an unlovely soul,
     That the most strainedest charity of earth
       Distasteth soon to render back the whole
     Of thine inflam-ed sweets and gentilesse!
       Whereat, like an unpastured Titan, thou
     Gnaw'st on thyself for famine's bitterness,
       And leap'st against thy chain.  Sweet Lady, how
     Little a linking of the hand to you!
       Though I should touch yours careless for a year,
     Not one blue vein would lie divinelier blue
       Upon your fragile temple, to unsphere
     The seraphim for kisses!  Not one curve
       Of your sad mouth would droop more sad and sweet.
     But little food love's beggars needs must serve,
       That eye your plenteous graces from the street.
     A hand-clasp I must feed on for a night,
       A noon, although the untasted feast you lay,
     To mock me, of your beauty.  That you might
       Be lover for one space, and make essay
     What 'tis to pass unsuppered to your couch,
       Keep fast from love all day; and so be taught
     The famine which these craving lines avouch!
       Ah! miser of good things that cost thee naught,
     How know'st thou poor men's hunger?--Misery!
     When I go doleless and unfed by thee!




A HOLOCAUST.

     'No man ever attained supreme knowledge, unless his heart had been
     torn up by the roots.'


     When I presage the time shall come--yea, now
       Perchance is come, when you shall fail from me,
     Because the mighty spirit, to whom you vow
       Faith of kin genius unrebukably,
     Scourges my sloth, and from your side dismissed
       Henceforth this sad and most, most lonely soul
     Must, marching fatally through pain and mist,
       The God-bid levy of its powers enrol;
     When I presage that none shall hear the voice
       From the great Mount that clangs my ordained advance,
     That sullen envy bade the churlish choice
       Yourself shall say, and turn your altered glance;
     O God!  Thou knowest if this heart of flesh
       Quivers like broken entrails, when the wheel
     Rolleth some dog in middle street, or fresh
       Fruit when ye tear it bleeding from the peel;
     If my soul cries the uncomprehended cry
       When the red agony oozed on Olivet!
     Yet not for this, a caitiff, falter I,
       Beloved whom I must lose, nor thence regret
     The doubly-vouched and twin allegiance owed
       To you in Heaven, and Heaven in you, Lady.
     How could you hope, loose dealer with my God,
       That I should keep for you my fealty?
     For still 'tis thus:-because I am so true,
     My Fair, to Heaven, I am so true to you!




BENEATH A PHOTOGRAPH.

     Phoebus, who taught me art divine,
     Here tried his hand where I did mine;
     And his white fingers in this face
     Set my Fair's sigh-suggesting grace.
     O sweetness past profaning guess,
     Grievous with its own exquisiteness!
     Vesper-like face, its shadows bright
     With meanings of sequestered light;
     Drooped with shamefast sanctities
     She purely fears eyes cannot miss,
     Yet would blush to know she IS.
     Ah, who can view with passionless glance
     This tear-compelling countenance!
     He has cozened it to tell
     Almost its own miracle.
     Yet I, all-viewing though he be,
     Methinks saw further here than he;
     And, Master gay!  I swear I drew
     Something the better of the two!




AFTER HER GOING.

     The after-even!  Ah, did I walk,
       Indeed, in her or even?
     For nothing of me or around
       But absent She did leaven,
     Felt in my body as its soul,
       And in my soul its heaven.

     'Ah me! my very flesh turns soul,
       Essenced,' I sighed, 'with bliss!'
     And the blackbird held his lutany,
       All fragrant-through with bliss;
     And all things stilled were as a maid
       Sweet with a single kiss.

     For grief of perfect fairness, eve
       Could nothing do but smile;
     The time was far too perfect fair,
       Being but for a while;
     And ah, in me, too happy grief
       Blinded herself with smile!

     The sunset at its radiant heart
       Had somewhat unconfest:
     The bird was loath of speech, its song
       Half-refluent on its breast,
     And made melodious toyings with
       A note or two at best.

