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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Children of the Night
+by Edwin Arlington Robinson
+
+[Maine Poet -- 1869-1935.]
+
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+The Children of the Night, by Edwin Arlington Robinson
+
+August, 1995 [Etext #313]
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+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Children of the Night
+by Edwin Arlington Robinson [Maine Poet -- 1869-1935.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Note on text: Italicized stanzas have been indented 5 spaces.
+Italicized words or phrases have been capitalized.
+Lines longer than 77 characters have been broken according to metre,
+and the continuation is indented two spaces. Also,
+some obvious errors have been corrected.]
+
+
+[This text was first published in 1897, this etext was transcribed
+from a 1905 printing of the 1897 edition.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Children of the Night
+
+A Book of Poems by Edwin Arlington Robinson
+
+
+
+
+
+
+To the Memory of my Father and Mother
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Children of the Night
+Three Quatrains
+The World
+An Old Story
+Ballade of a Ship
+Ballade by the Fire
+Ballade of Broken Flutes
+Ballade of Dead Friends
+Her Eyes
+Two Men
+Villanelle of Change
+John Evereldown
+Luke Havergal
+The House on the Hill
+Richard Cory
+Two Octaves
+Calvary
+Dear Friends
+The Story of the Ashes and the Flame
+For Some Poems by Matthew Arnold
+Amaryllis
+Kosmos
+Zola
+The Pity of the Leaves
+Aaron Stark
+The Garden
+Cliff Klingenhagen
+Charles Carville's Eyes
+The Dead Village
+Boston
+Two Sonnets
+The Clerks
+Fleming Helphenstine
+For a Book by Thomas Hardy
+Thomas Hood
+The Miracle
+Horace to Leuconoe
+Reuben Bright
+The Altar
+The Tavern
+Sonnet
+George Crabbe
+Credo
+On the Night of a Friend's Wedding
+Sonnet
+Verlaine
+Sonnet
+Supremacy
+The Night Before
+Walt Whitman
+The Chorus of Old Men in "Aegeus"
+The Wilderness
+Octaves
+Two Quatrains
+Romance
+The Torrent
+L'Envoi
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Children of the Night
+
+
+
+For those that never know the light,
+ The darkness is a sullen thing;
+And they, the Children of the Night,
+ Seem lost in Fortune's winnowing.
+
+But some are strong and some are weak, --
+ And there's the story. House and home
+Are shut from countless hearts that seek
+ World-refuge that will never come.
+
+And if there be no other life,
+ And if there be no other chance
+To weigh their sorrow and their strife
+ Than in the scales of circumstance,
+
+'T were better, ere the sun go down
+ Upon the first day we embark,
+In life's imbittered sea to drown,
+ Than sail forever in the dark.
+
+But if there be a soul on earth
+ So blinded with its own misuse
+Of man's revealed, incessant worth,
+ Or worn with anguish, that it views
+
+No light but for a mortal eye,
+ No rest but of a mortal sleep,
+No God but in a prophet's lie,
+ No faith for "honest doubt" to keep;
+
+If there be nothing, good or bad,
+ But chaos for a soul to trust, --
+God counts it for a soul gone mad,
+ And if God be God, He is just.
+
+And if God be God, He is Love;
+ And though the Dawn be still so dim,
+It shows us we have played enough
+ With creeds that make a fiend of Him.
+
+There is one creed, and only one,
+ That glorifies God's excellence;
+So cherish, that His will be done,
+ The common creed of common sense.
+
+It is the crimson, not the gray,
+ That charms the twilight of all time;
+It is the promise of the day
+ That makes the starry sky sublime;
+
+It is the faith within the fear
+ That holds us to the life we curse; --
+So let us in ourselves revere
+ The Self which is the Universe!
+
+Let us, the Children of the Night,
+ Put off the cloak that hides the scar!
+Let us be Children of the Light,
+ And tell the ages what we are!
+
+
+
+
+Three Quatrains
+
+
+
+ I
+
+
+As long as Fame's imperious music rings
+ Will poets mock it with crowned words august;
+And haggard men will clamber to be kings
+ As long as Glory weighs itself in dust.
+
+
+
+ II
+
+
+Drink to the splendor of the unfulfilled,
+ Nor shudder for the revels that are done:
+The wines that flushed Lucullus are all spilled,
+ The strings that Nero fingered are all gone.
+
+
+
+ III
+
+
+We cannot crown ourselves with everything,
+ Nor can we coax the Fates for us to quarrel:
+No matter what we are, or what we sing,
+ Time finds a withered leaf in every laurel.
+
+
+
+
+The World
+
+
+
+Some are the brothers of all humankind,
+ And own them, whatsoever their estate;
+And some, for sorrow and self-scorn, are blind
+ With enmity for man's unguarded fate.
+
+For some there is a music all day long
+ Like flutes in Paradise, they are so glad;
+And there is hell's eternal under-song
+ Of curses and the cries of men gone mad.
+
+Some say the Scheme with love stands luminous,
+ Some say 't were better back to chaos hurled;
+And so 't is what we are that makes for us
+ The measure and the meaning of the world.
+
+
+
+
+An Old Story
+
+
+
+Strange that I did not know him then,
+ That friend of mine!
+I did not even show him then
+ One friendly sign;
+
+But cursed him for the ways he had
+ To make me see
+My envy of the praise he had
+ For praising me.
+
+I would have rid the earth of him
+ Once, in my pride! . . .
+I never knew the worth of him
+ Until he died.
+
+
+
+
+Ballade of a Ship
+
+
+
+Down by the flash of the restless water
+ The dim White Ship like a white bird lay;
+Laughing at life and the world they sought her,
+ And out she swung to the silvering bay.
+ Then off they flew on their roystering way,
+And the keen moon fired the light foam flying
+ Up from the flood where the faint stars play,
+And the bones of the brave in the wave are lying.
+
+'T was a king's fair son with a king's fair daughter,
+ And full three hundred beside, they say, --
+Revelling on for the lone, cold slaughter
+ So soon to seize them and hide them for aye;
+ But they danced and they drank and their souls grew gay,
+Nor ever they knew of a ghoul's eye spying
+ Their splendor a flickering phantom to stray
+Where the bones of the brave in the wave are lying.
+
+Through the mist of a drunken dream they brought her
+ (This wild white bird) for the sea-fiend's prey:
+The pitiless reef in his hard clutch caught her,
+ And hurled her down where the dead men stay.
+ A torturing silence of wan dismay --
+Shrieks and curses of mad souls dying --
+ Then down they sank to slumber and sway
+Where the bones of the brave in the wave are lying.
+
+ ENVOY
+
+Prince, do you sleep to the sound alway
+ Of the mournful surge and the sea-birds' crying? --
+Or does love still shudder and steel still slay,
+ Where the bones of the brave in the wave are lying?
+
+
+
+
+Ballade by the Fire
+
+
+
+Slowly I smoke and hug my knee,
+ The while a witless masquerade
+Of things that only children see
+ Floats in a mist of light and shade:
+ They pass, a flimsy cavalcade,
+And with a weak, remindful glow,
+ The falling embers break and fade,
+As one by one the phantoms go.
+
+Then, with a melancholy glee
+ To think where once my fancy strayed,
+I muse on what the years may be
+ Whose coming tales are all unsaid,
+ Till tongs and shovel, snugly laid
+Within their shadowed niches, grow
+ By grim degrees to pick and spade,
+As one by one the phantoms go.
+
+But then, what though the mystic Three
+ Around me ply their merry trade? --
+And Charon soon may carry me
+ Across the gloomy Stygian glade? --
+ Be up, my soul! nor be afraid
+Of what some unborn year may show;
+ But mind your human debts are paid,
+As one by one the phantoms go.
+
+ ENVOY
+
+Life is the game that must be played:
+ This truth at least, good friend, we know;
+So live and laugh, nor be dismayed
+ As one by one the phantoms go.
+
+
+
+
+Ballade of Broken Flutes
+
+(To A. T. Schumann.)
+
+
+
+In dreams I crossed a barren land,
+ A land of ruin, far away;
+Around me hung on every hand
+ A deathful stillness of decay;
+ And silent, as in bleak dismay
+That song should thus forsaken be,
+ On that forgotten ground there lay
+The broken flutes of Arcady.
+
+The forest that was all so grand
+ When pipes and tabors had their sway
+Stood leafless now, a ghostly band
+ Of skeletons in cold array.
+ A lonely surge of ancient spray
+Told of an unforgetful sea,
+ But iron blows had hushed for aye
+The broken flutes of Arcady.
+
+No more by summer breezes fanned,
+ The place was desolate and gray;
+But still my dream was to command
+ New life into that shrunken clay.
