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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37804 ***
+POETICAL WORKS
+
+OF
+
+ROBERT BRIDGES
+
+
+
+ UNIFORM EDITION OF
+ ROBERT BRIDGES' POETICAL WORKS
+
+ _In Seven Volumes, Small Post 8vo, 6s. each._
+
+ _CONTENTS_
+
+ VOLUME I: Prometheus the Firegiver--Eros and Psyche--The Growth
+ of Love--Notes.
+
+ VOLUME II: Shorter Poems--New Poems--Notes.
+
+ VOLUME III: The First Part of Nero--Achilles in Scyros--Notes.
+
+ VOLUME IV: Palicio--The Return of Ulysses--Notes.
+
+ VOLUME V: The Christian Captives--Humours of the Court--Notes.
+
+ VOLUME VI: The Feast of Bacchus--Second Part of the History of
+ Nero--Notes.
+
+ VOLUME VII in preparation
+
+ *** This Volume completes the Uniform Edition of Mr. Robert
+ Bridges' Works.
+
+ LONDON: SMITH, ELDER & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE, S.W.
+
+ [Illustration: Robert Bridges
+
+ Aug 1912]
+
+
+
+
+ POETICAL WORKS
+
+ OF
+
+ ROBERT BRIDGES
+
+ EXCLUDING
+ THE EIGHT DRAMAS
+
+ [Illustration: colophon]
+
+ HENRY FROWDE
+
+ OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
+
+ LONDON, NEW YORK, TORONTO AND MELBOURNE
+
+ 1912
+
+ OXFORD: HORACE HART
+
+ PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE
+
+
+ This book consists of the Poems and Masks (as apart
+ from the Dramas) contained in the collected editions of
+ the Poetical Works of Robert Bridges, together with two
+ groups of Later Poems and Poems in Classical Prosody
+ now published for the first time or now first collected.
+
+ A record of the previous publication of the poems will be
+ found in the bibliographical notes prefixed to the various
+ sections of the present book.
+
+ The spelling of certain words is not uniform throughout
+ the poems. This is due to observance of the text of the
+ earlier editions of different dates, in the notes to which the
+ author's justification of these peculiarities was given.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ PROMETHEUS THE FIREGIVER. A Mask in the Greek
+ Manner 1
+
+ DEMETER. A Mask 49
+
+ EROS AND PSYCHE 87
+
+ THE GROWTH OF LOVE 185
+
+ SHORTER POEMS.
+
+ Book I 225
+
+ Book II 242
+
+ Book III 264
+
+ Book IV 281
+
+ Book V 301
+
+ NEW POEMS 321
+
+ LATER POEMS 365
+
+ POEMS IN CLASSICAL PROSODY 409
+
+ INDEX OF FIRST LINES 465
+
+
+
+
+ PROMETHEUS THE FIREGIVER
+
+ _A Mask
+ in the Greek Manner_
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+ _PREVIOUS EDITIONS_
+
+ 1. _Private Press of H. Daniel. Oxford, 1883._
+
+ 2. _Chiswick Press. G. Bell & Sons, 1884._
+
+ 3. _Clarendon Press. Smith, Elder & Co. Vol. I, 1898._
+
+
+
+
+ ARGUMENT
+
+
+ _Prometheus coming on earth to give fire to men appears
+ before the palace of Inachus in Argos on a festival of Zeus.
+ He interrupts the ceremony by announcing fire and persuades
+ Inachus to dare the anger of Zeus and accept the gift. Inachus
+ fetching Argeia his wife from the palace has in turn to quiet
+ her fears. He asks a prophecy of Prometheus who foretells the
+ fate of Io their daughter. Prometheus then setting flame to the
+ altar and writing his own name thereon in the place of Zeus
+ disappears._
+
+ _The Chorus sing (1) a Hymn to Zeus with the stories of the
+ birth of Zeus and the marriage of Hera with the dances of the
+ Curetes and the Hesperides, (2) their anticipation of fire with
+ an Ode on Wonder, (3) a Tragic Hymn on the lot of man,
+ (4) a Fire-chorus, (5) a final Chorus in praise of Prometheus._
+
+ _All the characters are good. Prometheus prologizes. He
+ carries a long reed._
+
+
+ DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
+
+ _PROMETHEUS._
+ _INACHUS._
+ _ARGEIA._
+ _SERVANT._
+ _IO_ (_persona muta_).
+ _CHORUS:_ _Youths and maidens of the house of Inachus._
+
+ _The SCENE is in ARGOS before the palace of Inachus.
+ An altar inscribed to Zeus is at the
+ centre of the stage._
+
+
+
+
+ PROMETHEUS
+ THE FIREGIVER
+
+
+ _PROMETHEUS._
+
+ From high Olympus and the ætherial courts,
+ Where mighty Zeus our angry king confirms
+ The Fates' decrees and bends the wills of the gods,
+ I come: and on the earth step with glad foot.
+ This variegated ocean-floor of the air,
+ The changeful circle of fair land, that lies
+ Heaven's dial, sisterly mirror of night and day:
+ The wide o'er-wandered plain, this nether world
+ My truant haunt is, when from jealous eyes
+ I steal, for hither 'tis I steal, and here 10
+ Unseen repair my joy: yet not unseen
+ Methinks, nor seen unguessed of him I seek.
+ Rather by swath or furrow, or where the path
+ Is walled with corn I am found, by trellised vine
+ Or olive set in banks or orchard trim:
+ I watch all toil and tilth, farm, field and fold,
+ And taste the mortal joy; since not in heaven
+ Among our easeful gods hath facile time
+ A touch so keen, to wake such love of life
+ As stirs the frail and careful being, who here, 20
+ The king of sorrows, melancholy man,
+ Bows at his labour, but in heart erect
+ A god stands, nor for any gift of god
+ Would barter his immortal-hearted prime.
+ Could I but win this world from Zeus for mine,
+ With not a god to vex my happy rule,
+ I would inhabit here and leave high heaven:
+ So much I love it and its race of men,
+ Even as he hates them, hates both them, and me
+ For loving what he hates, and would destroy me, 30
+ Outcast in the scorn of all his cringing crew,
+ For daring but to save what he would slay:
+ And me must first destroy. Thus he denieth
+ My heart's wish, thus my counsel sets at naught,
+ Which him saved once, when all at stake he stood
+ Uprisen in rebellion to overthrow
+ The elderseated Titans, for I that day
+ Gave him the counsels which his foes despised.
+ Unhappy they, who had still their blissful seats
+ Preserved and their Olympian majesty, 40
+ Had they been one with me. Alas, my kin!
+ But he, when he had taken the throne and chained
+ His foes in wasteful Tartarus, said no more
+ Where is Prometheus our wise counsellor?
+ What saith Prometheus? tell us, O Prometheus,
+ What Fate requires! but waxing confident
+ And wanton, as a youth first tasting power,
+ He wrecked the timeless monuments of heaven,
+ The witness of the wisdom of the gods,
+ And making all about him new, beyond 50
+ Determined to destroy the race of men,
+ And that create afresh or else have none.
+ Then his vain mind imagined a device,
+ And at his bidding all the opposèd winds
+ Blew, and the scattered clouds and furlèd snows,
+ From every part of heaven together flying,
+ He with brute hands in huge disorder heaped:
+ They with the winds' weight and his angry breath
+ Were thawed: in cataracts they fell, and earth
+ In darkness deep and whelmèd tempest lay, 60
+ Drowned 'neath the waters. Yet on the mountain-tops
+ Some few escaped, and some, thus warned by me,
+ Made shift to live in vessels which outrode
+ The season and the fury of the flood.
+ And when his rain was spent and from clear skies
+ Zeus looking down upon the watery world,
+ Beheld these few, the remnant of mankind,
+ Who yet stood up and breathed; he next withdrew
+ The seeds of fire, that else had still lain hid
+ In withered branch and the blue flakes of flint 70
+ For man to exact and use, but these withdrawn,
+ Man with the brutes degraded would be man
+ No more; and so the tyrant was content.
+ But I, despised again, again upheld
+ The weak, and pitying them sent sweet Hope,
+ Bearer of dreams, enchantress fond and kind,
+ From heaven descending on the unhindered rays
+ Of every star, to cheer with visions fair
+ Their unamending pains. And now this day
+ Behold I come bearing the seal of all 80
+ Which Hope had promised: for within this reed
+ A prisoner I bring them stolen from heaven,
+ The flash of mastering fire, and it have borne
+ So swift to earth, that when yon noontide sun
+ Rose from the sea at morning I was by,
+ And unperceived of Hêlios plunged the point
+ I' the burning axle, and withdrew a tongue
+ Of breathing flame, which lives to leap on earth
+ For man the father of all fire to come.
+ And hither have I brought it even to Argos 90
+ Unto king Inachus, him having chosen
+ Above all mortals to receive my gift:
+ For he is hopeful, careful, wise, and brave.
+ He first, when first the floods left bare the land,
+ Grew warm with enterprise, and gathered men
+ Together, and disposed their various tasks
+ For common weal combined; for soon were seen
+ The long straight channels dwindling on the plain,
+ Which slow from stagnant pool and wide morass
+ The pestilent waters to the rivers bore: 100
+ Then in the ruined dwellings and old tombs
+ He dug, unbedding from the wormèd ooze
+ Vessels and tools of trade and husbandry;
+ Wherewith, all seasonable works restored,
+ Oil made he and wine anew, and taught mankind
+ To live not brutally though without fire,
+ Tending their flocks and herds and weaving wool,
+ Living on fruit and milk and shepherds' fare,
+ Till time should bring back flame to smithy and hearth,
+ Or Zeus relent. Now at these gates I stand, 110
+ At this mid hour, when Inachus comes forth
+ To offer sacrifice unto his foe.
+ For never hath his faithful zeal forborne
+ To pay the power, though hard, that rules the world
+ The smokeless sacrifice; which first to-day
+ Shall smoke, and rise at heaven in flame to brave
+ The baffled god. See here a servant bears
+ For the cold altar ceremonial wood:
+ My shepherd's cloak will serve me for disguise.
+
+ _SERVANT._
+
+ With much toil have I hewn these sapless logs. 120
+
+ PR. But toil brings health, and health is happiness.
+
+ SERV. Here's one I know not--nay, how came he here
+ Unseen by me? I pray thee, stranger, tell me
+ What wouldst thou at the house of Inachus?
+
+ PR. Intruders, friend, and travellers have glib tongues,
+ Silence will question such.
+
+ SERV. If 'tis a message,
+ To-day is not thy day--who sent thee hither?
+
+ PR. The business of my leisure was well guessed:
+ But he that sent me hither is I that come.
+
+ SERV. I smell the matter--thou wouldst serve the house?
+
+ PR. 'Twas for that very cause I fled my own. 131
+
+ SERV. From cruelty or fear of punishment?
+
+ PR. Cruel was my master, for he slew his father.
+ His punishments thou speakest of are crimes.
+
+ SERV. Thou dost well flying one that slew his father.
+
+ PR. Thy lord, they say, is kind.
+
+ SERV. Well, thou wilt see
+ Thou may'st at once begin--come, give a hand.
+
+ PR. A day of freedom is a day of pleasure:
+ And what thou doest have I never done,
+ And understanding not might mar thy work. 140
+
+ SERV. Ay true--there is a right way and a wrong
+ In laying wood.
+
+ PR. Then let me see thee lay it:
+ The sight of a skill'd hand will teach an art.
+
+ SERV. Thou seest this faggot which I now unbind,
+ How it is packed within.
+
+ PR. I see the cones
+ And needles of the fir, which by the wind
+ In melancholy places ceaselessly
+ Sighing are strewn upon the tufted floor.
+
+ SERV. These took I from a sheltered bank, whereon
+ The sun looks down at noon; for there is need 150
+ The things be dry. These first I spread; and then
+ Small sticks that snap i' the hand.
+
+ PR. Such are enough
+ To burden the slow flight of labouring rooks,
+ When on the leafless tree-tops in young March
+ Their glossy herds assembling soothe the air
+ With cries of solemn joy and cawings loud.
+ And such the long-necked herons will bear to mend
+ Their airy platform, when the loving spring
+ Bids them take thought for their expected young.
+
+ SERV. See even so I cross them and cross them so: 160
+ Larger and by degrees a steady stack
+ Have built, whereon the heaviest logs may lie:
+ And all of sun-dried wood: and now 'tis done.
+
+ PR. And now 'tis done, what means it now 'tis done?
+
+ SERV. Well, thus 'tis rightly done: but why 'tis so
+ I cannot tell, nor any man here knows;
+ Save that our master when he sacrificeth,
+ As thou wilt hear anon, speaketh of fire;
+ And fire he saith is good for gods and men;
+ And the gods have it and men have it not: 170
+ And then he prays the gods to send us fire;
+ And we, against they send it, must have wood
+ Laid ready thus as I have shewn thee here.
+
+ PR. To-day he sacrificeth?
+
+ SERV. Ay, this noon.
+
+ Hark! hear'st thou not? they come. The solemn flutes
+ Warn us away; we must not here be seen
+ In these our soilèd habits, yet may stand
+ Where we may hear and see and not be seen.
+
+ [_Exeunt R._
+
+ _Enter_ CHORUS, _and from the palace_ INACHUS _bearing cakes: he
+ comes to stand behind the altar_.
+
+ _CHORUS._
+
+ God of Heaven!
+ We praise thee, Zeus most high, 180
+ To whom by eternal Fate was given
+ The range and rule of the sky;
+ When thy lot, first of three
+ Leapt out, as sages tell,
+ And won Olympus for thee,
+ Therein for ever to dwell:
+ But the next with the barren sea
+ To grave Poseidôn fell,
+ And left fierce Hades his doom, to be
+ The lord and terror of hell. 190
+ (2) Thou sittest for aye
+ Encircled in azure bright,
+ Regarding the path of the sun by day,
+ And the changeful moon by night:
+ Attending with tireless ears
+ To the song of adoring love,
+ With which the separate spheres
+ Are voicèd that turn above:
+ And all that is hidden under
+ The clouds thy footing has furl'd 200
+ Fears the hand that holdeth the thunder,
+ The eye that looks on the world.
+
+ _Semichorus of youths._
+
+ Of all the isles of the sea
+ Is Crete most famed in story:
+ Above all mountains famous to me
+ Is Ida and crowned with glory.
+ There guarded of Heaven and Earth
+ Came Rhea at fall of night
+ To hide a wondrous birth
+ From the Sire's unfathering sight. 210
+ The halls of Cronos rang
+ With omens of coming ill,
+ And the mad Curêtes danced and sang
+ Adown the slopes of the hill.
+
+ Then all the peaks of Gnossus kindled red
+ Beckoning afar unto the sinking sun,
+ he thro' the vaporous west plunged to his bed,
+ Sunk, and the day was done.
+ But they, though he was fled,
+ Such light still held, as oft 220
+ Hanging in air aloft,
+ At eve from shadowed ship
+ The Egyptian sailor sees:
+ Or like the twofold tip
+ That o'er the topmost trees
+ Flares on Parnassus, and the Theban dames
+ Quake at the ghostly flames.
+
+ Then friendly night arose
+ To succour Earth, and spread
+ Her mantle o'er the snows 230
+ And quenched their rosy red;
+ But in the east upsprings
+ Another light on them,
+ Selêné with white wings
+ And hueless diadem.
+ Little could she befriend
+ Her father's house and state,
+ Nor her weak beams defend
+ Hyperion from his fate.
+ Only where'er she shines, 240
+ In terror looking forth,
+ She sees the wailing pines
+ Stoop to the bitter North:
+ Or searching twice or thrice
+ Along the rocky walls,
+ She marks the columned ice
+ Of frozen waterfalls:
+ But still the darkened cave
+ Grew darker as she shone,
+ Wherein was Rhea gone 250
+ Her child to bear and save.
+
+ [_They dance._
+
+ Then danced the Dactyls and Curêtes wild,
+ And drowned with yells the cries of mother and child;
+ Big-armed Damnámeneus gan prance and shout:
+ And burly Acmon struck the echoes out:
+ And Kermis leaped and howled: and Titias pranced
+ And broad Cyllenus tore the air and danced:
+ While deep within the shadowed cave at rest
+ Lay Rhea, with her babe upon her breast.
+
+
+ _INACHUS._
+
+ If any here there be whose impure hands 260
+ Among pure hands, or guilty heart among
+ Our guiltless hearts be stained with blood or wrong,
+ Let him depart!
+ If there be any here in whom high Zeus
+ Seeing impiety might turn away,
+ Now from our sacrifice and from his sin
+ Let him depart!
+
+ _Semichorus of maidens._
+
+ I have chosen to praise
+ Hêra the wife, and bring
+ A hymn for the feast on marriage days 270
+ To the wife of the gods' king.
+ How on her festival
+ The gods had loving strife,
+ Which should give of them all
+ The fairest gift to the wife.
+ But Earth said, Fair to see
+ Is mine and yields to none,
+ I have grown for her joy a sacred tree,
+ With apples of gold thereon.
+
+ Then Hêra, when she heard what Earth had given, 280
+ Smiled for her joy, and longed and came to see:
+ On dovewings flying from the height of heaven,
+ Down to the golden tree:
+ As tired birds at even
+ Come flying straight to house
+ On their accustomed boughs.
+ 'Twas where, on tortured hands
+ Bearing the mighty pole.
+ Devoted Atlas stands:
+ And round his bowed head roll 290
+ Day-light and night, and stars unmingled dance,
+ Nor can he raise his glance.
+
+ She saw the rocky coast
+ Whereon the azured waves
+ Are laced in foam, or lost
+ In water-lighted caves;
+ The olive island where,
+ Amid the purple seas,
+ Night unto Darkness bare
+ The four Hesperides: 300
+ And came into the shade
+ Of Atlas, where she found
+ The garden Earth had made
+ And fenced with groves around.
+ And in the midst it grew
+ Alone, the priceless stem,
+ As careful, clear and true
+ As graving on a gem.
+ Nature had kissèd Art
+ And borne a child to stir 310
+ With jealousy the heart
+ Of heaven's Artificer.
+ From crown to swelling root
+ It mocked the goddess' praise,
+ The green enamelled sprays,
+ The emblazoned golden fruit.
+
+ [_They dance_
+
+ And 'neath the tree, with hair and zone unbound,
+ The fair Hesperides aye danced around,
+ And Ægle danced and sang 'O welcome, Queen!'
+ And Erytheia sang 'The tree is green!' 320
+ And Hestia danced and sang 'The fruit is gold!'
+ And Arethusa sang 'Fair Queen, behold!'
+ And all joined hands and danced about the tree,
+ And sang 'O Queen, we dance and sing for thee!'
+
+ IN. If there be any here who has complaint
+ Against our rule or claim or supplication,
+ Now in the name of Zeus let it appear,
+ Now let him speak!
+
+ _Prometheus re-enters._
+
+ PR. All hail, most worthy king, such claim have I.
+
+ IN. May grace be with thee, stranger; speak thy mind.
+
+ PR. To Argos, king of Argos, at thy house 331
+ I bring long journeying to an end this hour,
+ Bearing no idle message for thine ears.
+ For know that far thy fame has reached, and men
+ That ne'er have seen thee tell that thou art set
+ Upon the throne of virtue, that goodwill
+ And love thy servants are, that in thy land
+ Joy, honour, trust and modesty abide
+ And drink the air of peace, that kings must see
+ Thy city, would they know their peoples' good 340
+ And stablish them therein by wholesome laws.
+ But one thing mars the tale, for o'er thy lands
+ Travelling I have not seen from morn till eve,
+ Either from house or farm or labourer's cot,
+ In any village, nor this town of Argos
+ A blue-wreathed smoke arise: the hearths are cold,
+ This altar cold: I see the wood and cakes
+ Unbaken--O king, where is the fire?
+
+ IN. If hither, stranger, thou wert come to find
+ That which thou findest wanting, join with us 350
+ Now in our sacrifice, take food within,
+ And having learnt our simple way of life
+ Return unto thy country whence thou camest.
+ But hast thou skill or knowledge of this thing,
+ How best it may be sought, or by what means
+ Hope to be reached, O speak! I wait to hear.
+
+ PR. There is, O king, fire on the earth this day.
+
+ IN. On earth there is fire thou sayest!
+
+ PR. There is fire.
+
+ IN. On earth this day!
+
+ PR. There is fire on earth this day.
+
+ IN. This is a sacred place, a solemn hour, 360
+ Thy speech is earnest: yet even if thou speak truth,
+ O welcome messenger of happy tidings,
+ And though I hear aright, yet to believe
+ Is hard: thou canst not know what words thou speakest
+ Into what ears: they never heard before
+ This sound but in old tales of happier times,
+ In sighs of prayer and faint unhearted hope:
+ Maybe they heard not rightly, speak again!
+
+ PR. There is, O king, fire on the earth this day.
+
+ IN. Yes, yes, again. Now let sweet Music blab 370
+ Her secret and give o'er; here is a trumpet
+ That mocks her method. Yet 'tis but the word.
+ Maybe thy fire is not the fire I seek;
+ Maybe though thou didst see it, now 'tis quenched,
+ Or guarded out of reach: speak yet again
+ And swear by heaven's truth is there fire or no;
+ And if there be, what means may make it mine.
+
+ PR. There is, O king, fire on the earth this day:
+ But not as thou dost seek it to be found.
+
+ IN. How seeking wrongly shall I seek aright? 380
+
+ PR. Thou prayest here to Zeus, and him thou callest
+ Almighty, knowing he could grant thy prayer:
+ That if 'twere but his will, the journeying sun
+ Might drop a spark into thine outstretched hand:
+ That at his breath the splashing mountain brooks
+ That fall from Orneæ, and cold Lernè's pool
+ Would change their element, and their chill streams
+ Bend in their burning banks a molten flood:
+ That at his word so many messengers
+ Would bring thee fire from heaven, that not a hearth 390
+ In all thy land but straight would have a god
+ To kneel and fan the flame: and yet to him,
+ It is to him thou prayest.
+
+ IN. Therefore to him.
+
+ PR. Is this thy wisdom, king, to sow thy seed
+ Year after year in this unsprouting soil?
+ Hast thou not proved and found the will of Zeus
+ A barren rock for man with prayer to plough?
+
+ IN. His anger be averted! we judge not god
+ Evil, because our wishes please him not.
+ Oft our shortsighted prayers to heaven ascending 400
+ Ask there our ruin, and are then denied
+ In kindness above granting: were 't not so,
+ Scarce could we pray for fear to pluck our doom
+ Out of the merciful withholding hands.
+
+ PR. Why then provokest thou such great goodwill
+ In long denial and kind silence shown?
+
+ IN. Fie, fie! Thou lackest piety: the god's denial
+ Being nought but kindness, there is hope that he
+ Will make that good which is not:--or if indeed
+ Good be withheld in punishment, 'tis well 410
+ Still to seek on and pray that god relent.
+
+ PR. O Sire of Argos, Zeus will not relent.
+
+ IN. Yet fire thou say'st is on the earth this day.
+
+ PR. Not of his knowledge nor his gift, O king.
+
+ IN. By kindness of what god then has man fire?
+
+ PR. I say but on the earth unknown to Zeus.
+
+ IN. How boastest thou to know, not of his knowledge?
+
+ PR. I boast not: he that knoweth not may boast.
+
+ IN. Thy daring words bewilder sense with sound.
+
+ PR. I thought to find thee ripe for daring deeds. 420
+
+ IN. And what the deed for which I prove unripe?
+
+ PR. To take of heaven's fire.
+
+ IN. And were I ripe,
+ What should I dare, beseech you?
+
+ PR. The wrath of Zeus.
+
+ IN. Madman, pretending in one hand to hold
+ The wrath of god and in the other fire.
+
+ PR. Thou meanest rather holding both in one.
+
+ IN. Both impious art thou and incredible.
+
+ PR. Yet impious only till thou dost believe.
+
+ IN. And what believe? Ah, if I could believe!
+ It was but now thou saidst that there was fire, 430
+ And I was near believing; I believed:
+ Now to believe were to be mad as thou.
+
+ CHORUS. He may be mad and yet say true--maybe
+ The heat of prophecy like a strong wine
+ Shameth his reason with exultant speech.
+
+ PR. Thou say'st I am mad, and of my sober words
+ Hast called those impious which thou fearest true,
+ Those which thou knowest good, incredible.
+ Consider ere thou judge: be first assured
+ All is not good for man that seems god's will. 440
+ See, on thy farming skill, thy country toil
+ Which bends to aid the willing fruits of earth,
+ And would promote the seasonable year,
+ The face of nature is not always kind:
+ And if thou search the sum of visible being
+ To find thy blessing featured, 'tis not there:
+ Her best gifts cannot brim the golden cup
+ Of expectation which thine eager arms
+ Lift to her mouthèd horn--what then is this
+ Whose wide capacity outbids the scale 450
+ Of prodigal beauty, so that the seeing eye
+ And hearing ear, retiring unamazed
+ Within their quiet chambers, sit to feast
+ With dear imagination, nor look forth
+ As once they did upon the varying air?
+ Whence is the fathering of this desire
+ Which mocks at fated circumstance? nay though
+ Obstruction lie as cumbrous as the mountains,
+ Nor thy particular hap hath armed desire
+ Against the brunt of evil,--yet not for this 460
+ Faints man's desire: it is the unquenchable
+ Original cause, the immortal breath of being:
+ Nor is there any spirit on Earth astir,
+ Nor 'neath the airy vault, nor yet beyond
+ In any dweller in far-reaching space,
+ Nobler or dearer than the spirit of man:
+ That spirit which lives in each and will not die,
+ That wooeth beauty, and for all good things
+ Urgeth a voice, or in still passion sigheth,
+ And where he loveth draweth the heart with him. 470
+ Hast thou not heard him speaking oft and oft,
+ Prompting thy secret musings and now shooting
+ His feathered fancies, or in cloudy sleep
+ Piling his painted dreams? O hark to him!
+ For else if folly shut his joyous strength
+ To mope in her dark prison without praise,
+ The hidden tears with which he wails his wrong
+ Will sour the fount of life. O hark to him!
+ Him may'st thou trust beyond the things thou seest.
+ For many things there be upon this earth 480
+ Unblest and fallen from beauty, to mislead
+ Man's mind, and in a shadow justify
+ The evil thoughts and deeds that work his ill;
+ Fear, hatred, lust and strife, which, if man question
+ The heavenborn spirit within him, are not there.
+ Yet are they bold of face, and Zeus himself,
+ Seeing that Mischief held her head on high,
+ Lest she should go beyond his power to quell
+ And draw the inevitable Fate that waits
+ On utmost ill, himself preventing Fate 490
+ Hasted to drown the world, and now would crush
+ Thy little remnant: but among the gods
+ Is one whose love and courage stir for thee;
+ Who being of manlike spirit, by many shifts
+ Has stayed the hand of the enemy, who crieth
+ Thy world is not destroyed, thy good shall live:
+ Thou hast more power for good than Zeus for ill,
+ More courage, justice, more abundant art,
+ More love, more joy, more reason: though around thee
+ Rank-rooting evil bloom with poisonous crown, 500
+ Though wan and dolorous and crooked things
+ Have made their home with thee, thy good shall live.
+ Know thy desire: and know that if thou seek it,
+ And seek, and seek, and fear not, thou shall find.
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). Is this a god that speaketh thus?
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). He speaketh as a man
+ In love or great affliction yields his soul.
+
+ IN. Thou, whencesoe'er thou comest, whoe'er thou art,
+ Who breakest on our solemn sacrifice
+ With solemn words, I pray thee not depart 510
+ Till thou hast told me more. This fire I seek
+ Not for myself, whose thin and silvery hair
+ Tells that my toilsome age nears to its end,
+ But for my children and the aftertime,
+ For great the need thereof, wretched our state;
+ Nay, set by what has been, our happiness
+ Is very want, so that what now is not
+ Is but the measure of what yet may be.
+ And first are barest needs, which well I know
+ Fire would supply, but I have hope beyond, 520
+ That Nature in recovering her right
+ Would kinder prove to man who seeks to learn
+ Her secrets and unfold the cause of life.
+ So tell me, if thou knowest, what is fire?
+ Doth earth contain it? or, since from the sun
+ Fire reaches us, since in the glimmering stars
+ And pallid moon, in lightning, and the glance
+ Of tracking meteors that at nightfall show
+ How in the air a thousand sightless things
+ Travel, and ever on their windswift course 530
+ Flame when they list and into darkness go,--
+ Since in all these a fiery nature dwells,
+ Is fire an airy essence, a thing of heaven,
+ That, could we poise it, were an alien power
+ To make our wisdom less, our wonder more?
+
+ PR. Thy wish to know is good, and happy is he
+ Who thus from chance and change has launched his mind
+ To dwell for ever with undisturbèd truth.
+ This high ambition doth not prompt his hand
+ To crime, his right and pleasure are not wronged 540
+ By folly of his fellows, nor his eye
+ Dimmed by the griefs that move the tears of men.
+ Son of the earth, and citizen may be
+ Of Argos or of Athens and her laws,
+ But still the eternal nature, where he looks,
+ O'errules him with the laws which laws obey,
+ And in her heavenly city enrols his heart.
+
+ IN. Thus ever have I held of happiness,
+ The child of heavenly truth, and thus have found it
+ In prayer and meditation and still thought, 550
+ And thus my peace of mind based on a floor
+ That doth not quaver like the joys of sense:
+ Those I possess enough in seeing my slaves
+ And citizens enjoy, having myself
+ Tasted for once and put their sweets away.
+ But of that heavenly city, of which thou sayest
+ Her laws o'errule us, have I little learnt,
+ For when my wandering spirit hath dared alone
+ The unearthly terror of her voiceless halls,
+ She hath fallen from delight, and without guide 560
+ Turned back, and from her errand fled for fear.
+
+ PR. Think not that thou canst all things know, nor deem
+ Such knowledge happiness: the all-knowing Fates
+ No pleasure have, who sit eternally
+ Spinning the unnumbered threads that Time hath woven,
+ And weaves, upgathering in his furthest house
+ To store from sight; but what 'tis joy to learn
+ Or use to know, that may'st thou ask of right.
+
+ IN. Then tell me, for thou knowest, what is fire?
+
+ PR. Know then, O king, that this fair earth of men, 570
+ The Olympus of the gods, and all the heavens
+ Are lesser kingdoms of the boundless space
+ Wherein Fate rules; they have their several times,
+ Their seasons and the limit of their thrones,
+ And from the nature of eternal things
+ Springing, themselves are changed; even as the trees
+ Or birds or beasts of earth, which now arise
+ To being, now in turn decay and die.
+ The heaven and earth thou seest, for long were held
+ By Fire, a raging power, to whom the Fates 580
+ Decreed a slow diminishing old age,
+ But to his daughter, who is that gentle goddess,
+ Queen of the clear and azure firmament,
+ In heaven called Hygra, but by mortals Air,
+ To her, the child of his slow doting years,
+ Was given a beauteous youth, not long to outlast
+ His life, but be the pride of his decay,
+ And win to gentler sway his lost domains.
+ And when the day of time arrived, when Air
+ Took o'er from her decrepit sire the third 590
+ Of the Sun's kingdoms, the one-moonèd earth,
+ Straight came she down to her inheritance.
+ Gaze on the sun with thine unshaded eye
+ And shrink from what she saw. Forests of fire
+ Whose waving trunks, sucking their fuel, reared
+ In branched flame roaring, and their torrid shades
+ Aye underlit with fire. The mountains lifted
+ And fell and followed like a running sea,
+ And from their swelling flanks spumed froth of fire;
+ Or, like awakening monsters, mighty mounds 600
+ Rose on the plain awhile.
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). He discovers a foe.
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). An enemy he paints.
+
+ PR. These all she quenched,
+ Or charmed their fury into the dens and bowels
+ Of earth to smoulder, there the vital heat
+ To hold for her creation, which then--to her aid
+ Summoning high Reason from his home in heaven,--
+ She wrought anew upon the temperate lands.
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). 'Twas well Air won this kingdom of her sire.
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). Now say how made she green this home of fire.
+
+ PR. The waters first she brought, that in their streams
+ And pools and seas innumerable things 611
+ Brought forth, from whence she drew the fertile seeds
+ Of trees and plants, and last of footed life,
+ That wandered forth, and roaming to and fro,
+ The rejoicing earth peopled with living sound.
+ Reason advised, and Reason praised her toil;
+ Which when she had done she gave him thanks, and said,
+ 'Fair comrade, since thou praisest what is done,
+ Grant me this favour ere thou part from me:
+ Make thou one fair thing for me, which shall suit 620
+ With what is made, and be the best of all.'
+ 'Twas evening, and that night Reason made man.
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). Children of Air are we, and live by fire.
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). The sons of Reason dwelling on the earth.
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). Folk of a pleasant kingdom held between
+ Fire's reign of terror and the latter day
+ When dying, soon in turn his child must die.
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). Having a wise creator, above time
+ Or youth or change, from whom our kind inherit
+ The grace and pleasure of the eternal gods. 630
+
+ IN. But how came gods to rule this earth of Air?
+
+ PR. They also were her children who first ruled,
+ Cronos, Iapetus, Hypérion,
+ Theia and Rhea, and other mighty names
+ That are but names--whom Zeus drave out from heaven,
+ And with his tribe sits on their injured thrones.
+
+ IN. There is no greater god in heaven than he.
+
+ PR. Nor none more cruel nor more tyrannous.
+
+ IN. But what can man against the power of god?
+
+ PR. Doth not man strive with him? thyself dost pray.
+
+ IN. That he may pardon our contrarious deeds. 641
+
+ PR. Alas! Alas! what more contrarious deed,
+ What greater miracle of wrong than this,
+ That man should know his good and take it not?
+ To what god wilt thou pray to pardon this?
+ In vain was reason given, if man therewith
+ Shame truth, and name it wisdom to cry down
+ The unschooled promptings of his best desire.
+ The beasts that have no speech nor argument
+ Confute him, and the wild hog in the wood 650
+ That feels his longing, hurries straight thereto,
+ And will not turn his head.
+
+ IN. How mean'st thou this?
+
+ PR. Thou hast desired the good, and now canst feel
+ How hard it is to kill the heart's desire.
+
+ IN. Shall Inachus rise against Zeus, as he
+ Rose against Cronos and made war in heaven?
+
+ PR. I say not so, yet, if thou didst rebel,
+ The tongue that counselled Zeus should counsel thee.
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). This is strange counsel.
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). He is not
+ A counsellor for gods or men. 660
+
+ IN. O that I knew where I might counsel find,
+ That one were sent, nay, were't the least of all
+ The myriad messengers of heaven, to me!
+ One that should say 'This morn I stood with Zeus,
+ He hath heard thy prayer and sent me: ask a boon,
+ What thing thou wilt, it shall be given thee.'
+
+ PR. What wouldst thou say to such a messenger?
+
+ IN. No need to ask then what I now might ask,
+ How 'tis the gods, if they have care for mortals,
+ Slubber our worst necessities--and the boon, 670
+ No need to tell him that.
+
+ PR. Now, king, thou seest
+ Zeus sends no messenger, but I am here.
+
+ IN. Thy speech is hard, and even thy kindest words
+ Unkind. If fire thou hast, in thee 'tis kind
+ To proffer it: but thou art more unkind
+ Yoking heaven's wrath therewith. Nay, and how knowest thou
+ Zeus will be angry if I take of it?
+ Thou art a prophet: ay, but of the prophets
+ Some have been taken in error, and honest time
+ Has honoured many with forgetfulness. 680
+ I'll make this proof of thee; Show me thy fire--
+ Nay, give't me now--if thou be true at all,
+ Be true so far: for the rest there's none will lose,
+ Nor blame thee being false--where is thy fire?
+
+ PR. O rather, had it thus been mine to give,
+ I would have given it thus: not adding aught
+ Of danger or diminishment or loss;
+ So strong is my goodwill; nor less than this
+ My knowledge, but in knowledge all my power.
+ Yet since wise guidance with a little means 690
+ Can more than force unminded, I have skill
+ To conjure evil and outcompass strength.
+ Now give I thee my best, a little gift
+ To work a world of wonder; 'tis thine own
+ Of long desire, and with it I will give
+ The cunning of invention and all arts
+ In which thy hand instructed may command,
+ Interpret, comfort, or ennoble nature;
+ With all provision that in wisdom is,
+ And what prevention in foreknowledge lies. 700
+
+ IN. Great is the gain.
+
+ PR. O king, the gain is thine,
+ The penalty I more than share.
+
+ IN. Enough,
+ I take thy gift; nor hast thou stood more firm
+ To every point of thy strange chequered tale,
+ Revealing, threatening, offering more and more,
+ And never all, than I to this resolve.
+
+ PR. I knew thy heart would fail not at the hour.
+
+ IN. Nay, failed I now, what were my years of toil
+ More than the endurance of a harnessed brute,
+ Flogged to his daily work, that cannot view 710
+ The high design to which his labour steps?
+ And I of all men were dishonoured most
+ Shrinking in fear, who never shrank from toil,
+ And found abjuring, thrusting stiffly back,
+ The very gift for which I stretched my hands.
+ What though I suffer? are these wintry years
+ Of growing desolation to be held
+ As cherishable as the suns of spring?
+ Nay, only joyful can they be in seeing
+ Long hopes accomplished, long desires fulfilled. 720
+ And since thou hast touched ambition on the side
+ Of nobleness, and stirred my proudest hope,
+ And wilt fulfil this, shall I count the cost?
+ Rather decay will triumph, and cold death
+ Be lapped in glory, seeing strength arise
+ From weakness, from the tomb go forth a flame.
+
+ PR. 'Tis well; thou art exalted now, the grace
+ Becomes thy valiant spirit.
+
+ IN. Lo! on this day
+ Which hope despaired to see, hope manifests
+ A vision bright as were the dreams of youth; 730
+ When life was easy as a sleeper's faith
+ Who swims in the air and dances on the sea;
+ When all the good that scarce by toil is won,
+ Or not at all is won, is as a flower
+ Growing in plenty to be plucked at will:
+ Is it a dream again or is it truth,
+ This vision fair of Greece inhabited?
+ A fairer sight than all fair Iris sees,
+ Footing her airy arch of colours spun
+ From Ida to Olympus, when she stays 740
+ To look on Greece and thinks the sight is fair;
+ Far fairer now, clothed with the works of men.
+
+ PR. Ay, fairer far: for nature's varied pleasaunce
+ Without man's life is but a desert wild,
+ Which most, where most she mocks him, needs his aid.
+ She knows her silence sweeter when it girds
+ His murmurous cities, her wide wasteful curves
+ Larger beside his economic line;
+ Or what can add a mystery to the dark,
+ As doth his measured music when it moves 750
+ With rhythmic sweetness through the void of night?
+ Nay, all her loveliest places are but grounds
+ Of vantage, where with geometric hand,
+ True square and careful compass he may come
+ To plan and plant and spread abroad his towers,
+ His gardens, temples, palaces and tombs.