     And she was gone, my sole, my Fair,
       Ah, sole my Fair, was gone!
     Methinks, throughout the world 'twere right
       I had been sad alone;
     And yet, such sweet in all things' heart,
       And such sweet in my own!




MY LADY THE TYRANNESS.

     Me since your fair ambition bows
     Feodary to those gracious brows,
     Is nothing mine will not confess
     Your sovran sweet rapaciousness?
     Though use to the white yoke inures,
     Half-petulant is
     Your loving rebel for somewhat his,
     Not yours, my love, not yours!

     Behold my skies, which make with me
     One passionate tranquillity!
     Wrap thyself in them as a robe,
     She shares them not; their azures probe,
     No countering wings thy flight endures.
     Nay, they do stole
     Me like an aura of her soul.
     I yield them, love, for yours!

     But mine these hills and fields, which put
     Not on the sanctity of her foot.
     Far off, my dear, far off the sweet
     Grave pianissimo of your feet!
     My earth, perchance, your sway abjures?--
     Your absence broods
     O'er all, a subtler presence.  Woods,
     Fields, hills, all yours, all yours!

     Nay then, I said, I have my thought,
     Which never woman's reaching raught;
     Being strong beyond a woman's might,
     And high beyond a woman's height,
     Shaped to my shape in all contours.--
     I looked, and knew
     No thought but you were garden to.
     All yours, my love, all yours!

     Meseemeth still, I have my life;
     All-clement Her its resolute strife
     Evades; contained, relinquishing
     Her mitigating eyes; a thing
     Which the whole girth of God secures.
     Ah, fool, pause! pause!
     I had no life, until it was
     All yours, my love, all yours!

     Yet, stern possession!  I have my death,
     Sole yielding up of my sole breath;
     Which all within myself I die,
     All in myself must cry the cry
     Which the deaf body's wall immures.--
     Thought fashioneth
     My death without her.--Ah, even death
     All yours, my love, all yours!

     Death, then, be hers.  I have my heaven,
     For which no arm of hers has striven;
     Which solitary I must choose,
     And solitary win or lose.--
     Ah, but not heaven my own endures!
     I must perforce
     Taste you, my stream, in God your source,--
     So steep my heaven in yours.

     At last I said--I have my God,
     Who doth desire me, though a clod,
     And from His liberal Heaven shall He
     Bar in mine arms His privacy.
     Himself for mine Himself assures.--
     None shall deny
     God to be mine, but He and I
     All yours, my love, all yours!

     I have no fear at all lest I
     Without her draw felicity.
     God for His Heaven will not forego
     Her whom I found such heaven below,
     And she will train Him to her lures.
     Nought, lady, I love
     In you but more is loved above;
     What made me, makes Him yours.

     'I, thy sought own, am I forgot?'
     Ha, thou?--thou liest, I seek thee not.
     Why what, thou painted parrot, Fame,
     What have I taught thee but her name?
     Hear, thou slave Fame, while Time endures,
     I give her thee;
     Page her triumphal name!--Lady,
     Take her, the thrall is yours.




UNTO THIS LAST.

     A boy's young fancy taketh love
     Most simply, with the rind thereof;
     A boy's young fancy tasteth more
     The rind, than the deific core.
     Ah, Sweet! to cast away the slips
     Of unessential rind, and lips
     Fix on the immortal core, is well;
     But heard'st thou ever any tell
     Of such a fool would take for food
     Aspect and scent, however good,
     Of sweetest core Love's orchards grow?
     Should such a phantast please him so,
     Love where Love's reverent self denies
     Love to feed, but with his eyes,
     All the savour, all the touch,
     Another's--was there ever such?
     Such were fool, if fool there be;
     Such fool was I, and was for thee!
     But if the touch and savour too
     Of this fruit--say, Sweet, of you--
     You unto another give
     For sacrosanct prerogative,
     Yet even scent and aspect were
     Some elected Second's share;
     And one, gone mad, should rest content
     With memory of show and scent;
     Would not thyself vow, if there sigh
     Such a fool--say, Sweet, as I--
     Treble frenzy it must be
     Still to love, and to love thee?