+ I tried it. Yes, you scan to-day,
+With uncommiserating glee,
+ The songs of one who strove to play
+The broken flutes of Arcady.
+
+ ENVOY
+
+So, Rock, I join the common fray,
+ To fight where Mammon may decree;
+And leave, to crumble as they may,
+ The broken flutes of Arcady.
+
+
+
+
+Ballade of Dead Friends
+
+
+
+As we the withered ferns
+ By the roadway lying,
+Time, the jester, spurns
+ All our prayers and prying --
+ All our tears and sighing,
+Sorrow, change, and woe --
+ All our where-and-whying
+For friends that come and go.
+
+Life awakes and burns,
+ Age and death defying,
+Till at last it learns
+ All but Love is dying;
+ Love's the trade we're plying,
+God has willed it so;
+ Shrouds are what we're buying
+For friends that come and go.
+
+Man forever yearns
+ For the thing that's flying.
+Everywhere he turns,
+ Men to dust are drying, --
+ Dust that wanders, eying
+(With eyes that hardly glow)
+ New faces, dimly spying
+For friends that come and go.
+
+ ENVOY
+
+And thus we all are nighing
+ The truth we fear to know:
+Death will end our crying
+ For friends that come and go.
+
+
+
+
+Her Eyes
+
+
+
+Up from the street and the crowds that went,
+ Morning and midnight, to and fro,
+Still was the room where his days he spent,
+ And the stars were bleak, and the nights were slow.
+
+Year after year, with his dream shut fast,
+ He suffered and strove till his eyes were dim,
+For the love that his brushes had earned at last, --
+ And the whole world rang with the praise of him.
+
+But he cloaked his triumph, and searched, instead,
+ Till his cheeks were sere and his hairs were gray.
+"There are women enough, God knows," he said. . . .
+ "There are stars enough -- when the sun's away."
+
+Then he went back to the same still room
+ That had held his dream in the long ago,
+When he buried his days in a nameless tomb,
+ And the stars were bleak, and the nights were slow.
+
+And a passionate humor seized him there --
+ Seized him and held him until there grew
+Like life on his canvas, glowing and fair,
+ A perilous face -- and an angel's, too.
+
+Angel and maiden, and all in one, --
+ All but the eyes. -- They were there, but yet
+They seemed somehow like a soul half done.
+ What was the matter? Did God forget? . . .
+
+But he wrought them at last with a skill so sure
+ That her eyes were the eyes of a deathless woman, --
+With a gleam of heaven to make them pure,
+ And a glimmer of hell to make them human.
+
+God never forgets. -- And he worships her
+ There in that same still room of his,
+For his wife, and his constant arbiter
+ Of the world that was and the world that is.
+
+And he wonders yet what her love could be
+ To punish him after that strife so grim;
+But the longer he lives with her eyes to see,
+ The plainer it all comes back to him.
+
+
+
+
+Two Men
+
+
+
+There be two men of all mankind
+ That I should like to know about;
+But search and question where I will,
+ I cannot ever find them out.
+
+Melchizedek he praised the Lord,
+ And gave some wine to Abraham;
+But who can tell what else he did
+ Must be more learned than I am.
+
+Ucalegon he lost his house
+ When Agamemnon came to Troy;
+But who can tell me who he was --
+ I'll pray the gods to give him joy.
+
+There be two men of all mankind
+ That I'm forever thinking on:
+They chase me everywhere I go, --
+ Melchizedek, Ucalegon.
+
+
+
+
+Villanelle of Change
+
+
+
+Since Persia fell at Marathon,
+ The yellow years have gathered fast:
+Long centuries have come and gone.
+
+And yet (they say) the place will don
+ A phantom fury of the past,
+Since Persia fell at Marathon;
+
+And as of old, when Helicon
+ Trembled and swayed with rapture vast
+(Long centuries have come and gone),
+
+This ancient plain, when night comes on,
+ Shakes to a ghostly battle-blast,
+Since Persia fell at Marathon.
+
+But into soundless Acheron
+ The glory of Greek shame was cast:
+Long centuries have come and gone,
+
+The suns of Hellas have all shone,
+ The first has fallen to the last: --
+Since Persia fell at Marathon,
+Long centuries have come and gone.
+
+
+
+
+John Evereldown
+
+
+
+"Where are you going to-night, to-night, --
+ Where are you going, John Evereldown?
+There's never the sign of a star in sight,
+ Nor a lamp that's nearer than Tilbury Town.
+Why do you stare as a dead man might?
+Where are you pointing away from the light?
+And where are you going to-night, to-night, --
+ Where are you going, John Evereldown?"
+
+"Right through the forest, where none can see,
+ There's where I'm going, to Tilbury Town.
+The men are asleep, -- or awake, may be, --
+ But the women are calling John Evereldown.
+Ever and ever they call for me,
+And while they call can a man be free?
+So right through the forest, where none can see,
+ There's where I'm going, to Tilbury Town."
+
+"But why are you going so late, so late, --
+ Why are you going, John Evereldown?
+Though the road be smooth and the path be straight,
+ There are two long leagues to Tilbury Town.
+Come in by the fire, old man, and wait!
+Why do you chatter out there by the gate?
+And why are you going so late, so late, --
+ Why are you going, John Evereldown?"
+
+"I follow the women wherever they call, --
+ That's why I'm going to Tilbury Town.
+God knows if I pray to be done with it all,
+ But God is no friend to John Evereldown.
+So the clouds may come and the rain may fall,
+The shadows may creep and the dead men crawl, --
+But I follow the women wherever they call,
+ And that's why I'm going to Tilbury Town."
+
+
+
+
+Luke Havergal
+
+
+
+Go to the western gate, Luke Havergal, --
+There where the vines cling crimson on the wall, --
+And in the twilight wait for what will come.
+The wind will moan, the leaves will whisper some --
+Whisper of her, and strike you as they fall;
+But go, and if you trust her she will call.
+Go to the western gate, Luke Havergal --
+Luke Havergal.
+
+No, there is not a dawn in eastern skies
+To rift the fiery night that's in your eyes;
+But there, where western glooms are gathering,
+The dark will end the dark, if anything:
+God slays Himself with every leaf that flies,
+And hell is more than half of paradise.
+No, there is not a dawn in eastern skies --
+In eastern skies.
+
+Out of a grave I come to tell you this, --
+Out of a grave I come to quench the kiss
+That flames upon your forehead with a glow
+That blinds you to the way that you must go.
+Yes, there is yet one way to where she is, --
+Bitter, but one that faith can never miss.
+Out of a grave I come to tell you this --
+To tell you this.
+
+There is the western gate, Luke Havergal,
+There are the crimson leaves upon the wall.
+Go, -- for the winds are tearing them away, --
+Nor think to riddle the dead words they say,
+Nor any more to feel them as they fall;
+But go! and if you trust her she will call.
+There is the western gate, Luke Havergal --
+Luke Havergal.
+
+
+
+
+The House on the Hill
+
+
+
+They are all gone away,
+ The House is shut and still,
+There is nothing more to say.
+
+Through broken walls and gray
+ The winds blow bleak and shrill:
+They are all gone away.
+
+Nor is there one to-day
+ To speak them good or ill:
+There is nothing more to say.
+
+Why is it then we stray
+ Around that sunken sill?
+They are all gone away,
+
+And our poor fancy-play
+ For them is wasted skill:
+There is nothing more to say.
+
+There is ruin and decay
+ In the House on the Hill:
+They are all gone away,
+There is nothing more to say.
+
+
+
+
+Richard Cory
+
+
+
+Whenever Richard Cory went down town,
+We people on the pavement looked at him:
+He was a gentleman from sole to crown,
+Clean favored, and imperially slim.
+
+And he was always quietly arrayed,
+And he was always human when he talked;
+But still he fluttered pulses when he said,
+"Good-morning," and he glittered when he walked.
+
+And he was rich, -- yes, richer than a king, --
+And admirably schooled in every grace:
+In fine, we thought that he was everything
+To make us wish that we were in his place.
+
+So on we worked, and waited for the light,
+And went without the meat, and cursed the bread;
+And Richard Cory, one calm summer night,
+Went home and put a bullet through his head.
+
+
+
+
+Two Octaves
+
+
+
+ I
+
+
+Not by the grief that stuns and overwhelms
+All outward recognition of revealed
+And righteous omnipresence are the days
+Of most of us affrighted and diseased,
+But rather by the common snarls of life
+That come to test us and to strengthen us
+In this the prentice-age of discontent,
+Rebelliousness, faint-heartedness, and shame.