+ And yet not all thou seest, with trancèd eye
+ Looking upon the beauty that shall be,
+ The temple-crownèd heights, the wallèd towns,
+ Farms and cool summer seats, nor the broad ways 760
+ That bridge the rivers and subdue the mountains,
+ Nor all that travels on them, pomp or war
+ Or needful merchandise, nor all the sails
+ Piloting over the wind-dappled blue
+ Of the summer-soothed Ægean, to thy mind
+ Can picture what shall be: these are the face
+ And form of beauty, but her heart and life
+ Shall they be who shall see it, born to shield
+ A happier birthright with intrepid arms,
+ To tread down tyranny and fashion forth 770
+ A virgin wisdom to subdue the world,
+ To build for passion an eternal song,
+ To shape her dreams in marble, and so sweet
+ Their speech, that envious Time hearkening shall stay
+ In fear to snatch, and hide his rugged hand.
+ Now is the birthday of thy conquering youth,
+ O man, and lo! Thy priest and prophet stand
+ Beside the altar and have blessed the day.
+
+ IN. Ay, blessed be this day. Where is thy fire?
+ Or is aught else to do, ere I may take? 780
+
+ PR. This was my message, speak and there is fire.
+
+ IN. There shall be fire. Await me here awhile.
+ I go to acquaint my house, and bring them forth.
+
+ [_Exit._
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Hearken, O Argos, hearken!
+ There will be fire.
+ And thou, O Earth, give ear!
+ There will be fire.
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). Who shall be sent to fetch this fire for the king?
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). Shall we put forth in boats to reap,
+ And shall the waves for harvest yield 790
+ The rootless flames that nimbly leap
+ Upon their ever-shifting field?
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). Or we in olive-groves go shake
+ And beat the fruiting sprays, till all
+ The silv'ry glitter which they make
+ Beneath into our baskets fall?
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). To bind in sheaves and bear away
+ The white unshafted darts of day?
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). And from the shadow one by one
+ Pick up the playful oes of sun? 800
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). Or wouldst thou mine a passage deep
+ Until the darksome fire is found,
+ Which prisoned long in seething sleep
+ Vexes the caverns underground?
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). Or bid us join our palms perchance,
+ To cup the slant and chinkèd beam,
+ Which mounting morn hath sent to dance
+ Across our chamber while we dream?
+
+ SEM. (_youths_). Say whence and how shall we fetch this fire for the king?
+ Our hope is impatient of vain debating. 810
+
+ SEM. (_maidens_). My heart is stirred at the name of the wondrous thing,
+ And trembles awaiting.
+
+
+ _ODE._
+
+ A coy inquisitive spirit, the spirit of wonder,
+ Possesses the child in his cradle, when mortal things
+ Are new, yet a varied surface and nothing under.
+ It busies the mind on trifles and toys and brings
+ Her grasp from nearer to further, from smaller to greater,
+ And slowly teaches flight to her fledgeling wings.
+
+ Where'er she flutters and falls surprises await her:
+ She soars, and beauty's miracles open in sight, 820
+ The flowers and trees and beasts of the earth ; and later
+ The skies of day, the moon and the stars of night;
+ 'Neath which she scarcely venturing goes demurely,
+ With mystery clad, in the awe of depth and height.
+
+ O happy for still unconscious, for ah ! how surely,
+ How soon and surely will disenchantment come,
+ When first to herself she boasts to walk securely,
+ And drives the master spirit away from his home;
+
+ Seeing the marvellous things that make the morning
+ Are marvels of every-day, familiar, and some 830
+ Have lost with use, like earthly robes, their adorning,
+ As earthly joys the charm of a first delight,
+ And some are fallen from awe to neglect and scorning;
+ Until--
+ O tarry not long, dear needed sprite!
+ Till thou, though uninvited, with fancy returnest
+ To hallow beauty and make the dull heart bright:
+ To inhabit again thy gladdened kingdom in earnest;
+ Wherein--
+ from the smile of beauty afar forecasting
+ The pleasure of god, thou livest at peace and yearnest
+ With wonder everlasting. 840
+
+
+
+
+ SECOND PART
+
+ _Re-enter from the palace_ INACHUS, _with_ ARGEIA _and_ IO.
+
+
+ _INACHUS._
+
+ That but a small and easy thing now seems,
+ Which from my house when I came forth at noon
+ A dream was and beyond the reach of man.
+ 'Tis now a fancy of the will, a word,
+ Liberty's lightest prize. Yet still as one
+ Who loiters on the threshold of delight,
+ Delaying pleasure for the love of pleasure,
+ I dally--Come, Argeia, and share my triumph!
+ And set our daughter by thee; though her eyes
+ Are young, there are no eyes this day so young 850
+ As shall forget this day--while one thing more
+ I ask of thee; this evil, will it light
+ On me or on my house or on mankind?
+
+ PR. Scarce on mankind, O Inachus, for Zeus
+ A second time failing will not again
+ Measure his spite against their better fate.
+ And now the terror, which awhile o'er Earth
+ Its black wings spread, shall up to Heaven ascend
+ And gnaw the tyrant's heart: for there is whispered
+ A word gone forth to scare the mighty gods; 860
+ How one must soon be born, and born of men,
+ Who shall drive out their impious host from heaven,
+ And from their skyey dwellings rule mankind
+ In truth and love. So scarce on man will fall
+ This evil, nay, nor on thyself, O king;
+ Thy name shall live an honoured name in Greece.
+
+ IN. Then on my house 'twill be. Know'st thou no more?
+
+ PR. Know I no more? Ay, if my purpose fail
+ 'Tis not for lack of knowing: if I suffer,
+ 'Tis not that poisonous fear hath slurred her task, 870
+ Or let brave resolution walk unarmed.
+ My ears are callous to the threats of Zeus,
+ The direful penalties his oath hath laid
+ On every good that I in heart and hand
+ Am sworn to accomplish, and for all his threats,
+ Lest their accomplishment should outrun mine,
+ Am bound the more. Nay, nor his evil minions,
+ Nor force, nor strength, shall bend me to his will.
+
+ _ARGEIA._
+
+ Alas, alas, what heavy words are these,
+ That in the place of joy forbid your tongue, 880
+ That cloud and change his face, while desperate sorrow
+ Sighs in his heart? I came to share a triumph:
+ All is dismay and terror. What is this?
+
+ IN. True, wife, I spake of triumph, and I told thee
+ The winter-withering hope of my whole life
+ Has flower'd to-day in amaranth: what the hope
+ Thou knowest, who hast shared; but the condition
+ I told thee not and thou hast heard: this prophet,
+ Who comes to bring us fire, hath said that Zeus
+ Wills not the gift he brings, and will be wroth 890
+ With us that take it.
+
+ AR. O doleful change, I came
+ In pious purpose, nay, I heard within
+ The hymn to glorious Zeus: I rose and said,
+ The mighty god now bends, he thrusts aside
+ His heavenly supplicants to hear the prayer
+ Of Inachus his servant; let him hear.
+ O let him turn away now lest he hear.
+ Nay, frown not on me; though a woman's voice
+ That counsels is but heard impatiently,
+ Yet by thy love, and by the sons I bare thee, 900
+ By this our daughter, our last ripening fruit,
+ By our long happiness and hope of more,
+ Hear me and let me speak.
+
+ IN. Well, wife, speak on.
+
+ AR. Thy voice forbids more than thy words invite:
+ Yet say whence comes this stranger. Know'st thou not?
+ Yet whencesoe'er, if he but wish us well,
+ He will not bound his kindness in a day.
+ Do nought in haste. Send now to Sicyon
+ And fetch thy son Phorôneus, for his stake
+ In this is more than thine, and he is wise. 910
+ 'Twere well Phorôneus and Ægialeus
+ Were both here: maybe they would both refuse
+ The strange conditions which this stranger brings.
+ Were we not happy too before he came?
+ Doth he not offer us unhappiness?
+ Bid him depart, and at some other time,
+ When you have well considered, then return.
+
+ IN. 'Tis his conditions that we now shall hear.
+
+ AR. O hide them yet! Are there not tales enough
+ Of what the wrathful gods have wrought on men? 920
+ Nay, 'twas this very fire thou now wouldst take,
+ Which vain Salmoneus, son of Æolus,
+ Made boast to have, and from his rattling car
+ Threw up at heaven to mock the lightning. Him
+ The thunderer stayed not to deride, but sent
+ One blinding fork, that in the vacant sky
+ Shook like a serpent's tongue, which is but seen
+ In memory, and he was not, or for burial
+ Rode with the ashes of his royal city
+ Upon the whirlwind of the riven air. 930
+ And after him his brother Athamas,
+ King of Orchomenos, in frenzy fell
+ For Hera's wrath, and raving killed his son;
+ And would have killed fair Ino, but that she fled
+ Into the sea, preferring there to woo
+ The choking waters, rather than that the arm
+ Which had so oft embraced should do her wrong.
+ For which old crimes the gods yet unappeased
+ Demand a sacrifice, and the king's son
+ Dreads the priest's knife, and all the city mourns. 940
+ Or shall I say what shameful fury it was
+ With which Poseidon smote Pasiphaë,
+ But for neglect of a recorded vow:
+ Or how Actæon fared of Artemis
+ When he surprised her, most himself surprised:
+ And even while he looked his boasted bow
+ Fell from his hands, and through his veins there ran
+ A strange oblivious trouble, darkening sense
+ Till he knew nothing but a hideous fear
+ Which bade him fly, and faster, as behind 950
+ He heard his hounds give tongue, that through the wood
+ Were following, closing, caught him and tore him down.
+ And many more thus perished in their prime;
+ Lycaon and his fifty sons, whom Zeus
+ In their own house spied on, and unawares
+ Watching at hand, from his disguise arose.
+ And overset the table where they sat
+ Around their impious feast and slew them all:
+ Alcyonè and Ceyx, queen and king,
+ Who for their arrogance were changed to birds: 960
+ And Cadmus now a serpent, once a king:
+ And saddest Niobe, whom not the love
+ Of Leto aught availed, when once her boast
+ Went out, though all her crime was too much pride
+ Of heaven's most precious gift, her children fair.
+ Six daughters had she, and six stalwart sons;
+ But Leto bade her two destroy the twelve.
+ And somewhere now, among lone mountain rocks
+ On Sipylus, where couch the nymphs at night
+ Who dance all day by Achelous' stream, 970
+ The once proud mother lies, herself a rock,
+ And in cold breast broods o'er the goddess' wrong.
+
+ IN. Now hush thy fear. See how thou tremblest still.
+ Or if thou fear, fear passion; for the freshes
+ Of tenderness and motherly love will drown
+ The eye of judgment: yet, since even excess
+ Of the soft quality fits woman well,
+ I praise thee; nor would ask thee less to aid
+ With counsel, than in love to share my choice.
+ Tho' weak thy hands to poise, thine eye may mark 980
+ This balance, how the good of all outweighs
+ The good of one or two, though these be us.
+ Let not reluctance shame the sacrifice
+ Which in another thou wert first to praise.
+
+ AR. Alas for me, for thee and for our children,
+ Who, being our being, having all our having,
+ If they fare ill, our pride lies in the dust.
+
+ IN. O deem not a man's children are but those
+ Out of his loins engendered--our spirit's love
+ Hath such prolific consequence, that Virtue 990
+ Cometh of ancestry more pure than blood,
+ And counts her seed as sand upon the shore.
+ Happy is he whose body's sons proclaim
+ Their father's honour, but more blest to whom
+ The world is dutiful, whose children spring
+ Out of all nations, and whose pride the proud
+ Rise to regenerate when they call him sire.
+
+ AR. Thus, husband, ever have I bought and buy
+ Nobleness cheaply being linked with thee.
+ Forgive my weakness; see, I now am bold; 1000
+ Tell me the worst I'll hear and wish 'twere more.
+
+ IN. Retire--thy tears perchance may stir again.
+
+ AR. Nay, I am full of wonder and would hear.
+
+ PR. Bid me not tell if ye have fear to hear;
+ But have no fear. Knowledge of future things
+ Can nothing change man's spirit: and though he seem
+ To aim his passion darkly, like a shaft
+ Shot toward some fearful sound in thickest night,
+ He hath an owl's eye, and must blink at day.
+ The springs of memory, that feed alike 1010
+ His thought and action, draw from furthest time
+ Their constant source, and hardly brook constraint
+ Of actual circumstance, far less attend
+ On glassed futurity; nay, death itself,
+ His fate unquestioned, his foretasted pain,
+ The certainty foreknown of things unknown,
+ Cannot discourage his habitual being
+ In its appointed motions, to make waver
+ His eager hand, nor loosen the desire
+ Of the most feeble melancholy heart 1020
+ Even from the unhopefullest of all her dreams.
+
+ IN. Since then I long to know, now something say
+ Of what will come to mine when I am gone.
+
+ PR. And let the maid too hear, for 'tis of her
+ I speak, to tell her whither she should turn
+ The day ye drive her forth from hearth and home.
+
+ IN. What say'st thou? drive her out? and we? from home?
+ Banish the comfort of our eyes? Nay rather
+ Believe that these obedient hands will tear
+ The heart out of my breast, ere it do this. 1030
+
+ PR. When her wild cries arouse the house at night,
+ And, running to her bed, ye see her set
+ Upright in trancèd sleep, her starting hair
+ With deathly sweat bedewed, in horror shaking,
+ Her eyeballs fixed upon the unbodied dark,
+ Through which a draping mist of luminous gloom
+ Drifts from her couch away,--when, if asleep,
+ She walks as if awake, and if awake
+ Dreams, and as one who nothing hears or sees,
+ Lives in a sick and frantic mood, whose cause 1040
+ She understands not or is loth to tell--
+
+ AR. Ah, ah, my child, my child!--Dost thou feel aught?
+ Speak to me--nay, 'tis nothing--hearken not.
+
+ PR. Ye then distraught with sorrow, neither knowing
+ Whether to save were best or lose, will seek
+ Apollo's oracle.
+
+ IN. And what the answer?
+ Will it discover nought to avert this sorrow?
+
+ PR. Or else thy whole race perish root and branch.
+
+ IN. Alas! Alas!
+
+ PR. Yet shall she live though lost; from human form
+ Changed, that thou wilt not know thy daughter more. 1051
+
+ IN. Woe, woe! my thought was praying for her death.
+
+ PR. In Hera's temple shall her prison be
+ At high Mycenæ, till from heaven be sent
+ Hermes, with song to soothe and sword to slay
+ The beast whose hundred eyes devour the door.
+
+ IN. Enough, enough is told, unless indeed,
+ The beast once slain, thou canst restore our child.
+
+ PR. Nay, with her freedom will her wanderings
+ Begin. Come hither, child--nay, let her come: 1060
+ What words remain to speak will not offend her.
+ And shall in memory quicken, when she looks
+ To learn where she should go;--for go she must,
+ Stung by the venomous fly, whose angry flight
+ She still will hear about her, till she come
+ To lay her sevenfold-carried burden down
+ Upon the Æthiop shore where he shall reign.
+
+ IN. But say--say first, what form--
+
+ PR. In snow-white hide
+ Of those that feel the goad and wear the yoke. 1069
+
+ IN. Round-hoofed, or such as tread with cloven foot?
+
+ PR. Wide-horned, large-eyed, broad-fronted, and the feet
+ Cloven which carry her to her far goal.
+
+ IN. Will that of all these evils be the term?
+
+ PR. Ay, but the journey first which she must learn.
+ Hear now, my child; the day when thou art free,
+ Leaving the lion-gate, descend and strike
+ The Trêtan road to Nemea, skirting wide
+ The unhunted forest o'er the watered plain
+ To walled Cleônæ, whence the traversed stream
+ To Corinth guides: there enter not, but pass 1080
+ To narrow Isthmus, where Poseidon won
+ A country from Apollo, and through the town
+ Of Crommyon, till along the robber's road
+ Pacing, thy left eye meet the westering sun
+ O'er Geraneia, and thou reach the hill
+ Of Megara, where Car thy brother's babe
+ In time shall rule; next past Eleusis climb
+ Stony Panactum and the pine-clad slopes
+ Of Phyle; shun the left-hand way, and keep
+ The rocks; the second day thy feet shall tread 1090
+ The plains of Græa, whence the roadway serves
+ Aulis and Mycalessus to the point
+ Of vext Euripus: fear not then the stream,
+ Nor scenting think to taste, but plunging in
+ Breast its salt current to the further shore.
+ For on this island mayst thou lose awhile
+ Thy maddening pest, and rest and pasture find,
+ And from the heafs of bold Macistus see
+ The country left and sought: but when thou feel
+ Thy torment urge, move down, recross the flood, 1100
+ And west by Harma's fencèd gap arrive
+ At seven-gated Thebes: thy friendly goddess
+ Ongan Athenè has her seat without.
+
+ CHOR. Now if she may not stay thy toilsome destined steps,
+ I pray that she may slay for thee the maddening fly.
+
+ PR. Keep not her sanctuary long, but seek
+ Bœotian Ascra, where the Muses' fount,
+ Famed Aganippè, wells: Ocalea
+ Pass, and Tilphusa's northern steeps descend
+ By Alalcomenæ, the goddess' town. 1110
+ Guard now the lake's low shore, till thou have crossed
+ Hyrcana and Cephissus, the last streams
+ Which feed its reedy pools, when thou shalt come
+ Between two mountains that enclose the way
+ By peakèd Abæ to Hyampolis.
+ The right-hand path that thither parts the vale
+ Opes to Cyrtonè and the Locrian lands;
+ Toward Elateia thou, where o'er the marsh
+ A path with stones is laid; and thence beyond
+ To Thronium, Tarphè, and Thermopylæ, 1120
+ Where rocky Lamia views the Maliac gulf.
+
+ CHOR. If further she should go, will she not see
+ That other Argos, the Dodonian land?
+
+ PR. Crossing the Phthian hills thou next shall reach
+ Pharsalus, and Olympus' peakèd snows
+ Shall guide thee o'er the green Pelasgic plains
+ For many a day, but to Argissa come
+ Let old Peneius thy slow pilot be
+ Through Tempè, till they turn upon his left
+ Crowning the wooded slopes with splendours bare. 1130
+ Thence issuing forth on the Pierian shore
+ Northward of Ossa thou shalt touch the lands
+ Of Macedon.
+
+ CHOR. Alas, we wish thee speed,
+ But bid thee here farewell; for out of Greece
+ Thou goest 'mongst the folk whose chattering speech
+ Is like the voice of birds, nor home again
+ Wilt thou return.
+
+ PR. Thy way along the coast
+ Lies till it southward turn, when thou shalt seek
+ Where wide on Strymon's plain the hindered flood
+ Spreads like a lake; thy course to his oppose 1140
+ And face him to the mountain whence he comes:
+ Which doubled, Thrace receives thee: barbarous names
+ Of mountain, town and river, and a people
+ Strange to thine eyes and ears, the Agathyrsi,
+ Of pictured skins, who owe no marriage law,
+ And o'er whose gay-spun garments sprent with gold
+ Their hanging hair is blue. Their torrent swim
+ That measures Europe in two parts, and go
+ Eastward along the sea, to mount the lands
+ Beyond man's dwelling, and the rising steeps 1150
+ That face the sun untrodden and unnamed.--
+ Know to earth's verge remote thou then art come,
+ The Scythian tract and wilderness forlorn,
+ Through whose rude rocks and frosty silences
+ No path shall guide thee then, nor my words now.
+ There as thou toilest o'er the treacherous snows,
+ A sound then thou shall hear to stop thy breath,
+ And prick thy trembling ears; a far-off cry,
+ Whose throat seems the white mountain and its passion
+ The woe of earth. Flee not, nor turn not back: 1160
+ Let thine ears drink and guide thine eyes to see
+ That sight whose terrors shall assuage thy terror,
+ Whose pain shall kill thy pain. Stretched on the rock,
+ Naked to scorching sun, to pinching frost,
+ To wind and storm and beaks of wingèd fiends
+ From year to year he lies. Refrain to ask
+ His name and crime--nay, haply when thou see him
+ Thou wilt remember--'tis thy tyrant's foe,
+ Man's friend, who pays his chosen penalty.
+ Draw near, my child, for he will know thy need, 1170
+ And point from land to land thy further path.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ O miserable man, hear now the worst.
+ O weak and tearful race,
+ Born to unhappiness, see now thy cause
+ Doomed and accurst!
+
+ It surely were enough, the bad and good
+ Together mingled, against chance and ill
+ To strive, and prospering by turns,
+ Now these, now those, now folly and now skill,
+ Alike by means well understood 1180
+ Or 'gainst all likelihood;
+ Loveliness slaving to the unlovely will
+ That overrides the right and laughs at law.
+
+ But always all in awe
+ And imminent dread:
+ Because there is no mischief thought or said,
+ Imaginable or unguessed,
+ But it may come to be; nor home of rest,
+ Nor hour secure: but anywhere,
+ At any moment; in the air, 1190
+ Or on the earth or sea,
+ Or in the fair
+ And tender body itself it lurks, creeps in,
+ Or seizes suddenly,
+ Torturing, burning, withering, devouring,
+ Shaking, destroying; till tormented life
+ Sides with the slayer, not to be,
+ And from the cruel strife
+ Falls to fate overpowering.
+
+ Or if some patient heart, 1200
+ In toilsome steps of duty tread apart,
+ Thinking to win her peace within herself,
+ And thus awhile succeed:
+ She must see others bleed,
+ At others' misery moan,
+ And learn the common suffering is her own,
+ From which it is no freedom to be freed:
+ Nay, Nature, her best nurse,
+ Is tender but to breed a finer sense,
+ Which she may easier wound, with smart the worse 1210
+ And torture more intense.
+
+ And no strength for thee but the thought of duty,
+ Nor any solace but the love of beauty.
+ O Right's toil unrewarded!
+ O Love's prize unaccorded!
+
+ I say this might suffice,
+ O tearful and unstable
+ And miserable man,
+ Were't but from day to day
+ Thy miserable lot, 1220
+ This might suffice, I say,
+ To term thee miserable.
+ But thou of all thine ills too must take thought,
+ Must grow familiar till no curse astound thee,
+ With tears recall the past,
+ With tears the times forecast;
+ With tears, with tears thou hast
+ The scapeless net spread in thy sight around thee.
+
+ How then support thy fate,
+ O miserable man, if this befall, 1230
+ That he who loves thee and would aid thee, daring
+ To raise an arm for thy deliverance,
+ Must for his courage suffer worse than all?
+
+ IN. Bravest deliverer, for thy prophecy
+ Has torn the veil which hid thee from my eyes,
+ If thyself art that spirit, of whom some things
+ Were darkly spoken,--nor can I doubt thou art,
+ Being that the heaven its fire withholds not from thee
+ Nor time his secrets,--tell me now thy name,
+ That I may praise thee rightly; and my late 1240
+ Unwitting words pardon thou, and these who still
+ In blinded wonder kneel not to thy love.
+
+ PR. Speak not of love. See, I am moved with hate,
+ And fiercest anger, which will sometimes spur
+ The heart to extremity, till it forget
+ That there is any joy save furious war.
+ Nay, were there now another deed to do,
+ Which more could hurt our enemy than this,
+ Which here I stand to venture, here would I leave thee
+ Conspiring at his altar, and fly off 1250
+ To plunge the branding terror in his soul.
+ But now the rising passion of my will
+ Already jars his reaching sense, already
+ From heaven he bids his minion Hermes forth
+ To bring his only rebel to his feet.
+ Therefore no more delay, the time is short.
+
+ IN. I take, I take. 'Tis but for thee to give.
+
+ PR. O heavenly fire, life's life, the eye of day,
+ Whose nimble waves upon the starry night
+ Of boundless ether love to play, 1260
+ Carrying commands to every gliding sprite
+ To feed all things with colour, from the ray
+ Of thy bright-glancing, white
+ And silver-spinning light:
+ Unweaving its thin tissue for the bow
+ Of Iris, separating countless hues
+ Of various splendour for the grateful flowers
+ To crown the hasting hours,
+ Changing their special garlands as they choose.
+
+ O spirit of rage and might, 1270
+ Who canst unchain the links of winter stark,
+ And bid earth's stubborn metals flow like oil,
+ Her porphyrous heart-veins boil;
+ Whose arrows pierce the cloudy shields of dark;
+ Let now this flame, which did to life awaken
+ Beyond the cold dew-gathering veils of morn,
+ And thence by me was taken,
+ And in this reed was borne,
+ A smothered theft and gift to man below,
+ Here with my breath revive, 1280
+ Restore thy lapsèd realm, and be the sire
+ Of many an earthly fire.
+
+ O flame, flame bright and live,
+ Appear upon the altar as I blow.
+
+ CHOR. 'Twas in the marish reed.
+ See to his mouth he sets its hollow flute
+ And breathes therein with heed,
+ As one who from a pipe with breathings mute
+ Will music's voice evoke.--
+ See, the curl of a cloud. 1290
+
+ IN. The smoke, the smoke!
+
+ SEMICHORUS. Thin clouds mounting higher.
+
+ IN. 'Tis smoke, the smoke of fire.
+
+ SEMICHORUS. Thick they come and thicker,
+ Quick arise and quicker,
+ Higher still and higher.
+ Their wreaths the wood enfold.
+ --I see a spot of gold.
+ They spring from a spot of gold,
+ Red gold, deep among 1300
+ The leaves: a golden tongue.
+ O behold, behold,
+ Dancing tongues of gold,
+ That leaping aloft flicker,
+ Higher still and higher.
+
+ IN. 'Tis fire, the flame of fire!
+
+ SEMICHORUS. The blue smoke overhead
+ Is turned to angry red.
+ The fire, the fire, it stirs.
+ Hark, a crackling sound, 1310
+ As when all around
+ Ripened pods of furze
+ Split in the parching sun
+ Their dry caps one by one,
+ And shed their seeds on the ground.
+ --Ah! what clouds arise.
+ Away! O come away.
+ The wind-wafted smoke,
+ Blowing all astray,
+ Blinds and pricks my eyes.
+
+ [PROMETHEUS, _after writing his name on the altar, goes out unobserved_.]
+
+ Ah! I choke, I choke.
+ --All the midst is rent:
+ See, the twigs are all
+ By the flaming spent
+ White and gold, and fall.
+ How they writhe, resist,
+ Blacken, flake, and twist,
+ Snap in gold and fall.
+ --See the stars that mount,
+ Momentary bright 1330
+ Flitting specks of light
+ More than eye can count.
+ Insects of the air,
+ As in summer night
+ Show a fire in flying
+ Flickering here and there,
+ Waving past and dying.
+ --Look, a common cone
+ Of the mountain pine
+ Solid gold is grown; 1340
+ Till its scales outshine,
+ Standing each alone
+ In the spiral rows
+ Of their fair design,
+ All the brightest shows
+ Of the sun's decline.
+ --Hark, there came a hiss,
+ Like a startled snake
+ Sliding through the brake.
+ Oh, and what is this? 1350
+ Smaller flames that flee
+ Sidelong from the tree,
+ Hark, they hiss, they hiss.
+ --How the gay flames flicker,
+ Spurting, dancing, leaping
+ Quicker yet and quicker,
+ Higher yet and higher,
+ --Flaming, flaring, fuming,
+ Cracking, crackling, creeping,
+ Hissing and consuming: 1360
+ Mighty is the fire.
+
+ IN. Stay, stay, cease your rejoicings. Where is he,
+ The prophet,--nay, what say I,--the god, the giver?
+
+ CHOR. He is not here--he is gone.
+
+ IN. Search, search around.
+ Search all, search well.
+
+ CHOR. He is gone,--he is not here.
+
+ IN. The palace gate lies open: go, Argeia,
+ Maybe he went within: go seek him there.
+
+ [_Exit_ AR.
+
+ Look down the sea road, down the country road:
+ Follow him if ye see him.
+
+ CHOR. He is not there.
+
+ IN. Strain, strain your eyes: look well: search everywhere.
+ Look townwards--is he there?
+
+ _Part of_ CHORUS _returning_. He is not there.-- 1371
+
+ _Other part returning._ He is not there.
+
+ _Argeia re-entering._
+
+ AR. He is not there.
+
+ CHOR. O see!
+
+ CHOR. See where?
+
+ CHOR. See on the altar--see!
+
+ CHOR. What see ye on the altar?
+
+ CHOR. Here in front
+ Words newly writ.
+
+ CHOR. What words?
+
+ CHOR. A name--
+
+ IN. Ay true--
+ There is the name. How like a child was I,
+ That I must wait till these dumb letters gave
+ The shape and soul to knowledge: when the god
+ Stood here so self-revealed to ears and eyes
+ That, 'tis a god I said, yet wavering still, 1380
+ Doubting what god,--and now, who else but he?
+ I knew him, yet not well; I knew him not:
+ Prometheus--ay, Prometheus. Know ye, my children,
+ This name we see was writ by him we seek.
+ 'Tis his own name, his own heart-stirring name,
+ Feared and revered among the immortal gods;
+ Divine Prometheus: see how here the large
+ Cadmeian characters run, scoring out
+ The hated title of his ancient foe,--
+ To Zeus 'twas made,--and now 'tis to Prometheus-- 1390
+ Writ with the charrèd reed--theft upon theft.
+ He hath stolen from Zeus his altar, and with his fire
+ Hath lit our sacrifice unto himself.
+ Ió Prometheus, friend and firegiver,
+ For good or ill thy thefts and gifts are ours.
+ We worshipped thee unknowing.
+
+ CHOR. But now where is he?
+
+ IN. No need to search--we shall not see him more.
+ We look in vain. The high gods when they choose
+ Put on and off the solid visible shape
+ Which more deceives our hasty sense, than when 1400
+ Seeing them not we judge they stand aloof.
+ And he, he now is gone; his work is done:
+ 'Tis ours to see it be not done in vain.
+
+ CHOR. What is to do? speak, bid, command, we fly.
+
+ In. Go some and fetch more wood to feed the fire;
+ And some into the city to proclaim
+ That fire is ours: and send out messengers
+ To Corinth, Sicyon, Megara and Athens
+ And to Mycenæ, telling we have fire:
+ And bid that in the temples they prepare 1410
+ Their altars, and send hither careful men
+ To learn of me what things the time requires.
+
+ [_Exit part of_ CHORUS.
+
+ The rest remain to end our feast; and now
+ Seeing this altar is no more to Zeus,
+ But shall for ever be with smouldering heat
+ Fed for the god who first set fire thereon,
+ Change ye your hymns, which in the praise of Zeus
+ Ye came to sing, and change the prayer for fire
+ Which ye were wont to raise, to high thanksgiving,
+ Praising aloud the giver and his gift. 1420
+
+ _Part of_ CHORUS. Now our happy feast hath ending,
+ While the sun in heaven descending
+ Sees us gathered round a light
+ Born to cheer his vacant night.
+ Praising him to-day who came
+ Bearing far his heavenly flame:
+ Came to crown our king's desire
+ With his gift of golden fire.
+
+ SEMICHORUS. My heart, my heart is freed.
+ Now can I sing. I loose a shaft from my bow, 1430
+ A song from my heart to heaven, and watch it speed.
+ It revels in the air, and straight to its goal doth go.
+ I have no fear. I praise distinguishing duly:
+ I praise the love that I love and I worship truly.
+ Goodness I praise, not might,
+ Nor more will I speak of wrong,
+ But of lovingkindness and right;
+ And the god of my love shall rejoice at the sound of my song.
+ I praise him whom I have seen:
+ As a man he is beautiful, blending prime and youth, 1440
+ Of gentle and lovely mien,
+ With the step and the eyes of truth,
+ As a god,--O were I a god, but thus to be man!
+ As a god, I set him above
+ The rest of the gods; for his gifts are pledges of love,
+ The words of his mouth rare and precious,
+ His eyes' glance and the smile of his lips are love.
+ He is the one
+ Alone of all the gods,
+ Of righteous Themis the lofty-spirited son, 1450
+ Who hates the wrongs they have done.
+ He is the one I adore.
+ For if there be love in heaven with evil to cope,--
+ And he promised us more and more,--
+ For what may we not hope?
+
+
+ _ODE._
+
+ My soul is drunk with joy, her new desire
+ In far forbidden places wanders away.
+ Her hopes with free bright-coloured wings of fire
+ Upon the gloom of thought
+ Are sailing out. 1460
+ Awhile they rise, awhile to rest they softly fall,
+ Like butterflies, that flit
+ Across the mountains, or upon a wall
+ Winking their idle fans at pleasure sit.
+
+ O my vague desires!
+ Ye lambent flames of the soul, her offspring fires:
+ That are my soul herself in pangs sublime
+ Rising and flying to heaven before her time:
+ What doth tempt you forth
+ To melt in the south or shiver in the frosty north? 1470
+ What seek ye or find ye in your random flying,
+ For ever soaring aloft, soaring and dying?
+ Joy, the joy of flight;
+ They hide in the sun, they flare and dance in the night.
+ Gone up, gone out of sight--and ever again
+ Follow fresh tongues of fire, fresh pangs of pain.
+ Ah! could I control
+ These vague desires, these leaping flames of the soul:
+ Could I but quench the fire, ah! could I stay
+ My soul that flieth, alas, and dieth away! 1480
+
+ [_Enter other part of_ CHORUS.
+
+ _Part of_ CHOR. Here is wood to feed the fire--
+ Never let its flames expire.
+ Sing ye still while we advance
+ Round the fire in measured dance,
+ While the sun in heaven descending
+ Sees our happy feast have ending.
+ Weave ye still your joyous song,
+ While we bear the wood along.
+
+ SEMICHORUS. But O return,
+ Return, thou flower of the gods! 1490
+ Remember the limbs that toil and the hearts that yearn,
+ Remember, and soon return!
+ To prosper with peace and skill
+ Our hands in the works of pleasure, beauty and use.
+ Return, and be for us still
+ Our shield from the anger of Zeus.
+ And he, if he raise his arm in anger to smite thee,
+ And think for the good thou hast done with pain to requite thee,
+ Vengeance I heard thee tell,
+ And the curse I take for my own, 1500
+ That his place is prepared in hell,
+ And a greater than he shall hurl him down from his throne
+ Down, down from his throne!
+ For the god who shall rule mankind from the deathless skies
+ By mercy and truth shall be known,
+ In love and peace shall arise.
+ For him,--if again I hear him thunder above,
+ O then, if I crouch or start,
+ I will press thy lovingkindness more to my heart,
+ Remember the words of thy mouth rare and precious, 1510
+ Thy heart of hearts and gifts of divine love.
+
+
+
+
+ DEMETER
+
+ _A Mask_
+
+ "_Dreams & the light imaginings of men_"
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+ WRITTEN FOR THE LADIES AT
+ SOMERVILLE COLLEGE
+ & ACTED BY THEM
+ AT THE INAUGURATION OF THEIR NEW BUILDING
+ IN 1904
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+ _PREVIOUS EDITION_
+
+ _Oxford: at the Clarendon Press, 1905_
+
+
+
+
+ ARGUMENT OF THE PLAY
+
+
+ _The scene is in the flowery valley below Enna. Hades
+ prologizes, and tells how he has come with consent of Zeus to
+ carry off Persephone to be his queen. The Chorus of Ocean
+ nymphs entering praise Sicily and the spring. Persephone
+ enters with Athena and Artemis to gather flowers for the
+ festival of Zeus. Persephone being left alone is carried off by
+ Hades._
+
+ _In the second act, which is ten days later, the Chorus deplore
+ the loss of Persephone. Demeter entering upbraids them in
+ a choric scene and describes her search for Persephone until
+ she learnt her fate from Helios. Afterwards she describes her
+ plan for compelling Zeus to restore her. Hermes brings from
+ Zens a command to Demeter that she shall return to Olympus.
+ She sends defiance to Zeus, and the Chorus end the scene by
+ vowing to win Poseidon to aid Demeter._
+
+ _In the third act, which is a year later, the Chorus, who
+ have been summoned by Demeter to witness the restoration of
+ Persephone, lament Demeter's anger. Demeter narrates the
+ Eleusinian episode of her wanderings, until Hermes enters
+ leading Persephone. After their greeting Demeter hears from
+ Hermes the terms of Persephone's restoration; she is reconciled
+ thereto by Persephone, and invites her to Eleusis. The Chorus
+ sing and crown Persephone with flowers._
+
+
+ DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
+
+ _HADES._ }
+ _DEMETER._ }
+ _PERSEPHONE._
+ _ATHENA._
+ _ARTEMIS._ }
+ _HERMES._ }
+ _Chorus of OCEANIDES._
+
+
+
+
+ DEMETER
+
+ _HADES._
+
+
+ I am the King of Hell, nor prone to vex
+ Eternal destiny with weak complaint;
+ Nor when I took my kingdom did I mourn
+ My lot, from heav'n expell'd, deny'd to enjoy
+ Its radiant revelry and ambrosial feast,
+ Nor blamed our mighty Sisters, that not one
+ Would share my empire in the shades of night.
+ But when a younger race of gods arose,
+ And Zeus set many sons on heav'nly seats,
+ And many daughters dower'd with new domain, 10
+ And year by year were multiply'd on earth
+ Their temples and their statu'd sanctities,
+ Mirrors of man's ideas that grow apace,
+ Yea, since man's mind was one with my desire
+ That Hell should have a queen,--for heav'n hath queens
+ Many, nor on all earth reigns any king
+ In unkind isolation like to me,--
+ I claimed from Zeus that of the fair immortals
+ One should be given to me to grace my throne.
+ Willing he was, and quick to praise my rule, 20
+ And of mere justice there had granted me
+ Whome'er I chose: but 'Brother mine,' he said,
+ 'Great as my power among the gods, this thing
+ I cannot compass, that a child of mine,
+ Who once hath tasted of celestial life,
+ Should all forgo, and destitute of bliss
+ Descend into the shades, albeit to sit
+ An equal on thy throne. Take whom thou wilt;
+ But by triumphant force persuade, as erst
+ I conquer'd heav'n.' Said I 'My heart is set: 30
+ I take Demeter's child Persephone;
+ Dost thou consent?' Whereto he gave his nod.
+ And I am come to-day with hidden powers,
+ Ev'n unto Enna's fair Sicilian field,
+ To rob her from the earth. 'Tis here she wanders
+ With all her train: nor is this flow'ry vale
+ Fairer among the fairest vales of earth,
+ Nor any flower within this flow'ry vale
+ Fair above other flowers, as she is fairest
+ Among immortal goddesses, the daughter 40
+ Of gentle-eyed Demeter; and her passion
+ Is for the flowers, and every tenderness
+ That I have long'd for in my fierce abodes.
+ But she hath always in attendant guard
+ The dancing nymphs of Ocean, and to-day
+ The wise Athena and chaste Artemis
+ Indulge her girlish fancy, gathering flowers
+ To deck the banner of my golden brother,
+ Whose thought they guess not, tho' their presence here
+ Affront his will and mine. If once alone 50
+ I spy her, I can snatch her swiftly down:
+ And after shall find favour for my fault,
+ When I by gentle means have won her love.
+ I hear their music now. Hither they come:
+ I'll to my ambush in the rocky cave. [_Exit._
+
+
+
+
+ ACT I
+
+ _Enter Chorus of Oceanides, with baskets._
+
+
+ _OCEANIDES._
+
+ Gay and lovely is earth, man's decorate dwelling;
+ With fresh beauty ever varying hour to hour.