     Yet had I torn (man knoweth not,
     Nor scarce the unweeping angels wot
     Of such dread task the lightest part)
     Her fingers from about my heart.
     Heart, did we not think that she
     Had surceased her tyranny?
     Heart, we bounded, and were free!
     O sacrilegious freedom!--Till
     She came, and taught my apostate will
     The winnowed sweet mirth cannot guess
     And tear-fined peace of hopefulness;
     Looked, spake, simply touched, and went.
     Now old pain is fresh content,
     Proved content is unproved pain.
     Pangs fore-tempted, which in vain
     I, faithless, have denied, now bud
     To untempted fragrance and the mood
     Of contrite heavenliness; all days
     Joy affrights me in my ways;
     Extremities of old delight
     Afflict me with new exquisite
     Virgin piercings of surprise,--
     Stung by those wild brown bees, her eyes!




ULTIMUM.

     Now in these last spent drops, slow, slower shed,
     Love dies, Love dies, Love dies--ah, Love is dead!
     Sad Love in life, sore Love in agony,
     Pale Love in death; while all his offspring songs,
     Like children, versed not in death's chilly wrongs,
     About him flit, frighted to see him lie
     So still, who did not know that Love could die.
     One lifts his wing, where dulls the vermeil all
     Like clotting blood, and shrinks to find it cold,
     And when she sees its lapse and nerveless fall
     Clasps her fans, while her sobs ooze through the webb-ed gold.
     Thereat all weep together, and their tears
     Make lights like shivered moonlight on long waters.
     Have peace, O piteous daughters!
     He shall not wake more through the mortal years,
     Nor comfort come to my soul widow-ed,
     Nor breath to your wild wings; for Love is dead!

     I slew, that moan for him: he lifted me
     Above myself, and that I might not be
     Less than myself, need was that he should die;
     Since Love that first did wing, now clogged me from the sky.
     Yet lofty Love being dead thus passeth base--
     There is a soul of nobleness which stays,
     The spectre of the rose:  be comforted,
     Songs, for the dust that dims his sacred head!
     The days draw on too dark for Song or Love;
     O peace, my songs, nor stir ye any wing!
     For lo, the thunder hushing all the grove,
     And did Love live, not even Love could sing.

     And, Lady, thus I dare to say,
     Not all with you is passed away!
     For your love taught me this:-'tis Love's true praise
     To be, not staff, but writ of worthy days;
     And that high worth in love unfortunate
     Should still remain it learned in love elate.
     Beyond your star, still, still the stars are bright;
     Beyond your highness, still I follow height;
     Sole I go forth, yet still to my sad view,
     Beyond your trueness, Lady, Truth stands true.
     This wisdom sings my song with last firm breath,
     Caught from the twisted lore of Love and Death,
     The strange inwoven harmony that wakes
     From Pallas' straying locks twined with her aegis-snakes.
     'On him the unpetitioned heavens descend,
     Who heaven on earth proposes not for end;
     The perilous and celestial excess
     Taking with peace, lacking with thankfulness.
     Bliss in extreme befits thee not, until
     Thou'rt not extreme in bliss; be equal still:
     Sweets to be granted think thy self unmeet
     Till thou have learned to hold sweet not too sweet.'
     This thing not far is he from wise in art
     Who teacheth; nor who doth, from wise in heart.




ENVOY.

     Go, songs, for ended is our brief, sweet play;
       Go, children of swift joy and tardy sorrow:
     And some are sung, and that was yesterday,
       And some unsung, and that may be to-morrow.

     Go forth; and if it be o'er stony way,
       Old joy can lend what newer grief must borrow:
     And it was sweet, and that was yesterday,
       And sweet is sweet, though purchas-ed with sorrow.

     Go, songs, and come not back from your far way:
       And if men ask you why ye smile and sorrow,
     Tell them ye grieve, for your hearts know To-day,
       Tell them ye smile, for your eyes know To-morrow.





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of New Poems, by Francis Thompson

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