+
+
+
+ II
+
+
+When through hot fog the fulgid sun looks down
+Upon a stagnant earth where listless men
+Laboriously dawdle, curse, and sweat,
+Disqualified, unsatisfied, inert, --
+It seems to me somehow that God himself
+Scans with a close reproach what I have done,
+Counts with an unphrased patience my arrears,
+And fathoms my unprofitable thoughts.
+
+
+
+
+Calvary
+
+
+
+Friendless and faint, with martyred steps and slow,
+Faint for the flesh, but for the spirit free,
+Stung by the mob that came to see the show,
+The Master toiled along to Calvary;
+We gibed him, as he went, with houndish glee,
+Till his dimmed eyes for us did overflow;
+We cursed his vengeless hands thrice wretchedly, --
+And this was nineteen hundred years ago.
+
+But after nineteen hundred years the shame
+Still clings, and we have not made good the loss
+That outraged faith has entered in his name.
+Ah, when shall come love's courage to be strong!
+Tell me, O Lord -- tell me, O Lord, how long
+Are we to keep Christ writhing on the cross!
+
+
+
+
+Dear Friends
+
+
+
+Dear friends, reproach me not for what I do,
+Nor counsel me, nor pity me; nor say
+That I am wearing half my life away
+For bubble-work that only fools pursue.
+And if my bubbles be too small for you,
+Blow bigger then your own: the games we play
+To fill the frittered minutes of a day,
+Good glasses are to read the spirit through.
+
+And whoso reads may get him some shrewd skill;
+And some unprofitable scorn resign,
+To praise the very thing that he deplores;
+So, friends (dear friends), remember, if you will,
+The shame I win for singing is all mine,
+The gold I miss for dreaming is all yours.
+
+
+
+
+The Story of the Ashes and the Flame
+
+
+
+No matter why, nor whence, nor when she came,
+There was her place. No matter what men said,
+No matter what she was; living or dead,
+Faithful or not, he loved her all the same.
+The story was as old as human shame,
+But ever since that lonely night she fled,
+With books to blind him, he had only read
+The story of the ashes and the flame.
+
+There she was always coming pretty soon
+To fool him back, with penitent scared eyes
+That had in them the laughter of the moon
+For baffled lovers, and to make him think --
+Before she gave him time enough to wink --
+Sin's kisses were the keys to Paradise.
+
+
+
+
+For Some Poems by Matthew Arnold
+
+
+
+Sweeping the chords of Hellas with firm hand,
+He wakes lost echoes from song's classic shore,
+And brings their crystal cadence back once more
+To touch the clouds and sorrows of a land
+Where God's truth, cramped and fettered with a band
+Of iron creeds, he cheers with golden lore
+Of heroes and the men that long before
+Wrought the romance of ages yet unscanned.
+
+Still does a cry through sad Valhalla go
+For Balder, pierced with Lok's unhappy spray --
+For Balder, all but spared by Frea's charms;
+And still does art's imperial vista show,
+On the hushed sands of Oxus, far away,
+Young Sohrab dying in his father's arms.
+
+
+
+
+Amaryllis
+
+
+
+Once, when I wandered in the woods alone,
+An old man tottered up to me and said,
+"Come, friend, and see the grave that I have made
+For Amaryllis." There was in the tone
+Of his complaint such quaver and such moan
+That I took pity on him and obeyed,
+And long stood looking where his hands had laid
+An ancient woman, shrunk to skin and bone.
+
+Far out beyond the forest I could hear
+The calling of loud progress, and the bold
+Incessant scream of commerce ringing clear;
+But though the trumpets of the world were glad,
+It made me lonely and it made me sad
+To think that Amaryllis had grown old.
+
+
+
+
+Kosmos
+
+
+
+Ah, -- shuddering men that falter and shrink so
+To look on death, -- what were the days we live,
+Where life is half a struggle to forgive,
+But for the love that finds us when we go?
+Is God a jester? Does he laugh and throw
+Poor branded wretches here to sweat and strive
+For some vague end that never shall arrive?
+And is He not yet weary of the show?
+
+Think of it, all ye millions that have planned,
+And only planned, the largess of hard youth!
+Think of it, all ye builders on the sand,
+Whose works are down! -- Is love so small, forsooth?
+Be brave! To-morrow you will understand
+The doubt, the pain, the triumph, and the Truth!
+
+
+
+
+Zola
+
+
+
+Because he puts the compromising chart
+Of hell before your eyes, you are afraid;
+Because he counts the price that you have paid
+For innocence, and counts it from the start,
+You loathe him. But he sees the human heart
+Of God meanwhile, and in God's hand has weighed
+Your squeamish and emasculate crusade
+Against the grim dominion of his art.
+
+Never until we conquer the uncouth
+Connivings of our shamed indifference
+(We call it Christian faith!) are we to scan
+The racked and shrieking hideousness of Truth
+To find, in hate's polluted self-defence
+Throbbing, the pulse, the divine heart of man.
+
+
+
+
+The Pity of the Leaves
+
+
+
+Vengeful across the cold November moors,
+Loud with ancestral shame there came the bleak
+Sad wind that shrieked, and answered with a shriek,
+Reverberant through lonely corridors.
+The old man heard it; and he heard, perforce,
+Words out of lips that were no more to speak --
+Words of the past that shook the old man's cheek
+Like dead, remembered footsteps on old floors.
+
+And then there were the leaves that plagued him so!
+The brown, thin leaves that on the stones outside
+Skipped with a freezing whisper. Now and then
+They stopped, and stayed there -- just to let him know
+How dead they were; but if the old man cried,
+They fluttered off like withered souls of men.
+
+
+
+
+Aaron Stark
+
+
+
+Withal a meagre man was Aaron Stark, --
+Cursed and unkempt, shrewd, shrivelled, and morose.
+A miser was he, with a miser's nose,
+And eyes like little dollars in the dark.
+His thin, pinched mouth was nothing but a mark;
+And when he spoke there came like sullen blows
+Through scattered fangs a few snarled words and close,
+As if a cur were chary of its bark.
+
+Glad for the murmur of his hard renown,
+Year after year he shambled through the town, --
+A loveless exile moving with a staff;
+And oftentimes there crept into his ears
+A sound of alien pity, touched with tears, --
+And then (and only then) did Aaron laugh.
+
+
+
+
+The Garden
+
+
+
+There is a fenceless garden overgrown
+With buds and blossoms and all sorts of leaves;
+And once, among the roses and the sheaves,
+The Gardener and I were there alone.
+He led me to the plot where I had thrown
+The fennel of my days on wasted ground,
+And in that riot of sad weeds I found
+The fruitage of a life that was my own.
+
+My life! Ah, yes, there was my life, indeed!
+And there were all the lives of humankind;
+And they were like a book that I could read,
+Whose every leaf, miraculously signed,
+Outrolled itself from Thought's eternal seed,
+Love-rooted in God's garden of the mind.
+
+
+
+
+Cliff Klingenhagen
+
+
+
+Cliff Klingenhagen had me in to dine
+With him one day; and after soup and meat,
+And all the other things there were to eat,
+Cliff took two glasses and filled one with wine
+And one with wormwood. Then, without a sign
+For me to choose at all, he took the draught
+Of bitterness himself, and lightly quaffed
+It off, and said the other one was mine.
+
+And when I asked him what the deuce he meant
+By doing that, he only looked at me
+And grinned, and said it was a way of his.
+And though I know the fellow, I have spent
+Long time a-wondering when I shall be
+As happy as Cliff Klingenhagen is.
+
+
+
+
+Charles Carville's Eyes
+
+
+
+A melancholy face Charles Carville had,
+But not so melancholy as it seemed, --
+When once you knew him, -- for his mouth redeemed
+His insufficient eyes, forever sad:
+In them there was no life-glimpse, good or bad, --
+Nor joy nor passion in them ever gleamed;
+His mouth was all of him that ever beamed,
+His eyes were sorry, but his mouth was glad.
+
+He never was a fellow that said much,
+And half of what he did say was not heard
+By many of us: we were out of touch
+With all his whims and all his theories
+Till he was dead, so those blank eyes of his
+Might speak them. Then we heard them, every word.
+
+
+
+
+The Dead Village
+
+
+
+Here there is death. But even here, they say, --
+Here where the dull sun shines this afternoon
+As desolate as ever the dead moon
+Did glimmer on dead Sardis, -- men were gay;
+And there were little children here to play,
+With small soft hands that once did keep in tune
+The strings that stretch from heaven, till too soon
+The change came, and the music passed away.
+
+Now there is nothing but the ghosts of things, --
+No life, no love, no children, and no men;
+And over the forgotten place there clings
+The strange and unrememberable light
+That is in dreams. The music failed, and then
+God frowned, and shut the village from His sight.