+ As now bathed in azure joy she awakeneth
+ With bright morn to the sun's life-giving effluence,
+ Or sunk into solemn darkness aneath the stars 60
+ In mysterious awe slumbereth out the night,
+ Then from darkness again plunging again to day;
+ Like dolphins in a swift herd that accompany
+ Poseidon's chariot when he rebukes the waves.
+ But no country to me 'neath the enarching air
+ Is fair as Sicily's flowery fruitful isle:
+ Always lovely, whether winter adorn the hills
+ With his silvery snow, or generous summer
+ Outpour her heavy gold on the river-valleys.
+ Her rare beauty giveth gaiety unto man, 70
+ A delite dear to immortals.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ And one season of all chiefly deliteth us,
+ When fair Spring is afield. O happy is the Spring!
+ Now birds early arouse their pretty minstreling;
+ Now down its rocky hill murmureth ev'ry rill;
+ Now all bursteth anew, wantoning in the dew
+ Their bells of bonny blue, their chalices honey'd.
+ Unkind frost is away; now sunny is the day;
+ Now man thinketh aright, Life it is all delite.
+ Now maids playfully dance o'er enamel'd meadows, 80
+ And with goldy blossom deck forehead and bosom;
+ While old Pan rollicketh thro' the budding shadows,
+ Voicing his merry reed, laughing aloud to lead
+ The echoes madly rejoicing.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ We be Oceanids, Persephone's lovers,
+ Who all came hurrying joyfully from the sea
+ Ere daybreak to obey her belovëd summons.
+ At her fancy to pluck these violets, lilies,
+ Windflow'rs and daffodils, all for a festival
+ Whereat shé will adorn Zeuses honour'd banner. 90
+ And with Persephone there cometh Artemis
+ And grave Pallas ... Hilloo! Already they approach!
+ Haste, haste! Stoop to gather! Seem busy ev'ryone!
+ Crowd all your wicker arcs with the meadow-lilies;
+ Lest our disreverenc'd deity should rebuke
+ The divine children of Ocean.
+
+ [_Enter_ ATHENA, PERSEPHONE, _and_ ARTEMIS. _Persephone has
+ a basket half fill'd with gather'd flowers._]
+
+ _ATHENA._
+
+ These then are Enna's flowery fields, and here
+ In midmost isle the garden of thy choice?
+
+ _PERSEPHONE._
+
+ Is not all as I promist? Feel ye not
+ Your earthborn ecstasy concenter'd here? 100
+ Tell me, Athena, of thy wisdom, whénce
+ Cometh this joy of earth, this penetrant
+ Palpitant exultation so unlike
+ The balanc't calm of high Olympian state?
+ Is't in the air, the tinted atmosphere
+ Whose gauzy veil, thrown on the hills, will paint
+ Their features, changing with the gradual day,
+ Rosy or azure, clouded now, and now
+ Again afire? Or is it that the sun's
+ Electric beams--which shot in circling fans 110
+ Whirl all things with them--as they strike the earth
+ Excite her yearning heart, till stir'd beneath
+ The rocks and silent plains, she cannot hold
+ Her fond desires, but sends them bursting forth
+ In scents and colour'd blossoms of the spring?--
+ Breathes it not in the flowers?
+
+ ATH. Fair are the flowers,
+ Dear child; and yet to me far lovelier
+ Than all their beauty is thy love for them.
+ Whate'er I love, I contemplate my love
+ More than the object, and am so rejoic'd. 120
+ For life is one, and like a level sea
+ Life's flood of joy. Thou wond'rest at the flowers,
+ But I would teach thee wonder of thy wonder;
+ Would shew thee beauty in the desert-sand,
+ The worth of things unreckt of, and the truth
+ That thy desire and love may spring of evil
+ And ugliness, and that Earth's ecstasy
+ May dwell in darkness also, in sorrow and tears.
+
+ PER. I'd not believe it: why then should we pluck
+ The flowers and not the stalks without the flowers? 130
+ Or do thy stones breathe scent? Would not men laugh
+ To see the banner of almighty Zeus
+ Adorn'd with ragged roots and straws?--Dear Artemis,
+ How lovest thou the flowers?
+
+ _ARTEMIS._
+
+ I'll love them better
+ Ever for thy sake, Cora; but for me
+ The joy of Earth is in the breath of life
+ And animal motions: nor are flowery sweets
+ Dear as the scent of life. His petal'd cup,
+ What is it by the wild fawn's liquid eye
+ Eloquent as love-music 'neath the moon? 140
+ Nay, not a flower in all thy garden here,
+ Nor wer't a thousand-thousand-fold enhanc't
+ In every charm, but thou wouldst turn from it
+ To view the antler'd stag, that in the glade
+ With the coy gaze of his majestic fear
+ Faced thee a moment ere he turn'd to fly.
+
+ PER. But why, then, hunt and kill what thou so lovest?
+
+ AR. Dost thou not pluck thy flowers?
+
+ PER. 'Tis not the same.
+ Thy victims fly for life: they pant, they scream.
+
+ AR. Were they not mortal, sweet, I coud not kill them.
+ They kill each other in their lust for life; 151
+ Nay, cruelly persecute their blemisht kin:
+ And they that thus are exiled from the herd
+ Slink heart-brok'n to sepulchral solitudes,
+ Defenceless and dishonour'd; there to fall
+ Prey to the hungry glutton of the cave,
+ Or stand in mute pain lingering, till they drop
+ In their last lair upon the ancestral bones.
+
+ PER. What is it that offends me?
+
+ ATH. 'Tis Pity, child,
+ The mortal thought that clouds the brow of man 160
+ With dark reserve, or poisoning all delite
+ Drives him upon his knees in tearful prayer
+ To avert his momentary qualms: till Zeus
+ At his reiterated plaint grows wrath,
+ And burdens with fresh curse the curse of care.
+ And they that haunt with men are apt to take
+ Infection of his mind: thy mighty mother
+ Leans to his tenderness.
+
+ PER. How should man, dwelling
+ On earth that is so gay, himself be sad?
+ Is not earth gay? Look on the sea, the sky, 170
+ The flowers!
+
+ ATH. 'Tis sad to him because 'tis gay.--
+ For whether he consider how the flowers,
+ --Thy miracles of beauty above praise,--
+ Are wither'd in the moment of their glory,
+ So that of all the mounting summer's wealth
+ The show is chang'd each day, and each day dies,
+ Of no more count in Nature's estimate
+ Than crowded bubbles of the fighting foam:
+ Or whether 'tis the sea, whose azure waves
+ Play'd in the same infinity of motion 180
+ Ages ere he beheld it, and will play
+ For ages after him;--alike 'tis sad
+ To read how beauty dies and he must die.
+
+ PER. Were I a man, I would not worship thee,
+ Thou cold essential wisdom. If, as thou say'st,
+ Thought makes men sorrowful, why help his thought
+ To quench enjoyment, who might else as I
+ Revel among bright things, and feast his sense
+ With beauty well-discern'd? Nay, why came ye
+ To share my pastime? Ye love not the flowers. 190
+
+ ATH. Indeed I love thee, child; and love thy flowers,--
+ Nor less for loving wisely. All emotions,
+ Whether of gods or men, all loves and passions,
+ Are of two kinds; they are either inform'd by wisdom,
+ To reason obedient,--or they are unconducted,
+ Flames of the burning life. The brutes of earth
+ And Pan their master know these last; the first
+ Are seen in me: betwixt the extremes there lie
+ Innumerable alloys and all of evil.
+
+ PER. Nay, and I guess your purpose with me well: 200
+ I am a child, and ye would nurse me up
+ A pupil in your school. I know ye twain
+ Of all the immortals are at one in this;
+ Ye wage of cold disdain a bitter feud
+ With Aphrodite, and ye fear for me,
+ Lest she should draw me to her wanton way.
+ Fear not: my party is taken. Hark! I'll tell
+ What I have chosen, what mankind shall hold
+ Devote and consecrate to me on earth:
+ It is the flowers: but only among the flowers 210
+ Those that men love for beauty, scent, or hue,
+ Having no other uses: I have found
+ Demeter, my good mother, heeds them not.--
+ She loves vines, olives, orchards, 'the rich leas
+ Of wheat, rye, barley, vetches, oats, and peas,[1]
+ But for the idle flowers she hath little care:
+ She will resign them willingly. And think not,
+ Thou wise Athena, I shall go unhonour'd,
+ Or rank a meaner goddess unto man.
+ His spirit setteth beauty before wisdom, 220
+ Pleasures above necessities, and thus
+ He ever adoreth flowers. Nor this I guess
+ Where rich men only and superfluous kings
+ Around their palaces reform the land
+ To terraces and level lawns, whereon
+ Appointed slaves are told, to tend and feed
+ Lilies and roses and all rarest plants
+ Fetch'd from all lands; that they--these lordly men--
+ 'Twixt flaunting avenues and wafted odours
+ May pace in indolence: this is their bliss; 230
+ This first they do: and after, it may be,
+ Within their garden set their academe:--
+ But in the poorest villages, around
+ The meanest cottage, where no other solace
+ Comforts the eye, some simple gaiety
+ Of flowers in tended garden is seen; some pinks,
+ Tulips, or crocuses that edge the path;
+ Where oft at eve the grateful labourer
+ Sits in his jasmin'd porch, and takes the sun:
+ And even the children, that half-naked go, 240
+ Have posies in their hands, and of themselves
+ Will choose a queen in whom to honour Spring,
+ Dancing before her garlanded with may.
+ The cowslip makes them truant, they forget
+ The hour of hunger and their homely feast
+ So they may cull the delicate primrose,
+ Sealing their birthright with the touch of beauty;
+ With unconsider'd hecatombs assuring
+ Their dim sense of immortal mystery.--
+ Yea, rich and poor, from cradle unto grave 250
+ All men shall love me, shall adore my name,
+ And heap my everlasting shrine with flowers.
+
+ ATH. Thou sayest rightly thou art a child. May Zeus
+ Give thee a better province than thy thought.
+
+ [_Music heard._
+
+ AR. Listen! The nymphs are dancing. Let us go!
+
+ [_They move off._
+
+ Come, Cora; wilt thou learn a hunting dance?
+ I'll teach thee.
+
+ PER. Can I learn thy hunter-step
+ Without thy bare legs and well-buskin'd feet?
+
+ AR. Give me thy hand.
+
+ PER. Stay! stay! I have left my flowers.
+ I follow. [_Exeunt Athena and Artemis._
+
+ [_Persephone returning to right slowly._
+
+ They understand not--Now, praise be to Zeus, 261
+ That, tho' I sprang not from his head, I know
+ Something that Pallas knows not.
+
+ [_She has come to where her basket lies. In stooping towards it she kneels
+ to pluck a flower: and then comes to sit on a bank with the basket
+ in hand on her knees, facing the audience._]
+
+ Thou tiny flower!
+ Art thou not wise?
+ Who taught thee else, thou frail anemone,
+ Thy starry notion, thy wind-wavering motion,
+ Thy complex of chaste beauty, unimagin'd
+ Till thou art seen?--And how so wisely, thou,
+ Indifferent to the number of thy rays, 270
+ While others are so strict? This six-leaved tulip,
+ --He would not risk a seventh for all his worth,--
+ He thought to attain unique magnificence
+ By sheer simplicity--a pointed oval
+ Bare on a stalk erect: and yet, grown old
+ He will his young idea quite abandon,
+ In his dishevel'd fury wantoning
+ Beyond belief.... Some are four-leaved: this poppy
+ Will have but four. He, like a hurried thief,
+ Stuffs his rich silks into too small a bag-- 280
+ I think he watch'd a summer-butterfly
+ Creep out all crumpled from his winter-case,
+ Trusting the sun to smooth his tender tissue
+ And sleek the velvet of his painted wings:--
+ And so doth he.--Between such different schemes,
+ Such widely varied loveliness, how choose?
+ Yet loving all, one should be most belov'd,
+ Most intimately mine; to mortal men
+ My emblem: tho' I never find in one
+ The sum of all distinctions.--Rose were best: 290
+ But she is passion's darling, and unkind
+ To handle--set her by.--Choosing for odour,
+ The violet were mine--men call her modest,
+ Because she hides, and when in company
+ Lacks manner and the assertive style of worth:--
+ While this narcissus here scorns modesty,
+ Will stand up what she is, tho' something prim:
+ Her scent, a saturation of one tone,
+ Like her plain symmetry, leaves nought to fancy:--
+ Whereas this iris,--she outvieth man's 300
+ Excellent artistry; elaboration
+ Confounded with simplicity, till none
+ Can tell which sprang of which. Coud I but find
+ A scented iris, I should be content:
+ Yet men would call me proud: Iris is Pride.--
+ To-day I'll favour thee, sweet violet;
+ Thou canst live in my bosom. I'll not wrong thee
+ Wearing thee in Olympus.--Help! help! Ay me!
+
+ [_Persephone rises to her feet, and amidst a contrivance of confused
+ darkness Hades is seen rushing from behind. He seizes her and
+ drags her backward. Her basket is thrown up and the flowers
+ scattered._]
+
+
+
+
+ ACT II
+
+
+ _CHORUS._
+
+ I (α)
+
+
+ Bright day succeedeth unto day--
+ Night to pensive night-- 310
+ With his towering ray
+ Of all-fathering light--
+ With the solemn trance
+ Of her starry dance.--
+
+ Nought is new or strange
+ In the eternal change.--
+
+ As the light clouds fly
+ O'er the tree-tops high,
+ So the days go by.--
+
+ Ripples that arrive 320
+ On the sunny shore,
+ Dying to their live
+ Music evermore.--
+
+ Like pearls on a thread,--
+ Like notes of a song,--
+ Like the measur'd tread
+ Of a dancing throng.--
+
+
+ (β)
+
+ Ocëanides are we,
+ Nereids of the foam,
+ But we left the sea 330
+ On the earth to roam
+ With the fairest Queen
+ That the world hath seen.--
+ Why amidst our play
+ Was she sped away?--
+
+ Over hill and plain
+ We have sought in vain;
+ She comes not again.--
+
+ Not the Naiads knew
+ On their dewy lawns:-- 340
+ Not the laughing crew
+ Of the leaping Fauns.--
+
+ Now, since she is gone,
+ All our dance is slow,
+ All our joy is done,
+ And our song is woe.--
+
+
+ II
+
+ Saw ye the mighty Mother, where she went
+ Searching the land?
+ Nor night nor day resting from her lament,
+ With smoky torch in hand. 350
+ Her godhead in the passion of a sorrow spent
+ Which not her mind coud suffer, nor heart withstand?--
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Enlanguor'd like a fasting lioness,
+ That prowls around
+ Robb'd of her whelps, in fury comfortless
+ Until her lost be found:
+ Implacable and terrible in her wild distress;
+ And thro' the affrighted country her roars resound.--
+
+
+ 3
+
+ But lo! what form is there? Thine eyes awaken!
+ See! see! O say, 360
+ Is not that she, the furious, the forsaken?
+ She cometh, lo! this way;
+ Her golden-rippling hair upon her shoulders shaken,
+ And all her visage troubled with deep dismay.
+
+ _DEMETER_ (_entering_).
+
+ Here is the hateful spot, the hollow rock
+ Whence the fierce ravisher sprang forth--
+ (_seeing the nymphs_) Ah! Ye!
+ I know you well: ye are the nymphs of Ocean.
+ Ye, graceful as your watery names
+ And idle as the mimic flames
+ That skip upon his briny floor, 370
+ When the hot sun smiteth thereo'er;
+ Why did ye leave your native waves?
+ Did false Poseidon, to my hurt
+ Leagued with my foe, bid you desert
+ Your opalescent pearly caves,
+ Your dances on the shelly strand?
+
+ CH. Poseidon gave us no command,
+ Lady; it was thy child Persephone,
+ Whose beauty drew us from the sea.
+
+ DEM. Ill company ye lent, ill-fated guards! 380
+ How was she stolen from your distracted eyes?
+
+ CH. There, where thou standest now, stood she companion'd
+ By wise Athena and bright Artemis.
+ We in flower-gathering dance and idle song
+ Were wander'd off apart; we fear'd no wrong.
+
+ DEM. In heav'n I heard her cry: ye nothing heard?
+
+ CH. We heard no cry--How coudst thou hear in heaven?
+ Ask us not óf her:--we have nought to tell.--
+
+ DEM. I seek not knowledge óf you, for I know.
+
+ CH. Thou knowest? Ah, mighty Queen, deign then to tell
+ If thou hast found her. Tell us--tell us--tell! 391
+
+ DEM. Oh, there are calls that love can hear,
+ That strike not on the outward ear.
+ None heard save I: but with a dart
+ Of lightning-pain it pierc'd my heart,
+ That call for aid, that cry of fear.
+ It echo'd from the mountain-steeps
+ Down to the dark of Ocean-deeps;
+ O'er all the isle, from ev'ry hill
+ It pierc'd my heart and echoes still, 400
+ Ay me! Ay me!
+
+ CH. Where is she, O mighty Queen?--Tell us--O tell!--
+
+ DEM. Swift unto earth, in frenzy led
+ By Cora's cry, from heav'n I sped.
+ Immortal terror froze my mind:
+ I fear'd, ev'n as I yearn'd to find
+ My child, my joy, faln from my care
+ Wrong'd or distresst, I knew not where,
+ Cora, my Cora!
+ Nor thought I whither first to fly, 410
+ Answ'ring the appeal of that wild cry:
+ But still it drew me till I came
+ To Enna, calling still her name,
+ Cora, my Cora!
+
+ CH. If thou hast found her, tell us, Queen, O tell!
+
+ DEM. Nine days I wander'd o'er the land.
+ From Enna to the eastern strand
+ I sought, and when the first night came
+ I lit my torch in Etna's flame.
+ But neither 'mid the chestnut woods 420
+ That rustle o'er his stony floods;
+ Nor yet at daybreak on the meads
+ Where bountiful Symaethus leads
+ His chaunting boatmen to the main;
+ Nor where the road on Hybla's plain
+ Is skirted by the spacious corn;
+ Nor where embattled Syracuse
+ With lustrous temple fronts the morn;
+ Nor yet by dolphin'd Arethuse;
+ Nor when I crossed Anapus wide, 430
+ Where Cyane, his reedy bride,
+ Uprushing from her crystal well,
+ Doth not his cold embrace repel;
+ Nor yet by western Eryx, where
+ Gay Aphrodite high in air
+ Beams gladness from her marble chair;
+ Nor 'mong the mountains that enfold
+ Panormos in her shell of gold,
+ Found I my Cora: no reply
+ Came to my call, my helpless cry, 440
+ Cora, my Cora!
+
+ CH. Hast thou not found her, then? Tell us--O tell!
+
+ DEM. What wonder that I never found
+ Her whom I sought on mortal ground,
+ When she--(now will ye understand?)--
+ Dwelt in the land that is no land,
+ The fruitless and unseason'd plain
+ Where all lost things are found again;
+ Where man's distract imaginings
+ Head-downward hang on bat-like wings, 450
+ 'Mid mummied hopes, sleep-walking cares,
+ Crest-faln illusions and despairs,
+ The tortur'd memories of crime,
+ The outcasts of forgotten time?
+
+ CH. Where is she, Queen?--where?--where?
+
+ DEM. Nor had I known,
+ Had not himself high Helios seen and told me.
+
+ CH. Alas! Alas! We cannot understand--
+ We pray, dear Queen, may great Zeus comfort thee.
+
+ DEM. Yea, pray to Zeus; but pray ye for yourselves,
+ That he have pity on you, for there is need. 460
+ Or let Zeus hear a strange, unwonted prayer
+ That in his peril he will aid himself;
+ For I have said, nor coud his Stygian oath
+ Add any sanction to a mother's word,
+ That, if he give not back my daughter to me,
+ Him will I slay, and lock his pining ghost
+ In sleepy prisons of unhallowing hell.
+
+ CH. (_aside_). Alas! alas! she is distraught with grief.--
+ What comfort can we make?-- How reason with her?-- 469
+ (_to_ D.) This coud not be, great Queen. How coud it be
+ That Zeus should be destroy'd, or thou destroy him?
+
+ DEM. Yea, and you too: so make your prayer betimes.
+
+ CH. We pray thee, Lady, sit thou on this bank
+ And we will bring thee food; or if thou thirst,
+ Water. We know too in what cooling caves
+ The sly Fauns have bestow'd their skins of wine.
+
+ DEM. Ye simple creatures, I need not these things,
+ And stand above your pity. Think ye me
+ A woman of the earth derang'd with grief?
+ Nay, nay: but I have pity on your pity, 480
+ And for your kindness I will ease the trouble
+ Wherewith it wounds your gentleness: attend!
+ Ye see this jewel here, that from my neck
+ Hangs by this golden chain.
+
+ [_They crowd near to see._
+
+ Look, 'tis a picture,
+ 'Tis of Persephone.
+
+ CH. How?--Is that she?--
+ A crown she weareth.--She was never wont
+ Thus ...--nor her robe thus--and her countenance
+ Hath not the smile which drew us from the sea.
+
+ DEM. Daedalus cut it, in the year he made
+ The Zibian Aphrodite, and Hephaestus 490
+ O'erlookt and praised the work. I treasure it
+ Beyond all other jewels that I have,
+ And on this chain I guard it. Say now: think ye
+ It cannot fall loose until every link
+ Of all the chain be broken, or if one
+ Break, will it fall?
+
+ CH. Surely if one break, Lady,
+ The chain is broken and the jewel falls.
+
+ DEM. 'Tis so. Now hearken diligently. All life
+ Is as this chain, and Zeus is as the jewel.
+ The universal life dwells first in the Earth, 500
+ The stones and soil; therefrom the plants and trees
+ Exhale their being; and on them the brutes
+ Feeding elaborate their sentient life,
+ And from these twain mankind; and in mankind
+ A spirit lastly is form'd of subtler sort
+ Whereon the high gods live, sustain'd thereby,
+ And feeding on it, as plants on the soil,
+ Or animals on plants. Now see! I hold,
+ As well ye know, one whole link of this chain:
+ If I should kill the plants, must not man perish? 510
+ And if he perish, then the gods must die.
+
+ CH. If this were so, thou wouldst destroy thyself.
+
+ DEM. And therefore Zeus will not believe my word.
+
+ CH. Nor we believe thee, Lady: it cannot be
+ That thou shouldst seek to mend a private fortune
+ By universal ruin, and restore
+ Thy daughter by destruction of thyself.
+
+ DEM. Ye are not mothers, or ye would not wonder.
+ In me, who hold from great all-mother Rhea
+ Heritage of essential motherhood, 520
+ Ye would look rather for unbounded passion.
+ Coud I, the tenderness of Nature's heart,
+ Exist, were I unheedful to protect
+ From wrong and ill the being that I gave,
+ The unweeting passions that I fondly nurtured
+ To hopes of glory, the young confidence
+ In growing happiness? Shall I throw by
+ As self-delusion the supreme ambition,
+ Which I encourag'd till parental fondness
+ Bore the prophetic blessing, on whose truth 530
+ My spirit throve? Oh never! nay, nay, nay!
+ That were the one disaster, and if aid
+ I cannot, I can mightily avenge.
+ On irremediable wrong I shrink not
+ To pile immortal ruin, there to lie
+ As trophies on a carven tomb: nor less
+ For that no memory of my deed survive,
+ Nor any eye to see, nor tongue to tell.
+
+ CH. So vast injustice, Lady, were not good.
+
+ DEM. To you I seem unjust involving man. 540
+
+ CH. Why should man suffer in thy feud with Zeus?
+
+ DEM. Let Zeus relent. There is no other way.
+ I will destroy the seeds of plant and tree:
+ Vineyard and orchard, oliveyard and cornland
+ Shall all withhold their fruits, and in their stead
+ Shall flourish the gay blooms that Cora loved.
+ There shall be dearth, and yet so gay the dearth
+ That all the land shall look in holiday
+ With mockery of foison; every field
+ With splendour aflame. For wheat the useless poppy 550
+ In sheeted scarlet; and for barley and oats
+ The blue and yellow weeds that mock men's toil,
+ Centaury and marigold in chequer'd plots:
+ Where seed is sown, or none, shall dandelions
+ And wretched ragwort vie, orchis and iris
+ And garish daisy, and for every flower
+ That in this vale she pluckt, shall spring a thousand.
+ Where'er she slept anemones shall crowd,
+ And the sweet violet. These things shall ye see.
+ --But I behold him whom I came to meet, 560
+ Hermes:--he, be he laden howsoe'er,
+ Will heavier-laden to his lord return.
+
+ _HERMES_ (_entering_).
+
+ Mighty Demeter, Mother of the seasons,
+ Bountiful all-sustainer, fairest daughter
+ Of arch-ancestral Rhea,--to thee Zeus sendeth
+ Kindly message. He grieves seeing thy godhead
+ Offended wrongly at eternal justice,
+ 'Gainst destiny ordain'd idly revolting.
+ Ever will he, thy brother, honour thee
+ And willingly aid thee: but since now thy daughter 570
+ Is raised to a place on the tripartite throne,
+ He finds thee honour'd duly and not injur'd.
+ Wherefore he bids thee now lament no more,
+ But with thy presence grace the courts of heav'n.
+
+ DEM. Bright Hermes, Argus-slayer, born of Maia,
+ Who bearest empty words, the mask of war,
+ To Zeus make thine own words, that thou hast found me
+ Offended,--that I still lament my daughter,
+ Nor heed his summons to the courts of heav'n.
+
+ HER. Giv'st thou me nought but these relentless words?
+
+ DEM. I send not words, nor dost thou carry deeds. 581
+ But know, since heav'n denies my claim, I take
+ Earth for my battle-field. Curse and defiance
+ Shall shake his throne, and, readier then for justice,
+ Zeus will enquire my terms: thou, on that day,
+ Remember them; that he shall bid thee lead
+ Persephone from Hades by the hand,
+ And on this spot, whence she was stol'n, restore her
+ Into mine arms. Execute that; and praise
+ Shall rise from earth and peace return to heav'n. 590
+
+ HER. How dare I carry unto Zeus thy threats?
+
+ DEM. Approach him with a gift: this little wallet.
+
+ [_Giving a little bag of seeds._
+
+ I will not see thee again until the day
+ Thou lead my daughter hither thro' the gates of Hell. [_Going._
+
+ HER. Ah! mighty Queen, the lightness of thy gift
+ Is greater burden than thy weighty words.
+
+ [_Exeunt severally r. and l._
+
+ _CHORUS._
+
+
+ (1) Sisters! what have we heard!
+ Our fair Persephone, the flower of the earth,
+ By Hades stolen away, his queen to be.
+ (_others_) Alas!--alas!--ay me! 600
+ (2) And great Demeter's bold relentless word
+ To Hermes given,
+ Threatening mankind with dearth.
+ (_others_) Ay me! alas! alas!--
+ (3 _or_ 1) She in her sorrow strong
+ Fears not to impeach the King of Heaven,
+ And combat wrong with wrong.--
+ (_others confusedly_) What can we do?--Alas!--
+ Back to our ocean-haunts return
+ To weep and mourn.-- 610
+ What use to mourn?--
+ Nay, nay!--Away with sorrow:
+ Let us forget to-day
+ And look for joy to-morrow:--
+ [(1) Nay, nay! hearken to me!]
+ Nay, how forget that on us too,--
+ Yea, on us all
+ The curse will fall.--
+ [(1) Hearken! I say!]
+ What can we do? Alas! alas! 620
+ (1) Hearken! There's nought so light,
+ Nothing of weight so small,
+ But that in even balance 'twill avail
+ Wholly to turn the scale.
+ Let us our feeble force unite,
+ And giving voice to tears,
+ Assail Poseidon's ears;
+ Rob pleasure from his days,
+ Darken with sorrow all his ways,
+ Until his shifty mind 630
+ Become to pity inclined,
+ And 'gainst his brother turn.
+ (_others_) 'Tis well, thou sayest well.
+ (2) Yea; for if Zeus should learn
+ That earth and sea were both combined
+ Against his cruel intent,
+ Sooner will he relent.
+ (_others_) 'Tis well--we do it--'tis well.--
+ (1) Come let us vow. Vow all with one accord
+ To harden every heart 640
+ Till we have won Poseidon to our part.
+ (_all_) We vow--we do it--we vow.
+ (1) Till we have conquer'd heav'n's almighty lord
+ And seen Persephone restored.
+ (_all_) We vow--we vow.
+ (1) Come then all; and, as ye go,
+ Begin the song of woe.
+
+ _Song._
+
+ Close up, bright flow'rs, and hang the head,
+ Ye beauties of the plain,
+ The Queen of Spring is with the dead, 650
+ Ye deck the earth in vain.
+ From your deserted vale we fly,
+ And where the salt waves mourn
+ Our song shall swell their burd'ning sigh
+ Until sweet joy return.
+
+
+
+
+ ACT III
+
+
+ _CHORUS._
+
+ _Song._
+
+ Lo where the virgin veilëd in airy beams,
+ All-holy Morn, in splendor awakening,
+ Heav'n's gate hath unbarrèd, the golden
+ Aerial lattices set open.
+
+ With music endeth night's prisoning terror, 660
+ With flow'ry incense: Haste to salute the sun,
+ That for the day's chase, like a huntsman,
+ With flashing arms cometh o'er the mountain.
+
+ _Inter se._ That were a song for Artemis--I have heard
+ Men thus salute the rising sun in spring--
+ --See, we have wreaths enough and garlands plenty
+ To hide our lov'd Persephone from sight
+ If she should come.--But think you she will come?--
+ If one might trust the heavens, it is a morn
+ Promising happiness--'Tis like the day 670
+ That brought us all our grief a year ago.--
+
+
+ _ODE._
+
+ O that the earth, or only this fair isle wer' ours
+ Amid the ocean's blue billows,
+ With flow'ry woodland, stately mountain and valley,
+ Cascading and lilied river;
+ Nor ever a mortal envious, laborious,
+ By anguish or dull care opprest,
+ Should come polluting with remorseful countenance
+ Our haunt of easy gaiety.
+ For us the grassy slopes, the country's airiness, 680
+ The lofty whispering forest,
+ Where rapturously Philomel invoketh the night
+ And million eager throats the morn;
+ With doves at evening softly cooing, and mellow
+ Cadences of the dewy thrush.
+ We love the gentle deer, the nimble antelope;
+ Mice love we and springing squirrels;
+ To watch the gaudy flies visit the blooms, to hear
+ On ev'ry mead the grasshopper.
+ All thro' the spring-tide, thro' the indolent summer, 690
+ (If only this fair isle wer' ours)
+ Here might we dwell, forgetful of the weedy caves
+ Beneath the ocean's blue billows.
+
+ _Enter Demeter._
+
+ CH. Hail, mighty Mother!--Welcome, great Demeter!--
+ (1) This day bring joy to thee, and peace to man!
+
+ DEM. I welcome you, my loving true allies,
+ And thank you, who for me your gentle tempers
+ Have stiffen'd in rebellion, and so long
+ Harass'd the foe. Here on this field of flowers
+ I have bid you share my victory or defeat. 700
+ For Hermes hath this day command from Zeus
+ To lead our lost Persephone from Hell,
+ Hither whence she was stolen.--And yet, alas!
+ Tho' Zeus is won, some secret power thwarts me;
+ All is not won: a cloud is o'er my spirit.
+ Wherefore not yet I boast, nor will rejoice
+ Till mine eyes see her, and my arms enfold her,
+ And breast to breast we meet in fond embrace.
+
+ CH. Well hast thou fought, great goddess, so to wrest
+ Zeus from his word. We thank thee, call'd to share 710
+ Thy triumph, and rejoice. Yet O, we pray,
+ Make thou this day a day of peace for man!
+ Even if Persephone be not restored,
+ Whether Aidoneus hold her or release,
+ Relent thou.--Stay thine anger, mighty goddess;
+ Nor with thy hateful famine slay mankind.
+
+ DEM. Say not that word 'relent' lest Hades hear!
+
+ CH. Consider rather if mankind should hear.
+
+ DEM. Do ye love man?
+
+ CH. We have seen his sorrows, Lady ...
+
+ DEM. And what can ye have seen that I know not?--
+ His sorrow?--Ah my sorrow!--and ye bid 721
+ Me to relent; whose deeds of fond compassion
+ Have in this year of agony built up
+ A story for all time that shall go wand'ring
+ Further than I have wander'd;--whereto all ears
+ Shall hearken ever, as ye will hearken now.
+
+ CH. Happy are we, who first shall hear the tale
+ From thine own lips, and tell it to the sea.
+
+ DEM. Attend then while I tell.--
+ --Parting from Hermes hence, anger'd at heart, 730
+ Self-exiled from the heav'ns, forgone, alone,
+ My anguish fasten'd on me, as I went
+ Wandering an alien in the haunts of men.
+ To screen my woe I put my godhead off,
+ Taking the likeness of a worthy dame,
+ A woman of the people well in years;
+ Till going unobserv'd, it irked me soon
+ To be unoccupy'd save by my grief,
+ While men might find distraction for their sorrows
+ In useful toil. Then, of my pity rather 740
+ Than hope to find their simple cure my own,
+ I took resolve to share and serve their needs,
+ And be as one of them.
+
+ CH. Ah, mighty goddess,
+ Coudst thou so put thy dignities away,
+ And suffer the familiar brunt of men?
+
+ DEM. In all things even as they.--And sitting down
+ One evening at Eleusis, by the well
+ Under an olive-tree, likening myself
+ Outwardly to some kindly-hearted matron,
+ Whose wisdom and experience are of worth 750
+ Either where childhood clamorously speaks
+ The engrossing charge of Aphrodite's gifts,
+ Or merry maidens in wide-echoing halls
+ Want sober governance;--to me, as there
+ I sat, the daughters of King Keleos came,
+ Tall noble damsels, as kings' daughters are,
+ And, marking me a stranger, they drew from me
+ A tale told so engagingly, that they
+ Grew fain to find employment for my skill;
+ --As men devise in mutual recompense, 760
+ Hoping the main advantage for themselves;--
+ And so they bad me follow, and I enter'd
+ The palace of King Keleos, and received
+ There on my knees the youngest of the house,
+ A babe, to nurse him as a mother would:
+ And in that menial service I was proud
+ To outrun duty and trust: and there I liv'd
+ Disguised among the maidens many months.
+
+ CH. Often as have our guesses aim'd, dear Lady,
+ Where thou didst hide thyself, oft as we wonder'd 770
+ What chosen work was thine, none ever thought
+ That thou didst deign to tend a mortal babe.
+
+ DEM. What life I led shall be for men to tell.
+ But for this babe, the nursling of my sorrow,
+ Whose peevish cry was my consoling care,
+ How much I came to love him ye shall hear.
+
+ CH. What was he named, Lady?
+
+ DEM. Demophoön.
+ Yea, ye shall hear how much I came to love him.
+ For in his small epitome I read
+ The trouble of mankind; in him I saw 780
+ The hero's helplessness, the countless perils
+ In ambush of life's promise, the desire
+ Blind and instinctive, and the will perverse.
+ His petty needs were man's necessities;
+ In him I nurst all mortal natur', embrac'd
+ With whole affection to my breast, and lull'd
+ Wailing humanity upon my knee.
+
+ CH. We see thou wilt not now destroy mankind.
+
+ DEM. What I coud do to save man was my thought.
+ And, since my love was center'd in the boy, 790
+ My thought was first for him, to rescue him;
+ That, thro' my providence, he ne'er should know
+ Suffering, nor disease, nor fear of death.
+ Therefore I fed him on immortal food,
+ And should have gain'd my wish, so well he throve,
+ But by ill-chance it hapt, once, as I held him
+ Bathed in the fire at midnight (as was my wont),--
+ His mother stole upon us, and ascare
+ At the strange sight, screaming in loud dismay
+ Compel'd me to unmask, and leave for ever 800
+ The halls of Keleos, and my work undone.
+
+ CH. 'Twas pity that she came!--Didst thou not grieve to lose
+ The small Demophoön?--Coudst thou not save him?
+
+ DEM. I had been blinded. Think ye for yourselves ...
+ What vantage were it to mankind at large
+ That one should be immortal,--if all beside
+ Must die and suffer misery as before?
+
+ CH. Nay, truly. And great envy borne to one
+ So favour'd might have more embitter'd all.
+
+ DEM. I had been foolish. My sojourn with men 810
+ Had warpt my mind with mortal tenderness.
+ So, questioning myself what real gift
+ I might bestow on man to help his state,
+ I saw that sorrow was his life-companion,
+ To be embrac't bravely, not weakly shun'd:
+ That as by toil man winneth happiness,
+ Thro' tribulation he must come to peace.
+ How to make sorrow his friend then,--this my task.
+ Here was a mystery ... and how persuade
+ This thorny truth?... Ye do not hearken me. 820
+
+ CH. Yea, honour'd goddess, yea, we hearken still:
+ Stint not thy tale.
+
+ DEM. Ye might not understand.
+ My tale to you must be a tale of deeds--
+ How first I bade King Keleos build for me
+ A temple in Eleusis, and ordain'd
+ My worship, and the mysteries of my thought;
+ Where in the sorrow that I underwent
+ Man's state is pattern'd; and in picture shewn
+ The way of his salvation.... Now with me
+ --Here is a matter grateful to your ears-- 830
+ Your lov'd Persephone hath equal honour,
+ And in the spring her festival of flowers:
+ And if she should return ... [_Listening._
+ Ah! hark! what hear I?
+
+ CH. We hear no sound.
+
+ DEM. Hush ye! Hermes: he comes.
+
+ CH. What hearest thou?
+
+ DEM. Hermes; and not alone.
+ She is there. 'Tis she: I have won.
+
+ CH. Where? where?
+
+ DEM. (_aside_). Ah! can it be that out of sorrow's night,
+ From tears, from yearning pain, from long despair,
+ Into joy's sunlight I shall come again?--
+ Aside! stand ye aside! 840
+
+ _Enter Hermes leading Persephone._
+
+ HER. Mighty Demeter, lo! I execute
+ The will of Zeus and here restore thy daughter.
+
+ DEM. I have won.
+
+ PER. Sweet Mother, thy embrace is as the welcome
+ Of all the earth, thy kiss the breath of life.
+
+ DEM. Ah! but to me, Cora! Thy voice again...
+ My tongue is trammel'd with excess of joy.
+
+ PER. Arise, my nymphs, my Oceanides!
+ My Nereids all, arise! and welcome me!
+ Put off your strange solemnity! arise! 850
+
+ CH. Welcome! all welcome, fair Persephone!
+ (1) We came to welcome thee, but fell abash'd
+ Seeing thy purple robe and crystal crown.
+
+ PER. Arise and serve my pleasure as of yore.
+
+ DEM. And thou too doff thy strange solemnity,
+ That all may see thee as thou art, my Cora,
+ Restor'd and ever mine. Put off thy crown!
+
+ PER. Awhile! dear Mother--what thou say'st is true;
+ I am restor'd to thee, and evermore
+ Shall be restor'd. Yet am I none the less 860
+ Evermore Queen of Hades: and 'tis meet
+ I wear the crown, the symbol of my reign.
+
+ DEM. What words are these, my Cora! Evermore
+ Restor'd to me thou say'st ... 'tis well--but then
+ Evermore Queen of Hades ... what is this?