+
+
+
+
+Boston
+
+
+
+My northern pines are good enough for me,
+But there's a town my memory uprears --
+A town that always like a friend appears,
+And always in the sunrise by the sea.
+And over it, somehow, there seems to be
+A downward flash of something new and fierce,
+That ever strives to clear, but never clears
+The dimness of a charmed antiquity.
+
+
+
+
+Two Sonnets
+
+
+
+ I
+
+
+Just as I wonder at the twofold screen
+Of twisted innocence that you would plait
+For eyes that uncourageously await
+The coming of a kingdom that has been,
+So do I wonder what God's love can mean
+To you that all so strangely estimate
+The purpose and the consequent estate
+Of one short shuddering step to the Unseen.
+
+No, I have not your backward faith to shrink
+Lone-faring from the doorway of God's home
+To find Him in the names of buried men;
+Nor your ingenious recreance to think
+We cherish, in the life that is to come,
+The scattered features of dead friends again.
+
+
+
+ II
+
+
+Never until our souls are strong enough
+To plunge into the crater of the Scheme --
+Triumphant in the flash there to redeem
+Love's handsel and forevermore to slough,
+Like cerements at a played-out masque, the rough
+And reptile skins of us whereon we set
+The stigma of scared years -- are we to get
+Where atoms and the ages are one stuff.
+
+Nor ever shall we know the cursed waste
+Of life in the beneficence divine
+Of starlight and of sunlight and soul-shine
+That we have squandered in sin's frail distress,
+Till we have drunk, and trembled at the taste,
+The mead of Thought's prophetic endlessness.
+
+
+
+
+The Clerks
+
+
+
+I did not think that I should find them there
+When I came back again; but there they stood,
+As in the days they dreamed of when young blood
+Was in their cheeks and women called them fair.
+Be sure, they met me with an ancient air, --
+And yes, there was a shop-worn brotherhood
+About them; but the men were just as good,
+And just as human as they ever were.
+
+And you that ache so much to be sublime,
+And you that feed yourselves with your descent,
+What comes of all your visions and your fears?
+Poets and kings are but the clerks of Time,
+Tiering the same dull webs of discontent,
+Clipping the same sad alnage of the years.
+
+
+
+
+Fleming Helphenstine
+
+
+
+At first I thought there was a superfine
+Persuasion in his face; but the free glow
+That filled it when he stopped and cried, "Hollo!"
+Shone joyously, and so I let it shine.
+He said his name was Fleming Helphenstine,
+But be that as it may; -- I only know
+He talked of this and that and So-and-So,
+And laughed and chaffed like any friend of mine.
+
+But soon, with a queer, quick frown, he looked at me,
+And I looked hard at him; and there we gazed
+With a strained shame that made us cringe and wince:
+Then, with a wordless clogged apology
+That sounded half confused and half amazed,
+He dodged, -- and I have never seen him since.
+
+
+
+
+For a Book by Thomas Hardy
+
+
+
+With searching feet, through dark circuitous ways,
+I plunged and stumbled; round me, far and near,
+Quaint hordes of eyeless phantoms did appear,
+Twisting and turning in a bootless chase, --
+When, like an exile given by God's grace
+To feel once more a human atmosphere,
+I caught the world's first murmur, large and clear,
+Flung from a singing river's endless race.
+
+Then, through a magic twilight from below,
+I heard its grand sad song as in a dream:
+Life's wild infinity of mirth and woe
+It sang me; and, with many a changing gleam,
+Across the music of its onward flow
+I saw the cottage lights of Wessex beam.
+
+
+
+
+Thomas Hood
+
+
+
+The man who cloaked his bitterness within
+This winding-sheet of puns and pleasantries,
+God never gave to look with common eyes
+Upon a world of anguish and of sin:
+His brother was the branded man of Lynn;
+And there are woven with his jollities
+The nameless and eternal tragedies
+That render hope and hopelessness akin.
+
+We laugh, and crown him; but anon we feel
+A still chord sorrow-swept, -- a weird unrest;
+And thin dim shadows home to midnight steal,
+As if the very ghost of mirth were dead --
+As if the joys of time to dreams had fled,
+Or sailed away with Ines to the West.
+
+
+
+
+The Miracle
+
+
+
+"Dear brother, dearest friend, when I am dead,
+And you shall see no more this face of mine,
+Let nothing but red roses be the sign
+Of the white life I lost for him," she said;
+"No, do not curse him, -- pity him instead;
+Forgive him! -- forgive me! . . God's anodyne
+For human hate is pity; and the wine
+That makes men wise, forgiveness. I have read
+Love's message in love's murder, and I die."
+And so they laid her just where she would lie, --
+Under red roses. Red they bloomed and fell;
+But when flushed autumn and the snows went by,
+And spring came, -- lo, from every bud's green shell
+Burst a white blossom. -- Can love reason why?
+
+
+
+
+Horace to Leuconoe
+
+
+
+I pray you not, Leuconoe, to pore
+With unpermitted eyes on what may be
+Appointed by the gods for you and me,
+Nor on Chaldean figures any more.
+'T were infinitely better to implore
+The present only: -- whether Jove decree
+More winters yet to come, or whether he
+Make even this, whose hard, wave-eaten shore
+Shatters the Tuscan seas to-day, the last --
+Be wise withal, and rack your wine, nor fill
+Your bosom with large hopes; for while I sing,
+The envious close of time is narrowing; --
+So seize the day, -- or ever it be past, --
+And let the morrow come for what it will.
+
+
+
+
+Reuben Bright
+
+
+
+Because he was a butcher and thereby
+Did earn an honest living (and did right),
+I would not have you think that Reuben Bright
+Was any more a brute than you or I;
+For when they told him that his wife must die,
+He stared at them, and shook with grief and fright,
+And cried like a great baby half that night,
+And made the women cry to see him cry.
+
+And after she was dead, and he had paid
+The singers and the sexton and the rest,
+He packed a lot of things that she had made
+Most mournfully away in an old chest
+Of hers, and put some chopped-up cedar boughs
+In with them, and tore down the slaughter-house.
+
+
+
+
+The Altar
+
+
+
+Alone, remote, nor witting where I went,
+I found an altar builded in a dream --
+A fiery place, whereof there was a gleam
+So swift, so searching, and so eloquent
+Of upward promise, that love's murmur, blent
+With sorrow's warning, gave but a supreme
+Unending impulse to that human stream
+Whose flood was all for the flame's fury bent.
+
+Alas! I said, -- the world is in the wrong.
+But the same quenchless fever of unrest
+That thrilled the foremost of that martyred throng
+Thrilled me, and I awoke . . . and was the same
+Bewildered insect plunging for the flame
+That burns, and must burn somehow for the best.
+
+
+
+
+The Tavern
+
+
+
+Whenever I go by there nowadays
+And look at the rank weeds and the strange grass,
+The torn blue curtains and the broken glass,
+I seem to be afraid of the old place;
+And something stiffens up and down my face,
+For all the world as if I saw the ghost
+Of old Ham Amory, the murdered host,
+With his dead eyes turned on me all aglaze.
+
+The Tavern has a story, but no man
+Can tell us what it is. We only know
+That once long after midnight, years ago,
+A stranger galloped up from Tilbury Town,
+Who brushed, and scared, and all but overran
+That skirt-crazed reprobate, John Evereldown.
+
+
+
+
+Sonnet
+
+
+
+Oh for a poet -- for a beacon bright
+To rift this changeless glimmer of dead gray;
+To spirit back the Muses, long astray,
+And flush Parnassus with a newer light;
+To put these little sonnet-men to flight
+Who fashion, in a shrewd, mechanic way,
+Songs without souls, that flicker for a day,
+To vanish in irrevocable night.
+
+What does it mean, this barren age of ours?
+Here are the men, the women, and the flowers,
+The seasons, and the sunset, as before.
+What does it mean? Shall not one bard arise
+To wrench one banner from the western skies,
+And mark it with his name forevermore?
+
+
+
+
+George Crabbe
+
+
+
+Give him the darkest inch your shelf allows,
+Hide him in lonely garrets, if you will, --
+But his hard, human pulse is throbbing still
+With the sure strength that fearless truth endows.
+In spite of all fine science disavows,
+Of his plain excellence and stubborn skill
+There yet remains what fashion cannot kill,
+Though years have thinned the laurel from his brows.
+
+Whether or not we read him, we can feel
+From time to time the vigor of his name
+Against us like a finger for the shame
+And emptiness of what our souls reveal
+In books that are as altars where we kneel
+To consecrate the flicker, not the flame.
+
+
+
+
+Credo
+
+
+
+I cannot find my way: there is no star
+In all the shrouded heavens anywhere;
+And there is not a whisper in the air
+Of any living voice but one so far
+That I can hear it only as a bar
+Of lost, imperial music, played when fair
+And angel fingers wove, and unaware,
+Dead leaves to garlands where no roses are.
+
+No, there is not a glimmer, nor a call,
+For one that welcomes, welcomes when he fears,
+The black and awful chaos of the night;
+For through it all, -- above, beyond it all, --
+I know the far-sent message of the years,
+I feel the coming glory of the Light!
+
+
+
+
+On the Night of a Friend's Wedding
+
+
+
+If ever I am old, and all alone,
+I shall have killed one grief, at any rate;
+For then, thank God, I shall not have to wait
+Much longer for the sheaves that I have sown.
+The devil only knows what I have done,
+But here I am, and here are six or eight
+Good friends, who most ingenuously prate
+About my songs to such and such a one.
+
+But everything is all askew to-night, --
+As if the time were come, or almost come,
+For their untenanted mirage of me
+To lose itself and crumble out of sight,
+Like a tall ship that floats above the foam
+A little while, and then breaks utterly.
+
+
+
+
+Sonnet
+
+
+
+The master and the slave go hand in hand,
+Though touch be lost. The poet is a slave,
+And there be kings do sorrowfully crave
+The joyance that a scullion may command.
+But, ah, the sonnet-slave must understand
+The mission of his bondage, or the grave
+May clasp his bones, or ever he shall save
+The perfect word that is the poet's wand!
+
+The sonnet is a crown, whereof the rhymes
+Are for Thought's purest gold the jewel-stones;
+But shapes and echoes that are never done
+Will haunt the workshop, as regret sometimes
+Will bring with human yearning to sad thrones
+The crash of battles that are never won.
+
+
+
+
+Verlaine
+
+
+
+Why do you dig like long-clawed scavengers
+To touch the covered corpse of him that fled
+The uplands for the fens, and rioted
+Like a sick satyr with doom's worshippers?
+Come! let the grass grow there; and leave his verse
+To tell the story of the life he led.
+Let the man go: let the dead flesh be dead,
+And let the worms be its biographers.
+
+Song sloughs away the sin to find redress
+In art's complete remembrance: nothing clings
+For long but laurel to the stricken brow
+That felt the Muse's finger; nothing less
+Than hell's fulfilment of the end of things
+Can blot the star that shines on Paris now.
+
+
+
+
+Sonnet
+
+
+
+When we can all so excellently give
+The measure of love's wisdom with a blow, --
+Why can we not in turn receive it so,
+And end this murmur for the life we live?
+And when we do so frantically strive
+To win strange faith, why do we shun to know
+That in love's elemental over-glow
+God's wholeness gleams with light superlative?
+
+Oh, brother men, if you have eyes at all,
+Look at a branch, a bird, a child, a rose, --
+Or anything God ever made that grows, --
+Nor let the smallest vision of it slip,
+Till you can read, as on Belshazzar's wall,
+The glory of eternal partnership!
+
+
+
+
+Supremacy
+
+
+
+There is a drear and lonely tract of hell
+From all the common gloom removed afar:
+A flat, sad land it is, where shadows are,
+Whose lorn estate my verse may never tell.
+I walked among them and I knew them well:
+Men I had slandered on life's little star
+For churls and sluggards; and I knew the scar
+Upon their brows of woe ineffable.
+
+But as I went majestic on my way,
+Into the dark they vanished, one by one,
+Till, with a shaft of God's eternal day,
+The dream of all my glory was undone, --
+And, with a fool's importunate dismay,
+I heard the dead men singing in the sun.
+
+
+
+
+The Night Before
+
+
+
+Look you, Dominie; look you, and listen!
+Look in my face, first; search every line there;
+Mark every feature, -- chin, lip, and forehead!
+Look in my eyes, and tell me the lesson
+You read there; measure my nose, and tell me
+Where I am wanting! A man's nose, Dominie,
+Is often the cast of his inward spirit;
+So mark mine well. But why do you smile so?
+Pity, or what? Is it written all over,
+This face of mine, with a brute's confession?
+Nothing but sin there? nothing but hell-scars?
+Or is it because there is something better --
+A glimmer of good, maybe -- or a shadow
+Of something that's followed me down from childhood --
+Followed me all these years and kept me,
+Spite of my slips and sins and follies,
+Spite of my last red sin, my murder, --
+Just out of hell? Yes? something of that kind?
+And you smile for that? You're a good man, Dominie,
+The one good man in the world who knows me, --
+My one good friend in a world that mocks me,
+Here in this hard stone cage. But I leave it
+To-morrow. To-morrow! My God! am I crying?
+Are these things tears? Tears! What! am I frightened?
+I, who swore I should go to the scaffold
+With big strong steps, and -- No more. I thank you,
+But no -- I am all right now! No! -- listen!
+I am here to be hanged; to be hanged to-morrow
+At six o'clock, when the sun is rising.
+And why am I here? Not a soul can tell you
+But this poor shivering thing before you,
+This fluttering wreck of the man God made him,
+For God knows what wild reason. Hear me,
+And learn from my lips the truth of my story.
+There's nothing strange in what I shall tell you,
+Nothing mysterious, nothing unearthly, --
+But damnably human, -- and you shall hear it.
+Not one of those little black lawyers had guessed it;
+The judge, with his big bald head, never knew it;
+And the jury (God rest their poor souls!) never dreamed it.
+Once there were three in the world who could tell it;
+Now there are two. There'll be two to-morrow, --
+You, my friend, and -- But there's the story: --
+
+When I was a boy the world was heaven.
+I never knew then that the men and the women
+Who petted and called me a brave big fellow
+Were ever less happy than I; but wisdom --
+Which comes with the years, you know -- soon showed me
+The secret of all my glittering childhood,
+The broken key to the fairies' castle
+That held my life in the fresh, glad season
+When I was the king of the earth. Then slowly --
+And yet so swiftly! -- there came the knowledge
+That the marvellous life I had lived was my life;
+That the glorious world I had loved was my world;
+And that every man, and every woman,
+And every child was a different being,
+Wrought with a different heat, and fired
+With passions born of a single spirit;
+That the pleasure I felt was not their pleasure,
+Nor my sorrow -- a kind of nameless pity
+For something, I knew not what -- their sorrow.
+And thus was I taught my first hard lesson, --
+The lesson we suffer the most in learning:
+That a happy man is a man forgetful
+Of all the torturing ills around him.
+When or where I first met the woman
+I cherished and made my wife, no matter.
+Enough to say that I found her and kept her
+Here in my heart with as pure a devotion
+As ever Christ felt for his brothers. Forgive me
+For naming His name in your patient presence;
+But I feel my words, and the truth I utter
+Is God's own truth. I loved that woman, --
+Not for her face, but for something fairer,
+Something diviner, I thought, than beauty:
+I loved the spirit -- the human something
+That seemed to chime with my own condition,
+And make soul-music when we were together;
+And we were never apart, from the moment
+My eyes flashed into her eyes the message
+That swept itself in a quivering answer
+Back through my strange lost being. My pulses
+Leapt with an aching speed; and the measure
+Of this great world grew small and smaller,
+Till it seemed the sky and the land and the ocean
+Closed at last in a mist all golden
+Around us two. And we stood for a season
+Like gods outflung from chaos, dreaming
+That we were the king and the queen of the fire
+That reddened the clouds of love that held us
+Blind to the new world soon to be ours --
+Ours to seize and sway. The passion
+Of that great love was a nameless passion,
+Bright as the blaze of the sun at noonday,
+Wild as the flames of hell; but, mark you,
+Never a whit less pure for its fervor.
+The baseness in me (for I was human)
+Burned like a worm, and perished; and nothing
+Was left me then but a soul that mingled
+Itself with hers, and swayed and shuddered
+In fearful triumph. When I consider
+That helpless love and the cursed folly
+That wrecked my life for the sake of a woman
+Who broke with a laugh the chains of her marriage
+(Whatever the word may mean), I wonder
+If all the woe was her sin, or whether
+The chains themselves were enough to lead her
+In love's despite to break them. . . . Sinners
+And saints -- I say -- are rocked in the cradle,
+But never are known till the will within them
+Speaks in its own good time. So I foster
+Even to-night for the woman who wronged me,
+Nothing of hate, nor of love, but a feeling
+Of still regret; for the man -- But hear me,
+And judge for yourself: --
+
+ For a time the seasons
+Changed and passed in a sweet succession
+That seemed to me like an endless music:
+Life was a rolling psalm, and the choirs
+Of God were glad for our love. I fancied
+All this, and more than I dare to tell you
+To-night, -- yes, more than I dare to remember;
+And then -- well, the music stopped. There are moments
+In all men's lives when it stops, I fancy, --
+Or seems to stop, -- till it comes to cheer them
+Again with a larger sound. The curtain
+Of life just then is lifted a little
+To give to their sight new joys -- new sorrows --
+Or nothing at all, sometimes. I was watching
+The slow, sweet scenes of a golden picture,
+Flushed and alive with a long delusion
+That made the murmur of home, when I shuddered
+And felt like a knife that awful silence
+That comes when the music goes -- forever.