+ I had a dark foreboding till I saw thee:
+ Alas, alas! it lives again: destroy it!
+ Solve me this riddle quickly, if thou mayest.
+
+ PER. Let Hermes speak, nor fear thou. All is well.
+
+ HER. Divine Demeter, thou hast won thy will, 870
+ And the command of Zeus have I obey'd.
+ Thy daughter is restor'd, and evermore
+ Shall be restor'd to thee as on this day.
+ But Hades holding to his bride, the Fates
+ Were kind also to him, that she should be
+ His queen in Hades as thy child on earth.
+ Yearly, as spring-tide cometh, she is thine
+ While flowers bloom and all the land is gay;
+ But when thy corn is gather'd, and the fields
+ Are bare, and earth withdraws her budding life 880
+ From the sharp bite of winter's angry fang,
+ Yearly will she return and hold her throne
+ With great Aidoneus and the living dead:
+ And she hath eaten with him of such fruit
+ As holds her his true bride for evermore.
+
+ DEM. Alas! alas!
+
+ PER. Rejoice, dear Mother. Let not vain lament
+ Trouble our joy this day, nor idle tears.
+
+ DEM. Alas! from my own deed my trouble comes:
+ He gave thee of the fruit which I had curs'd: 890
+ I made the poison that enchanted thee.
+
+ PER. Repent not in thy triumph, but rejoice,
+ Who hast thy will in all, as I have mine.
+
+ DEM. I have but half my will, how hast thou more?
+
+ PER. It was my childish fancy (thou rememb'rest),
+ I would be goddess of the flowers: I thought
+ That men should innocently honour me
+ With bloodless sacrifice and spring-tide joy.
+ Now Fate, that look'd contrary, hath fulfill'd
+ My project with mysterious efficacy: 900
+ And as a plant that yearly dieth down
+ When summer is o'er, and hideth in the earth,
+ Nor showeth promise in its wither'd leaves
+ That it shall reawaken and put forth
+ Its blossoms any more to deck the spring;
+ So I, the mutual symbol of my choice,
+ Shall die with winter, and with spring revive.
+ How without winter coud I have my spring?
+ How come to resurrection without death?
+ Lo thus our joyful meeting of to-day, 910
+ Born of our separation, shall renew
+ Its annual ecstasy, by grief refresht:
+ And no more pall than doth the joy of spring
+ Yearly returning to the hearts of men.
+ See then the accomplishment of all my hope:
+ Rejoice, and think not to put off my crown.
+
+ DEM. What hast thou seen below to reconcile thee
+ To the dark moiety of thy strange fate?
+
+ PER. Where have I been, mother? what have I seen?
+ The downward pathway to the gates of death: 920
+ The skeleton of earthly being, stript
+ Of all disguise: the sudden void of night:
+ The spectral records of unwholesome fear:--
+ Why was it given to me to see these things?
+ The ruin'd godheads, disesteem'd, condemn'd
+ To toil of deathless mockery: conquerors
+ In the reverse of glory, doom'd to rule
+ The multitudinous army of their crimes:
+ The naked retribution of all wrong:--
+ Why was it given to me to see such things? 930
+
+ DEM. Not without terror, as I think, thou speakest,
+ Nor as one reconcil'd to brook return.
+
+ PER. But since I have seen these things, with salt and fire
+ My spirit is purged, and by this crystal crown
+ Terror is tamed within me. If my words
+ Seem'd to be tinged with terror, 'twas because
+ I knew one hour of terror (on the day
+ That took me hence) and with that memory
+ Colour'd my speech, using the terms which paint
+ The blindfold fears of men, who little reckon 940
+ How they by holy innocence and love,
+ By reverence and gentle lives may win
+ A title to the fair Elysian fields,
+ Where the good spirits dwell in ease and light
+ And entertainment of those fair desires
+ That made earth beautiful ... brave souls that spent
+ Their lives for liberty and truth, grave seers
+ Whose vision conquer'd darkness, pious poets
+ Whose words have won Apollo's deathless praise,
+ Who all escape Hell's mysteries, nor come nigh 950
+ The Cave of Cacophysia.
+
+ DEM. Mysteries!
+ What mysteries are these? and what the Cave?
+
+ PER. The mysteries of evil, and the cave
+ Of blackness that obscures them. Even in hell
+ The worst is hidden, and unfructuous night
+ Stifles her essence in her truthless heart.
+
+ DEM. What is the arch-falsity? I seek to know
+ The mystery of evil. Hast thou seen it?
+
+ PER. I have seen it. Coud I truly rule my kingdom
+ Not having seen it?
+
+ DEM. Tell me what it is. 960
+
+ PER. 'Tis not that I forget it; tho' the thought
+ Is banisht from me. But 'tis like a dream
+ Whose sense is an impression lacking words.
+
+ DEM. If it would pain thee telling ...
+
+ PER. Nay, but surely
+ The words of gods and men are names of things
+ And thoughts accustom'd: but of things unknown
+ And unimagin'd are no words at all.
+
+ DEM. And yet will words sometimes outrun the thought.
+
+ PER. What can be spoken is nothing: 'twere a path
+ That leading t'ward some prospect ne'er arrived. 970
+
+ DEM. The more thou holdest back, the more I long.
+
+ PER. The outward aspect only mocks my words.
+
+ DEM. Yet what is outward easy is to tell.
+
+ PER. Something is possible. This cavern lies
+ In very midmost of deep-hollow'd hell.
+ O'er its torn mouth the black Plutonic rock
+ Is split in sharp disorder'd pinnacles
+ And broken ledges, whereon sit, like apes
+ Upon a wither'd tree, the hideous sins
+ Of all the world: once having seen within 980
+ The magnetism is heavy on them, and they crawl
+ Palsied with filthy thought upon the peaks;
+ Or, squatting thro' long ages, have become
+ Rooted like plants into the griping clefts:
+ And there they pullulate, and moan, and strew
+ The rock with fragments of their mildew'd growth.
+
+ DEM. Cora, my child! and hast thou seen these things!
+
+ PER. Nay but the outward aspect, figur'd thus
+ In mere material loathsomeness, is nought
+ Beside the mystery that is hid within. 990
+
+ DEM. Search thou for words, I pray, somewhat to tell.
+
+ PER. Are there not matters past the thought of men
+ Or gods to know?
+
+ DEM. Thou meanest wherefore things
+ Should be at all? Or, if they be, why thus,
+ As hot, cold, hard and soft: and wherefore Zeus
+ Had but two brothers; why the stars of heaven
+ Are so innumerable, constellated
+ Just as they are; or why this Sicily
+ Should be three-corner'd? Yes, thou sayest well,
+ Why things are as they are, nor gods nor men 1000
+ Can know. We say that Fate appointed thus,
+ And are content.--
+
+ PER. Suppose, dear Mother, there wer' a temple in heaven,
+ Which, dedicated to the unknown Cause
+ And worship of the unseen, had power to draw
+ All that was worthy and good within its gate:
+ And that the spirits who enter'd there became
+ Not only purified and comforted,
+ But that the mysteries of the shrine were such,
+ That the initiated bathed in light 1010
+ Of infinite intelligence, and saw
+ The meaning and the reason of all things,
+ All at a glance distinctly, and perceived
+ The origin of all things to be good,
+ And the énd good, and that what appears as evil
+ Is as a film of dust, that faln thereon,
+ May,--at one stroke of the hand,--
+ Be brush'd away, and show the good beneath,
+ Solid and fair and shining: If moreover
+ This blessëd vision were of so great power 1020
+ That none coud e'er forget it or relapse
+ To doubtful ignorance:--I say, dear Mother,
+ Suppose that there were such a temple in heaven.
+
+ DEM. O child, my child! that were a temple indeed.
+ 'Tis such a temple as man needs on earth;
+ A holy shrine that makes no pact with sin,
+ A worthy shrine to draw the worthy and good,
+ A shrine of wisdom trifling not with folly,
+ A shrine of beauty, where the initiated
+ Drank love and light.... Strange thou shouldst speak of it.
+ I have inaugurated such a temple 1031
+ These last days in Eleusis, have ordain'd
+ These very mysteries!--Strange thou speakest of it.
+ But by what path return we to the Cave
+ Of Cacophysia?
+
+ PER. By this path, dear Mother.
+ The Cave of Cacophysia is in all things
+ T'ward evil, as that temple were t'ward good.
+ I enter'd in. Outside the darkness was
+ But as accumulated sunlessness;
+ Within 'twas positive as light itself, 1040
+ A blackness that extinguished: Yet I knew,
+ For Hades told me, that I was to see;
+ And so I waited, till a forking flash
+ Of sudden lightning dazzlingly reveal'd
+ All at a glance. As on a pitchy night
+ The warder of some high acropolis
+ Looks down into the dark, and suddenly
+ Sees all the city with its roofs and streets,
+ Houses and walls, clear as in summer noon,
+ And ere he think of it, 'tis dark again,-- 1050
+ So I saw all within the Cave, and held
+ The vision, 'twas so burnt upon my sense.
+
+ DEM. What saw'st thou, child? what saw'st thou?
+
+ PER. Nay, the things
+ Not to be told, because there are no words
+ Of gods or men to paint the inscrutable
+ And full initiation of hell.--I saw
+ The meaning and the reason of all things,
+ All at a glance, and in that glance perceiv'd
+ The origin of all things to be evil,
+ And the énd evil: that what seems as good 1060
+ Is as a bloom of gold that spread thereo'er
+ May, by one stroke of the hand,
+ Be brush'd away, and leave the ill beneath
+ Solid and foul and black....
+
+ DEM. Now tell me, child,
+ If Hades love thee, that he sent thee thither.
+
+ PER. He said it coud not harm me: and I think
+ It hath not. [_Going up to Demeter, who kisses her._
+
+ DEM. Nay it hath not, ... and I know
+ The power of evil is no power at all
+ Against eternal good. 'Tis fire on water,
+ As darkness against sunlight, like a dream 1070
+ To waken'd will. Foolish was I to fear
+ That aught coud hurt thee, Cora. But to-day
+ Speak we no more.... This mystery of Hell
+ Will do me service: I'll not tell thee now:
+ But sure it is that Fate o'erruleth all
+ For good or ill: and we (no more than men)
+ Have power to oppose, nor any will nor choice
+ Beyond such wisdom as a fisher hath
+ Who driven by sudden gale far out to sea
+ Handles his fragile boat safe thro' the waves, 1080
+ Making what harbour the wild storm allows.
+ To-day hard-featured and inscrutable Fate
+ Stands to mine eyes reveal'd, nor frowns upon me.
+ I thought to find thee as I knew thee, and fear'd
+ Only to find thee sorrowful: I find thee
+ Far other than thou wert, nor hurt by Hell.
+ I thought I must console thee, but 'tis thou
+ Playest the comforter: I thought to teach thee,
+ And had prepared my lesson, word by word;
+ But thou art still beyond me. One thing only 1090
+ Of all my predetermin'd plan endures:
+ My purpose was to bid thee to Eleusis
+ For thy spring festival, which three days hence
+ Inaugurates my temple. Thou wilt come?
+
+ PER. I come. And art thou reconcil'd, dear Mother?
+
+ DEM. Joy and surprise make tempest in my mind;
+ When their bright stir is o'er, there will be peace.
+ But ere we leave this flowery field, the scene
+ Of strange and beauteous memories evermore,
+ I thank thee, Hermes, for thy willing service. 1100
+
+ PER. I thank thee, son of Maia, and bid farewell.
+
+ HER. Have thy joy now, great Mother; and have thou joy,
+ Fairest Persephone, Queen of the Spring.
+
+ _CHORUS._
+
+ Fair Persephone, garlands we bring thee,
+ Flow'rs and spring-tide welcome sing thee.
+ Hades held thee not,
+ Darkness quell'd thee not.
+ Gay and joyful welcome!
+ Welcome, Queen, evermore.
+ Earth shall own thee, 1110
+ Thy nymphs crown thee,
+ Garland thee and crown thee,
+ Crown thee Queen evermore.
+
+
+
+
+ EROS & PSYCHE
+
+ _A narrative Poem
+ in twelve measures_
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+ THE STORY DONE INTO ENGLISH
+ FROM THE LATIN
+ OF
+ APULEIUS
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+ _L'anima semplicetta che sa nulla._
+
+ _O latest born, O loveliest vision far
+ Of all Olympus' faded hierarchy._
+
+
+
+
+ _PREVIOUS EDITIONS_
+
+ 1. _Chiswick Press for Bell & Sons._ 1885.
+ 2. _Do. do. revised._ 1894.
+ 3. _Smith, Elder & Co. Vol. I_. 1898.
+
+
+
+
+ FIRST QUARTER
+
+ SPRING
+
+ PSYCHE'S EARTHLY PARENTAGE · WORSHIPPED BY
+ MEN · & PERSECUTED BY APHRODITE · SHE IS
+ LOVED & CARRIED OFF BY EROS
+
+ MARCH
+
+
+ 1
+
+ In midmost length of hundred-citied Crete,
+ The land that cradl'd Zeus, of old renown,
+ Where grave Demeter nurseried her wheat,
+ And Minos fashion'd law, ere he went down
+ To judge the quaking hordes of Hell's domain,
+ There dwelt a King on the Omphalian plain
+ Eastward of Ida, in a little town.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Three daughters had this King, of whom my tale
+ Time hath preserved, that loveth to despise
+ The wealth which men misdeem of much avail,
+ Their glories for themselves that they devise;
+ For clerkly is he, old hard-featured Time,
+ And poets' fabl'd song and lovers' rhyme
+ He storeth on his shelves to please his eyes.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ These three princesses all were fairest fair;
+ And of the elder twain 'tis truth to say
+ That if they stood not high above compare,
+ Yet in their prime they bore the palm away;
+ Outwards of loveliness; but Nature's mood,
+ Gracious to make, had grudgingly endued
+ And marr'd by gifting ill the beauteous clay.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ And being in honour they were well content
+ To feed on lovers' looks and courtly smiles,
+ To hang their necks with jewel'd ornament,
+ And gold, that vanity in vain beguiles,
+ And live in gaze, and take their praise for due,
+ To be the fairest maidens then to view
+ Within the shores of Greece and all her isles.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ But of that youngest one, the third princess,
+ There is no likeness; since she was as far
+ From pictured beauty as is ugliness,
+ Though on the side where heavenly wonders are,
+ Ideals out of being and above,
+ Which music worshippeth, but if love love,
+ 'Tis, as the poet saith, to love a star.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Her vision rather drave from passion's heart
+ What earthly soil it had afore possest;
+ Since to man's purer unsubstantial part
+ The brightness of her presence was addrest:
+ And such as mock'd at God, when once they saw
+ Her heavenly glance, were humbl'd, and in awe
+ Of things unseen, return'd to praise the Best.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ And so before her, wheresoe'er she went,
+ Hushing the crowd a thrilling whisper ran,
+ And silent heads were reverently bent;
+ Till from the people the belief began
+ That Love's own mother had come down on earth,
+ Sweet Cytherea, or of mortal birth
+ A greater Goddess was vouchsaf't to man.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ Then Aphrodite's statue in its place
+ Stood without worshippers; if Cretans pray'd
+ For beauty or for children, love or grace,
+ The prayer and vow were offer'd to the maid;
+ Unto the maid their hymns of praise were sung,
+ Their victims bled for her, for her they hung
+ Garland and golden gift, and none forbade.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ And thence opinion spread beyond the shores,
+ From isle to isle the wonder flew, it came
+ Across the Ægæan on a thousand oars,
+ Athens and Smyrna caught the virgin's fame;
+ And East or West, where'er the tale had been,
+ The adoration of the foam-born queen
+ Fell to neglect, and men forgot her name.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ No longer to high Paphos now 'twas sail'd;
+ The fragrant altar by the Graces served
+ At Cnidus was forsaken; pilgrims fail'd
+ The rocky island to her name reserved,
+ Proud Ephyra, and Meropis renown'd;
+ 'Twas all for Crete her votaries were bound,
+ And to the Cretan maid her worship swerved.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ Which when in heaven great Aphrodite saw,
+ Who is the breather of the year's bright morn,
+ Fount of desire and beauty without flaw,
+ Herself the life that doth the world adorn;
+ Seeing that without her generative might
+ Nothing can spring upon the shores of light,
+ Nor any bud of joy or love be born;
+
+
+ 12
+
+ She, when she saw the insult, did not hide
+ Her indignation, that a mortal frail
+ With her eterne divinity had vied,
+ Her fair Hellenic empire to assail,
+ For which she had fled the doom of Ninus old,
+ And left her wanton images unsoul'd
+ In Babylon and Zidon soon to fail.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ 'Not long,' she cried, 'shall that poor girl of Crete
+ God it in my despite; for I will bring
+ Such mischief on the sickly counterfeit
+ As soon shall cure her tribe of worshipping:
+ Her beauty will I mock with loathèd lust,
+ Bow down her dainty spirit to the dust,
+ And leave her long alive to feel the sting.'
+
+
+ 14
+
+ With that she calls to her her comely boy,
+ The limber scion of the God of War,
+ The fruit adulterous, which for man's annoy
+ To that fierce partner Cytherea bore,
+ Eros, the ever young, who only grew
+ In mischief, and was Cupid named anew
+ In westering aftertime of latin lore.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ What the first dawn of manhood is, the hour
+ When beauty, from its fleshy bud unpent,
+ Flaunts like the corol of a summer flower,
+ As if all life were for that ornament,
+ Such Eros seemed in years, a trifler gay,
+ The prodigal of an immortal day
+ For ever spending, and yet never spent.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ His skin is brilliant with the nimble flood
+ Of ichor, that comes dancing from his heart,
+ Lively as fire, and redder than the blood,
+ And maketh in his eyes small flashes dart,
+ And curleth his hair golden, and distilleth
+ Honey on his tongue, and all his body filleth
+ With wanton lightsomeness in every part.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ Naked he goeth, but with sprightly wings
+ Red, iridescent, are his shoulders fledged.
+ A bow his weapon, which he deftly strings,
+ And little arrows barb'd and keenly edged;
+ And these he shooteth true; but else the youth
+ For all his seeming recketh naught of truth,
+ But most deceiveth where he most is pledged.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ 'Tis he that maketh in men's heart a strife
+ Between remorseful reason and desire,
+ Till with life lost they lose the love of life,
+ And by their own hands wretchedly expire;
+ Or slain in bloody rivalries they miss
+ Even the short embracement of their bliss,
+ His smile of fury and his kiss of fire.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ He makes the strong man weak, the weak man wild;
+ Ruins great business and purpose high;
+ Brings down the wise to folly reconciled,
+ And martial captains on their knees to sigh:
+ He changeth dynasties, and on the head
+ Of duteous heroes, who for honour bled,
+ Smircheth the laurel that can never die.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ Him then she call'd, and gravely kissing told
+ The great dishonour to her godhead done;
+ And how, if he from that in heaven would hold,
+ On earth he must maintain it as her son;
+ The rather that his weapons were most fit,
+ As was his skill ordain'd to champion it;
+ And flattering thus his ready zeal she won.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ Whereon she quickly led him down on earth,
+ And show'd him PSYCHE, thus the maid was named;
+ Whom when she show'd, but coud not hide her worth,
+ She grew with envy tenfold more enflamed.
+ 'But if,' she cried, 'thou smite her as I bid,
+ Soon shall our glory of this affront be rid,
+ And she and all her likes for ever shamed.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ 'Make her to love the loathliest, basest wretch,
+ Deform'd in body, and of moonstruck mind,
+ A hideous brute and vicious, born to fetch
+ Anger from dogs and cursing from the blind.
+ And let her passion for the monster be
+ As shameless and detestable as he
+ Is most extreme and vile of humankind.'
+
+
+ 23
+
+ Which said, when he agreed, she spake no more,
+ But left him to his task, and took her way
+ Beside the ripples of the shell-strewn shore,
+ The southward stretching margin of a bay,
+ Whose sandy curves she pass'd, and taking stand
+ Upon its taper horn of furthest land,
+ Lookt left and right to rise and set of day.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ Fair was the sight; for now, though full an hour
+ The sun had sunk, she saw the evening light
+ In shifting colour to the zenith tower,
+ And grow more gorgeous ever and more bright.
+ Bathed in the warm and comfortable glow,
+ The fair delighted queen forgot her woe,
+ And watch'd the unwonted pageant of the night.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ Broad and low down, where late the sun had been
+ A wealth of orange-gold was thickly shed,
+ Fading above into a field of green,
+ Like apples ere they ripen into red;
+ Then to the height a variable hue
+ Of rose and pink and crimson freak'd with blue,
+ And olive-border'd clouds o'er lilac led.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ High in the opposèd west the wondering moon
+ All silvery green in flying green was fleec't;
+ And round the blazing South the splendour soon
+ Caught all the heaven, and ran to North and East;
+ And Aphrodite knew the thing was wrought
+ By cunning of Poseidon, and she thought
+ She would go see with whom he kept his feast.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ Swift to her wish came swimming on the waves
+ His lovely ocean nymphs, her guides to be,
+ The Nereids all, who live among the caves
+ And valleys of the deep, Cymodocè,
+ Agavè, blue-eyed Hallia and Nesæa,
+ Speio, and Thoë, Glaucè and Actæa,
+ Iaira, Melitè and Amphinomè,
+
+
+ 28
+
+ Apseudès and Nemertès, Callianassa,
+ Cymothoë, Thaleia, Limnorrhea,
+ Clymenè, Ianeira and Ianassa,
+ Doris and Panopè and Galatea,
+ Dynamenè, Dexamenè and Maira,
+ Ferusa, Doto, Proto, Callianeira,
+ Amphithoë, Oreithuia and Amathea.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ And after them sad Melicertes drave
+ His chariot, that with swift unfellied wheel,
+ By his two dolphins drawn along the wave,
+ Flew as they plunged, yet did not dip nor reel,
+ But like a plough that shears the heavy land
+ Stood on the flood, and back on either hand
+ O'erturn'd the briny furrow with its keel.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ Behind came Tritons, that their conches blew,
+ Greenbearded, tail'd like fish, all sleek and stark;
+ And hippocampi tamed, a bristly crew,
+ The browzers of old Proteus' weedy park,
+ Whose chiefer Mermen brought a shell for boat,
+ And balancing its hollow fan afloat,
+ Push'd it to shore and bade the queen embark:
+
+
+ 31
+
+ And then the goddess stept upon the shell
+ Which took her weight; and others threw a train
+ Of soft silk o'er her, that unfurl'd to swell
+ In sails, at breath of flying Zephyrs twain;
+ And all her way with foam in laughter strewn,
+ With stir of music and of conches blown,
+ Was Aphrodite launch'd upon the main.
+
+
+
+
+ APRIL
+
+
+ 1
+
+ But fairest Psyche still in favour rose,
+ Nor knew the jealous power against her sworn;
+ And more her beauty now surpass't her foe's,
+ Since 'twas transfigured by the spirit forlorn,
+ That writeth, to the perfecting of grace,
+ Immortal question in a mortal face,
+ The vague desire whereunto man is born.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Already in good time her sisters both,
+ Whose honest charms were never famed as hers,
+ With princes of the isle had plighted troth,
+ And gone to rule their foreign courtiers;
+ But she, exalted evermore beyond
+ Their loveliness, made yet no lover fond,
+ And gain'd but number to her worshippers.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ To joy in others' joy had been her lot,
+ And now that that was gone she wept to see
+ How her transcendent beauty overshot
+ The common aim of all felicity.
+ For love she sigh'd; and had some peasant rude
+ For true love's sake in simple passion woo'd,
+ Then Psyche had not scorn'd his wife to be.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ For what is Beauty, if it doth not fire
+ The loving answer of an eager soul?
+ Since 'tis the native food of man's desire,
+ And doth to good our varying world control;
+ Which, when it was not, was for Beauty's sake
+ Desired and made by Love, who still doth make
+ A beauteous path thereon to Beauty's goal.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ Should all men by some hateful venom die,
+ The pity were that o'er the unpeopl'd sphere
+ The sun would still bedeck the evening sky
+ And the unimaginable hues appear,
+ With none to mark the rose and gold and green;
+ That Spring should walk the earth, and nothing seen
+ Of her fresh delicacy year by year.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ And if some beauteous things,--whose heavenly worth
+ And function overpass our mortal sense,--
+ Lie waste and unregarded on the earth
+ By reason of our gross intelligence,
+ These are not vain, because in nature's scheme
+ It lives that we shall grow from dream to dream
+ In time to gather an enchantment thence.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ Even as we see the fairest works of men
+ Awhile neglected, and the makers die;
+ But Truth comes weeping to their graves, and then
+ Their fames victoriously mounting high
+ Do battle with the regnant names of eld,
+ To win their seats; as when the Gods rebel'd
+ Against their sires and drave them from the sky.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ But to be praised for beauty and denied
+ The meed of beauty, this was yet unknown:
+ The best and bravest men have ever vied
+ To win the fairest women for their own.
+ Thus Psyche spake, or reason'd in her mind,
+ Disconsolate; and with self-pity pined,
+ In the deserted halls wandering alone.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ And grievèd grew the King to see her woe:
+ And blaming first the gods for her disease,
+ He purposed to their oracle to go
+ To question how he might their wrath appease,
+ Or, if that might not be, the worst to hear,--
+ Which is the last poor hope of them that fear.--
+ So he took his ship upon the northern seas,
+
+
+ 10
+
+ And journeying to the shrine of Delphi went,
+ The temple of Apollo Pythian,
+ Where when the god he question'd if 'twas meant
+ That Psyche should be wed, and to what man,
+ The tripod shook, and o'er the vaporous well
+ The chanting Pythoness gave oracle,
+ And thus in priestly verse the sentence ran:
+
+
+ 11
+
+ _High on the topmost rock with funeral feast
+ Convey and leave the maid, nor look to find
+ A mortal husband, but a savage beast,
+ The viperous scourge of gods and humankind;
+ Who shames and vexes all, and as he flies
+ With sword and fire, Zeus trembles in the skies,
+ And groans arise from souls to hell consigned._
+
+
+ 12
+
+ With which reply the King return'd full sad:
+ For though he nothing more might understand,
+ Yet in the bitter bidding that he had
+ No man made question of the plain command,
+ That he must sacrifice the tender flower
+ Of his own blood to a demonian power,
+ Upon the rocky mount with his own hand.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ Some said that she to Talos was devote,
+ The metal giant, who with mile-long stride
+ Cover'd the isle, walking around by rote
+ Thrice every day at his appointed tide;
+ Who shepherded the sea-goats on the coast,
+ And, as he past, caught up and live would roast,
+ Pressing them to his burning ribs and side:
+
+
+ 14
+
+ Whose head was made of fine gold-beaten work
+ Of silver pure his arms and gleaming chest,
+ Thence of green-bloomèd bronze far as the fork,
+ Of iron weather-rusted all the rest.
+ One single vein he had, which running down
+ From head to foot was open in his crown,
+ And closèd by a nail; such was this pest.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ A little while they spent in sad delay,
+ Then order'd, as the oracle had said,
+ The cold feast and funereal display
+ Wherewith the fated bridal should be sped:
+ And their black pageantry and vain despairing
+ When Psyche saw, and for herself preparing
+ The hopeless ceremonial of the dead,
+
+
+ 16
+
+ Then spake she to the King and said 'O Sire,
+ Why wilt thou veil those venerable eyes
+ With piteous tears, which must of me require
+ More tears again than for myself arise?
+ Then, on the day my beauty first o'erstept
+ Its mortal place it had been well to have wept;
+ But now the fault beyond our ruing lies.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ 'As to be worship'd was my whole undoing,
+ So my submission must the forfeit pay:
+ And welcome were the morning of my wooing,
+ Tho' after it should dawn no other day.
+ Up to the mountain! for I hear the voice
+ Of my belovèd on the winds, _Rejoice,
+ Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away_!'
+
+
+ 18
+
+ With such distemper'd speech, that little cheer'd
+ Her mourning house, she went to choose with care
+ The raiment for her day of wedlock weird,
+ Her body as for burial to prepare;
+ But laved with bridal water, from the stream
+ Where Hera bathed; for still her fate supreme
+ Was doubtful, whether Love or Death it were:
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Love that is made of joy, and Death of fear:
+ Nay, but not these held Psyche in suspense;
+ Hers was the hope that following by the bier
+ Boweth its head beneath the dark immense:
+ Her fear the dread of life that turns to hide
+ Its tragic tears, what hour the happy bride
+ Ventures for love her maiden innocence.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ They set on high upon the bridal wain
+ Her bed for bier, and yet no corpse thereon;
+ But like as when unto a warrior slain
+ And not brought home the ceremonies done
+ Are empty, for afar his body brave
+ Lies lost, deep buried by the wandering wave
+ Or 'neath the foes his fury fell upon,--
+
+
+ 21
+
+ So was her hearse: and with it went afore,
+ Singing the solemn dirge that moves to tears,
+ The singers; and behind, clad as for war,
+ The King uncrown'd among his mournful peers,
+ All 'neath their armour robed in linen white;
+ And in their left were shields, and in their right
+ Torches they bore aloft instead of spears.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ And next the virgin tribe in white forth sail'd,
+ With wreaths of dittany; and 'midst them there
+ Went Psyche, all in lily-whiteness veil'd,
+ The white Quince-blossom chapleting her hair:
+ And last the common folk, a weeping crowd,
+ Far as the city-gates with wailings loud
+ Follow'd the sad procession in despair.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ Thus forth and up the mount they went, until
+ The funeral chariot must be left behind,
+ Since road was none for steepness of the hill;
+ And slowly by the narrow path they wind:
+ All afternoon their white and scatter'd file
+ Toil'd on distinct, ascending many a mile
+ Over the long brown slopes and crags unkind.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ But ere unto the snowy peak they came
+ Of that stormshapen pyramid so high,
+ 'Twas evening, and with footsteps slow and lame
+ They gather'd up their lagging company:
+ And then her sire, even as Apollo bade,
+ Set on the topmost rock the hapless maid,
+ With trembling hands and melancholy cry.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ And now the sun was sunk; only the peak
+ Flash'd like a jewel in the deepening blue:
+ And from the shade beneath none dared to speak,
+ But all look'd up, where glorified anew
+ Psyche sat islanded in living day.
+ Breathless they watcht her, till the last red ray
+ Fled from her lifted arm that waved adieu.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ There left they her, turning with sad farewells
+ To haste their homeward course, as best they might:
+ But night was crowding up the barren fells,
+ And hid full soon their rocky path from sight;
+ And each unto his stumbling foot to hold
+ His torch was fain, for o'er the moon was roll'd
+ A mighty cloud from heaven, to blot her light.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ And thro' the darkness for long while was seen
+ That armour'd train with waving fires to thread
+ Downwards, by pass, defile, and black ravine,
+ Each leading on the way that he was led.
+ Slowly they gain'd the plain, and one by one
+ Into the shadows of the woods were gone,
+ Or in the clinging mists were quench'd and fled.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ But unto Psyche, pondering o'er her doom
+ In tearful silence on her stony chair,
+ A Zephyr straying out of heaven's wide room
+ Rush'd down, and gathering round her unaware
+ Fill'd with his breath her vesture and her veil;
+ And like a ship, that crowding all her sail
+ Leans to accompany the tranquil air,
+
+
+ 29
+
+ She yielded, and was borne with swimming brain
+ And airy joy, along the mountain side,
+ Till, hid from earth by ridging summits twain,
+ They came upon a valley deep and wide;
+ Where the strong Zephyr with his burden sank,
+ And laid her down upon a grassy bank,
+ 'Mong thyme and violets and daisies pied.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ And straight upon the touch of that sweet bed
+ Both woe and wonder melted fast away:
+ And sleep with gentle stress her sense o'erspread,
+ Gathering as darkness doth on drooping day:
+ And nestling to the ground, she slowly drew
+ Her wearied limbs together, and, ere she knew,
+ Wrapt in forgetfulness and slumber lay.
+
+
+ MAY
+
+
+ 1
+
+ After long sleep when Psyche first awoke
+ Among the grasses 'neath the open skies,
+ And heard the mounting larks, whose carol spoke
+ Delighted invitation to arise,
+ She lay as one who after many a league
+ Hath slept off memory with his long fatigue,
+ And waking knows not in what place he lies:
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Anon her quickening thought took up its task,
+ And all came back as it had happ'd o'ernight;
+ The sad procession of the wedding mask,
+ The melancholy toiling up the height,
+ The solitary rock where she was left;
+ And thence in dark and airy waftage reft,
+ How on the flowers she had been disburden'd light.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Thereafter she would rise and see what place
+ That voyage had its haven in, and found
+ She stood upon a little hill, whose base
+ Shelved off into the valley all around;
+ And all round that the steep cliffs rose away,
+ Save on one side where to the break of day
+ The widening dale withdrew in falling ground.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ There, out from over sea, and scarce so high
+ As she, the sun above his watery blaze
+ Upbroke the grey dome of the morning sky,
+ And struck the island with his level rays;
+ Sifting his gold thro' lazy mists, that still
+ Climb'd on the shadowy roots of every hill,
+ And in the tree-tops breathed their silvery haze.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ At hand on either side there was a wood;
+ And on the upward lawn, that sloped between,
+ Not many paces back a temple stood,
+ By even steps ascending from the green;
+ With shaft and pediment of marble made,
+ It fill'd the passage of the rising glade,
+ And there withstay'd the sun in dazzling sheen.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Too fair for human art, so Psyche thought,
+ It might the fancy of some god rejoice;
+ Like to those halls which lame Hephæstos wrought,
+ Original, for each god to his choice,
+ In high Olympus; where his matchless lyre
+ Apollo wakes, and the responsive choir
+ Of Muses sing alternate with sweet voice.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ Wondering she drew anigh, and in a while
+ Went up the steps as she would entrance win,
+ And faced her shadow 'neath the peristyle
+ Upon the golden gate, whose flanges twin--
+ As there she stood, irresolute at heart
+ To try--swung to her of themselves apart;
+ Whereat she past between and stood within.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ A foursquare court it was with marble floor'd,
+ Embay'd about with pillar'd porticoes,
+ That echo'd in a somnolent accord
+ The music of a fountain, which arose
+ Sparkling in air, and splashing in its tank;
+ Whose wanton babble, as it swell'd or sank,
+ Gave idle voice to silence and repose.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ Thro' doors beneath the further colonnade,
+ Like a deep cup's reflected glooms of gold,
+ The inner rooms glow'd with inviting shade:
+ And, standing in the court, she might behold
+ Cedar, and silk, and silver; and that all
+ The pargeting of ceiling and of wall
+ Was fresco'd o'er with figures manifold.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ Then making bold to go within, she heard
+ Murmur of gentle welcome in her ear;
+ And seeing none that coud have spoken word,
+ She waited: when again Lady, draw near;
+ Enter! was cried; and now more voices came
+ From all the air around calling her name,
+ And bidding her rejoice and have no fear.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ And one, if she would rest, would show her bed,
+ Pillow'd for sleep, with fragrant linen fine;
+ One, were she hungry, had a table spread
+ Like as the high gods have it when they dine:
+ Or, would she bathe, were those would heat the bath;
+ The joyous cries contending in her path,
+ Psyche, they said, What wilt thou? all is thine.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Then Psyche would have thank'd their service true,
+ But that she fear'd her echoing words might scare
+ Those sightless tongues; and well by dream she knew
+ The voices of the messengers of prayer,
+ Which fly upon the gods' commandment, when
+ They answer the supreme desires of men,
+ Or for a while in pity hush their care.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ 'Twas fancy's consummation, and because
+ She would do joy no curious despite,
+ She made no wonder how the wonder was;
+ Only concern'd to take her full delight.
+ So to the bath,--what luxury could be
+ Better enhanced by eyeless ministry?--
+ She follows with the voices that invite.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ There being deliciously refresht, from soil
+ Of earth made pure by water, fire, and air,
+ They clad her in soft robes of Asian toil,
+ Scented, that in her queenly wardrobe were;
+ And led her forth to dine, and all around
+ Sang as they served, the while a choral sound
+ Of strings unseen and reeds the burden bare.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ P athetic strains and passionate they wove,
+ U rgent in ecstasies of heavenly sense;
+ R esponsive rivalries, that, while they strove
+ C ombined in full harmonious suspense,
+ E ntrancing wild desire, then fell at last
+ L ull'd in soft closes, and with gay contrast
+ L aunch'd forth their fresh unwearied excellence.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ Now Psyche, when her twofold feast was o'er,
+ Would feed her eye; and choosing for her guide
+ A low-voiced singer, bade her come explore
+ The wondrous house; until on every side
+ As surfeited with beauty, and seeing nought
+ But what was rich and fair beyond her thought,
+ And all her own, thus to the voice she cried:
+
+
+ 17
+
+ 'Am I indeed a goddess, or is this
+ But to be dead: and through the gates of death
+ Passing unwittingly doth man not miss
+ Body nor memory nor living breath;
+ Nor by demerits of his deeds is cast,
+ But, paid with the desire he holdeth fast,
+ Is holp with all his heart imagineth?'
+
+
+ 18
+
+ But her for all reply the wandering tongue
+ Call'd to the chamber where her bed was laid
+ With flower'd broideries of linen hung:
+ And round the walls in painting were portray'd
+ Love's victories over the gods renown'd.
+ Ares and Aphrodite here lay bound
+ In the fine net that dark Hephæstus made:
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Here Zeus, in likeness of a tawny bull,
+ Stoop'd on the Cretan shore his mighty knee,
+ While off his back Europa beautiful
+ Stept pale against the blue Carpathian sea;
+ And here Apollo, as he caught amazed
+ Daphne, for lo! her hands shot forth upraised
+ In leaves, her feet were rooted like a tree:
+
+
+ 20
+
+ Here Dionysos, springing from his car
+ At sight of Ariadne; here uplept
+ Adonis to the chase, breaking the bar
+ Of Aphrodite's arm for love who wept:
+ He spear in hand, with leashèd dogs at strain;
+ A marvellous work. But Psyche soon grown fain
+ Of rest, betook her to her bed and slept.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ Nor long had slept, when at a sudden stir
+ She woke; and one, that thro' the dark made way,
+ Drew near, and stood beside; and over her
+ The curtain rustl'd. Trembling now she lay,
+ Fainting with terror: till upon her face
+ A kiss, and with two gentle arms' embrace,
+ A voice that call'd her name in loving play.
+
+
+ 22
+
+
+ Though for the darkness she coud nothing see,
+ She wish'd not then for what the night denied:
+ This was the lover she had lack'd, and she,
+ Loving his loving, was his willing bride.
+ O'erjoy'd she slept again, o'erjoy'd awoke
+ At break of morn upon her love to look;
+ When lo! his empty place lay by her side.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ So all that day she spent in company
+ Of the soft voices; and Of right, they said,
+ Art thou our Lady now. Be happily
+ Thy bridal morrow by thy servants sped.
+ But she but long'd for night, if that might bring
+ Her lover back; and he on secret wing
+ Came with the dark, and in the darkness fled.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ And this was all her life; for every night
+ He came, and though his name she never learn'd,
+ Nor was his image yielded to her sight
+ At morn or eve, she neither look'd nor yearn'd
+ Beyond her happiness: and custom brought
+ An ease to pleasure; nor would Psyche's thought
+ Have ever to her earthly home return'd,
+
+
+ 25
+
+ But that one night he said 'Psyche, my soul,
+ Sad danger threatens us: thy sisters twain
+ Come to the mountain top, whence I thee stole,
+ And thou wilt hear their voices thence complain.