+The truth came over my life like a darkness
+Over a forest where one man wanders,
+Worse than alone. For a time I staggered
+And stumbled on with a weak persistence
+After the phantom of hope that darted
+And dodged like a frightened thing before me,
+To quit me at last, and vanish. Nothing
+Was left me then but the curse of living
+And bearing through all my days the fever
+And thirst of a poisoned love. Were I stronger,
+Or weaker, perhaps my scorn had saved me,
+Given me strength to crush my sorrow
+With hate for her and the world that praised her --
+To have left her, then and there -- to have conquered
+That old false life with a new and a wiser, --
+Such things are easy in words. You listen,
+And frown, I suppose, that I never mention
+That beautiful word, FORGIVE! -- I forgave her
+First of all; and I praised kind Heaven
+That I was a brave, clean man to do it;
+And then I tried to forget. Forgiveness!
+What does it mean when the one forgiven
+Shivers and weeps and clings and kisses
+The credulous fool that holds her, and tells him
+A thousand things of a good man's mercy,
+And then slips off with a laugh and plunges
+Back to the sin she has quit for a season,
+To tell him that hell and the world are better
+For her than a prophet's heaven? Believe me,
+The love that dies ere its flames are wasted
+In search of an alien soul is better,
+Better by far than the lonely passion
+That burns back into the heart that feeds it.
+For I loved her still, and the more she mocked me, --
+Fooled with her endless pleading promise
+Of future faith, -- the more I believed her
+The penitent thing she seemed; and the stronger
+Her choking arms and her small hot kisses
+Bound me and burned my brain to pity,
+The more she grew to the heavenly creature
+That brightened the life I had lost forever.
+The truth was gone somehow for the moment;
+The curtain fell for a time; and I fancied
+We were again like gods together,
+Loving again with the old glad rapture.
+But scenes like these, too often repeated,
+Failed at last, and her guile was wasted.
+I made an end of her shrewd caresses
+And told her a few straight words. She took them
+Full at their worth -- and the farce was over.
+ . . . . .
+At first my dreams of the past upheld me,
+But they were a short support: the present
+Pushed them away, and I fell. The mission
+Of life (whatever it was) was blasted;
+My game was lost. And I met the winner
+Of that foul deal as a sick slave gathers
+His painful strength at the sight of his master;
+And when he was past I cursed him, fearful
+Of that strange chance which makes us mighty
+Or mean, or both. I cursed him and hated
+The stones he pressed with his heel; I followed
+His easy march with a backward envy,
+And cursed myself for the beast within me.
+But pride is the master of love, and the vision
+Of those old days grew faint and fainter:
+The counterfeit wife my mercy sheltered
+Was nothing now but a woman, -- a woman
+Out of my way and out of my nature.
+My battle with blinded love was over,
+My battle with aching pride beginning.
+If I was the loser at first, I wonder
+If I am the winner now! . . . I doubt it.
+My life is a losing game; and to-morrow --
+To-morrow! -- Christ! did I say to-morrow? . . .
+Is your brandy good for death? . . . There, -- listen: --
+
+When love goes out, and a man is driven
+To shun mankind for the scars that make him
+A joke for all chattering tongues, he carries
+A double burden. The woes I suffered
+After that hard betrayal made me
+Pity, at first, all breathing creatures
+On this bewildered earth. I studied
+Their faces and made for myself the story
+Of all their scattered lives. Like brothers
+And sisters they seemed to me then; and I nourished
+A stranger friendship wrought in my fancy
+Between those people and me. But somehow,
+As time went on, there came queer glances
+Out of their eyes, and the shame that stung me
+Harassed my pride with a crazed impression
+That every face in the surging city
+Was turned to me; and I saw sly whispers,
+Now and then, as I walked and wearied
+My wasted life twice over in bearing
+With all my sorrow the sorrows of others, --
+Till I found myself their fool. Then I trembled, --
+A poor scared thing, -- and their prying faces
+Told me the ghastly truth: they were laughing
+At me and my fate. My God, I could feel it --
+That laughter! And then the children caught it;
+And I, like a struck dog, crept and listened.
+And then when I met the man who had weakened
+A woman's love to his own desire,
+It seemed to me that all hell were laughing
+In fiendish concert! I was their victim --
+And his, and hate's. And there was the struggle!
+As long as the earth we tread holds something
+A tortured heart can love, the meaning
+Of life is not wholly blurred; but after
+The last loved thing in the world has left us,
+We know the triumph of hate. The glory
+Of good goes out forever; the beacon
+Of sin is the light that leads us downward --
+Down to the fiery end. The road runs
+Right through hell; and the souls that follow
+The cursed ways where its windings lead them
+Suffer enough, I say, to merit
+All grace that a God can give. -- The fashion
+Of our belief is to lift all beings
+Born for a life that knows no struggle
+In sin's tight snares to eternal glory --
+All apart from the branded millions
+Who carry through life their faces graven
+With sure brute scars that tell the story
+Of their foul, fated passions. Science
+Has yet no salve to smooth or soften
+The cradle-scars of a tyrant's visage;
+No drug to purge from the vital essence
+Of souls the sleeping venom. Virtue
+May flower in hell, when its roots are twisted
+And wound with the roots of vice; but the stronger
+Never is known till there comes that battle
+With sin to prove the victor. Perilous
+Things are these demons we call our passions:
+Slaves are we of their roving fancies,
+Fools of their devilish glee. -- You think me,
+I know, in this maundering way designing
+To lighten the load of my guilt and cast it
+Half on the shoulders of God. But hear me!
+I'm partly a man, -- for all my weakness, --
+If weakness it were to stand and murder
+Before men's eyes the man who had murdered
+Me, and driven my burning forehead
+With horns for the world to laugh at. Trust me!
+And try to believe my words but a portion
+Of what God's purpose made me! The coward
+Within me cries for this; and I beg you
+Now, as I come to the end, to remember
+That women and men are on earth to travel
+All on a different road. Hereafter
+The roads may meet. . . . I trust in something --
+I know not what. . . .
+
+ Well, this was the way of it: --
+Stung with the shame and the secret fury
+That comes to the man who has thrown his pittance
+Of self at a traitor's feet, I wandered
+Weeks and weeks in a baffled frenzy,
+Till at last the devil spoke. I heard him,
+And laughed at the love that strove to touch me, --
+The dead, lost love; and I gripped the demon
+Close to my breast, and held him, praising
+The fates and the furies that gave me the courage
+To follow his wild command. Forgetful
+Of all to come when the work was over, --
+There came to me then no stony vision
+Of these three hundred days, -- I cherished
+An awful joy in my brain. I pondered
+And weighed the thing in my mind, and gloried
+In life to think that I was to conquer
+Death at his own dark door, -- and chuckled
+To think of it done so cleanly. One evening
+I knew that my time had come. I shuddered
+A little, but rather for doubt than terror,
+And followed him, -- led by the nameless devil
+I worshipped and called my brother. The city
+Shone like a dream that night; the windows
+Flashed with a piercing flame, and the pavements
+Pulsed and swayed with a warmth -- or something
+That seemed so then to my feet -- and thrilled me
+With a quick, dizzy joy; and the women
+And men, like marvellous things of magic,
+Floated and laughed and sang by my shoulder,
+Sent with a wizard motion. Through it
+And over and under it all there sounded
+A murmur of life, like bees; and I listened
+And laughed again to think of the flower
+That grew, blood-red, for me! . . . This fellow
+Was one of the popular sort who flourish
+Unruffled where gods would fall. For a conscience
+He carried a snug deceit that made him
+The man of the time and the place, whatever
+The time or the place might be. Were he sounding,
+With a genial craft that cloaked its purpose,
+Nigh to itself, the depth of a woman
+Fooled with his brainless art, or sending
+The midnight home with songs and bottles, --
+The cad was there, and his ease forever
+Shone with the smooth and slippery polish
+That tells the snake. That night he drifted
+Into an up-town haunt and ordered --
+Whatever it was -- with a soft assurance
+That made me mad as I stood behind him,
+Gripping his death, and waited. Coward,
+I think, is the name the world has given
+To men like me; but I'll swear I never
+Thought of my own disgrace when I shot him --
+Yes, in the back, -- I know it, I know it
+Now; but what if I do? . . . As I watched him
+Lying there dead in the scattered sawdust,
+Wet with a day's blown froth, I noted
+That things were still; that the walnut tables,
+Where men but a moment before were sitting,
+Were gone; that a screen of something around me
+Shut them out of my sight. But the gilded
+Signs of a hundred beers and whiskeys
+Flashed from the walls above, and the mirrors
+And glasses behind the bar were lighted
+In some strange way, and into my spirit
+A thousand shafts of terrible fire
+Burned like death, and I fell. The story
+Of what came then, you know.
+
+ But tell me,
+What does the whole thing mean? What are we, --
+Slaves of an awful ignorance? puppets
+Pulled by a fiend? or gods, without knowing it?
+Do we shut from ourselves our own salvation, --
+Or what do we do! I tell you, Dominie,
+There are times in the lives of us poor devils
+When heaven and hell get mixed. Though conscience
+May come like a whisper of Christ to warn us
+Away from our sins, it is lost or laughed at, --
+And then we fall. And for all who have fallen --
+Even for him -- I hold no malice,
+Nor much compassion: a mightier mercy
+Than mine must shrive him. -- And I -- I am going
+Into the light? -- or into the darkness?
+Why do I sit through these sickening hours,
+And hope? Good God! are they hours? -- hours?
+Yes! I am done with days. And to-morrow --
+We two may meet! To-morrow! -- To-morrow! . . .
+
+
+
+
+Walt Whitman
+
+
+
+The master-songs are ended, and the man
+That sang them is a name. And so is God
+A name; and so is love, and life, and death,
+And everything. But we, who are too blind
+To read what we have written, or what faith
+Has written for us, do not understand:
+We only blink, and wonder.
+
+Last night it was the song that was the man,
+But now it is the man that is the song.
+We do not hear him very much to-day:
+His piercing and eternal cadence rings
+Too pure for us -- too powerfully pure,
+Too lovingly triumphant, and too large;
+But there are some that hear him, and they know
+That he shall sing to-morrow for all men,
+And that all time shall listen.
+
+The master-songs are ended? Rather say
+No songs are ended that are ever sung,
+And that no names are dead names. When we write
+Men's letters on proud marble or on sand,
+We write them there forever.
+
+
+
+
+The Chorus of Old Men in "Aegeus"
+
+
+
+Ye gods that have a home beyond the world,
+Ye that have eyes for all man's agony,
+Ye that have seen this woe that we have seen, --
+Look with a just regard,
+And with an even grace,
+Here on the shattered corpse of a shattered king,
+Here on a suffering world where men grow old
+And wander like sad shadows till, at last,
+Out of the flare of life,
+Out of the whirl of years,
+Into the mist they go,
+Into the mist of death.
+
+O shades of you that loved him long before
+The cruel threads of that black sail were spun,
+May loyal arms and ancient welcomings
+Receive him once again
+Who now no longer moves
+Here in this flickering dance of changing days,
+Where a battle is lost and won for a withered wreath,
+And the black master Death is over all,
+To chill with his approach,
+To level with his touch,
+The reigning strength of youth,
+The fluttered heart of age.
+
+Woe for the fateful day when Delphi's word was lost --
+Woe for the loveless prince of Aethra's line!
+Woe for a father's tears and the curse of a king's release --
+Woe for the wings of pride and the shafts of doom! --
+And thou, the saddest wind
+That ever blew from Crete,
+Sing the fell tidings back to that thrice unhappy ship! --
+Sing to the western flame,
+Sing to the dying foam,
+A dirge for the sundered years and a dirge for the years to be!
+
+Better his end had been as the end of a cloudless day,
+Bright, by the word of Zeus, with a golden star,
+Wrought of a golden fame, and flung to the central sky,
+To gleam on a stormless tomb for evermore: --
+Whether or not there fell
+To the touch of an alien hand
+The sheen of his purple robe and the shine of his diadem,
+Better his end had been
+To die as an old man dies, --
+But the fates are ever the fates, and a crown is ever a crown.
+
+
+
+
+The Wilderness
+
+
+
+Come away! come away! there's a frost along the marshes,
+And a frozen wind that skims the shoal where it shakes the dead black water;
+There's a moan across the lowland and a wailing through the woodland
+Of a dirge that sings to send us back to the arms of those that love us.
+There is nothing left but ashes now where the crimson chills of autumn
+Put off the summer's languor with a touch that made us glad
+For the glory that is gone from us, with a flight we cannot follow,
+To the slopes of other valleys and the sounds of other shores.
+
+ Come away! come away! you can hear them calling, calling,
+ Calling us to come to them, and roam no more.
+ Over there beyond the ridges and the land that lies between us,
+ There's an old song calling us to come!
+
+Come away! come away! -- for the scenes we leave behind us
+Are barren for the lights of home and a flame that's young forever;
+And the lonely trees around us creak the warning of the night-wind,
+That love and all the dreams of love are away beyond the mountains.
+The songs that call for us to-night, they have called for men before us,
+And the winds that blow the message, they have blown ten thousand years;
+But this will end our wander-time, for we know the joy that waits us
+In the strangeness of home-coming, and a faithful woman's eyes.
+
+ Come away! come away! there is nothing now to cheer us --
+ Nothing now to comfort us, but love's road home: --
+ Over there beyond the darkness there's a window gleams to greet us,
+ And a warm hearth waits for us within.
+
+Come away! come away! -- or the roving-fiend will hold us,
+And make us all to dwell with him to the end of human faring:
+There are no men yet can leave him when his hands are clutched upon them,
+There are none will own his enmity, there are none will call him brother.
+So we'll be up and on the way, and the less we brag the better
+For the freedom that God gave us and the dread we do not know: --
+The frost that skips the willow-leaf will again be back to blight it,
+And the doom we cannot fly from is the doom we do not see.
+
+ Come away! come away! there are dead men all around us --
+ Frozen men that mock us with a wild, hard laugh
+ That shrieks and sinks and whimpers in the shrill November rushes,
+ And the long fall wind on the lake.
+
+
+
+
+Octaves
+
+
+
+ I
+
+
+To get at the eternal strength of things,
+And fearlessly to make strong songs of it,
+Is, to my mind, the mission of that man
+The world would call a poet. He may sing
+But roughly, and withal ungraciously;
+But if he touch to life the one right chord
+Wherein God's music slumbers, and awake
+To truth one drowsed ambition, he sings well.
+
+
+
+ II
+
+
+We thrill too strangely at the master's touch;
+We shrink too sadly from the larger self
+Which for its own completeness agitates
+And undetermines us; we do not feel --
+We dare not feel it yet -- the splendid shame
+Of uncreated failure; we forget,
+The while we groan, that God's accomplishment
+Is always and unfailingly at hand.
+
+
+
+ III
+
+
+To mortal ears the plainest word may ring
+Fantastic and unheard-of, and as false
+And out of tune as ever to our own
+Did ring the prayers of man-made maniacs;
+But if that word be the plain word of Truth,
+It leaves an echo that begets itself,
+Persistent in itself and of itself,
+Regenerate, reiterate, replete.
+
+
+
+ IV
+
+
+Tumultuously void of a clean scheme
+Whereon to build, whereof to formulate,
+The legion life that riots in mankind
+Goes ever plunging upward, up and down,
+Most like some crazy regiment at arms,
+Undisciplined of aught but Ignorance,
+And ever led resourcelessly along
+To brainless carnage by drunk trumpeters.
+
+
+
+ V
+
+
+To me the groaning of world-worshippers
+Rings like a lonely music played in hell
+By one with art enough to cleave the walls
+Of heaven with his cadence, but without
+The wisdom or the will to comprehend
+The strangeness of his own perversity,
+And all without the courage to deny
+The profit and the pride of his defeat.
+
+
+
+ VI
+
+
+While we are drilled in error, we are lost
+Alike to truth and usefulness. We think
+We are great warriors now, and we can brag
+Like Titans; but the world is growing young,
+And we, the fools of time, are growing with it: --
+We do not fight to-day, we only die;
+We are too proud of death, and too ashamed
+Of God, to know enough to be alive.
+
+
+
+ VII
+
+
+There is one battle-field whereon we fall
+Triumphant and unconquered; but, alas!
+We are too fleshly fearful of ourselves
+To fight there till our days are whirled and blurred
+By sorrow, and the ministering wheels
+Of anguish take us eastward, where the clouds
+Of human gloom are lost against the gleam
+That shines on Thought's impenetrable mail.