+ Answer them not: for it must end our love
+ If they should hear or spy thee from above.'
+ And Psyche said 'Their cry shall be in vain.'
+
+
+ 26
+
+ But being again alone, she thought 'twas hard
+ On her own blood; and blamed her joy as thief
+ Of theirs, her comfort which their comfort barr'd;
+ When she their care might be their care's relief.
+ All day she brooded on her father's woe,
+ And when at night her lover kisst her, lo!
+ Her tender face was wet with tears of grief.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ Then question'd why she wept, she all confest;
+ And begg'd of him she might but once go nigh
+ To set her sire's and sisters' fears at rest;
+ Till he for pity coud not but comply:
+ 'Only if they should ask thee of thy love
+ Discover nothing to their ears above.'
+ And Psyche said 'In vain shall be their cry.'
+
+
+ 28
+
+ And yet with day no sooner was alone,
+ Than she for loneliness her promise rued:
+ That having so much pleasure for her own,
+ 'Twas all unshared and spent in solitude.
+ And when at night her love flew to his place,
+ More than afore she shamed his fond embrace,
+ And piteously with tears her plaint renew'd.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ The more he now denied, the more she wept;
+ Nor would in anywise be comforted,
+ Unless her sisters, on the Zephyr swept,
+ Should in those halls be one day bathed and fed,
+ And see themselves the palace where she reign'd.
+ And he, by force of tears at last constrain'd,
+ Granted her wish unwillingly, and said:
+
+
+ 30
+
+ 'Much to our peril hast thou won thy will;
+ Thy sisters' love, seeing thee honour'd so,
+ Will sour to envy, and with jealous skill
+ Will pry to learn the thing that none may know.
+ Answer not, nor inquire; for know that I
+ The day thou seest my face far hence shall fly,
+ And thou anew to bitterest fate must go.'
+
+
+ 31
+
+ But Psyche said, 'Thy love is more than life;
+ To have thee leaveth nothing to be won:
+ For should the noonday prove me to be wife
+ Even of the beauteous Eros, who is son
+ Of Cypris, I coud never love thee more.'
+ Whereat he fondly kisst her o'er and o'er,
+ And peace was 'twixt them till the night was done.
+
+
+
+
+ SECOND QUARTER
+
+ SUMMER
+
+ PSYCHE'S SISTERS · SNARING HER TO DESTRUCTION ·
+ ARE THEMSELVES DESTROYED
+
+
+ JUNE
+
+ 1
+
+ And truly need there was to the old King
+ For consolation: since the mournful day
+ Of Psyche's fate he took no comforting,
+ But only for a speedy death would pray;
+ And on his head his hair grew silver-white.
+ --Such on life's topmost bough is sorrow's blight,
+ When the stout heart is cankering to decay.
+
+ 2
+
+ Which when his daughters learnt, they both were quick
+ Comfort and solace to their sire to lend.
+ But as not seldom they who nurse the sick
+ Will take the malady from them they tend,
+ So happ'd it now; for they who fail'd to cheer
+ Grew sad themselves, and in that palace drear
+ Increased the evil that they came to mend.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ And them the unhappy father sent to seek
+ Where Psyche had been left, if they might find
+ What monster held her on the savage peak;
+ Or if she there had died of hunger pined,
+ And, by wild eagles stript, her scatter'd bones
+ Might still be gather'd from the barren stones;
+ Or if her fate had left no trace behind.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ So just upon this time her sisters both
+ Climb'd on the cliff that hung o'er Psyche's vale;
+ And finding there no sign, to leave were loth
+ Ere well assured she lurk'd not within hail.
+ So calling loud her name, 'Psyche!' they cried,
+ 'Psyche, O Psyche!' and when none replied
+ They sank upon the rocks to weep and wail.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ But Psyche heard their voices where she sat,
+ And summoning the Zephyr bade him fleet
+ Those mourners down unto the grassy plat
+ 'Midst of her garden, where she had her seat.
+ Then from the dizzy steep the wondering pair
+ Came swiftly sinking on his buoyant air,
+ And stood upon the terrace at her feet.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Upsprang she then, and kiss'd them and embraced,
+ And said 'Lo, here am I, I whom ye mourn.
+ I am not dead, nor tortured, nor disgraced,
+ But blest above all days since I was born:
+ Wherefore be glad. Enter my home and see
+ How little cause has been to grieve for me,
+ And my desertion on the rocks forlorn.'
+
+
+ 7
+
+ So entering by the golden gate, or e'er
+ The marvel of their hither flight had waned,
+ Fresh wonder took them now, for everywhere
+ Their eyes that lit on beauty were enchain'd;
+ And Psyche's airy service, as she bade,
+ Perform'd its magic office, and display'd
+ The riches of the palace where she reign'd.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ And through the perfumed chambers they were led,
+ And bathed therein; and after, set to sup,
+ Were upon dreamlike delicacies fed,
+ And wine more precious than its golden cup.
+ Till seeing nothing lack'd and naught was theirs,
+ Their happiness fell from them unawares,
+ And bitter envy in their hearts sprang up.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ At last one said 'Psyche, since not alone
+ Thou livest here in joy, as well we wot,
+ Who is the man who should these wonders own,
+ Or god, I say, and still appeareth not?
+ What is his name? What rank and guise hath he,
+ Whom winds and spirits serve, who honoureth thee
+ Above all others in thy blissful lot?'
+
+
+ 10
+
+ But Psyche when that wistful speech she heard
+ Was ware of all her spouse had warn'd her of:
+ And uttering a disingenuous word,
+ Said 'A youth yet unbearded is my love;
+ He goeth hunting on the plains to-day,
+ And with his dogs hath wander'd far away;
+ And not till eve can he return above.'
+
+
+ 11
+
+ Then fearing to be nearer plied, she rose
+ And brought her richest jewels one by one,
+ Bidding them choose and take whate'er they chose;
+ And beckoning the Zephyr spake anon
+ That he should waft her sisters to the peak;
+ The which he did, and, ere they more coud speak,
+ They rose on high, and in the wind were gone.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Nor till again they came upon the road,
+ Which from the mountain shoulder o'er the plain
+ Led to the city of their sire's abode,
+ Found they their tongues, though full of high disdain
+ Their hearts were, but kept silence, till the strength
+ Of pride and envious hatred burst at length
+ In voice, and thus the elder gan complain:
+
+
+ 13
+
+ 'Cruel and unjust fortune! that of three
+ Sisters, whose being from one fountain well'd,
+ Exalts the last so high from her degree,
+ And leaves the first to be so far excel'd.
+ My husband is a poor and niggard churl
+ To him, whoe'er he be, that loves the girl.
+ Oh! in what godlike state her house is held!'
+
+
+ 14
+
+ 'Ay,' said the other, 'to a gouty loon
+ Am I not wedded? Lo! thy hurt is mine:
+ But never call me woman more, if soon
+ I cannot lure her from her height divine.
+ Nay, she shall need her cunning wit to save
+ The wealth of which so grudgingly she gave;
+ Wherefore thy hand and heart with me combine.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ 'She but received us out of pride, to show
+ Her state, well deeming that her happiness
+ Was little worth while there was none to know;
+ So is our lot uninjured if none guess.
+ Reveal we nothing therefore, but the while
+ Together scheme this wanton to beguile,
+ And bring her boasting godhead to distress.'
+
+
+ 16
+
+ So fresh disordering their dress and hair,
+ With loud lament they to their sire return,
+ Telling they found not Psyche anywhere,
+ And of her sure mischance could nothing learn:
+ And with that lie the wounded man they slew,
+ Hiding the saving truth which well they knew;
+ Nor did his piteous grief their heart concern.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ Meanwhile her unknown lover did not cease
+ To warn poor Psyche how her sisters plan'd
+ To undermine her love and joy and peace;
+ And urged how well she might their wiles withstand,
+ By keeping them from her delight aloof:
+ For better is security than proof,
+ And malice held afar than near at hand.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ 'And, dearest wife,' he said, 'since 'tis not long
+ Ere one will come to share thy secrecy,
+ And be thy babe and mine; let nothing wrong
+ The happy months of thy maternity.
+ If thou keep trust, then shalt thou see thy child
+ A god; but if to pry thou be beguiled,
+ The lot of both is death and misery.'
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Then Psyche's simple heart was fill'd with joy,
+ And counting to herself the months and days,
+ Look'd for the time, when she should bear a boy
+ To be her growing stay and godlike praise.
+ And 'O be sure,' she said, 'be sure, my pride
+ Having so rich a promise cannot slide,
+ Even if my love coud fail which thee obeys.'
+
+
+ 20
+
+ And so most happily her life went by,
+ In thoughts of love dear to her new estate;
+ Until at length the evil day drew nigh,
+ When now her sisters, joined in jealous hate,
+ Set forth again, and plotted by the way
+ How they might best allure her to betray
+ Her secret; with what he their angle bait.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ That night her husband spake to her, and said
+ 'Psyche, thy sisters come: and when they climb
+ The peak they will not tarry to be sped
+ Down by the Zephyr, as that other time,
+ But winging to the wind will cast themselves
+ Out in the air, and on the rocky shelves
+ Be dasht, and pay the penalty of crime.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ 'So let it be, and so shall we be saved.'
+ Which meditated vengeance of his fear
+ When Psyche heard, now for their life she craved,
+ Whose mere distress erewhile had toucht her near.
+ Around her lover's neck her arms she threw,
+ And pleaded for them by her faith so true,
+ Although they went on doom in judgment clear.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ In terror of bloodguiltiness she now
+ Forgot all other danger; she adjured,
+ Or using playfulness deep sobs would plow
+ Her soft entreaties, not to be endured:
+ Till he at last was fain once more to grant
+ The service of the Zephyr, to enchant
+ That wicked couple from their fate assured.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ So ere 'twas noon were noises at the door
+ Of knocking loud and voices high in glee;
+ Such as within that vale never before
+ Had been, and now seem'd most unmeet to be.
+ And Psyche blush'd, though being alone, and rose
+ To meet her sisters and herself unclose
+ The gate that made them of her palace free.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ Fondly she kiss'd them, and with kindly cheer
+ Sought to amuse; and they with outward smile
+ O'ermask'd their hate, and called her sweet and dear,
+ Finding affection easy to beguile:
+ And all was smooth, until at last one said
+ 'Tell us, I pray, to whom 'tis thou art wed;
+ 'Mong gods or men, what is his rank and style?
+
+
+ 26
+
+ 'Thou canst not think to hide the truth from us,
+ Who knew thy peevish sorrows when a maid,
+ And see thee now so glad and rapturous,
+ As changed from what thou wert as light from shade;
+ Thy jewels, too, the palace of a king,
+ Nor least the serviceable spiriting,
+ By everything thy secret is betray'd:
+
+
+ 27
+
+ 'And yet thou talkest of thy wondrous man
+ No more than if his face thou didst not know.'
+ At which incontinently she began,
+ Forgetful of her word a month ago,
+ Answering 'A merchant rich, of middle age,
+ My husband is; and o'er his features sage
+ His temples are already touch'd with snow.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ 'But 'gainst his wish since hither ye were brought
+ 'Twere best depart.' Then her accustom'd spell
+ Sped them upon the summit quick as thought;
+ And being alone her doing pleased her well:
+ So was she vext to find her love at night
+ More sad than ever, of her sisters' spite
+ Speaking as one that coud the end foretell.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ 'And ere long,' said he, 'they will spy again:
+ Let them be dash'd upon the rocks and die;
+ 'Tis they must come to death or thou to pain,
+ To separation, Psyche, thou and I;
+ Nay, and our babe to ill. I therefore crave
+ Thou wilt not even once more these vipers save,
+ Nor to thy love his only boon deny.'
+
+
+ 30
+
+ But Psyche would not think her sisters' crime
+ So gross and strange, nor coud her danger see;
+ Since 'twere so easy, if at any time
+ They show'd the venom of their hearts, that she
+ Should fan them off upon the willing gust.
+ So she refused, and claiming truer trust,
+ Would in no wise unto their death agree.
+
+
+ JULY
+
+
+ 1
+
+ 'What think you, sister:' thus one envious fiend
+ To other spake upon their homeward route,
+ 'What of the story that our wit hath glean'd
+ Of this mysterious lover, who can shoot
+ In thirty days from beardless youth to prime,
+ With wisdom in his face before his time,
+ And snowy locks upon his head to boot?
+
+
+ 2
+
+ 'Ay,' said the other, 'true, she lied not well;
+ And thence I gather knows no more than we:
+ For surely 'tis a spirit insensible
+ To whom she is wedded, one she cannot see.
+ 'Tis that I fear; for if 'tis so, her child
+ Will be a god, and she a goddess styled,
+ Which, though I die to let it, shall not be.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ 'Lament we thus no longer. Come, consult
+ What may be done.' And home they came at night,
+ Yet not to rest, but of their plots occult
+ Sat whispering on their beds; and ere 'twas light
+ Resolving on the deed coud not defer;
+ But roused the sleeping house with sudden stir,
+ And sallied forth alone to work their spite.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ And with the noon were climb'd upon the peak,
+ And swam down on the Zephyr as before;
+ But now with piercing cry and doleful shriek
+ They force their entrance through the golden door,
+ Feigning the urgency of bitter truth;
+ Such as deforms a friendly face with ruth,
+ When kindness may not hide ill tidings more.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ Then Psyche when she heard their wailful din,
+ And saw their countenances wan and worn
+ With travel, vigil, and disfiguring sin,
+ Their hair dishevel'd and their habits torn,
+ For trembling scarce coud ask what ill had hapt;
+ And they alert with joy to see her trapt,
+ Launch'd forth amain, and on their drift were borne.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ 'O Psyche, happiest certainly and blest
+ Up to this hour,' they said, 'thou surely wert,
+ Being of thy fearful peril unpossest;
+ Which now we would not tell but to avert.
+ But we in solemn truth thy spouse have found
+ To be the dragon of this mountain ground,
+ Who holds thee here to work thy shame and hurt.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ 'As yesternight we rode upon the wind
+ He issued to pursue us from the wood;
+ We saw his back, that through the tree-tops finn'd,
+ His fiery eyes glared from their wrinkl'd hood.
+ Lo, now betimes the oracle, which said
+ How to the savage beast thou shouldst be wed,
+ Is plainly for thy safety understood.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ 'Long time hath he been known to all that dwell
+ Upon the plain; but now his secret lair
+ Have we discover'd, which none else coud tell:
+ Though many women fallen in his snare
+ Hath he enchanted; who, tradition saith,
+ Taste love awhile, ere to their cruel death
+ They pass in turn upon the summits bare.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ Renounce the spells of this accursed vale.
+ We come to save thee, but we dare not stay;
+ Among these sightless spirits our senses quail.
+ Fly with us, fly!' Then Psyche, for her soul
+ Was soft and simple, lost her self-control,
+ And, thinking only of the horrid tale,
+
+
+ 10
+
+ 'Dear sisters,' said she, and her sobbing speech
+ Was broken by her terror, 'it is true
+ That much hath hapt to stablish what ye teach;
+ For ne'er hath it been granted me to view
+ My husband; and, for aught I know, he may
+ Be even that cruel dragon, which ye say
+ Peer'd at you from the forest to pursue.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ ''Tis sure that scarcely can I win his grace
+ To see you here; and still he mischief vows
+ If ever I should ask to see his face,
+ Which, coming in the dark, he ne'er allows.
+ Therefore, if ye can help, of pity show,
+ Since doubt I must, how I may come to know
+ What kind of spirit it is that is my spouse.'
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Then to her cue the younger was afore:
+ 'Hide thou a razor,' cried she, 'near thy bed;
+ And have a lamp prepared, but whelm thereo'er
+ Some cover, that no light be from it shed.
+ And when securely in first sleep he lies,
+ Look on him well, and ere he can arise,
+ Gashing his throat, cut off his hideous head.'
+
+
+ 13
+
+ Which both persuading, off they flew content,
+ Divining that whate'er she was forbid
+ Was by her lover for her safety meant,
+ Which only coud be sure while he was hid.
+ But Psyche, to that miserable deed
+ Being now already in her mind agreed,
+ Wander'd alone, and knew not what she did.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ Now she would trust her lover, now in turn
+ Made question of his bidding as unjust;
+ But thirsting curiosity to learn
+ His secret overcame her simple trust,
+ O'ercame her spoken troth, o'ercame her fear;
+ And she prepared, as now the hour drew near,
+ The mean contrivances, nor felt disgust.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ She set the lamp beneath a chair, and cloked
+ Thickly its rebel lustre from the eye:
+ And laid the knife, to mortal keenness stroked,
+ Within her reach, where she was wont to lie:
+ And took her place full early; but her heart
+ Beat fast, and stay'd her breath with sudden start,
+ Feeling her lover's arm laid fond thereby.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ But when at last he slept, then she arose,
+ All faint and tremulous: and though it be
+ That wrong betrayeth innocence with shews
+ Of novelty, its guilt from shame to free,
+ Yet 'twas for shame her hand so strangely shook
+ That held the steel, and from the cloke that took
+ The lamp, and raised it o'er the bed to see.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ She had some fear she might not well discern
+ By that small flame a monster in the gloom;
+ When lo! the air about her seem'd to burn,
+ And bright celestial radiance fill'd the room.
+ Too plainly O she saw, O fair to see!
+ Eros, 'twas Eros' self, her lover, he,
+ The God of love, reveal'd in deathless bloom.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ Her fainting strength forsook her; on her knees
+ Down by the bed she sank; the shameless knife
+ Fell flashing, and her heart took thought to seize
+ Its desperate haft, and end her wicked life.
+ Yet coud she not her loving eyes withdraw
+ From her fair sleeping lover, whom she saw
+ Only to know she was no more his wife.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ O treasure of all treasures, late her own!
+ O loss above all losses, lost for aye!
+ Since there was no repentance coud atone
+ For her dishonour, nor her fate withstay.
+ But yet 'twas joy to have her love in sight;
+ And, to the rapture yielding while she might,
+ She gazed upon his body where he lay.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ Above all mortal beauty, as was hers,
+ She saw a rival; but if passion's heart
+ Be rightly read by subtle questioners,
+ It owns a wanton and a gentler part.
+ And Psyche wonder'd, noting every sign
+ By which the immortal God, her spouse divine,
+ Betray'd the image of our earthly art;
+
+
+ 21
+
+ His thickly curling hair, his ruddy cheeks,
+ And pouting lips, his soft and dimpl'd chin,
+ The full and cushion'd eye, that idly speaks
+ Of self-content and vanity within,
+ The forward, froward ear, and smooth to touch
+ His body sleek, but rounded overmuch
+ For dignity of mind and pride akin.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ She noted that the small irradiant wings,
+ That from his shoulders lay along at rest,
+ Were yet disturb'd with airy quiverings,
+ As if some wakeful spirit his blood possest;
+ She feared he was awaking, but they kept
+ Their sweet commotion still, and still he slept,
+ And still she gazed with never-tiring zest.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ And now the colour of her pride and joy
+ Outflush'd the hue of Eros; she, so cold,
+ To have fired the passion of the heartless boy,
+ Whom none in heaven or earth were found to hold!
+ Psyche, the earthborn, to be prized above
+ The heavenly Graces by the God of love,
+ And worshipt by his wantonness untold!
+
+
+ 24
+
+ Nay, for that very thing she loved him more,
+ More than herself her sweet self's complement:
+ Until the sight of him again upbore
+ Her courage, and renew'd her vigour spent.
+ And looking now around, she first espied
+ Where at the bed's foot, cast in haste aside,
+ Lay his full quiver, and his bow unbent.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ One of those darts, of which she had heard so oft,
+ She took to try if 'twas so very keen;
+ And held its point against her finger soft
+ So gently, that to touch it scarce was seen;
+ Yet was she sharply prickt, and felt the fire
+ Run through her veins; and now a strange desire
+ Troubl'd her heart, which ne'er before had been:
+
+
+ 26
+
+ Straight sprang she to her lover on the bed,
+ And kisst his cheek, and was not satisfied:
+ When, O the lamp, held ill-balanced o'erhead,
+ One drop of burning oil spill'd from its side
+ On Eros' naked shoulder as he slept,
+ Who waken'd by the sudden smart uplept
+ Upon the floor, and all the mischief eyed.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ With nervous speed he seized his bow, and past
+ Out of the guilty chamber at a bound;
+ But Psyche, following his flight as fast,
+ Caught him, and crying threw her arms around:
+ Till coming to the court he rose in air;
+ And she, close clinging in her last despair,
+ Was dragg'd, and then lost hold and fell to ground.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ Wailing she fell; but he, upon the roof
+ Staying his feet, awhile his flight delay'd:
+ And turning to her as he stood aloof
+ Beside a cypress, whose profoundest shade
+ Drank the reflections of the dreamy night
+ In its stiff pinnacle, the nimble light
+ Of million stars upon his body play'd:
+
+
+ 29
+
+ 'O simple-hearted Psyche,' thus he spake,
+ And she upraised her piteous eyes and hands,
+ 'O simple-hearted Psyche, for thy sake
+ I dared to break my mother's stern commands;
+ And gave thee godlike marriage in the place
+ Of vilest shame; and, not to hurt thy grace,
+ Spared thee my arrows, which no heart withstands.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ 'But thou, for doubt I was some evil beast,
+ Hast mock'd the warnings of my love, to spy
+ Upon my secret, which concern'd thee least,
+ Seeing that thy joy was never touch'd thereby.
+ By faithless prying thou hast work'd thy fall,
+ And, even as I foretold thee, losest all
+ For looking on thy happiness too nigh:
+
+
+ 31
+
+ 'Which loss may be thine ample punishment.
+ But to those fiends, by whom thou wert misled,
+ Go tell each one in turn that I have sent
+ This message, that I love her in thy stead;
+ And bid them by their love haste hither soon.'
+ Whereat he fled; and Psyche in a swoon
+ Fell back upon the marble floor as dead.
+
+
+ AUGUST
+
+
+ 1
+
+ When from the lowest ebbing of her blood
+ The fluttering pulses thrill'd and swell'd again,
+ Her stricken heart recovering force to flood
+ With life the sunken conduits of her brain,
+ Then Psyche, where she had fallen, numb and cold
+ Arose, but scarce her quaking sense control'd,
+ Seeing the couch where she that night had lain.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ The level sunbeams search'd the grassy ground
+ For diamond dewdrops. Ah! was this the place?
+ Where was the court, her home? she look'd around
+ And question'd with her memory for a space.
+ There was the cypress, there the well-known wood,
+ That wall'd the spot: 'twas here her palace stood,
+ As surely as 'twas vanish'd without trace.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Was all a dream? To think that all was dreamt
+ Were now the happier thought; but arguing o'er
+ That dream it was, she fell from her attempt,
+ Feeling the wifely burden that she bore.
+ Nay, true, 'twas true. She had had all and lost;
+ The joy, the reckless wrong, the heavy cost
+ Were hers, the dead end now, and woe in store.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ What to be done? Fainting and shelterless
+ Upon the mountain it were death to bide:
+ And harbour knew she none, where her distress
+ Might comfort find, or love's dishonour hide;
+ Nor felt she any dread like that of home:
+ Yet forth she must, albeit to rove and roam
+ An outcast o'er the country far and wide.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ Anon she marvel'd noting from the vale
+ A path lead downward to the plain below,
+ Crossing the very site, whereon the pale
+ Of all her joy had stood few hours ago;
+ A run of mountain beasts, that keep their track
+ Through generations, and for ages back
+ Had trod the self-same footing to and fro.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ That would she try: so forth she took her way,
+ Turning her face from the dishonour'd dell,
+ Adown the broadening eastward lawns, which lay
+ In gentle slant, till suddenly they fell
+ In sheer cliff: whence the path that went around,
+ Clomb by the bluffs, or e'er it downward wound
+ Beneath that precipice impassable.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ There once she turn'd, and gazing up the slope
+ She bid the scene of all her joy adieu;
+ 'Ay, and farewell,' she cried, 'farewell to hope,
+ Since there is none will rescue me anew,
+ Who have kill'd God's perfection with a doubt.'
+ Which said, she took the path that led about,
+ And hid the upland pleasance from her view.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ But soon it left her, entering 'neath the shade
+ Of cedar old and russeted tall pine,
+ Whose mighty tops, seen from the thorny glade,
+ Belted the hills about; and now no sign
+ Had she to guide her, save the slow descent.
+ But swiftly o'er the springy floor she went,
+ And drew the odorous air like draughts of wine.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ Then next she past a forest thick and dark
+ With heavy ilexes and platanes high,
+ And came to long lush grass; and now coud mark
+ By many a token that the plain was nigh.
+ When lo! a river: to whose brink at last
+ Being come, upon the bank her limbs she cast,
+ And through her sad tears watch'd the stream go by.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ And now the thought came o'er her that in death
+ There was a cure for sorrow, that before
+ Her eyes ran Lethe, she might take one breath
+ Of water and be freed for evermore.
+ Leaning to look into her tomb, thereon
+ She saw the horror of her image wan,
+ And up she rose at height to leap from shore.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ When suddenly a mighty voice, that fell
+ With fury on her ears, their sense to scare,
+ That bounding from the tree trunks like the yell
+ Of hundred brazen trumpets, cried 'Forbear!
+ Forbear, fond maid, that froward step to take,
+ For life can cure the ills that love may make;
+ But for the harm of death is no repair.'
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Then looking up she saw an uncouth form
+ Perch'd on the further bank, whose parted lips
+ Volley'd their friendly warning in a storm:
+ A man he might have been, but for the tips
+ Of horns appearing from his shaggy head,
+ For o'er his matted beard his face was red,
+ And all his shape was manlike to the hips.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ In forehead low, keen eye, and nostril flat
+ He bore the human grace in mean degree,
+ But, set beneath his body squat and fat,
+ Legs like a goat's, and from the hairy knee
+ The shank fell spare; and, though crosswise he put
+ His limbs in easeful posture, for the foot
+ The beast's divided hoof was plain to see.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ Him then she knew the mighty choric God,
+ The great hill-haunting and tree-loving Pan;
+ Whom Zeus had laught to see when first he trod
+ Olympus, neither god nor beast nor man:
+ Who every rocky peak and snowy crest
+ Of the Aspran mountains for his own possest,
+ And all their alps with bacchic rout o'erran:
+
+
+ 15
+
+ Whom, when his pipe he plays on loud and sweet,
+ And o'er the fitted reeds his moist lip flees,
+ Around in measured step with nimble feet
+ Water-nymphs dance and Hamadryades:
+ And all the woodland's airy folk, who shun
+ Man's presence, to his frolic pastime run
+ From their perennial wells and sacred trees.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ Now on his knee his pipe laid by, he spoke
+ With flippant tongue, wounding unwittingly
+ The heart he sought to cheer with jest and joke.
+ 'And what hast thou to do with misery,'
+ He said, 'who hast such beauty as might gain
+ The love of Eros? Cast away thy pain,
+ And give thy soul to mirth and jollity.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ 'Thy mortal life is but a brittle vase,
+ But as thee list with wine or tears to fill;
+ For all the drops therein are Ohs and Ahs
+ Of joy or grief according to thy will;
+ And wouldst thou learn of me my merry way,
+ I'd teach thee change thy lover every day,
+ And prize the cup that thou wert fain to spill.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ 'Nay, if thou plunge thou shalt not drown nor sink,
+ For I will to thee o'er the stream afloat,
+ And bear thee safe; and O I know a drink
+ For care, that makes sweet music in the throat.
+ Come live with me, my love; I'll cure thy chance:
+ For I can laugh and quaff, and pipe and dance,
+ Swim like a fish, and caper like a goat.'
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Speaking, his brute divinity explored
+ The secret of her silence; and old Pan
+ Grew kind and told her of a shallow ford
+ Where lower down the stream o'er pebbles ran,
+ And one might pass at ease with ankles dry:
+ Whither she went, and crossing o'er thereby,
+ Her lonely wanderings through the isle began.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ But none coud tell, no, nor herself had told
+ Where food she found, or shelter through the land
+ By day or night; until by fate control'd
+ She came by steep ways to the southern strand,
+ Where, sacred to the Twins and Britomart,
+ Pent in its rocky theatre apart,
+ A little town stood on the level sand.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ 'Twas where her younger sister's husband reign'd:
+ And Psyche to the palace gate drew near,
+ Helplessly still by Eros' hest constrain'd,
+ And knocking begg'd to see her sister dear;
+ But when in state stepp'd down that haughty queen,
+ And saw the wan face spent with tears and teen,
+ She smiled, and said 'Psyche, what dost thou here?'
+
+
+ 22
+
+ Then Psyche told how, having well employ'd
+ Their means, and done their bidding not amiss,
+ Looking on him her hand would have destroy'd,
+ 'Twas Eros; whom in love leaning to kiss,
+ Even as she kisst, a drop of burning oil
+ Fall'n from the lamp had served her scheme to foil,
+ Discovering her in vision of her bliss;
+
+
+ 23
+
+ Wherewith the god stung, like a startled bird
+ Arose in air, and she fell back in swoon;
+ 'But ere he parted,' said she, 'he confer'd
+ On thee the irrecoverable boon
+ By prying lost to me: _Go tell_, he said,
+ _Thy sister that I love her in thy stead,
+ And bid her by her love haste hither soon_.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ Which when that heart of malice heard, it took
+ The jealous fancy of her silly lust:
+ And pitilessly with triumphant look
+ She drank the flattery, and gave full trust;
+ And leaving Psyche ere she more coud tell,
+ Ran off to bid her spouse for aye farewell,
+ And in his ear this ready lie she thrust:
+
+
+ 25
+
+ 'My dearest sister Psyche, she whose fate
+ We mourn'd, hath reappear'd alive and hale,
+ But brings sad news; my father dies: full late
+ These tidings come, but love may yet avail;
+ Let me be gone.' And stealing blind consent,
+ Forth on that well-remember'd road she went,
+ And climb'd upon the peak above the dale.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ There on the topmost rock, where Psyche first
+ Had by her weeping sire been left to die,
+ She stood a moment, in her hope accurst
+ Being happy; and the cliffs took up her cry
+ With chuckling mockery from her tongue above,
+ _Zephyr, sweet Zephyr, waft me to my love_!
+ When off she lept upon his wings to fly.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ But as a dead stone, from a height let fall,
+ Silent and straight is gather'd by the force
+ Of earth's vast mass upon its weight so small,
+ In speed increasing as it nears its source
+ Of motion--by which law all things soe'er
+ Are clutch'd and dragg'd and held--so fell she there,
+ Like a dead stone, down in her headlong course.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ The disregardful silence heard her strike
+ Upon the solid crags; her dismal shriek
+ Rang on the rocks and died out laughter-like
+ Along the vale in hurried trebles weak;
+ And soon upon her, from their skiey haunt
+ Fell to their feast the great birds bald and gaunt
+ And gorged on her fair flesh with bloody beak.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ But Psyche, when her sister was gone forth,
+ Went out again her wandering way to take:
+ And following a stream that led her north,
+ After some days she pass'd the Corian Lake,
+ Whereby Athena's temple stands, and he
+ Who traverses the isle from sea to sea
+ May by the plain his shortest journey make:
+
+
+ 30
+
+ Till on the northern coast arrived she came
+ Upon a city built about a port,
+ The which she knew, soon as she heard the name,
+ Was where her elder sister had her court;
+ To whom, as Eros had commanded her,
+ She now in turn became the messenger
+ Of vengeful punishment, that fell not short:
+
+
+ 31
+
+ For she too hearing gan her heart exalt,
+ Nor pity felt for Psyche's tears and moans,
+ But, fellow'd with that other in her fault,
+ Follow'd her to her fate upon the stones;
+ And from the peak leaping like her below
+ The self-same way unto the self-same woe,
+ Lay dasht to death upon her sister's bones.
+
+
+
+
+ THIRD QUARTER
+
+ AUTUMN
+
+ PSYCHE'S WANDERINGS
+
+
+ SEPTEMBER
+
+
+ 1
+
+ On the Hellenic board of Crete's fair isle,
+ Westward of Drepanon, along a reach
+ Which massy Cyamum for many a mile
+ Jutting to sea delivers from the breach
+ Of North and East,--returning to embay
+ The favour'd shore--an ancient city lay,
+ Aptera, which is _Wingless_ in our speech.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ And hence the name; that here in rocky cove,
+ Thence called Museion, was the trial waged
+ What day the Sirens with the Muses strove,
+ By jealous Hera in that war engaged:
+ Wherein the daughters of Mnemosynè
+ O'ercame the chauntresses who vex'd the sea,
+ Nor vengeance spared them by their pride enraged.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ For those strange creatures, who with women's words
+ And wiles made ravenous prey of passers-by,
+ Were throated with the liquid pipe of birds:
+ Of love they sang; and none, who sail'd anigh
+ Through the grey hazes of the cyanine sea,
+ Had wit the whirlpool of that song to flee,
+ Nor fear'd the talon hook'd and feather'd thigh.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ But them the singers of the gods o'ercame,
+ And pluck'd them of their plumage, where in fright
+ They vainly flutter'd off to hide their shame,
+ Upon two rocks that lie within the bight,
+ Under the headland, barren and alone;
+ Which, being with the scatter'd feathers strewn,
+ Were by the folk named Leukæ, which is _White_.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ Thereon about this time the snowy gull,
+ Minion of Aphrodite, being come,
+ Plumed himself, standing on the sea-wrack dull,
+ That drifted from the foot of Cyamum;
+ And 'twas his thought, that had the goddess learnt
+ The tale of Psyche loved and Eros burnt,
+ She ne'er so long had kept aloof and dumb.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Wherefore that duteous gossip of Love's queen
+ Devised that he the messenger would be;
+ And rising from the rock, he skim'd between
+ The chasing waves--such grace have none but he;--
+ Into the middle deep then down he dived,
+ And rowing with his glistening wings arrived
+ At Aphrodite's bower beneath the sea.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ The eddies from his silver pinions swirl'd
+ The crimson, green, and yellow floss, that grew
+ About the caves, and at his passing curl'd
+ Its graceful silk, and gently waved anew:
+ Till, oaring here and there, the queen he found
+ Stray'd from her haunt unto a sandy ground,
+ Dappl'd with eye-rings in the sunlight blue.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ She, as he came upon her from above,
+ With Hora play'd; Hora, her herald fair,
+ That lays the soft necessity of Love
+ On maidens' eyelids, and with tender care
+ Marketh the hour, as in all works is fit:
+ And happy they in love who time outwit,
+ Fondly constrained in her season rare.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ But he with garrulous and laughing tongue
+ Broke up his news; how Eros, fallen sick,
+ Lay tossing on his bed, to frenzy stung
+ By such a burn as did but barely prick:
+ A little bleb, no bigger than a pease,
+ Upon his shoulder 'twas, that kill'd his ease,
+ Fever'd his heart, and made his breathing thick.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ 'For which disaster hath he not been seen
+ This many a day at all in any place:
+ And thou, dear mistress,' piped he, 'hast not been
+ Thyself amongst us now a dreary space:
+ The pining mortals suffer from a dearth
+ Of love; and for this sadness of the earth
+ Thy family is darken'd with disgrace.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ 'Now on the secret paths of dale and wood,
+ Where lovers walk'd are lovers none to find:
+ And friends, besworn to equal brotherhood,
+ Forget their faith, and part with words unkind:
+ In the first moon thy honey-bond is loath'd:
+ And I coud tell even of the new-betroth'd
+ That fly o'ersea, and leave their loves behind.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ 'Summer is over, but the merry pipe,
+ That wont to cheer the harvesting, is mute:
+ And in the vineyards, where the grape is ripe,
+ No voice is heard of them that take the fruit.
+ No workman singeth at eve nor maiden danceth:
+ All joy is dead, and as the year advanceth
+ The signs of woe increase on man and brute.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ ''Tis plain that if thy pleasure longer pause,
+ Thy mighty rule on earth hath seen its day:
+ The race must come to perish, and no cause
+ But that thou sittest with thy nymphs at play,
+ While on a Cretan hill thy truant boy
+ Hath with his pretty mistress turn'd to toy,
+ And less for pain than love pineth away.'
+
+
+ 14
+
+ 'Ha! Mistress!' cried she; 'Hath my beardless son
+ Been hunting for himself his lovely game?
+ Some young Orestiad hath his fancy won?
+ Some Naiad? say; or is a Grace his flame?
+ Or maybe Muse, and then 'tis Erato,
+ The trifling wanton. Tell me, if thou know,
+ Woman or goddess is she? and her name.'
+
+
+ 15
+
+ Then said the snowy gull, 'O heavenly queen,
+ What is my knowledge, who am but a bird?
+ Yet is she only mortal, as I ween,
+ And namèd Psyche, if I rightly heard.'--
+ But Aphrodite's look daunted his cheer,
+ Ascare he fled away, screaming in fear,
+ To see what wrath his simple tale had stirr'd.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ He flasht his pens, and sweeping widely round
+ Tower'd to air; so swift in all his way,
+ That whence he dived he there again was found
+ As soon as if he had but dipt for prey:
+ And now, or e'er he join'd his wailful flock,
+ Once more he stood upon the Sirens' rock,
+ And preen'd his ruffl'd quills for fresh display.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ But as ill tidings will their truth assure
+ Without more witness than their fatal sense,
+ So, since was nothing bitterer to endure,
+ The injured goddess guess'd the full offence:
+ And doubted only whether first to smite
+ Or Psyche for her new presumptuous flight,
+ Or Eros for his disobedience.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ But full of anger to her son she went,
+ And found him in his golden chamber laid;
+ And with him sweet Euphrosynè, attent
+ Upon his murmur'd wants, aye as he bade
+ Shifted the pillows with each fretful whim;
+ But scornfully his mother look'd at him,
+ And reckless of his pain gan thus upbraid:
+
+
+ 19
+
+ 'O worthy deeds, I say, and true to blood,
+ The crown and pledge of promise! thou that wast
+ In estimation my perpetual bud,
+ Now fruiting thus untimely to my cost;
+ Backsliding from commandment, ay, and worse,
+ With bliss to favour one I bade thee curse,
+ And save the life I left with thee for lost!
+
+
+ 20
+
+ 'Thou too to burn with love, and love of her
+ Whom I did hate; and to thy bed to take
+ My rival, that my trusted officer
+ Might of mine enemy my daughter make!
+ Dost thou then think my love for thee so fond,
+ And miserably doting, that the bond
+ By such dishonour strainèd will not break?
+
+
+ 21
+
+ 'Or that I cannot bear another son
+ As good as thou; or, if I choose not bear,
+ Not beg as good a lusty boy of one
+ Of all my nymphs,--and some have boys to spare,--
+ Whom I might train, to whom thine arms made o'er
+ Should do me kinder service than before,
+ To smite my foes and keep my honour fair?
+
+
+ 22
+
+ 'For thou hast ever mockt me, and beguiled
+ In amours strange my God, thy valiant sire:
+ And having smirch'd our fame while yet a child
+ Wilt further foul it now with earthly fire.