+
+
+
+ VIII
+
+
+When we shall hear no more the cradle-songs
+Of ages -- when the timeless hymns of Love
+Defeat them and outsound them -- we shall know
+The rapture of that large release which all
+Right science comprehends; and we shall read,
+With unoppressed and unoffended eyes,
+That record of All-Soul whereon God writes
+In everlasting runes the truth of Him.
+
+
+
+ IX
+
+
+The guerdon of new childhood is repose: --
+Once he has read the primer of right thought,
+A man may claim between two smithy strokes
+Beatitude enough to realize
+God's parallel completeness in the vague
+And incommensurable excellence
+That equitably uncreates itself
+And makes a whirlwind of the Universe.
+
+
+
+ X
+
+
+There is no loneliness: -- no matter where
+We go, nor whence we come, nor what good friends
+Forsake us in the seeming, we are all
+At one with a complete companionship;
+And though forlornly joyless be the ways
+We travel, the compensate spirit-gleams
+Of Wisdom shaft the darkness here and there,
+Like scattered lamps in unfrequented streets.
+
+
+
+ XI
+
+
+When one that you and I had all but sworn
+To be the purest thing God ever made
+Bewilders us until at last it seems
+An angel has come back restigmatized, --
+Faith wavers, and we wonder what there is
+On earth to make us faithful any more,
+But never are quite wise enough to know
+The wisdom that is in that wonderment.
+
+
+
+ XII
+
+
+Where does a dead man go? -- The dead man dies;
+But the free life that would no longer feed
+On fagots of outburned and shattered flesh
+Wakes to a thrilled invisible advance,
+Unchained (or fettered else) of memory;
+And when the dead man goes it seems to me
+'T were better for us all to do away
+With weeping, and be glad that he is gone.
+
+
+
+ XIII
+
+
+Still through the dusk of dead, blank-legended,
+And unremunerative years we search
+To get where life begins, and still we groan
+Because we do not find the living spark
+Where no spark ever was; and thus we die,
+Still searching, like poor old astronomers
+Who totter off to bed and go to sleep,
+To dream of untriangulated stars.
+
+
+
+ XIV
+
+
+With conscious eyes not yet sincere enough
+To pierce the glimmered cloud that fluctuates
+Between me and the glorifying light
+That screens itself with knowledge, I discern
+The searching rays of wisdom that reach through
+The mist of shame's infirm credulity,
+And infinitely wonder if hard words
+Like mine have any message for the dead.
+
+
+
+ XV
+
+
+I grant you friendship is a royal thing,
+But none shall ever know that royalty
+For what it is till he has realized
+His best friend in himself. 'T is then, perforce,
+That man's unfettered faith indemnifies
+Of its own conscious freedom the old shame,
+And love's revealed infinitude supplants
+Of its own wealth and wisdom the old scorn.
+
+
+
+ XVI
+
+
+Though the sick beast infect us, we are fraught
+Forever with indissoluble Truth,
+Wherein redress reveals itself divine,
+Transitional, transcendent. Grief and loss,
+Disease and desolation, are the dreams
+Of wasted excellence; and every dream
+Has in it something of an ageless fact
+That flouts deformity and laughs at years.
+
+
+
+ XVII
+
+
+We lack the courage to be where we are: --
+We love too much to travel on old roads,
+To triumph on old fields; we love too much
+To consecrate the magic of dead things,
+And yieldingly to linger by long walls
+Of ruin, where the ruinous moonlight
+That sheds a lying glory on old stones
+Befriends us with a wizard's enmity.
+
+
+
+ XVIII
+
+
+Something as one with eyes that look below
+The battle-smoke to glimpse the foeman's charge,
+We through the dust of downward years may scan
+The onslaught that awaits this idiot world
+Where blood pays blood for nothing, and where life
+Pays life to madness, till at last the ports
+Of gilded helplessness be battered through
+By the still crash of salvatory steel.
+
+
+
+ XIX
+
+
+To you that sit with Sorrow like chained slaves,
+And wonder if the night will ever come,
+I would say this: The night will never come,
+And sorrow is not always. But my words
+Are not enough; your eyes are not enough;
+The soul itself must insulate the Real,
+Or ever you do cherish in this life --
+In this life or in any life -- repose.
+
+
+
+ XX
+
+
+Like a white wall whereon forever breaks
+Unsatisfied the tumult of green seas,
+Man's unconjectured godliness rebukes
+With its imperial silence the lost waves
+Of insufficient grief. This mortal surge
+That beats against us now is nothing else
+Than plangent ignorance. Truth neither shakes
+Nor wavers; but the world shakes, and we shriek.
+
+
+
+ XXI
+
+
+Nor jewelled phrase nor mere mellifluous rhyme
+Reverberates aright, or ever shall,
+One cadence of that infinite plain-song
+Which is itself all music. Stronger notes
+Than any that have ever touched the world
+Must ring to tell it -- ring like hammer-blows,
+Right-echoed of a chime primordial,
+On anvils, in the gleaming of God's forge.
+
+
+
+ XXII
+
+
+The prophet of dead words defeats himself:
+Whoever would acknowledge and include
+The foregleam and the glory of the real,
+Must work with something else than pen and ink
+And painful preparation: he must work
+With unseen implements that have no names,
+And he must win withal, to do that work,
+Good fortitude, clean wisdom, and strong skill.
+
+
+
+ XXIII
+
+
+To curse the chilled insistence of the dawn
+Because the free gleam lingers; to defraud
+The constant opportunity that lives
+Unchallenged in all sorrow; to forget
+For this large prodigality of gold
+That larger generosity of thought, --
+These are the fleshly clogs of human greed,
+The fundamental blunders of mankind.
+
+
+
+ XXIV
+
+
+Forebodings are the fiends of Recreance;
+The master of the moment, the clean seer
+Of ages, too securely scans what is,
+Ever to be appalled at what is not;
+He sees beyond the groaning borough lines
+Of Hell, God's highways gleaming, and he knows
+That Love's complete communion is the end
+Of anguish to the liberated man.
+
+
+
+ XXV
+
+
+Here by the windy docks I stand alone,
+But yet companioned. There the vessel goes,
+And there my friend goes with it; but the wake
+That melts and ebbs between that friend and me
+Love's earnest is of Life's all-purposeful
+And all-triumphant sailing, when the ships
+Of Wisdom loose their fretful chains and swing
+Forever from the crumbled wharves of Time.
+
+
+
+
+Two Quatrains
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ Unity
+
+
+As eons of incalculable strife
+Are in the vision of one moment caught,
+So are the common, concrete things of life
+Divinely shadowed on the walls of Thought.
+
+
+
+ II
+
+ Paraphrase
+
+
+We shriek to live, but no man ever lives
+Till he has rid the ghost of human breath;
+We dream to die, but no man ever dies
+Till he has quit the road that runs to death.
+
+
+
+
+Romance
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ Boys
+
+We were all boys, and three of us were friends;
+And we were more than friends, it seemed to me: --
+Yes, we were more than brothers then, we three. . . .
+Brothers? . . . But we were boys, and there it ends.
+
+
+ II
+
+ James Wetherell
+
+We never half believed the stuff
+They told about James Wetherell;
+We always liked him well enough,
+And always tried to use him well;
+But now some things have come to light,
+And James has vanished from our view, --
+There is n't very much to write,
+There is n't very much to do.
+
+
+
+
+The Torrent
+
+
+
+I found a torrent falling in a glen
+Where the sun's light shone silvered and leaf-split;
+The boom, the foam, and the mad flash of it
+All made a magic symphony; but when
+I thought upon the coming of hard men
+To cut those patriarchal trees away,
+And turn to gold the silver of that spray,
+I shuddered. Yet a gladness now and then
+Did wake me to myself till I was glad
+In earnest, and was welcoming the time
+For screaming saws to sound above the chime
+Of idle waters, and for me to know
+The jealous visionings that I had had
+Were steps to the great place where trees and torrents go.
+
+
+
+
+L'Envoi
+
+
+
+Now in a thought, now in a shadowed word,
+Now in a voice that thrills eternity,
+Ever there comes an onward phrase to me
+Of some transcendent music I have heard;
+No piteous thing by soft hands dulcimered,
+No trumpet crash of blood-sick victory,
+But a glad strain of some still symphony
+That no proud mortal touch has ever stirred.
+
+There is no music in the world like this,
+No character wherewith to set it down,
+No kind of instrument to make it sing.
+No kind of instrument? Ah, yes, there is!
+And after time and place are overthrown,
+God's touch will keep its one chord quivering.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of The Children of the Night
+
+
+
+
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