+ But I--do as thou may--have vow'd to kill
+ Thy fancied girl, whether thou love her still,
+ Or of her silly charms already tire.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ 'Tell me but where she hides.' And Eros now,
+ Proud in his woe, boasted his happy theft:
+ Confessing he had loved her well, and how
+ By her own doing she was lost and left;
+ And homeless in such sorrow as outwent
+ The utmost pain of other punishment,
+ Was wandering of his love and favour reft.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ By which was Cypris gladden'd, not appeased,
+ But hid her joy and spake no more her threat:
+ And left with face like one that much displeased
+ Hath yet betray'd that he can wrong forget.
+ When lo! as swiftly she came stepping down
+ From her fair house into the heavenly town
+ The Kronian sisters on the way she met;
+
+
+ 25
+
+ Hera, the Wife of Zeus, her placid front
+ Dark with the shadow of his troubl'd reign,
+ And tall Demeter, who with men once wont,
+ Holding the high Olympians in disdain
+ For Persephassa's rape; which now forgiven,
+ She had return'd unto the courts of Heaven,
+ And 'mong the immortals liv'd at peace again:
+
+
+ 26
+
+ Whose smile told Aphrodite that they knew
+ The meaning of her visit; and a flush
+ Of anger answer'd them, while hot she grew.
+ But Hera laugh'd outright: 'Why thou dost blush!
+ Now see we modest manners on my life!
+ And all thy little son has got a wife
+ Can make the crimson to thy forehead rush.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ 'Didst think he, whom thou madest passion's prince,
+ No privy dart then for himself would poise?
+ Nay, by the cuckoo on my sceptre, since
+ 'Twas love that made thee mother of his joys,
+ Art thou the foremost to his favour bound;
+ As thou shouldst be the last to think to sound
+ The heart, and least of all thy wanton boy's.'
+
+
+ 28
+
+ But her Demeter, on whose stalwart arm
+ She lean'd, took up: 'If thou wilt hark to me,
+ This Psyche,' said she, 'hath the heavenly charm,
+ And will become immortal. And maybe
+ To marry with a woman is as well
+ As wed a god and live below in Hell:
+ As 'twas my lot in child of mine to see.'
+
+
+ 29
+
+ Which things they both said, fearing in their hearts
+ That savage Eros, if they mockt his case,
+ Would kill their peace with his revengeful darts,
+ And bring them haply to a worse disgrace:
+ But Aphrodite, saying 'Good! my dames;
+ Behind this smoke I see the spite that flames,'
+ Left them, and on her journey went apace.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ For having purposed she would hold no truce
+ With Psyche or her son, 'twas in her mind
+ To go forthwith unto the throne of Zeus,
+ And beg that Hermes might be sent to find
+ The wanderer; and secure that in such quest
+ He would not fail, she ponder'd but how best
+ She might inflict her vengeance long-design'd.
+
+
+ OCTOBER
+
+
+ 1
+
+ Heavy meanwhile at heart, with bruisèd feet
+ Was Psyche wandering many nights and days
+ Upon the paths of hundred-citied Crete,
+ And chose to step the most deserted ways;
+ Being least unhappy when she went unseen;
+ Since else her secret sorrow had no screen
+ From the plain question of men's idle gaze.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Yet wheresoe'er she went one hope she had;
+ Like mortal mourners, who 'gainst reason strong
+ Hope to be unexpectedly made glad
+ With sight of their dead friends, so much they long;
+ So she for him, whom loss a thousandfold
+ Endear'd and made desired; nor coud she hold
+ He would not turn and quite forgive her wrong.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Wherefore her eager eyes in every place
+ Lookt for her lover; and 'twixt hope and fear
+ She follow'd oft afar some form of grace,
+ In pain alike to lose or venture near.
+ And still this thought cheer'd her fatigue, that he,
+ Or on some hill, or by some brook or tree,
+ But waited for her coming to appear.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ And then for comfort many an old love-crost
+ And doleful ditty would she gently sing,
+ Writ by sad poets of a lover lost,
+ Now sounding sweeter for her sorrowing:
+ _Echo, sweet Echo, watching up on high,
+ Say hast thou seen to-day my love go by,
+ Or where thou sittest by thy mossy spring?_
+
+
+ 5
+
+ _Or say ye nymphs, that from the crystal rills,
+ When ye have bathed your limbs from morn till eve,
+ Flying at midnight to the bare-topt hills,
+ Beneath the stars your mazy dances weave,
+ Say, my deserter whom ye well may know
+ By his small wings, his quiver, and his bow,
+ Say, have ye seen my love, whose loss I grieve?_
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Till climb'd one evening on a rocky steep
+ Above the plain of Cisamos, that lay,
+ Robb'd of its golden harvest, in the deep
+ Mountainous shadows of the dying day,
+ She saw a temple, whose tall columns fair
+ Recall'd her home; and 'O if thou be there,
+ My love,' she cried, 'fly not again away.'
+
+
+ 7
+
+ Swiftly she ran, and entering by the door
+ She stood alone within an empty fane
+ Of great Demeter: and, behold, the floor
+ Was litter'd with thank-offerings of grain,
+ With wheat and barley-sheaves together heapt
+ In holy harvest-home of them that reapt
+ The goddess plenteous gifts upon the plain;
+
+
+ 8
+
+ And on the tithe the tackle of the tithe
+ Thrown by in such confusion, as are laid
+ Upon the swath sickle, and hook, and scythe,
+ When midday drives the reapers to the shade.
+ And Psyche, since had come no priestess there
+ To trim the temple, in her pious care
+ Forgat herself, and lent her duteous aid.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ She drew the offerings from the midst aside,
+ And piled the sheaves at every pillar's base;
+ And sweeping therebetween a passage wide,
+ Made clear of corn and chaff the temple space:
+ As countrymen who bring their wheat to mart,
+ Set out their show along the walls apart
+ By their allotted stations, each in place;
+
+
+ 10
+
+ Thus she, and felt no weariness,--such strength
+ Hath duty to support our feeble frame,--
+ Till all was set in order, and at length
+ Up to the threshold of the shrine she came:
+ When lo! before her face with friendly smile,
+ Tall as a pillar of the peristyle,
+ The goddess stood reveal'd, and call'd her name.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ 'Unhappy Psyche,' said she, 'know'st thou not
+ How Aphrodite to thy hurt is sworn?
+ And thou, thy peril and her wrath forgot,
+ Spendest thy thought my temple to adorn.
+ Take better heed!'--And Psyche, at the voice
+ Even of so little comfort, gan rejoice,
+ And at her feet pour'd out this prayer forlorn.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ 'O Gracious giver of the golden grain,
+ Hide me, I pray thee, from her wrath unkind:
+ For who can pity as canst thou my pain,
+ Who wert thyself a wanderer, vex'd in mind
+ For loss of thy dear Corè once, whenas,
+ Ravisht to hell by fierce Agesilas,
+ Thou soughtest her on earth and coudst not find.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ 'How coud thy feet bear thee to western night,
+ And where swart Libyans watch the sacred tree,
+ And thrice to ford o'er Achelous bright,
+ And all the streams of beauteous Sicily?
+ And thrice to Enna cam'st thou, thrice, they tell,
+ Satest athirst by Callichorus' well,
+ Nor tookest of the spring to comfort thee.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ 'By that remember'd anguish of thine heart,
+ Lady, have pity even on me, and show
+ Where I may find my love; and take my part
+ For peace, I pray, against my cruel foe:
+ Or if thou canst not from her anger shield,
+ Here let me lie among the sheaves conceal'd
+ Such time till forth I may in safety go.'
+
+
+ 15
+
+ Demeter answer'd, 'Nay, though thou constrain
+ My favour with thy plea, my help must still
+ Be hidden, else I work for thee in vain
+ To thwart my mighty sister in her will.
+ Thou must fly hence: Yet though I not oppose,
+ Less will I aid her; and if now I close
+ My temple doors to thee, take it not ill.'
+
+
+ 16
+
+ Then Psyche's hope founder'd; as when a ship,
+ The morrow of the gale can hardly ride
+ The swollen seas, fetching a deeper dip
+ At every wave, and through her gaping side
+ And o'er her shattered bulwark ever drinks,
+ Till plunging in the watery wild she sinks,
+ To scoop her grave beneath the crushing tide:
+
+
+ 17
+
+ So with each word her broken spirit drank
+ Its doom; and overwhelm'd with deep despair
+ She turn'd away, and coming forth she sank
+ Silently weeping on the temple stair,
+ In midmost night, forspent with long turmoil:
+ But sleep, the gracious pursuivant of toil,
+ Came swiftly down, and nursed away her care.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ And when the sun awaked her with his beams
+ She found new hope, that still her sorrow's cure
+ Lay with the gods, who in her morning dreams
+ Had sent her comfort in a vision sure;
+ Wherein the Cretan-born, almightiest god,
+ Cloud-gathering Zeus himself had seem'd to nod,
+ And bid her with good heart her woes endure.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ So coming that same day unto a shrine
+ Of Hera, she took courage and went in:
+ And like to one that to the cell divine
+ For favour ventures or a suit to win,
+ She drew anigh the altar, from her face
+ Wiping the tears, ere to the heavenly grace,
+ As thus she pray'd, she would her prayer begin.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ 'Most honour'd Lady, who from ancient doom
+ Wert made heaven's wife, and art on earth besought
+ With gracious happiness of all to whom
+ Thy holy wedlock hath my burden brought,
+ Save me from Aphrodite's fell pursuit,
+ And guard unto the birth Love's hapless fruit,
+ Which she for cruel spite would bring to nought.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ 'As once from her thou wert not shamed to take
+ Her beauty's zone, thy beauty to enhance;
+ For which again Zeus loved thee, to forsake
+ His warlike ire in faithful dalliance;
+ Show me what means may win my Love to me,
+ Or how that I may come, if so may be,
+ Within the favour of his countenance.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ 'If there be any place for tears or prayer,
+ If there be need for succour in distress,
+ Now is the very hour of all despair,
+ Here is the heart of grief and bitterness.
+ Motherly pity, bend thy face and grant
+ One beam of ruth to thy poor suppliant,
+ Nor turn me from thine altar comfortless.'
+
+
+ 23
+
+ Even as she pray'd a cloud spread through the cell,
+ And 'mid the wreathings of the vapour dim
+ The goddess grew in glory visible,
+ Like some barbaric queen in festal trim;
+ Such the attire and ornaments she wore,
+ When o'er the forgèd threshold of the floor
+ Of Zeus's house she stept to visit him.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ From either ear, ring'd to its piercèd lobe
+ A triple jewel hung, with gold enchas't;
+ And o'er her breasts her wide ambrosial robe
+ With many a shining golden clasp was brac't;
+ The flowering on its smooth embroider'd lawn
+ Gather'd to colour where the zone was drawn
+ In fringe of golden tassels at her waist.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ Her curling hair with plaited braid and brail,
+ Pendant or loop'd about her head divine,
+ Lay hidden half beneath a golden veil,
+ Bright as the rippling ocean in sunshine:
+ And on the ground, flashing whene'er she stept,
+ Beneath her feet the dazzling lightnings lept
+ From the gold network of her sandals fine.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ Thus Hera stood in royal guise bedeckt
+ Before poor Psyche on the stair that knelt,
+ Whose new-nursed hope at that display was checkt
+ And all her happier thoughts gan fade and melt.
+ She saw no kindness in such haughty mien,
+ And venturing not to look upon the queen,
+ Bow'd down in woe to hear her sentence dealt.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ And thus the goddess spake, 'In vain thou suest,
+ Most miserable Psyche; though my heart
+ Be full of hate for her whose hate thou ruest,
+ And pride and pity move me to thy part:
+ Yet not till Zeus make known his will, coud I,
+ Least of the blameless gods that dwell on high,
+ Assist thee, wert thou worthier than thou art.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ 'But know if Eros love thee, that thy hopes
+ Should rest on him; and I would bid thee go
+ Where in his mother's house apart he mopes
+ Grieving for loss of thee in secret woe:
+ For should he take thee back, there is no power
+ In earth or heaven will hurt thee from that hour,
+ Nay, not if Zeus himself should prove thy foe.'
+
+
+ 29
+
+ Thus saying she was gone, and Psyche now
+ Surprised by comfort rose and went her way,
+ Resolved in heart, and only wondering how
+ 'Twas possible to come where Eros lay;
+ Since that her feet, however she might roam,
+ Coud never travel to the heavenly home
+ Of Love, beyond the bounds of mortal day:
+
+
+ 30
+
+ Yet must she come to him. And now 'twas proved
+ How that to Lovers, as is told in song,
+ Seeking the way no place is far removed;
+ Nor is there any obstacle so strong,
+ Nor bar so fix'd that it can hinder them:
+ And how to reach heaven's gate by stratagem
+ Vex'd not the venturous heart of Psyche long.
+
+
+ 31
+
+ To face her enemy might well avail:
+ Wherefore to Cypris' shrine her steps she bent,
+ Hoping the goddess in her hate might hale
+ Her body to the skies for punishment,
+ Whate'er to be; yet now her fiercest wrath
+ Seem'd happiest fortune, seeing 'twas the path
+ Whereby alone unto her love she went.
+
+
+ NOVEMBER
+
+
+ 1
+
+ But Aphrodite to the house of Zeus
+ Being bound, bade beckon out her milkwhite steeds,
+ Four doves, that ready to her royal use
+ In golden cages stood and peck'd the seeds:
+ Best of the nimble air's high-sailing folk
+ That wore with pride the marking of her yoke,
+ And cooed in envy of her gentle needs.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ These drew in turn her chariot, when in state
+ Along the heaven with all her train she fared;
+ And oft in journeying to the skiey gate
+ Of Zeus's palace high their flight had dared,
+ Which darkest vapour and thick glooms enshroud
+ Above all else in the perpetual cloud,
+ Wherethro' to mount again they stood prepared,
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Sleeking their feathers, by her shining car;
+ The same Hephæstos wrought for her, when he,
+ Bruised in his hideous fall from heaven afar,
+ Was nursed by Thetis, and Eurynomè,
+ The daughter of the ever-refluent main;
+ With whom he dwelt till he grew sound again,
+ Down in a hollow cave beside the sea:
+
+
+ 4
+
+ And them for kindness done was prompt to serve,
+ Forging them brooches rich in make and mode,
+ Earrings, and supple chains of jointed curve,
+ And other trinkets, while he there abode:
+ And none of gods or men knew of his home,
+ But they two only; and the salt sea-foam
+ To and fro past his cavern ever flow'd.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ 'Twas then he wrought this work within the cave,
+ Emboss'd with rich design, a moonèd car;
+ And when return'd to heaven to Venus gave,
+ In form imagined like her crescent star;
+ Which circling nearest earth, maketh at night
+ To wakeful mortal men shadow and light
+ Alone of all the stars in heaven that are.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Two slender wheels it had, with fretted tires
+ Of biting adamant, to take firm hold
+ Of cloud or ether; and their whirling fires
+ Threw off the air in halo where they roll'd:
+ And either nave that round the axle turn'd
+ A ruby was, whose steady crimson burn'd
+ Betwixt the twin speed-mingling fans of gold.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ Thereon the naked goddess mounting, shook
+ The reins; whereat the doves their wings outspread,
+ And rising high their flight to heaven they took:
+ And all the birds, that in those courts were bred,
+ Of her broad eaves the nested families,
+ Sparrows and swallows, join'd their companies
+ Awhile and twitter'd to her overhead.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ But onward she with fading tracks of flame
+ Sped swiftly, till she reacht her journey's end:
+ And when within the house of Zeus she came,
+ She pray'd the Sire of Heaven that he would lend
+ Hermes, the Argus-slayer, for her hest;
+ And he being granted her at her request,
+ She went forthwith to seek him and to send.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ Who happ'd within the palace then to wait
+ Upon the almighty pleasure; and her tale
+ Was quickly told, and he made answer straight
+ That he would find the truant without fail;
+ Asking the goddess by what signs her slave
+ Might best be known, and what the price she gave
+ For capture, or admitted for the bail.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ All which he took his silver stile to write
+ In letters large upon a waxed board;
+ Her age and name, her colour, face and height,
+ Her home, and parentage, and the reward:
+ And then read o'er as 'twas to be proclaim'd.
+ And she took oath to give the price she named,
+ Without demur, when Psyche was restored.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ Then on his head he closely set his cap
+ With earèd wings erect, and o'er his knee
+ He cross'd each foot in turn to prove the strap
+ That bound his wingèd sandals, and shook free
+ His chlamys, and gat up, and in his hand
+ Taking his fair white-ribbon'd herald's wand,
+ Lept forth on air, accoutred cap-a-pè.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ And piloting along the mid-day sky,
+ Held southward, till the narrow map of Crete
+ Lay like a fleck in azure 'neath his eye;
+ When down he came, and as an eagle fleet
+ Drops in some combe, then checks his headlong stoop
+ With wide-flung wing, wheeling in level swoop
+ To strike the bleating quarry with his feet,
+
+
+ 13
+
+ Thus he alighted; and in every town
+ In all the isle before the close of day
+ Had cried the message, which he carried down,
+ Of Psyche, Aphrodite's runaway;
+ That whosoever found the same and caught,
+ And by such time unto her temple brought,
+ To him the goddess would this guerdon pay:
+
+
+ 14
+
+ SIX HONIED KISSES FROM HER ROSY MOUTH
+ WOULD CYTHEREA GIVE, AND ONE BESIDE
+ TO QUENCH AT HEART FOR AYE LOVE'S MORTAL DROUTH:
+ BUT UNTO HIM THAT HID HER, WOE BETIDE!
+ Which now was on all tongues, and Psyche's name
+ Herself o'erheard, or ever nigh she came
+ To Aphrodite's temple where she hied.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ When since she found her way to heaven was safe,
+ She only wisht to make it soon and sure;
+ Nor fear'd to meet the goddess in her chafe,
+ So she her self-surrender might secure,
+ And not be given of other for the price;
+ Nor was there need of any artifice
+ Her once resplendent beauty to obscure.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ For now so changed she was by heavy woe,
+ That for the little likeness that she bore
+ To her description she was fear'd to go
+ Within the fane; and when she stood before
+ The priestess, scarce coud she with oath persuade
+ That she was Psyche, the renownèd maid,
+ Whom men had left the temple to adore.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ But when to Hermes she was shown and given,
+ He took no doubt, but eager to be quit,
+ And proud of speed, return'd with her to heaven,
+ And left her with the proclamation writ,
+ Hung at her neck, the board with letters large,
+ At Aphrodite's gate with those in charge;
+ And up whence first he came made haste to flit.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ But hapless Psyche fell, for so it chanced,
+ To moody SYNETHEA'S care, the one
+ Of Aphrodite's train whom she advanced
+ To try the work abandon'd by her son.
+ Who by perpetual presence made ill end
+ Of good or bad; though she coud both amend,
+ And merit praise for work by her begun.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ But she to better thought her heart had shut,
+ And proved she had a spite beyond compare:
+ Nor coud the keenest taunts her anger glut,
+ Which she when sour'd was never wont to spare:
+ And now she mock'd at Psyche's shame and grief,
+ As only she might do, and to her chief
+ Along the courtyard dragg'd her by the hair.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ Nor now was Aphrodite kinder grown:
+ Having her hated rival in her power,
+ She laught for joy, and in triumphant tone
+ Bade her a merry welcome to her bower:
+ ''Tis fit indeed daughters-in-law should wait
+ Upon their mothers; but thou comest late,
+ Psyche; I lookt for thee before this hour.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ 'And yet,' thus gave she rein to jeer and gibe,
+ 'Forgive me if I held thee negligent,
+ Or if accustom'd vanity ascribe
+ An honour to myself that was not meant.
+ Thy lover is it, who so dearly prized
+ The pretty soul, then left her and despised?
+ To him more like thy heavenward steps were bent:
+
+
+ 22
+
+ 'Nor without reason: Zeus, I tell thee, swoon'd
+ To hear the story of the drop of oil,
+ The revelation and the ghastly wound:
+ My merriment is but my fear's recoil.
+ But if my son was unkind, thou shalt see
+ How kind a goddess can his mother be
+ To bring thy tainted honour clear of soil.'
+
+
+ 23
+
+ And so, to match her promise with her mirth,
+ Two of her ministers she call'd in ken,
+ That work the melancholy of the earth;
+ MERIMNA that with care perplexes, when
+ The hearts of mortals have the gods forgot,
+ And LYPÈ, that her sorrow spares them not,
+ When mortals have forgot their fellow men.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ These, like twin sharks that in a fair ship's wake
+ Swim constant, showing 'bove the water blue
+ Their shearing fins, and hasty ravin make
+ Of overthrow or offal, so these two
+ On Aphrodite's passing follow hard;
+ And now she offer'd to their glut's regard
+ Sweet Psyche, with command their wont to do.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ But in what secret chamber their foul task
+ These soul-tormentors plied, or what their skill,
+ Pity of tender nature may not ask,
+ Nor poet stain his rhyme with such an ill.
+ But they at last themselves turn'd from their rack,
+ Weary of cruelty, and led her back,
+ Saying that further torture were to kill.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ Then when the goddess saw her, more she mockt
+ 'Art thou the woman of the earth,' she said,
+ 'That hast in sorceries mine Eros lockt,
+ And stood thyself for worship in my stead?
+ Looking that I should pity thee, or care
+ For what illicit offspring thou may'st bear;
+ Or let thee to that god my son be wed?
+
+
+ 27
+
+ 'I know thy trick; and thou art one of them
+ Who steal love's favour in the gentle way,
+ Wearing submission for a diadem,
+ Patience and suffering for thy rich array:
+ Thou wilt be modest, kind, implicit, so
+ To rest thy wily spirit out of show
+ That it may leap the livelier into play:
+
+
+ 28
+
+ 'Devout at doing nothing, if so be
+ The grace become thee well; but active yet
+ Above all others be there none to see
+ Thy business, and thine eager face asweat.
+ Lo! I will prove thy talent: thou may'st live,
+ And all that thou desirest will I give,
+ If thou perform the task which I shall set.'
+
+
+ 29
+
+ She took her then aside, and bade her heed
+ A heap of grains piled high upon the floor,
+ Millet and mustard, hemp and poppy seed,
+ And fern-bloom's undistinguishable spore,
+ All kinds of pulse, of grasses, and of spice,
+ Clover and linseed, rape, and corn, and rice,
+ Dodder, and sesame, and many more.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ 'Sort me these seeds' she said; 'it now is night,
+ I will return at morning; if I find
+ That thou hast separated all aright,
+ Each grain from other grain after its kind,
+ And set them in unmingl'd heaps apart,
+ Then shall thy wish be granted to thine heart.
+ Whereat she turn'd, and closed the door behind.
+
+
+
+
+ FOURTH QUARTER
+
+ WINTER
+
+ PSYCHE'S TRIALS AND RECEPTION
+ INTO HEAVEN
+
+
+ DECEMBER
+
+
+ 1
+
+ A single lamp there stood beside the heap,
+ And shed thereon its mocking golden light;
+ Such as might tempt the weary eye to sleep
+ Rather than prick the nerve of taskèd sight.
+ Yet Psyche, not to fail for lack of zeal,
+ With good will sat her down to her ordeal,
+ Sorting the larger seeds as best she might.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ When lo! upon the wall, a shadow past
+ Of doubtful shape, across the chamber dim
+ Moving with speed: and seeing nought that cast
+ The shade, she bent her down the flame to trim;
+ And there the beast itself, a little ant,
+ Climb'd up in compass of the lustre scant,
+ Upon the bowl of oil ran round the rim.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Smiling to see the creature of her fear
+ So dwarf'd by truth, she watcht him where he crept,
+ For mere distraction telling in his ear
+ What straits she then was in, and telling wept.
+ Whereat he stood and trim'd his horns; but ere
+ Her tale was done resumed his manner scare,
+ Ran down, and on his way in darkness kept.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ But she intent drew forth with dextrous hand
+ The larger seeds, or push'd the smaller back,
+ Or light from heavy with her breathing fan'd.
+ When suddenly she saw the floor grow black,
+ And troops of ants, flowing in noiseless train,
+ Moved to the hill of seeds, as o'er a plain
+ Armies approach a city for attack;
+
+
+ 5
+
+ And gathering on the grain, began to strive
+ With grappling horns: and each from out the heap
+ His burden drew, and all their motion live
+ Struggled and slid upon the surface steep.
+ And Psyche wonder'd, watching them, to find
+ The creatures separated kind from kind:
+ Till dizzied with the sight she fell asleep.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ And when she woke 'twas with the morning sound
+ Of Aphrodite's anger at the door,
+ Whom high amaze stay'd backward, as she found
+ Her foe asleep with all her trouble o'er:
+ And round the room beheld, in order due,
+ The piles arranged distinct and sorted true,
+ Grain with grain, seed with seed, and spore with spore.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ She fiercely cried 'Thou shalt not thus escape;
+ For to this marvel dar'st thou not pretend.
+ There is but one that could this order shape,
+ Demeter,--but I knew her not thy friend.
+ Therefore another trial will I set,
+ In which she cannot aid thee nor abet,
+ But thou thyself must bring it fair to end.'
+
+
+ 8
+
+ Thereon she sped her to the bounds of Thrace,
+ And set her by a river deep and wide,
+ And said 'To east beyond this stream, a race
+ Of golden-fleecèd sheep at pasture bide.
+ Go seek them out; and this thy task, to pull
+ But one lock for me of their precious wool,
+ And give it in my hands at eventide:
+
+
+ 9
+
+ 'This do and thou shalt have thy heart's desire.'
+ Which said, she fled and left her by the stream:
+ And Psyche then, with courage still entire,
+ Had plunged therein; but now of great esteem
+ Her life she rated, while it lent a spell
+ Wherein she yet might hope to quit her well,
+ And in one winning all her woes redeem.
+
+ 10
+
+ There as she stood in doubt, a fluting voice
+ Rose from the flood, 'Psyche, be not afraid
+ To hear a reed give tongue, for 'twas of choice
+ That I from mortal flesh a plant was made.
+ My name is Syrinx; once from mighty Pan
+ Into the drowning river as I ran,
+ A fearful prayer my steps for ever stay'd.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ 'But by that change in many climes I live;
+ And Pan, my lover, who to me alone
+ Is true and does me honour, I forgive--
+ Nor if I speak in sorrow is't my own:
+ Rather for thee my voice I now uplift
+ To warn thee plunge not in the river swift,
+ Nor seek the golden sheep to men unknown.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ 'If thou should cross the stream, which may not be,
+ Thou coudst not climb upon the hanging rocks,
+ Nor ever, as the goddess bade thee, see
+ The pasture of the yellow-fleecèd flocks:
+ Or if thou coud, their herded horns would gore
+ And slay thee on the crags, or thrust thee o'er
+ Ere thou coudst rob them of their golden locks.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ 'The goddess means thy death. But I can show
+ How thy obedience yet may thwart her will.
+ At noon the golden flocks descend below,
+ Leaving the scented herbage of the hill,
+ And where the shelving banks to shallows fall,
+ Drink at the rippling water one and all,
+ Nor back return till they have drawn their fill.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ 'I will command a thornbush, that it stoop
+ Over some ram that steppeth by in peace,
+ And him in all its prickles firmly coop,
+ Making thee seizure of his golden fleece;
+ So without peril of his angry horns
+ Shalt thou be quit: for he upon the thorns
+ Must leave his ransom ere he win release.'
+
+
+ 15
+
+ Then Psyche thankt her for her kind befriending,
+ And hid among the rushes looking east;
+ And when noon came she saw the flock descending
+ Out of the hills; and lo! one golden beast
+ Caught in a thornbush; and the mighty brute
+ Struggl'd and tore it from its twisted root
+ Into the stream, or e'er he was releas't.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ And when they water'd were and gone, the breeze
+ Floated the freighted thorn where Psyche lay:
+ Whence she unhook'd the golden wool at ease,
+ And back to heaven for passage swift gan pray.
+ And Hermes, who was sent to be her guide
+ Ifso she lived, came down at eventide,
+ And bore her thither ere the close of day.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ But when the goddess saw the locks of gold
+ Held to her hands, her heart with wrath o'erran:
+ 'Most desperate thou, and by abetting bold,
+ That dost outwit me, prove thee as I can.
+ Yet this work is not thine: there is but one
+ Of all the gods who coud the thing have done.
+ Hast thou a friend too in the lusty Pan?
+
+
+ 18
+
+ 'I'll give thee trial where he cannot aid.'
+ Which said, she led her to a torrid land,
+ Level and black, but not with flood or shade,
+ For nothing coud the mighty heat withstand,
+ Which aye from morn till eve the naked sun
+ Pour'd on that plain, where never foot had run,
+ Nor any herb sprung on its molten sand.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Far off a gloomy mountain rose alone:
+ And Aphrodite, thither pointing, said
+ 'There lies thy task. Out of the topmost stone
+ Of yonder hill upwells a fountain head.
+ Take thou this goblet; brimming must thou bring
+ Its cup with water from that sacred spring,
+ If ever to my son thou wouldst be wed.'
+
+
+ 20
+
+ Saying, she gave into her hands a bowl
+ Cut of one crystal, open, broad and fair;
+ And bade her at all hazard keep it whole,
+ For heaven held nought beside so fine or rare.
+ Then was she gone; and Psyche on the plain
+ Now doubted if she ever should regain
+ The love of Eros, strove she howsoe'er.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ Yet as a helmsman, at the word to tack,
+ Swiftly without a thought puts down his helm,
+ So Psyche turn'd to tread that desert black,
+ Since was no fear that coud her heart o'erwhelm;
+ Nor knew she that she went the fount to seek
+ Of cold Cocytus, springing to the peak,
+ Secretly from his source in Pluto's realm.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ All night and day she journey'd, and at last
+ Come to the rock gazed up in vain around:
+ Nothing she saw but precipices vast
+ O'er ruined scarps, with rugged ridges crown'd:
+ And creeping to a cleft to rest in shade,
+ Or e'er the desperate venture she assay'd,
+ She fell asleep upon the stony ground.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ A dream came to her, thus: she stood alone
+ Within her palace in the high ravine;
+ Where nought but she was changed, but she to stone.
+ Worshippers throng'd the court, and still were seen
+ Folk flying from the peak, who, ever more
+ Flying and flying, lighted on the floor,
+ _Hail!_ cried they, _wife of Eros, adorèd queen_!
+
+
+ 24
+
+ A hurtling of the battl'd air disturb'd
+ Her sunken sense, and waked her eyes to meet
+ The kingly bird of Zeus, himself that curb'd
+ His swooping course, alighting at her feet;
+ With motion gentle, his far-darting eye
+ In kindness dim'd upon her, he drew nigh,
+ And thus in words unveil'd her foe's deceit:
+
+
+ 25
+
+ 'In vain, poor Psyche, hast thou hither striven
+ Across the fiery plain toiling so well;
+ Cruelly to destruction art thou driven
+ By her, whose hate thou canst not quit nor quell.
+ No mortal foot may scale this horrid mount,
+ And those black waters of its topmost fount
+ Are guarded by the hornèd snakes of hell.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ 'Its little rill is an upleaping jet
+ Of cold Cocytus, which for ever licks
+ Earth's base, and when with Acheron 'tis met,
+ Its waters with that other cannot mix,
+ Which holds the elemental air dissolved;
+ But with it in its ceaseless course revolved
+ Issues unmingl'd in the lake of Styx.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ 'The souls of murderers, in guise of fish,
+ Scream as they swim therein and wail for cold,
+ Their times of woe determined by the wish
+ Of them they murder'd on the earth of old:
+ Whom each five years they see, whene'er they make
+ Their passage to the Acherusian lake,
+ And there release may win from pains condoled.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ 'For if the pitying ear of them they slew
+ Be haply piercèd by their voices spare,
+ Then are they freed from pain; as are some few,
+ But, for the most, again they forward fare
+ To Tartarus obscene, and outcast thence
+ Are hurried back into the cold intense,
+ And with new company their torments share.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ 'Its biting lymph may not be touch'd of man
+ Or god, unless the Fates have so ordain'd;
+ Nor coud I in thy favour break the ban,
+ Nor pass the dragons that thereby are chain'd,
+ Didst thou not bear the sacred cup of Zeus;
+ Which, for thy peril lent, shall turn to use,
+ And truly do the service which it feign'd.'
+
+
+ 30
+
+ Thus as he spake, his talons made he ring
+ Around the crystal bowl, and soaring high
+ Descended as from heaven upon the spring:
+ Nor dared the hornèd snakes of hell deny
+ The minister of Zeus, that bore his cup,
+ To fill it with their trusted water up,
+ Thence to the King of heaven therewith to fly.
+
+
+ 31
+
+ But he to Psyche bent his gracious speed,
+ And bidding her to mount his feather'd back
+ Bore her aloft as once young Ganymede;
+ Nor ever made his steady flight to slack,
+ Ere that he set her down beside her goal,
+ And gave into her hands the crystal bowl
+ Unspill'd, o'erbrimming with the water black.
+
+
+ JANUARY
+
+
+ 1
+
+ But Eros now recover'd from his hurt,
+ Felt other pangs; for who would not relent
+ Weighing the small crime and unmatch'd desert
+ Of Psyche with her cruel punishment?
+ And shamed he grew to be so near allied
+ To her, who by her taunts awoke his pride,
+ As his compassion by her spite unspent.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Which Aphrodite seeing, wax'd more firm
+ That he should never meet with Psyche more;
+ And had in thought already set the term
+ To their communion with that trial sore,
+ Which sent her forth upon a quest accurst,
+ And not to be accomplisht, that of thirst
+ She there might perish on hell's torrid shore.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ And now it chanced that she had called her son
+ Into her presence-chamber, to unfold
+ Psyche's destruction, that her fate might stun
+ What love remained by duty uncontrol'd;
+ And he to hide his tears' rebellious storm
+ Was fled; when in his place another form
+ Rose 'neath the golden lintel; and behold
+
+
+ 4
+
+ Psyche herself, in slow and balanced strain,
+ Poising the crystal bowl with fearful heed,
+ Her eyes at watch upon the steadied plane,
+ And whole soul gather'd in the single deed.
+ Onward she came, and stooping to the floor
+ Set down the cup unspill'd and brimming o'er
+ At Aphrodite's feet, and rose up freed.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ Surprise o'ercame the goddess, and she too
+ Stood like a statue, but with passion pale:
+ Till, when her victim nothing spake, she threw
+ Some kindness in her voice, and bade her hail;
+ But in the smiling judge 'twas plain to see--
+ Saying 'What water bringst thou here to me?'--
+ That justice over hate should not prevail.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Then Psyche said 'This is the biting flood
+ Of black Cocytus, silver'd with the gleam
+ Of souls, that guilty of another's blood
+ Are pent therein, and as they swim they scream.
+ The hornèd snakes of hell, upon the mount
+ Enchain'd, for ever guard the livid fount:
+ And but the Fates can grant to touch the stream.'
+
+
+ 7
+
+ 'Wherefore,' the goddess cried, ''tis plain that none
+ But one I wot of coud this thing have wrought.
+ That which another doth may well be done,
+ Nor thou the nearer to my promise brought.
+ Thou buildest on a hope to be destroy'd,
+ If thou accept conditions, and avoid
+ Thy parcel, nor thyself accomplish aught.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ 'Was it not kindness in me, being averse
+ To all thy wish, to yield me thus to grant
+ Thy heart's desire,--and nothing loathe I worse,--
+ If thou wouldst only work as well as want?
+ See, now I will not yet be all denial,
+ But offer thee one last determining trial;
+ And let it be a mutual covenant:
+
+
+ 9
+
+ 'This box,' and in her hands she took a pyx
+ Square-cut, of dark obsidian's rarest green,
+ 'Take; and therewith beyond Tartarean Styx
+ Go thou, and entering Hades' house obscene,
+ Say to Persephonè, _If 'tis thy will
+ To shew me so much favour, prithee fill
+ This little vase with beauty for Love's queen_.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ '_She begs but what shall well o'erlast a day;
+ For of her own was much of late outspent
+ In nursing of her son, in bed who lay
+ Wounded by me, who for the gift am sent._
+ Then bring me what she gives, and with all speed;
+ For truth to say I stand, thou seest, in need
+ Of some such charm in my disparagement.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ 'If thou return to me with that acquist,
+ Having thyself the journey made, I swear
+ That day to give thee whatsoe'er thou list,
+ An be it my son. Now, Psyche, wilt thou dare?'
+ And Psyche said 'If this thou truly mean,
+ I will go down to Tartarus obscene,
+ And beg of Hades' queen thy beauty there.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ 'Show me the way.' But Aphrodite said,
+ 'That may'st thou find. Yet I will place thee whence
+ A way there is: mortals have on it sped;
+ Ay, and return'd thereby: so let us hence.'
+ Then swift to earth her willing prey she bore,
+ And left her on the wide Laconian shore,
+ Alone, at midnight, in the darkness dense.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ 'Twas winter; and as shivering Psyche sat
+ Waiting for morn, she question'd in her mind
+ What place the goddess meant, arrived whereat
+ She might descend to hell, or how should find
+ The way which Gods to living men deny.
+ 'No Orpheus, nay, nor Hercules am I,'
+ Said she, 'to loosen where the great Gods bind.'
+
+
+ 14
+
+ And when at length the long-delaying dawn
+ Broke on the peaks of huge Taÿgetus,
+ And Psyche through the skirts of dark withdrawn
+ Look'd on that promontory mountainous,
+ And saw high-crested Taleton in snow,
+ Her heart sank, and she wept with head bent low
+ The malice of her foe dispiteous.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ And seeing near at hand an ancient tower,
+ Deserted now, but once a hold of men,
+ She came thereto, and, though 'twas all her power,
+ Mounted its steep unbroken stair again.
+ 'Surely,' she said, for now a second time
+ She thought to die--'this little height I climb
+ Will prove my shortest road to Pluto's den.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ 'Hence must I come to Tartarus; once there
+ Turn as I may,' and straight to death had sprung;
+ When in the mossy tower the imprison'd air
+ Was shaken, and the hoary stones gave tongue,
+ 'Stand firm! Stand firm!' that rugged voice outcried;
+ 'Of such as choose despondency for guide
+ Hast thou not heard what bitterest fate is sung?
+
+
+ 17
+
+ 'Hearken; for I the road and means can teach
+ How thou may'st come to hell and yet escape.
+ And first must thou, that upper gate to reach,
+ Along these seagirt hills thy journey shape,
+ To where the land in sea dips furthest South
+ At Tænarus and Hades' earthly mouth,
+ Hard by Poseidon's temple at the cape.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ 'Thereby may one descend: but they that make
+ That passage down must go provided well.
+ So take in either hand a honey-cake
+ Of pearlèd barley mix'd with hydromel;
+ And in thy mouth two doits, first having bound
+ The pyx beneath thy robe enwrap'd around:
+ Thus set thou forth; and mark what more I tell.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ 'When thou hast gone alone some half thy road
+ Thou wilt o'ertake a lame outwearied ass;
+ And one that beats him, tottering 'neath his load
+ Of loosely bundl'd wood, will cry _Alas;
+ Help me, kind friend, my faggots to adjust_!
+ But thou that silly cripple's words mistrust;
+ 'Tis planted for thy death. Note it and pass.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ 'And when thy road the Stygian river joins,
+ Where woolly Charon ferries o'er the dead,
+ He will demand his fare: one of thy coins
+ Force with thy tongue between thy teeth, thy head
+ Offering instead of hand to give the doit.
+ His fingers in this custom are adroit,
+ And thine must not set down the barleybread.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ 'Then in his crazy bark as, ferrying o'er
+ The stream, thou sittest, one that seems to float
+ Rather than swim, midway 'twixt shore and shore,
+ Will stretch his fleshless hand upon the boat,
+ And beg thee of thy pity take him in.
+ Shut thy soft ear unto his clamour thin,
+ Nor for a phantom deed thyself devote.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ 'Next, on the further bank when thou art stept,
+ Three wizen'd women weaving at the woof
+ Will stop, and pray thee in their art adept
+ To free their tangl'd threads. Hold thou aloof;
+ For this and other traps thy foe hath plan'd
+ To make thee drop the cakes out of thy hand,
+ Putting thy prudence to perpetual proof.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ 'For by one cake thou comest into Hell,
+ And by one cake departest; since the hound
+ That guards the gate is ever pleasèd well
+ To taste man's meal, or sweeten'd grain unground.
+ Cast him a cake; for that thou may'st go free
+ Even to the mansion of Persephonè,
+ Withouten stay or peril, safe and sound.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ 'She will receive thee kindly; thou decline
+ Her courtesies, and make the floor thy seat;
+ Refusing what is offer'd, food or wine;
+ Save only beg a crust of bread to eat.
+ Then tell thy mission, and her present take;
+ Which when thou hast, set forth with pyx and cake,
+ One in each hand, while yet thou may'st retreat.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ 'Giving thy second cake to Cerberus,
+ The coin to Charon, and that way whereby
+ Thou camest following, thou comest thus
+ To see again the starry choir on high.
+ But guard thou well the pyx, nor once uplift
+ The lid to look on Persephassa's gift;
+ Else 'tis in vain I bid thee now not die.'
+
+
+ 26
+
+ Then Psyche thank'd the tower, and stoopt her mouth
+ To kiss the stones upon his rampart hoary;
+ And coming down his stair went hasting south,
+ Along the steep Tænarian promontory;
+ And found the cave and temple by the cape,
+ And took the cakes and coins, and made escape
+ Beneath the earth, according to his story.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ And overtook the ass, but lent no aid;
+ And offer'd Charon with her teeth his fee;
+ And pass'd the floating ghost, in vain who pray'd;
+ And turned her back upon the weavers three;
+ And threw the honey-cake to that hell-hound
+ Three-headed Cerberus; and safe and sound,
+ Came to the mansion of Persephonè.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ Kindly received, she courtesy declined:
+ Sat on the ground; ate not, save where she lay,
+ A crust of bread; reveal'd the goddess' mind;
+ The gift took; and return'd upon her way:
+ Gave Cerberus his cake, Charon his fare,
+ And saw through Hell's mouth to the purple air
+ And one by one the keen stars melt in day.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ Awhile from so long journeying in the shades
+ Resting at Tænarus she came to know
+ How, up the eastern coast some forty stades,
+ There stood a temple of her goddess foe.
+ There would she make her offering, there reclaim
+ The prize, which now 'twas happiness to name,
+ The joy that should redeem all passèd woe.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ And wending by the sunny shore at noon,
+ She with her pyx, and wondering what it hid,
+ Of what kind, what the fashion of the boon
+ Coud be, that she to look on was forbid,--
+ Alas for Innocence so hard to teach!--
+ At fancy's prick she sat her on the beach,
+ And to content desire lifted the lid.
+
+
+ 31
+
+ She saw within nothing: But o'er her sight
+ That looked on nothing gan a darkness creep.
+ A cloudy poison, mix'd of Stygian night,
+ Rapt her to deadly and infernal sleep.
+ Backward she fell, like one when all is o'er,
+ And lay outstretch'd, as lies upon the shore
+ A drown'd corpse cast up by the murmuring deep.
+
+
+ FEBRUARY
+
+
+ 1
+
+ While Eros in his chamber hid his tears,
+ Mourning the loss of Psyche and her fate,
+ The rumour of her safety reacht his ears
+ And how she came to Aphrodite's gate:
+ Whereat with hope return'd his hardihood,
+ And secretly he purposed while he coud
+ Himself to save her from the goddess' hate.
+
+ 2
+
+ Then learning what he might and guessing more,
+ His ready wit came soon to understand
+ The journey to the far Laconian shore;
+ Whither to fly and seek his love he plan'd:
+ And making good escape in dark of night,
+ Ere the sun crost his true meridian flight
+ He by Teuthronè struck the southern strand.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ There as it chanct he found that snowy bird
+ Of Crete, that late made mischief with his queen,
+ And now along the cliffs with wings unstir'd
+ Sail'd, and that morn had cross'd the sea between:
+ Whom as he past he hail'd, and question'd thus,
+ 'O snowy gull, if thou from Tænarus
+ Be come, say, hast thou there my Psyche seen?'
+
+
+ 4
+
+ The gull replied 'Thy Psyche have I seen;
+ Walking beside the sea she joy'th to bear
+ A pyx of dark obsidian's rarest green,
+ Wherein she gazeth on her features fair.
+ She is not hence by now six miles at most.'
+ Then Eros bade him speed, and down the coast
+ Held on his passage through the buoyant air.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ With eager eye he search'd the salty marge,
+ Boding all mischief from his mother's glee;
+ And wondering of her wiles, and what the charge
+ Shut in the dark obsidian pyx might be.
+ And lo! at last, outstretch'd beside the rocks,
+ Psyche as lifeless; and the open box
+ Laid with the weedy refuse of the sea.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ He guess'd all, flew down, and beside her knelt,
+ With both his hands stroking her temples wan;
+ And for the poison with his fingers felt,
+ And drew it gently from her; and anon
+ She slowly from those Stygian fumes was freed;
+ Which he with magic handling and good heed
+ Replaced in pyx, and shut the lid thereon.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ 'O Psyche,' thus, and kissing her he cried,
+ 'O simple-hearted Psyche, once again
+ Hast thou thy foolish longing gratified,
+ A second time hath prying been thy bane.
+ But lo! I, love, am come, for I am thine:
+ Nor ever more shall any fate malign,
+ Or spite of goddess smite our love in twain.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ 'Let now that I have saved thee twice outweigh
+ The once that I deserted thee: and thou
+ Hast much obey'd for once to disobey,
+ And wilt no more my bidding disallow.
+ Take up thy pyx; to Aphrodite go,
+ And claim the promise of thy mighty foe;
+ Maybe that she will grant it to thee now.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ 'If she should yet refuse, despair not yet!'
+ Then Psyche, when she felt his arms restore
+ Their old embrace, and as their bodies met,
+ Knew the great joy that grief is pardon'd for;
+ And how it doth first ecstasy excel,
+ When love well-known, long-lost, and mournèd well
+ In long days of no hope, comes home once more.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ But Eros leaping up with purpose keen
+ Into the air, as only love can fly,
+ Bore her to heaven, and setting her unseen
+ At Aphrodite's golden gate,--whereby
+ They came as night was close on twilight dim,--
+ There left, and bidding her say nought of him
+ Went onward to the house of Zeus most high.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ Where winning audience of the heavenly sire,
+ Who well disposed to him was used to be,
+ He told the story of his strong desire;
+ And boldly begg'd that Zeus would grant his plea
+ That he might have sweet Psyche for his wife,
+ And she be dower'd with immortal life,
+ Since she was worthy, by his firm decree.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ And great Zeus smiled; and at the smile of Zeus
+ All heaven was glad, and on the earth below
+ Was calm and peace awhile and sorrow's truce:
+ The sun shone forth and smote the winter snow,
+ The flowërs sprang, the birds gan sing and pair,
+ And mortals, as they drew the brighten'd air,
+ Marvel'd, and quite forgot their common woe.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ Yet gave the Thunderer not his full consent
+ Without some words: 'At length is come the day,'
+ Thus spake he, 'when for all thy youth misspent,
+ Thy mischief-making and thy wanton play
+ Thou art upgrown to taste the sweet and sour:
+ Good shall it work upon thee: from this hour
+ Look we for better things. And this I say,
+
+
+ 14
+
+ 'That since thy birth, which all we took for bliss,
+ Thou hast but mock'd us; and no less on me
+ Hast brought disfavour and contempt, ywiss,
+ Than others that have had to do with thee:
+ Till only such as vow'd themselves aloof
+ From thee and thine were held in good approof;
+ And few there were, who thus of shame went free.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ 'That punishment is shapen as reward
+ Is like thy fortune: but our good estate
+ We honour, while we sit to be adored:
+ And thus 'twas written in the book of Fate.
+ Not for thy pleasure, but the general weal
+ Grant I the grace for which thou here dost kneel;
+ And that which I determine shall not wait.'
+
+
+ 16
+
+ So wingèd Hermes through the heaven he sped,
+ To warn the high celestials to his hall,
+ Where they should Psyche see with Eros wed,
+ And keep the day with feast ambrosial.
+ And Hermes, flying through the skiey ways
+ Of high Olympus, spread sweet Psyche's praise,
+ And bade the mighty gods obey his call.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ Then all the Kronian gods and goddesses
+ Assembl'd at his cry,--and now 'twas known
+ Why Zeus had smiled,--the lesser majesties
+ Attending them before his royal throne.
+ Athena, mistress good of them that know,
+ Came, and Apollo, warder off of woe,
+ Who had to Psyche's sire her fate foreshown;
+
+
+ 18
+
+ Demeter, giver of the golden corn,
+ Fair Hebe, honour'd at her Attic shrine,
+ And Artemis with hunting spear and horn,
+ And Dionysos, planter of the vine,
+ With old Poseidon from the barren sea,
+ And Leto, and the lame Hephæstos, he
+ Himself who built those halls with skill divine.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ And ruddy Pan with many a quip and quirk
+ Air'd 'mong those lofty gods his mirth illbred,
+ Bearing a mighty bowl of cretan work:
+ Stern Arês, with his crisp hair helmeted,
+ Came, and retirèd Hestia, and the god
+ Hermes, with wingèd cap and ribbon'd rod,
+ By whom the company was heralded.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ And Hera sat by Zeus, and all around
+ The Muses, that of learning make their choice;
+ Who, when Apollo struck his strings to sound,
+ Sang in alternate music with sweet voice:
+ And righteous Themis, and the Graces three
+ Ushering the anger'd Aphrodite; she
+ Alone of all were there might not rejoice
+
+
+ 21
+
+ But ere they sat to feast, Zeus bade them fill
+ The cup ambrosial of immortal life,
+ And said 'If Psyche drink,--and 'tis my will,--
+ There is an end of this unhappy strife.
+ Nor can the goddess, whose mislike had birth
+ From too great honour paid the bride on earth,
+ Forbid her any more for Eros' wife.'
+
+
+ 22
+
+ Then Aphrodite said 'So let it be.'
+ And Psyche was brought in, with such a flush
+ Of joy upon her face, as there to see
+ Was fairer to love's eye than beauty's blush.
+ And then she drank the eternal wine, whose draught
+ Can Terror cease: which flesh hath never quafft,
+ Nor doth it flow from grape that mortals crush.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ And next stood Eros forth, and took her hand,
+ And kisst her happy face before them all:
+ And Zeus proclaim'd them married, and outban'd
+ From heaven whoever should that word miscall.
+ And then all sat to feast, and one by one
+ Pledged Psyche ere they drank and cried _Well done!_
+ And merry laughter rang throughout the hall.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ So thus was Eros unto Psyche wed,
+ The heavenly bridegroom to his earthly bride,
+ Who won his love, in simple maidenhead:
+ And by her love herself she glorified,
+ And him from wanton wildness disinclined;
+ Since in his love for her he came to find
+ A joy unknown through all Olympus wide.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ And Psyche for her fall was quite forgiven,
+ Since 'gainst herself when tempted to rebel,
+ By others' malice on her ruin driven,
+ Only of sweet simplicity she fell:--
+ Wherein who fall may fall unto the skies;--
+ And being foolish she was yet most wise,
+ And took her trials patiently and well.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ And Aphrodite since her full defeat
+ Is kinder and less jealous than before,
+ And smiling on them both, calls Psyche sweet;
+ But thinks her son less manly than of yore:
+ Though still she holds his arm of some renown,
+ When he goes smiting mortals up and down,
+ Piercing their marrow with his weapons sore.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ _So now in steadfast love and happy state_
+ They hold for aye their mansion in the sky,
+ And send down heavenly peace on those who mate,
+ In virgin love, to find their joy thereby:
+ Whom gently Eros shooteth, and apart
+ Keepeth for them from all his sheaf that dart
+ Which Psyche in his chamber pickt to try.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ Now in that same month Psyche bare a child,
+ Who straight in heaven was named Hedonè
+ In mortal tongues by other letters styled;
+ Whom all to love, however named, agree:
+ Whom in our noble English JOY we call,
+ And honour them among us most of all,
+ Whose happy children are as fair as she.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ _ENVOY_
+
+ IT IS MY PRAYER THAT SHE MAY SMILE ON ALL
+ WHO READ MY TALE AS SHE HATH SMILED ON ME.
+
+
+
+
+ THE GROWTH OF LOVE
+
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+
+ _PREVIOUS EDITIONS_
+
+ 1. _XXIV Sonnets. Ed. Bumpus, 1876._
+
+ 2. _LXXIX Sonnets. Daniel Press, 1889.
+ This edition was copied in America._
+
+ 3. _Do. do. Black letter. 1890._
+
+ 4. _LXIX Sonnets. Smith, Elder & Co. Vol. I, 1898._
+
+
+
+
+ THE GROWTH
+ OF LOVE
+
+
+ 1
+
+ They that in play can do the thing they would,
+ Having an instinct throned in reason's place,
+ --And every perfect action hath the grace
+ Of indolence or thoughtless hardihood--
+ These are the best: yet be there workmen good
+ Who lose in earnestness control of face,
+ Or reckon means, and rapt in effort base
+ Reach to their end by steps well understood.
+
+ Me whom thou sawest of late strive with the pains
+ Of one who spends his strength to rule his nerve,
+ --Even as a painter breathlessly who strains
+ His scarcely moving hand lest it should swerve--
+ Behold me, now that I have cast my chains,
+ Master of the art which for thy sake I serve.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ For thou art mine: and now I am ashamed
+ To have usèd means to win so pure acquist,
+ And of my trembling fear that might have misst
+ Thro' very care the gold at which I aim'd;
+ And am as happy but to hear thee named,
+ As are those gentle souls by angels kisst
+ In pictures seen leaving their marble cist
+ To go before the throne of grace unblamed.
+
+ Nor surer am I water hath the skill
+ To quench my thirst, or that my strength is freed
+ In delicate ordination as I will,
+ Than that to be myself is all I need
+ For thee to be most mine: so I stand still,
+ And save to taste my joy no more take heed.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ The whole world now is but the minister
+ Of thee to me: I see no other scheme
+ But universal love, from timeless dream
+ Waking to thee his joy's interpreter.
+ I walk around and in the fields confer
+ Of love at large with tree and flower and stream,
+ And list the lark descant upon my theme,
+ Heaven's musical accepted worshipper.
+
+ Thy smile outfaceth ill: and that old feud
+ 'Twixt things and me is quash'd in our new truce;
+ And nature now dearly with thee endued
+ No more in shame ponders her old excuse,
+ But quite forgets her frowns and antics rude,
+ So kindly hath she grown to her new use.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ The very names of things belov'd are dear,
+ And sounds will gather beauty from their sense,
+ As many a face thro' love's long residence
+ Groweth to fair instead of plain and sere:
+ But when I say thy name it hath no peer,
+ And I suppose fortune determined thence
+ Her dower, that such beauty's excellence
+ Should have a perfect title for the ear.
+
+ Thus may I think the adopting Muses chose
+ Their sons by name, knowing none would be heard
+ Or writ so oft in all the world as those,--
+ Dan Chaucer, mighty Shakespeare, then for third
+ The classic Milton, and to us arose
+ Shelley with liquid music in the word.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ The poets were good teachers, for they taught
+ Earth had this joy; but that 'twould ever be
+ That fortune should be perfected in me,
+ My heart of hope dared not engage the thought.
+ So I stood low, and now but to be caught
+ By any self-styled lords of the age with thee
+ Vexes my modesty, lest they should see
+ I hold them owls and peacocks, things of nought.
+
+ And when we sit alone, and as I please
+ I taste thy love's full smile, and can enstate
+ The pleasure of my kingly heart at ease,
+ My thought swims like a ship, that with the weight
+ Of her rich burden sleeps on the infinite seas
+ Becalm'd, and cannot stir her golden freight.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ While yet we wait for spring, and from the dry
+ And blackening east that so embitters March,
+ Well-housed must watch grey fields and meadows parch,
+ And driven dust and withering snowflake fly:
+ Already in glimpses of the tarnish'd sky
+ The sun is warm and beckons to the larch,
+ And where the covert hazels interarch
+ Their tassell'd twigs, fair beds of primrose lie.
+
+ Beneath the crisp and wintry carpet hid
+ A million buds but stay their blossoming;
+ And trustful birds have built their nests amid
+ The shuddering boughs, and only wait to sing
+ Till one soft shower from the south shall bid,
+ And hither tempt the pilgrim steps of spring.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ In thee my spring of life hath bid the while
+ A rose unfold beyond the summer's best,
+ The mystery of joy made manifest
+ In love's self-answering and awakening smile,
+ Whereby the lips in wonder reconcile
+ Passion with peace, and show desire at rest,--
+ A grace of silence by the Greek unguesst,
+ That bloom'd to immortalize the Tuscan style:
+
+ When first the angel-song that faith hath ken'd
+ Fancy pourtray'd, above recorded oath
+ Of Israel's God, or light of poem pen'd;
+ The very countenance of plighted troth
+ 'Twixt heaven and earth, where in one moment blend
+ The hope of one and happiness of both.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ For beauty being the best of all we know
+ Sums up the unsearchable and secret aims
+ Of nature, and on joys whose earthly names
+ Were never told can form and sense bestow;
+ And man hath sped his instinct to outgo
+ The step of science; and against her shames
+ Imagination stakes out heavenly claims,
+ Building a tower above the head of woe.
+
+ Nor is there fairer work for beauty found
+ Than that she win in nature her release
+ From all the woes that in the world abound:
+ Nay with his sorrow may his love increase,
+ If from man's greater need beauty redound,
+ And claim his tears for homage of his peace.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ Thus to thy beauty doth my fond heart look,
+ That late dismay'd her faithless faith forbore;
+ And wins again her love lost in the lore
+ Of schools and script of many a learned book:
+ For thou what ruthless death untimely took
+ Shalt now in better brotherhood restore,
+ And save my batter'd ship that far from shore
+ High on the dismal deep in tempest shook.
+
+ So in despite of sorrow lately learn'd
+ I still hold true to truth since thou art true,
+ Nor wail the woe which thou to joy hast turn'd:
+ Nor come the heavenly sun and bathing blue
+ To my life's need more splendid and unearn'd
+ Than hath thy gift outmatch'd desire and due.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ Winter was not unkind because uncouth;
+ His prison'd time made me a closer guest,
+ And gave thy graciousness a warmer zest,
+ Biting all else with keen and angry tooth:
+ And bravelier the triumphant blood of youth
+ Mantling thy cheek its happy home possest,
+ And sterner sport by day put strength to test,
+ And custom's feast at night gave tongue to truth.
+
+ Or say hath flaunting summer a device
+ To match our midnight revelry, that rang
+ With steel and flame along the snow-girt ice?
+ Or when we hark't to nightingales that sang
+ On dewy eves in spring, did they entice
+ To gentler love than winter's icy fang?
+
+
+ 11
+
+ There's many a would-be poet at this hour,
+ Rhymes of a love that he hath never woo'd,
+ And o'er his lamplit desk in solitude
+ Deems that he sitteth in the Muses' bower:
+ And some the flames of earthly love devour,
+ Who have taken no kiss of Nature, nor renew'd
+ In the world's wilderness with heavenly food
+ The sickly body of their perishing power.
+
+ So none of all our company, I boast,
+ But now would mock my penning, coud they see
+ How down the right it maps a jagged coast;
+ Seeing they hold the manlier praise to be
+ Strong hand and will, and the heart best when most
+ 'Tis sober, simple, true, and fancy-free.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ How coud I quarrel or blame you, most dear,
+ Who all thy virtues gavest and kept back none;
+ Kindness and gentleness, truth without peer,
+ And beauty that my fancy fed upon?
+ Now not my life's contrition for my fault
+ Can blot that day, nor work me recompence,
+ Tho' I might worthily thy worth exalt,
+ Making thee long amends for short offence.
+
+ For surely nowhere, love, if not in thee
+ Are grace and truth and beauty to be found;
+ And all my praise of these can only be
+ A praise of thee, howe'er by thee disown'd:
+ While still thou must be mine tho' far removed,
+ And I for one offence no more beloved.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ Now since to me altho' by thee refused
+ The world is left, I shall find pleasure still;
+ The art that most I have loved but little used
+ Will yield a world of fancies at my will:
+ And tho' where'er thou goest it is from me,
+ I where I go thee in my heart must bear;
+ And what thou wert that wilt thou ever be,
+ My choice, my best, my loved, and only fair.
+
+ Farewell, yet think not such farewell a change
+ From tenderness, tho' once to meet or part
+ But on short absence so coud sense derange
+ That tears have graced the greeting of my heart;
+ They were proud drops and had my leave to fall,
+ Not on thy pity for my pain to call.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ When sometimes in an ancient house where state
+ From noble ancestry is handed on,
+ We see but desolation thro' the gate,
+ And richest heirlooms all to ruin gone;
+ Because maybe some fancied shame or fear,
+ Bred of disease or melancholy fate,
+ Hath driven the owner from his rightful sphere
+ To wander nameless save to pity or hate:
+
+ What is the wreck of all he hath in fief,
+ When he that hath is wrecking? nought is fine
+ Unto the sick, nor doth it burden grief
+ That the house perish when the soul doth pine.
+ Thus I my state despise, slain by a sting
+ So slight 'twould not have hurt a meaner thing.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ Who builds a ship must first lay down the keel
+ Of health, whereto the ribs of mirth are wed:
+ And knit, with beams and knees of strength, a bed
+ For decks of purity, her floor and ceil.
+ Upon her masts, Adventure, Pride, and Zeal,
+ To fortune's wind the sails of purpose spread:
+ And at the prow make figured maidenhead
+ O'erride the seas and answer to the wheel.
+
+ And let him deep in memory's hold have stor'd
+ Water of Helicon: and let him fit
+ The needle that doth true with heaven accord:
+ Then bid her crew, love, diligence and wit
+ With justice, courage, temperance come aboard,
+ And at her helm the master reason sit.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ This world is unto God a work of art,
+ Of which the unaccomplish'd heavenly plan
+ Is hid in life within the creature's heart,
+ And for perfection looketh unto man.
+ Ah me! those thousand ages: with what slow
+ Pains and persistence were his idols made,
+ Destroy'd and made, ere ever he coud know
+ The mighty mother must be so obey'd.
+
+ For lack of knowledge and thro' little skill
+ His childish mimicry outwent his aim;
+ His effort shaped the genius of his will;
+ Till thro' distinction and revolt he came,
+ True to his simple terms of good and ill,
+ Seeking the face of Beauty without blame.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ Say who be these light-bearded, sunburnt faces
+ In negligent and travel-stain'd array,
+ That in the city of Dante come to-day,
+ Haughtily visiting her holy places?
+ O these be noble men that hide their graces,
+ True England's blood, her ancient glory's stay,
+ By tales of fame diverted on their way
+ Home from the rule of oriental races.
+
+ Life-trifling lions these, of gentle eyes
+ And motion delicate, but swift to fire
+ For honour, passionate where duty lies,
+ Most loved and loving: and they quickly tire
+ Of Florence, that she one day more denies
+ The embrace of wife and son, of sister or sire.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ Where San Miniato's convent from the sun
+ At forenoon overlooks the city of flowers
+ I sat, and gazing on her domes and towers
+ Call'd up her famous children one by one:
+ And three who all the rest had far outdone,
+ Mild Giotto first, who stole the morning hours,
+ I saw, and god-like Buonarroti's powers,
+ And Dante, gravest poet, her much-wrong'd son.
+
+ Is all this glory, I said, another's praise?
+ Are these heroic triumphs things of old,
+ And do I dead upon the living gaze?
+ Or rather doth the mind, that can behold
+ The wondrous beauty of the works and days,
+ Create the image that her thoughts enfold?
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Rejoice, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell,
+ Rejoice that yet on earth your fame is bright;
+ And that your names, remember'd day and night,
+ Live on the lips of those that love you well.
+ 'Tis ye that conquer'd have the powers of hell,
+ Each with the special grace of your delight:
+ Ye are the world's creators, and thro' might
+ Of everlasting love ye did excel.
+
+ Now ye are starry names, above the storm
+ And war of Time and nature's endless wrong
+ Ye flit, in pictured truth and peaceful form,
+ Wing'd with bright music and melodious song,--
+ The flaming flowers of heaven, making May-dance
+ In dear Imagination's rich pleasance.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ THE world still goeth about to shew and hide,
+ Befool'd of all opinion, fond of fame:
+ But he that can do well taketh no pride,
+ And see'th his error, undisturb'd by shame:
+ So poor's the best that longest life can do,
+ The most so little, diligently done;
+ So mighty is the beauty that doth woo,
+ So vast the joy that love from love hath won.
+
+ God's love to win is easy, for He loveth
+ Desire's fair attitude, nor strictly weighs
+ The broken thing, but all alike approveth
+ Which love hath aim'd at Him: that is heaven's praise:
+ And if we look for any praise on earth,
+ 'Tis in man's love: all else is nothing worth.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ O FLESH and blood, comrade to tragic pain
+ And clownish merriment; whose sense could wake
+ Sermons in stones, and count death but an ache,
+ All things as vanity, yet nothing vain:
+ The world, set in thy heart, thy passionate strain
+ Reveal'd anew; but thou for man didst make
+ Nature twice natural, only to shake
+ Her kingdom with the creatures of thy brain.
+
+ Lo, Shakespeare, since thy time nature is loth
+ To yield to art her fair supremacy;
+ In conquering one thou hast so enrichèd both.
+ What shall I say? for God--whose wise decree
+ Confirmeth all He did by all He doth--
+ Doubled His whole creation making thee.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ I would be a bird, and straight on wings I arise,
+ And carry purpose up to the ends of the air:
+ In calm and storm my sails I feather, and where
+ By freezing cliffs the unransom'd wreckage lies:
+ Or, strutting on hot meridian banks, surprise
+ The silence: over plains in the moonlight bare
+ I chase my shadow, and perch where no bird dare
+ In treetops torn by fiercest winds of the skies.
+
+ Poor simple birds, foolish birds! then I cry,
+ Ye pretty pictures of delight, unstir'd
+ By the only joy of knowing that ye fly;
+ Ye are nót what ye are, but rather, sum'd in a word,
+ The alphabet of a god's idea, and I
+ Who master it, I am the only bird.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ O weary pilgrims, chanting of your woe,
+ That turn your eyes to all the peaks that shine,
+ Hailing in each the citadel divine
+ The which ye thought to have enter'd long ago;
+ Until at length your feeble steps and slow
+ Falter upon the threshold of the shrine,
+ And your hearts overburden'd doubt in fine
+ Whether it be Jerusalem or no:
+
+ Dishearten'd pilgrims, I am one of you;
+ For, having worshipp'd many a barren face,
+ I scarce now greet the goal I journey'd to:
+ I stand a pagan in the holy place;
+ Beneath the lamp of truth I am found untrue,
+ And question with the God that I embrace.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ Spring hath her own bright days of calm and peace;
+ Her melting air, at every breath we draw,
+ Floods heart with love to praise God's gracious law:
+ But suddenly--so short is pleasure's lease--
+ The cold returns, the buds from growing cease,
+ And nature's conquer'd face is full of awe;
+ As now the trait'rous north with icy flaw
+ Freezes the dew upon the sick lamb's fleece,
+
+ And 'neath the mock sun searching everywhere
+ Rattles the crispèd leaves with shivering din:
+ So that the birds are silent with despair
+ Within the thickets; nor their armour thin
+ Will gaudy flies adventure in the air,
+ Nor any lizard sun his spotted skin.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ Nothing is joy without thee: I can find
+ No rapture in the first relays of spring,
+ In songs of birds, in young buds opening,
+ Nothing inspiriting and nothing kind;
+ For lack of thee, who once wert throned behind
+ All beauty, like a strength where graces cling,--
+ The jewel and heart of light, which everything
+ Wrestled in rivalry to hold enshrined.
+
+ Ah! since thou'rt fled, and I in each fair sight
+ The sweet occasion of my joy deplore,
+ Where shall I seek thee best, or whom invite
+ Within thy sacred temples and adore?
+ Who shall fill thought and truth with old delight,
+ And lead my soul in life as heretofore?
+
+
+ 26
+
+ The work is done, and from the fingers fall
+ The bloodwarm tools that brought the labour thro':
+ The tasking eye that overrunneth all
+ Rests, and affirms there is no more to do.
+ Now the third joy of making, the sweet flower
+ Of blessed work, bloometh in godlike spirit;
+ Which whoso plucketh holdeth for an hour
+ The shrivelling vanity of mortal merit.
+
+ And thou, my perfect work, thou'rt of to-day;
+ To-morrow a poor and alien thing wilt be,
+ True only should the swift life stand at stay:
+ Therefore farewell, nor look to bide with me.
+ Go find thy friends, if there be one to love thee:
+ Casting thee forth, my child, I rise above thee.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ The fabled sea-snake, old Leviathan,
+ Or else what grisly beast of scaly chine
+ That champ'd the ocean-wrack and swash'd the brine,
+ Before the new and milder days of man,
+ Had never rib nor bray nor swindging fan
+ Like his iron swimmer of the Clyde or Tyne,
+ Late-born of golden seed to breed a line
+ Of offspring swifter and more huge of plan.
+
+ Straight is her going, for upon the sun
+ When once she hath look'd, her path and place are plain;
+ With tireless speed she smiteth one by one
+ The shuddering seas and foams along the main;
+ And her eased breath, when her wild race is run,
+ Roars thro' her nostrils like a hurricane.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ A thousand times hath in my heart's behoof
+ My tongue been set his passion to impart;
+ A thousand times hath my too coward heart
+ My mouth reclosed and fix'd it to the roof;
+ Then with such cunning hath it held aloof,
+ A thousand times kept silence with such art
+ That words coud do no more: yet on thy part
+ Hath silence given a thousand times reproof.
+
+ I should be bolder, seeing I commend
+ Love, that my dilatory purpose primes,
+ But fear lest with my fears my hope should end:
+ Nay, I would truth deny and burn my rhymes,
+ Renew my sorrows rather than offend,
+ A thousand times, and yet a thousand times.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ I travel to thee with the sun's first rays,
+ That lift the dark west and unwrap the night;
+ I dwell beside thee when he walks the height,
+ And fondly toward thee at his setting gaze.
+ I wait upon thy coming, but always--
+ Dancing to meet my thoughts if they invite--
+ Thou hast outrun their longing with delight,
+ And in my solitude dost mock my praise.
+
+ Now doth my drop of time transcend the whole:
+ I see no fame in Khufu's pyramid,
+ No history where loveless Nile doth roll.
+ --This is eternal life, which doth forbid
+ Mortal detraction to the exalted soul,
+ And from her inward eye all fate hath hid.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ My lady pleases me and I please her;
+ This know we both, and I besides know well
+ Wherefore I love her, and I love to tell
+ My love, as all my loving songs aver.
+ But what on her part could the passion stir,
+ Tho' 'tis more difficult for love to spell,
+ Yet can I dare divine how this befel,
+ Nor will her lips deny it if I err.
+
+ She loves me first because I love her, then
+ Loves me for knowing why she should be loved.
+ And that I love to praise her, loves again.
+ So from her beauty both our loves are moved,
+ And by her beauty are sustain'd; nor when
+ The earth falls from the sun is this disproved.
+
+
+ 31
+
+ In all things beautiful, I cannot see
+ Her sit or stand, but love is stir'd anew:
+ 'Tis joy to watch the folds fall as they do,
+ And all that comes is past expectancy.
+ If she be silent, silence let it be;
+ He who would bid her speak might sit and sue
+ The deep-brow'd Phidian Jove to be untrue
+ To his two thousand years' solemnity.
+
+ Ah, but her launchèd passion, when she sings,
+ Wins on the hearing like a shapen prow
+ Borne by the mastery of its urgent wings:
+ Or if she deign her wisdom, she doth show
+ She hath the intelligence of heavenly things,
+ Unsullied by man's mortal overthrow.
+
+
+ 32
+
+ Thus to be humbled: 'tis that ranging pride
+ No refuge hath; that in his castle strong
+ Brave reason sits beleaguer'd, who so long
+ Kept field, but now must starve where he doth hide;
+ That industry, who once the foe defied,
+ Lies slaughter'd in the trenches; that the throng
+ Of idle fancies pipe their foolish song,
+ Where late the puissant captains fought and died.
+
+ Thus to be humbled: 'tis to be undone;
+ A forest fell'd; a city razed to ground;
+ A cloak unsewn, unwoven and unspun
+ Till not a thread remains that can be wound.
+ And yet, O lover, thee, the ruin'd one,
+ Love who hath humbled thus hath also crown'd.
+
+
+ 33
+
+ I care not if I live, tho' life and breath
+ Have never been to me so dear and sweet.
+ I care not if I die, for I coud meet--
+ Being so happy--happily my death.
+ I care not if I love; to-day she saith
+ She loveth, and love's history is complete.
+ Nor care I if she love me; at her feet
+ My spirit bows entranced and worshippeth.
+
+ I have no care for what was most my care,
+ But all around me see fresh beauty born,
+ And common sights grown lovelier than they were:
+ I dream of love, and in the light of morn
+ Tremble, beholding all things very fair
+ And strong with strength that puts my strength to scorn.
+
+
+ 34
+
+ _O my goddess divine_ sometimes I say:--
+ Now let this word for ever and all suffice;
+ Thou art insatiable, and yet not twice
+ Can even thy lover give his soul away:
+ And for my acts, that at thy feet I lay;
+ For never any other, by device
+ Of wisdom, love or beauty, could entice
+ My homage to the measure of this day.
+
+ I have no more to give thee: lo, I have sold
+ My life, have emptied out my heart, and spent
+ Whate'er I had; till like a beggar, bold
+ With nought to lose, I laugh and am content.
+ A beggar kisses thee; nay, love, behold,
+ I fear not: thou too art in beggarment.
+
+
+ 35
+
+ All earthly beauty hath one cause and proof,
+ To lead the pilgrim soul to beauty above:
+ Yet lieth the greater bliss so far aloof,
+ That few there be are wean'd from earthly love.
+ Joy's ladder it is, reaching from home to home,
+ The best of all the work that all was good;
+ Whereof 'twas writ the angels aye upclomb,
+ Down sped, and at the top the Lord God stood.
+
+ But I my time abuse, my eyes by day
+ Center'd on thee, by night my heart on fire--
+ Letting my number'd moments run away--
+ Nor e'en 'twixt night and day to heaven aspire:
+ So true it is that what the eye seeth not
+ But slow is loved, and loved is soon forgot.
+
+
+ 36
+
+ O my life's mischief, once my love's delight,
+ That drew'st a mortgage on my heart's estate,
+ Whose baneful clause is never out of date,
+ Nor can avenging time restore my right:
+ Whom first to lose sounded that note of spite,
+ Whereto my doleful days were tuned by fate:
+ That art the well-loved cause of all my hate,
+ The sun whose wandering makes my hopeless night:
+
+ Thou being in all my lacking all I lack,
+ It is thy goodness turns my grace to crime,
+ Thy fleetness from my goal which holds me back;
+ Wherefore my feet go out of step with time,
+ My very grasp of life is old and slack,
+ And even my passion falters in my rhyme.
+
+
+ 37
+
+ At times with hurried hoofs and scattering dust
+ I race by field or highway, and my horse
+ Spare not, but urge direct in headlong course
+ Unto some fair far hill that gain I must:
+ But near arrived the vision soon mistrust,
+ Rein in, and stand as one who sees the source
+ Of strong illusion, shaming thought to force
+ From off his mind the soil of passion's gust.
+
+ My brow I bare then, and with slacken'd speed
+ Can view the country pleasant on all sides,
+ And to kind salutation give good heed:
+ I ride as one who for his pleasure rides,
+ And stroke the neck of my delighted steed,
+ And seek what cheer the village inn provides.
+
+
+ 38
+
+ An idle June day on the sunny Thames,
+ Floating or rowing as our fancy led,
+ Now in the high beams basking as we sped,
+ Now in green shade gliding by mirror'd stems;
+ By lock and weir and isle, and many a spot
+ Of memoried pleasure, glad with strength and skill,
+ Friendship, good wine, and mirth, that serve not ill
+ The heavenly Muse, tho' she requite them not:
+
+ I would have life--thou saidst--all as this day,
+ Simple enjoyment calm in its excess,
+ With not a grief to cloud, and not a ray
+ Of passion overhot my peace to oppress;
+ With no ambition to reproach delay,
+ Nor rapture to disturb its happiness.
+
+
+ 39
+
+ A man that sees by chance his picture, made
+ As once a child he was, handling some toy,
+ Will gaze to find his spirit within the boy,
+ Yet hath no secret with the soul pourtray'd:
+ He cannot think the simple thought which play'd
+ Upon those features then so frank and coy;
+ 'Tis his, yet oh! not his: and o'er the joy
+ His fatherly pity bends in tears dismay'd.
+
+ Proud of his prime maybe he stand at best,
+ And lightly wear his strength, or aim it high,
+ In knowledge, skill and courage self-possest:--
+ Yet in the pictured face a charm doth lie,
+ The one thing lost more worth than all the rest,
+ Which seeing, he fears to say _This child was I_.
+
+
+ 40
+
+ Tears of love, tears of joy and tears of care,
+ Comforting tears that fell uncomforted,
+ Tears o'er the new-born, tears beside the dead,
+ Tears of hope, pride and pity, trust and prayer,
+ Tears of contrition; all tears whatsoe'er
+ Of tenderness or kindness had she shed
+ Who here is pictured, ere upon her head
+ The fine gold might be turn'd to silver there.
+
+ The smile that charm'd the father hath given place
+ Unto the furrow'd care wrought by the son;
+ But virtue hath transform'd all change to grace:
+ So that I praise the artist, who hath done
+ A portrait, for my worship, of the face
+ Won by the heart my father's heart that won.
+
+
+ 41
+
+ If I coud but forget and not recall
+ So well my time of pleasure and of play,
+ When ancient nature was all new and gay,
+ Light as the fashion that doth last enthrall,--
+ Ah mighty nature, when my heart was small,
+ Nor dream'd what fearful searchings underlay
+ The flowers and leafy ecstasy of May,
+ The breathing summer sloth, the scented fall:
+
+ Coud I forget, then were the fight not hard,
+ Press'd in the mêlée of accursed things,
+ Having such help in love and such reward:
+ But that 'tis I who once--'tis this that stings--
+ Once dwelt within the gate that angels guard,
+ Where yet I'd be had I but heavenly wings.
+
+
+ 42
+
+ When I see childhood on the threshold seize
+ The prize of life from age and likelihood,
+ I mourn time's change that will not be withstood,
+ Thinking how Christ said _Be like one of these_.
+ For in the forest among many trees
+ Scarce one in all is found that hath made good
+ The virgin pattern of its slender wood,
+ That courtesied in joy to every breeze;
+
+ But scath'd, but knotted trunks that raise on high
+ Their arms in stiff contortion, strain'd and bare;
+ Whose patriarchal crowns in sorrow sigh.
+ So, little children, ye--nay nay, ye ne'er
+ From me shall learn how sure the change and nigh,
+ When ye shall share our strength and mourn to share.
+
+
+ 43
+
+ When parch'd with thirst, astray on sultry sand
+ The traveller faints, upon his closing ear
+ Steals a fantastic music: he may hear
+ The babbling fountain of his native land.
+ Before his eyes the vision seems to stand,
+ Where at its terraced brink the maids appear,
+ Who fill their deep urns at its waters clear,
+ And not refuse the help of lover's hand.
+
+ O cruel jest--he cries, as some one flings
+ The sparkling drops in sport or shew of ire--
+ O shameless, O contempt of holy things.
+ But never of their wanton play they tire,
+ As not athirst they sit beside the springs,
+ While he must quench in death his lost desire.
+
+
+ 44
+
+ The image of thy love, rising on dark
+ And desperate days over my sullen sea,
+ Wakens again fresh hope and peace in me,
+ Gleaming above upon my groaning bark.
+ Whate'er my sorrow be, I then may hark
+ A loving voice: whate'er my terror be,
+ This heavenly comfort still I win from thee,
+ To shine my lodestar that wert once my mark.
+
+ Prodigal nature makes us but to taste
+ One perfect joy, which given she niggard grows;
+ And lest her precious gift should run to waste,
+ Adds to its loss a thousand lesser woes:
+ So to the memory of the gift that graced
+ Her hand, her graceless hand more grace bestows.
+
+
+ 45
+
+ In this neglected, ruin'd edifice
+ Of works unperfected and broken schemes,
+ Where is the promise of my early dreams,
+ The smile of beauty and the pearl of price?
+ No charm is left now that could once entice
+ Wind-wavering fortune from her golden streams,
+ And full in flight decrepit purpose seems,
+ Trailing the banner of his old device.
+
+ Within the house a frore and numbing air
+ Has chill'd endeavour: sickly memories reign
+ In every room, and ghosts are on the stair:
+ And hope behind the dusty window-pane
+ Watches the days go by, and bow'd with care
+ Forecasts her last reproach and mortal stain.
+
+
+ 46
+
+ Once I would say, before thy vision came,
+ _My joy_, _my life_, _my love_, and with some kind
+ Of knowledge speak, and think I knew my mind
+ Of heaven and hope, and each word hit its aim.
+ Whate'er their sounds be, now all mean the same,
+ Denoting each the fair that none can find;
+ Or if I say them, 'tis as one long blind
+ Forgets the sights that he was used to name.
+
+ Now if men speak of love, 'tis not my love;
+ Nor are their hopes nor joys mine, nor their life
+ Of praise the life that I think honour of:
+ Nay tho' they turn from house and child and wife
+ And self, and in the thought of heaven above
+ Hold, as do I, all mortal things at strife.
+
+
+ 47
+
+ Since then 'tis only pity looking back,
+ Fear looking forward, and the busy mind
+ Will in one woeful moment more upwind
+ Than lifelong years unroll of bitter or black;
+ What is man's privilege, his hoarding knack
+ Of memory with foreboding so combined,
+ Whereby he comes to dream he hath of kind
+ The perpetuity which all things lack?
+
+ Which but to hope is doubtful joy, to have
+ Being a continuance of what, alas,
+ We mourn, and scarcely bear with to the grave;
+ Or something so unknown that it o'erpass
+ The thought of comfort, and the sense that gave
+ Cannot consider it thro' any glass.
+
+
+ 48
+
+ Come gentle sleep, I woo thee: come and take
+ Not now the child into thine arms, from fright
+ Composed by drowsy tune and shaded light,
+ Whom ignorant of thee thou didst nurse and make;
+ Nor now the boy, who scorn'd thee for the sake
+ Of growing knowledge or mysterious night,
+ Tho' with fatigue thou didst his limbs invite,
+ And heavily weigh the eyes that would not wake;
+
+ No, nor the man severe, who from his best
+ Failing, alert fled to thee, that his breath,
+ Blood, force and fire should come at morn redrest;
+ But me, from whom thy comfort tarrieth,
+ For all my wakeful prayer sent without rest
+ To thee, O shew and shadow of my death.
+
+
+ 49
+
+ The spirit's eager sense for sad or gay
+ Filleth with what he will our vessel full:
+ Be joy his bent, he waiteth not joy's day
+ But like a child at any toy will pull:
+ If sorrow, he will weep for fancy's sake,
+ And spoil heaven's plenty with forbidden care.
+ What fortune most denies we slave to take;
+ Nor can fate load us more than we can bear.
+
+ Since pleasure with the having disappeareth,
+ He who hath least in hand hath most at heart,
+ While he keep hope: as he who alway feareth
+ A grief that never comes hath yet the smart;
+ And heavier far is our self-wrought distress,
+ For when God sendeth sorrow, it doth bless.
+
+
+ 50
+
+ The world comes not to an end: her city-hives
+ Swarm with the tokens of a changeless trade,
+ With rolling wheel, driver and flagging jade,
+ Rich men and beggars, children, priests and wives.
+ New homes on old are set, as lives on lives;
+ Invention with invention overlaid:
+ But still or tool or toy or book or blade
+ Shaped for the hand, that holds and toils and strives.
+
+ The men to-day toil as their fathers taught,
+ With little better'd means; for works depend
+ On works and overlap, and thought on thought:
+ And thro' all change the smiles of hope amend
+ The weariest face, the same love changed in nought:
+ In this thing too the world comes not to an end.
+
+
+ 51
+
+ O my uncared-for songs, what are ye worth,
+ That in my secret book with so much care
+ I write you, this one here and that one there,
+ Marking the time and order of your birth?
+ How, with a fancy so unkind to mirth,
+ A sense so hard, a style so worn and bare,
+ Look ye for any welcome anywhere
+ From any shelf or heart-home on the earth?
+
+ Should others ask you this, say then I yearn'd
+ To write you such as once, when I was young,
+ Finding I should have loved and thereto turn'd.
+ 'Twere something yet to live again among
+ The gentle youth beloved, and where I learn'd
+ My art, be there remember'd for my song.
+
+
+ 52
+
+ Who takes the census of the living dead,
+ Ere the day come when memory shall o'ercrowd
+ The kingdom of their fame, and for that proud
+ And airy people find no room nor stead?
+ Ere hoarding Time, that ever thrusteth back
+ The fairest treasures of his ancient store,
+ Better with best confound, so he may pack
+ His greedy gatherings closer, more and more?
+
+ Let the true Muse rewrite her sullied page,
+ And purge her story of the men of hate,
+ That they go dirgeless down to Satan's rage
+ With all else foul, deform'd and miscreate:
+ She hath full toil to keep the names of love
+ Honour'd on earth, as they are bright above.
+
+
+ 53
+
+ I heard great Hector sounding war's alarms,
+ Where thro' the listless ghosts chiding he strode,
+ As tho' the Greeks besieged his last abode,
+ And he his Troy's hope still, her king-at-arms.
+ But on those gentle meads, which Lethe charms
+ With weary oblivion, his passion glow'd
+ Like the cold night-worm's candle, and only show'd
+ Such mimic flame as neither heats nor harms.
+
+ 'Twas plain to read, even by those shadows quaint,
+ How rude catastrophe had dim'd his day,
+ And blighted all his cheer with stern complaint:
+ _To arms! to arms!_ what more the voice would say
+ Was swallow'd in the valleys, and grew faint
+ Upon the thin air, as he pass'd away.
+
+
+ 54
+
+ Since not the enamour'd sun with glance more fond
+ Kisses the foliage of his sacred tree,
+ Than doth my waking thought arise on thee,
+ Loving none near thee, like thee nor beyond;
+ Nay, since I am sworn thy slave, and in the bond
+ Is writ my promise of eternity;
+ Since to such high hope thou'st encouraged me,
+ That if thou look but from me I despond;
+
+ Since thou'rt my all in all, O think of this:
+ Think of the dedication of my youth:
+ Think of my loyalty, my joy, my bliss:
+ Think of my sorrow, my despair and ruth,
+ My sheer annihilation if I miss:
+ Think--if thou shouldst be false--think of thy truth.
+
+
+ 55
+
+ These meagre rhymes, which a returning mood
+ Sometimes o'errateth, I as oft despise;
+ And knowing them illnatured, stiff and rude,
+ See them as others with contemptuous eyes.
+ Nay, and I wonder less at God's respect
+ For man, a minim jot in time and space,
+ Than at the soaring faith of His elect,
+ That gift of gifts, the comfort of His grace.
+
+ O truth unsearchable, O heavenly love,
+ Most infinitely tender, so to touch
+ The work that we can meanly reckon of:
+ Surely--I say--we are favour'd overmuch.
+ But of this wonder, what doth most amaze
+ Is that we know our love is held for praise.
+
+
+ 56
+
+ Beauty sat with me all the summer day,
+ Awaiting the sure triumph of her eye;
+ Nor mark'd I till we parted, how, hard by,
+ Love in her train stood ready for his prey.
+ She, as too proud to join herself the fray,
+ Trusting too much to her divine ally,
+ When she saw victory tarry, chid him--'Why
+ Dost thou not at one stroke this rebel slay?'
+
+ Then generous Love, who holds my heart in fee,
+ Told of our ancient truce: so from the fight
+ We straight withdrew our forces, all the three.
+ Baffled but not dishearten'd she took flight
+ Scheming new tactics: Love came home with me,
+ And prompts my measured verses as I write.
+
+
+ 57
+
+ In autumn moonlight, when the white air wan
+ Is fragrant in the wake of summer hence,
+ 'Tis sweet to sit entranced, and muse thereon
+ In melancholy and godlike indolence:
+ When the proud spirit, lull'd by mortal prime
+ To fond pretence of immortality,
+ Vieweth all moments from the birth of time,
+ All things whate'er have been or yet shall be.
+
+ And like the garden, where the year is spent,
+ The ruin of old life is full of yearning,
+ Mingling poetic rapture of lament
+ With flowers and sunshine of spring's sure returning;
+ Only in visions of the white air wan
+ By godlike fancy seized and dwelt upon.
+
+
+ 58
+
+ When first I saw thee, dearest, if I say
+ The spells that conjure back the hour and place,
+ And evermore I look upon thy face,
+ As in the spring of years long pass'd away;
+ No fading of thy beauty's rich array,
+ No detriment of age on thee I trace,
+ But time's defeat written in spoils of grace,
+ From rivals robb'd, whom thou didst pity and slay.
+
+ So hath thy growth been, thus thy faith is true,
+ Unchanged in change, still to my growing sense,
+ To life's desire the same, and nothing new:
+ But as thou wert in dream and prescience
+ At love's arising, now thou stand'st to view
+ In the broad noon of his magnificence.
+
+
+ 59
+
+ 'Twas on the very day winter took leave
+ Of those fair fields I love, when to the skies
+ The fragrant Earth was smiling in surprise
+ At that her heaven-descended, quick reprieve,
+ I wander'd forth my sorrow to relieve;
+ Yet walk'd amid sweet pleasure in such wise
+ As Adam went alone in Paradise,
+ Before God of His pity fashion'd Eve.
+
+ And out of tune with all the joy around
+ I laid me down beneath a flowering tree,
+ And o'er my senses crept a sleep profound;
+ In which it seem'd that thou wert given to me,
+ Rending my body, where with hurried sound
+ I feel my heart beat, when I think of thee.
+
+
+ 60
+
+ Love that I know, love I am wise in, love,
+ My strength, my pride, my grace, my skill untaught,
+ My faith here upon earth, my hope above,
+ My contemplation and perpetual thought:
+ The pleasure of my fancy, my heart's fire,
+ My joy, my peace, my praise, my happy theme,
+ The aim of all my doing, my desire
+ Of being, my life by day, by night my dream:
+
+ Love, my sweet melancholy, my distress,
+ My pain, my doubt, my trouble, my despair,
+ My only folly and unhappiness,
+ And in my careless moments still my care:
+ O love, sweet love, earthly love, love divine,
+ Say'st thou to-day, O love, that thou art mine?
+
+
+ 61
+
+ The dark and serious angel, who so long
+ Vex'd his immortal strength in charge of me,
+ Hath smiled for joy and fled in liberty
+ To take his pastime with the peerless throng.
+ Oft had I done his noble keeping wrong,
+ Wounding his heart to wonder what might be
+ God's purpose in a soul of such degree;
+ And there he had left me but for mandate strong.
+
+ But seeing thee with me now, his task at close
+ He knoweth, and wherefore he was bid to stay,
+ And work confusion of so many foes:
+ The thanks that he doth look for, here I pay,
+ Yet fear some heavenly envy, as he goes
+ Unto what great reward I cannot say.
+
+
+ 62
+
+ I will be what God made me, nor protest
+ Against the bent of genius in my time,
+ That science of my friends robs all the best,
+ While I love beauty, and was born to rhyme.
+ Be they our mighty men, and let me dwell
+ In shadow among the mighty shades of old,
+ With love's forsaken palace for my cell;
+ Whence I look forth and all the world behold,
+
+ And say, These better days, in best things worse,
+ This bastardy of time's magnificence,
+ Will mend in fashion and throw off the curse,
+ To crown new love with higher excellence.
+ Curs'd tho' I be to live my life alone,
+ My toil is for man's joy, his joy my own.
+
+
+ 63
+
+ I live on hope and that I think do all
+ Who come into this world, and since I see
+ Myself in swim with such good company,
+ I take my comfort whatsoe'er befall.
+ I abide and abide, as if more stout and tall
+ My spirit would grow by waiting like a tree;
+ And, clear of others' toil, it pleaseth me
+ In dreams their quick ambition to forestall.
+
+ And if thro' careless eagerness I slide
+ To some accomplishment, I give my voice
+ Still to desire, and in desire abide.
+ I have no stake abroad; if I rejoice
+ In what is done or doing, I confide
+ Neither to friend nor foe my secret choice.
+
+
+ 64
+
+ Ye blessed saints, that now in heaven enjoy
+ The purchase of those tears, the world's disdain,
+ Doth Love still with his war your peace annoy,
+ Or hath Death freed you from his ancient pain?
+ Have ye no springtide, and no burst of May
+ In flowers and leafy trees, when solemn night
+ Pants with love-music, and the holy day
+ Breaks on the ear with songs of heavenly light?
+
+ What make ye and what strive for? keep ye thought
+ Of us, or in new excellence divine
+ Is old forgot? or do ye count for nought
+ What the Greek did and what the Florentine?
+ We keep your memories well: O in your store
+ Live not our best joys treasured evermore?
+
+
+ 65
+
+ Ah heavenly joy! But who hath ever heard,
+ Who hath seen joy, or who shall ever find
+ Joy's language? There is neither speech nor word;
+ Nought but itself to teach it to mankind.
+ Scarce in our twenty thousand painful days
+ We may touch something: but there lives--beyond
+ The best of art, or nature's kindest phase--
+ The hope whereof our spirit is fain and fond:
+
+ The cause of beauty given to man's desires
+ Writ in the expectancy of starry skies,
+ The faith which gloweth in our fleeting fires,
+ The aim of all the good that here we prize;
+ Which but to love, pursue and pray for well
+ Maketh earth heaven, and to forget it, hell.
+
+
+ 66
+
+ My wearied heart, whenever, after all,
+ Its loves and yearnings shall be told complete,
+ When gentle death shall bid it cease to beat,
+ And from all dear illusions disenthrall:
+ However then thou shalt appear to call
+ My fearful heart, since down at others' feet
+ It bade me kneel so oft, I'll not retreat
+ From thee, nor fear before thy feet to fall.
+
+ And I shall say, 'Receive this loving heart
+ Which err'd in sorrow only; and in sin
+ Took no delight; but being forced apart
+ From thee, without thee hoping thee to win,
+ Most prized what most thou madest as thou art
+ On earth, till heaven were open to enter in.'
+
+
+ 67
+
+ Dreary was winter, wet with changeful sting
+ Of clinging snowfall and fast-flying frost;
+ And bitterer northwinds then withheld the spring,
+ That dallied with her promise till 'twas lost.
+ A sunless and half-hearted summer drown'd
+ The flowers in needful and unwelcom'd rain;
+ And Autumn with a sad smile fled uncrown'd
+ From fruitless orchards and unripen'd grain.
+
+ But coud the skies of this most desolate year
+ In its last month learn with our love to glow,
+ Men yet should rank its cloudless atmosphere
+ Above the sunsets of five years ago:
+ Of my great praise too part should be its own,
+ Now reckon'd peerless for thy love alone.
+
+
+ 68
+
+ Away now, lovely Muse, roam and be free:
+ Our commerce ends for aye, thy task is done:
+ Tho' to win thee I left all else unwon,
+ Thou, whom I most have won, art not for me.
+ My first desire, thou too forgone must be,
+ Thou too, O much lamented now, tho' none
+ Will turn to pity thy forsaken son,
+ Nor thy divine sisters will weep for thee.
+
+ None will weep for thee: thou return, O Muse,
+ To thy Sicilian fields: I once have been
+ On thy loved hills, and where thou first didst use
+ Thy sweetly balanced rhyme, O thankless queen,
+ Have pluck'd and wreath'd thy flowers; but do thou choose
+ Some happier brow to wear thy garlands green.
+
+
+ 69
+
+ Eternal Father, who didst all create,
+ In whom we live, and to whose bosom move,
+ To all men be Thy name known, which is Love,
+ Till its loud praises sound at heaven's high gate.
+ Perfect Thy kingdom in our passing state,
+ That here on earth Thou may'st as well approve
+ Our service, as Thou ownest theirs above,
+ Whose joy we echo and in pain await.
+
+ Grant body and soul each day their daily bread:
+ And should in spite of grace fresh woe begin,
+ Even as our anger soon is past and dead
+ Be Thy remembrance mortal of our sin:
+ By Thee in paths of peace Thy sheep be led,
+ And in the vale of terror comforted.
+
+ [Illustration: Robert Bridges]
+
+
+
+
+ SHORTER POEMS
+
+ _in Five Books_
+
+
+
+
+ _PREVIOUS EDITIONS_
+
+ 1. _Bks. I-IV. Clarendon Press. Geo. Bell & Sons, Oct. 1890._
+ _Reprinted, Nov. 1890, 1891, 1894._
+
+ 2. _Bks. I-V. Private Press of H. Daniel. Oxford, 1894._
+
+ 3. _Do. do. Clarendon Press. George Bell & Sons, 1896._
+
+ 4. _Cheap issue of 3. 1899. Reprinted, 1899._
+
+ 5. _Poetical works of R. B. Smith, Elder & Co., 1899, vol. II._
+
+ _An account of earlier issues of first four books is given in notes
+ at end of 5._
+
+
+
+
+ SHORTER POEMS
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK I
+
+ DEDICATED TO H. E. W.
+
+
+ 1
+
+ ELEGY
+
+ Clear and gentle stream!
+ Known and loved so long,
+ That hast heard the song
+ And the idle dream
+ Of my boyish day;
+ While I once again
+ Down thy margin stray,
+ In the selfsame strain
+ Still my voice is spent,
+ With my old lament
+ And my idle dream,
+ Clear and gentle stream!
+
+ Where my old seat was
+ Here again I sit,
+ Where the long boughs knit
+ Over stream and grass
+ A translucent eaves:
+ Where back eddies play
+ Shipwreck with the leaves,
+ And the proud swans stray,
+ Sailing one by one
+ Out of stream and sun,
+ And the fish lie cool
+ In their chosen pool.
+
+ Many an afternoon
+ Of the summer day
+ Dreaming here I lay;
+ And I know how soon,
+ Idly at its hour,
+ First the deep bell hums
+ From the minster tower,
+ And then evening comes,
+ Creeping up the glade,
+ With her lengthening shade,
+ And the tardy boon
+ Of her brightening moon.
+
+ Clear and gentle stream!
+ Ere again I go
+ Where thou dost not flow,
+ Well does it beseem
+ Thee to hear again
+ Once my youthful song,
+ That familiar strain
+ Silent now so long:
+ Be as I content
+ With my old lament
+ And my idle dream,
+ Clear and gentle stream.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ ELEGY
+
+ The wood is bare: a river-mist is steeping
+ The trees that winter's chill of life bereaves:
+ Only their stiffened boughs break silence, weeping
+ Over their fallen leaves;
+
+ That lie upon the dank earth brown and rotten,
+ Miry and matted in the soaking wet:
+ Forgotten with the spring, that is forgotten
+ By them that can forget.
+
+ Yet it was here we walked when ferns were springing,
+ And through the mossy bank shot bud and blade:-
+ Here found in summer, when the birds were singing,
+ A green and pleasant shade.
+
+ 'Twas here we loved in sunnier days and greener;
+ And now, in this disconsolate decay,
+ I come to see her where I most have seen her,
+ And touch the happier day.
+
+ For on this path, at every turn and corner,
+ The fancy of her figure on me falls;
+ Yet walks she with the slow step of a mourner,
+ Nor hears my voice that calls.
+
+ So through my heart there winds a track of feeling,
+ A path of memory, that is all her own:
+ Whereto her phantom beauty ever stealing
+ Haunts the sad spot alone.
+
+ About her steps the trunks are bare, the branches
+ Drip heavy tears upon her downcast head;
+ And bleed from unseen wounds that no sun stanches,
+ For the year's sun is dead.
+
+ And dead leaves wrap the fruits that summer planted:
+ And birds that love the South have taken wing.
+ The wanderer, loitering o'er the scene enchanted,
+ Weeps, and despairs of spring.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Poor withered rose and dry,
+ Skeleton of a rose,
+ Risen to testify
+ To love's sad close:
+
+ Treasured for love's sweet sake,
+ That of joy past
+ Thou might'st again awake
+ Memory at last.
+
+ Yet is thy perfume sweet;
+ Thy petals red
+ Yet tell of summer heat,
+ And the gay bed:
+
+ Yet, yet recall the glow
+ Of the gazing sun,
+ When at thy bush we two
+ Joined hands in one.
+
+ But, rose, thou hast not seen,
+ Thou hast not wept
+ The change that passed between,
+ Whilst thou hast slept.
+
+ To me thou seemest yet
+ The dead dream's thrall:
+ While I live and forget
+ Dream, truth and all.
+
+ Thou art more fresh than I,
+ Rose, sweet and red:
+ Salt on my pale cheeks lie
+ The tears I shed.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ THE CLIFF-TOP
+
+ The cliff-top has a carpet
+ Of lilac, gold and green:
+ The blue sky bounds the ocean,
+ The white clouds scud between.
+
+ A flock of gulls are wheeling
+ And wailing round my seat;
+ Above my head the heaven,
+ The sea beneath my feet.
+
+ THE OCEAN.
+
+ Were I a cloud I'd gather
+ My skirts up in the air,
+ And fly I well know whither,
+ And rest I well know where.
+
+ As pointed the star surely,
+ The legend tells of old,
+ Where the wise kings might offer
+ Myrrh, frankincense, and gold;
+
+ Above the house I'd hover
+ Where dwells my love, and wait
+ Till haply I might spy her
+ Throw back the garden-gate.
+
+ There in the summer evening
+ I would bedeck the moon;
+ I would float down and screen her
+ From the sun's rays at noon;
+
+ And if her flowers should languish,
+ Or wither in the drought
+ Upon her tall white lilies
+ I'd pour my heart's blood out:
+
+ So if she wore one only,
+ And shook not out the rain,
+ Were I a cloud, O cloudlet,
+ I had not lived in vain.
+
+ [_A cloud speaks._
+
+
+ A CLOUD.
+
+ But were I thou, O ocean,
+ I would not chafe and fret
+ As thou, because a limit
+ To thy desires is set.
+
+ I would be blue, and gentle,
+ Patient, and calm, and see
+ If my smiles might not tempt her,
+ My love, to come to me.
+
+ I'd make my depths transparent,
+ And still, that she should lean
+ O'er the boat's edge to ponder
+ The sights that swam between.
+
+ I would command strange creatures,
+ Of bright hue and quick fin,
+ To stir the water near her,
+ And tempt her bare arm in.
+
+ I'd teach her spend the summer
+ With me: and I can tell,
+ That, were I thou, O ocean,
+ My love should love me well.
+
+ * * *
+
+ But on the mad cloud scudded,
+ The breeze it blew so stiff;
+ And the sad ocean bellowed,
+ And pounded at the cliff.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ I heard a linnet courting
+ His lady in the spring:
+ His mates were idly sporting,
+ Nor stayed to hear him sing
+ His song of love.--
+ I fear my speech distorting
+ His tender love.
+
+ The phrases of his pleading
+ Were full of young delight;
+ And she that gave him heeding
+ Interpreted aright
+ His gay, sweet notes,--
+ So sadly marred in the reading,--
+ His tender notes.
+
+ And when he ceased, the hearer
+ Awaited the refrain,
+ Till swiftly perching nearer
+ He sang his song again,
+ His pretty song:--
+ Would that my verse spake clearer
+ His tender song!
+
+ Ye happy, airy creatures!
+ That in the merry spring
+ Think not of what misfeatures
+ Or cares the year may bring;
+ But unto love
+ Resign your simple natures,
+ To tender love.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Dear lady, when thou frownest,
+ And my true love despisest,
+ And all thy vows disownest
+ That sealed my venture wisest;
+ I think thy pride's displeasure
+ Neglects a matchless treasure
+ Exceeding price and measure.
+
+ But when again thou smilest,
+ And love for love returnest,
+ And fear with joy beguilest,
+ And takest truth in earnest;
+ Then, though I sheer adore thee,
+ The sum of my love for thee
+ Seems poor, scant, and unworthy.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ Ends all our month-long love in this?
+ Can it be summed up so,
+ Quit in a single kiss?
+ I will not let thee go.
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ If thy words' breath could scare thy deeds,
+ As the soft south can blow
+ And toss the feathered seeds,
+ Then might I let thee go.
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ Had not the great sun seen, I might;
+ Or were he reckoned slow
+ To bring the false to light,
+ Then might I let thee go.
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ The stars that crowd the summer skies
+ Have watched us so below
+ With all their million eyes,
+ I dare not let thee go.
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ Have we not chid the changeful moon,
+ Now rising late, and now
+ Because she set too soon,
+ And shall I let thee go?
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ Have not the young flowers been content,
+ Plucked ere their buds could blow,
+ To seal our sacrament?
+ I cannot let thee go.
+
+ I will not let thee go.
+ I hold thee by too many bands:
+ Thou sayest farewell, and lo!
+ I have thee by the hands,
+ And will not let thee go.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ I found to-day out walking
+ The flower my love loves best.
+ What, when I stooped to pluck it,
+ Could dare my hand arrest?
+
+ Was it a snake lay curling
+ About the root's thick crown?
+ Or did some hidden bramble
+ Tear my hand reaching down?
+
+ There was no snake uncurling,
+ And no thorn wounded me;
+ 'Twas my heart checked me, sighing
+ She is beyond the sea.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ A poppy grows upon the shore,
+ Bursts her twin cup in summer late:
+ Her leaves are glaucous-green and hoar,
+ Her petals yellow, delicate.
+
+ Oft to her cousins turns her thought,
+ In wonder if they care that she
+ Is fed with spray for dew, and caught
+ By every gale that sweeps the sea.
+
+ She has no lovers like the red,
+ That dances with the noble corn:
+ Her blossoms on the waves are shed,
+ Where she stands shivering and forlorn.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ Sometimes when my lady sits by me
+ My rapture's so great, that I tear
+ My mind from the thought that she's nigh me,
+ And strive to forget that she's there.
+ And sometimes when she is away
+ Her absence so sorely does try me,
+ That I shut to my eyes, and assay
+ To think she is there sitting by me.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ Long are the hours the sun is above,
+ But when evening comes I go home to my love.
+
+ I'm away the daylight hours and more,
+ Yet she comes not down to open the door.
+
+ She does not meet me upon the stair,--
+ She sits in my chamber and waits for me there.
+
+ As I enter the room she does not move:
+ I always walk straight up to my love;
+
+ And she lets me take my wonted place
+ At her side, and gaze in her dear dear face.
+
+ There as I sit, from her head thrown back
+ Her hair falls straight in a shadow black.
+
+ Aching and hot as my tired eyes be,
+ She is all that I wish to see.
+
+ And in my wearied and toil-dinned ear,
+ She says all things that I wish to hear.
+
+ Dusky and duskier grows the room,
+ Yet I see her best in the darker gloom.
+
+ When the winter eves are early and cold,
+ The firelight hours are a dream of gold.
+
+ And so I sit here night by night,
+ In rest and enjoyment of love's delight.
+
+ But a knock at the door, a step on the stair
+ Will startle, alas, my love from her chair.
+
+ If a stranger comes she will not stay:
+ At the first alarm she is off and away.
+
+ And he wonders, my guest, usurping her throne,
+ That I sit so much by myself alone.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Who has not walked upon the shore,
+ And who does not the morning know,
+ The day the angry gale is o'er,
+ The hour the wind has ceased to blow?
+
+ The horses of the strong south-west
+ Are pastured round his tropic tent,
+ Careless how long the ocean's breast
+ Sob on and sigh for passion spent.
+
+ The frightened birds, that fled inland
+ To house in rock and tower and tree,
+ Are gathering on the peaceful strand,
+ To tempt again the sunny sea;
+
+ Whereon the timid ships steal out
+ And laugh to find their foe asleep,
+ That lately scattered them about,
+ And drave them to the fold like sheep.
+
+ The snow-white clouds he northward chased
+ Break into phalanx, line, and band:
+ All one way to the south they haste,
+ The south, their pleasant fatherland.
+
+ From distant hills their shadows creep,
+ Arrive in turn and mount the lea,
+ And flit across the downs, and leap
+ Sheer off the cliff upon the sea;
+
+ And sail and sail far out of sight.
+ But still I watch their fleecy trains,
+ That piling all the south with light,
+ Dapple in France the fertile plains.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ I made another song,
+ In likeness of my love:
+ And sang it all day long,
+ Around, beneath, above;
+ I told my secret out,
+ That none might be in doubt.
+
+ I sang it to the sky,
+ That veiled his face to hear
+ How far her azure eye
+ Outdoes his splendid sphere;
+ But at her eyelids' name
+ His white clouds fled for shame.
+
+ I told it to the trees,
+ And to the flowers confest,
+ And said not one of these
+ Is like my lily drest;
+ Nor spathe nor petal dared
+ Vie with her body bared.
+
+ I shouted to the sea,
+ That set his waves a-prance;
+ Her floating hair is free,
+ Free are her feet to dance;
+ And for thy wrath, I swear
+ Her frown is more to fear.
+
+ And as in happy mood
+ I walked and sang alone,
+ At eve beside the wood
+ I met my love, my own:
+ And sang to her the song
+ I had sung all day long.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ ELEGY
+
+ ON A LADY WHOM GRIEF FOR THE DEATH OF HER
+ BETROTHED KILLED
+
+ Assemble, all ye maidens, at the door,
+ And all ye loves, assemble; far and wide
+ Proclaim the bridal, that proclaimed before
+ Has been deferred to this late eventide:
+ For on this night the bride,
+ The days of her betrothal over,
+ Leaves the parental hearth for evermore;
+ To-night the bride goes forth to meet her lover.
+
+ Reach down the wedding vesture, that has lain
+ Yet all unvisited, the silken gown:
+ Bring out the bracelets, and the golden chain
+ Her dearer friends provided: sere and brown
+ Bring out the festal crown,
+ And set it on her forehead lightly:
+ Though it be withered, twine no wreath again;
+ This only is the crown she can wear rightly.
+
+ Cloke her in ermine, for the night is cold,
+ And wrap her warmly, for the night is long,
+ In pious hands the flaming torches hold,
+ While her attendants, chosen from among
+ Her faithful virgin throng,
+ May lay her in her cedar litter,
+ Decking her coverlet with sprigs of gold,
+ Roses, and lilies white that best befit her.
+
+ Sound flute and tabor, that the bridal be
+ Not without music, nor with these alone;
+ But let the viol lead the melody,
+ With lesser intervals, and plaintive moan
+ Of sinking semitone;
+ And, all in choir, the virgin voices
+ Rest not from singing in skilled harmony
+ The song that aye the bridegroom's ear rejoices.
+
+ Let the priests go before, arrayed in white,
+ And let the dark-stoled minstrels follow slow,
+ Next they that bear her, honoured on this night,
+ And then the maidens, in a double row,
+ Each singing soft and low,
+ And each on high a torch upstaying:
+ Unto her lover lead her forth with light,
+ With music, and with singing, and with praying.
+
+ 'Twas at this sheltering hour he nightly came,
+ And found her trusty window open wide,
+ And knew the signal of the timorous flame,
+ That long the restless curtain would not hide
+ Her form that stood beside;
+ As scarce she dared to be delighted,
+ Listening to that sweet tale, that is no shame
+ To faithful lovers, that their hearts have plighted.
+
+ But now for many days the dewy grass
+ Has shown no markings of his feet at morn:
+ And watching she has seen no shadow pass
+ The moonlit walk, and heard no music borne
+ Upon her ear forlorn.
+ In vain has she looked out to greet him;
+ He has not come, he will not come, alas!
+ So let us bear her out where she must meet him.
+
+ Now to the river bank the priests are come:
+ The bark is ready to receive its freight:
+ Let some prepare her place therein, and some
+ Embark the litter with its slender weight:
+ The rest stand by in state,
+ And sing her a safe passage over;
+ While she is oared across to her new home,
+ Into the arms of her expectant lover.
+
+ And thou, O lover, that art on the watch,
+ Where, on the banks of the forgetful streams,
+ The pale indifferent ghosts wander, and snatch
+ The sweeter moments of their broken dreams,--
+ Thou, when the torchlight gleams,
+ When thou shalt see the slow procession,
+ And when thine ears the fitful music catch,
+ Rejoice, for thou art near to thy possession.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ RONDEAU
+
+ His poisoned shafts, that fresh he dips
+ In juice of plants that no bee sips,
+ He takes, and with his bow renown'd
+ Goes out upon his hunting ground,
+ Hanging his quiver at his hips.
+
+ He draws them one by one, and clips
+ Their heads between his finger-tips,
+ And looses with a twanging sound
+ His poisoned shafts.
+
+ But if a maiden with her lips
+ Suck from the wound the blood that drips,
+ And drink the poison from the wound,
+ The simple remedy is found
+ That of their deadly terror strips
+ His poisoned shafts.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ TRIOLET
+
+ When first we met we did not guess
+ That Love would prove so hard a master;
+ Of more than common friendliness
+ When first we met we did not guess.
+ Who could foretell this sore distress,
+ This irretrievable disaster
+ When first we met?--We did not guess
+ That Love would prove so hard a master.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ TRIOLET
+
+ All women born are so perverse
+ No man need boast their love possessing.
+ If nought seem better, nothing's worse:
+ All women born are so perverse.
+ From Adam's wife, that proved a curse
+ Though God had made her for a blessing,
+ All women born are so perverse
+ No man need boast their love possessing.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK II
+
+
+ TO
+
+ THE MEMORY OF
+
+ G. M. H.
+
+
+ 1
+
+ MUSE.
+
+ Will Love again awake,
+ That lies asleep so long?
+
+ POET.
+
+ O hush! ye tongues that shake
+ The drowsy night with song.
+
+ MUSE.
+
+ It is a lady fair
+ Whom once he deigned to praise,
+ That at the door doth dare
+ Her sad complaint to raise.
+
+ POET.
+
+ She must be fair of face,
+ As bold of heart she seems,
+ If she would match her grace
+ With the delight of dreams.
+
+ MUSE.
+
+ Her beauty would surprise
+ Gazers on Autumn eves,
+ Who watched the broad moon rise
+ Upon the scattered sheaves.
+
+ POET.
+
+ O sweet must be the voice
+ He shall descend to hear,
+ Who doth in Heaven rejoice
+ His most enchanted ear.
+
+ MUSE.
+
+ The smile, that rests to play
+ Upon her lip, foretells
+ What musical array
+ Tricks her sweet syllables
+
+ POET.
+
+ And yet her smiles have danced
+ In vain, if her discourse
+ Win not the soul entranced
+ In divine intercourse.
+
+ MUSE.
+
+ She will encounter all
+ This trial without shame,
+ Her eyes men Beauty call,
+ And Wisdom is her name.
+
+ POET.
+
+ Throw back the portals then,
+ Ye guards, your watch that keep,
+ Love will awake again
+ That lay so long asleep.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ A PASSER-BY
+
+ Whither, O splendid ship, thy white sails crowding,
+ Leaning across the bosom of the urgent West,
+ That fearest nor sea rising, nor sky clouding,
+ Whither away, fair rover, and what thy quest?
+ Ah! soon, when Winter has all our vales opprest,
+ When skies are cold and misty, and hail is hurling,
+ Wilt thóu glíde on the blue Pacific, or rest
+ In a summer haven asleep, thy white sails furling.
+
+ I there before thee, in the country that well thou knowest,
+ Already arrived am inhaling the odorous air:
+ I watch thee enter unerringly where thou goest,
+ And anchor queen of the strange shipping there,
+ Thy sails for awnings spread, thy masts bare;
+ Nor is aught from the foaming reef to the snow-capped, grandest
+ Peak, that is over the feathery palms more fair
+ Than thou, so upright, so stately, and still thou standest.
+
+ And yet, O splendid ship, unhailed and nameless,
+ I know not if, aiming a fancy, I rightly divine
+ That thou hast a purpose joyful, a courage blameless,
+ Thy port assured in a happier land than mine.
+ But for all I have given thee, beauty enough is thine,
+ As thou, aslant with trim tackle and shrouding,
+ From the proud nostril curve of a prow's line
+ In the offing scatterest foam, thy white sails crowding.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ LATE SPRING EVENING
+
+ I saw the Virgin-mother clad in green,
+ Walking the sprinkled meadows at sundown;
+ While yet the moon's cold flame was hung between
+ The day and night, above the dusky town:
+ I saw her brighter than the Western gold,
+ Whereto she faced in splendour to behold.
+
+ Her dress was greener than the tenderest leaf
+ That trembled in the sunset glare aglow:
+ Herself more delicate than is the brief,
+ Pink apple-blossom, that May showers lay low,
+ And more delicious than 's the earliest streak
+ The blushing rose shows of her crimson cheek.
+
+ As if to match the sight that so did please,
+ A music entered, making passion fain:
+ Three nightingales sat singing in the trees,
+ And praised the Goddess for the fallen rain;
+ Which yet their unseen motions did arouse,
+ Or parting Zephyrs shook out from the boughs.
+
+ And o'er the treetops, scattered in mid air,
+ The exhausted clouds laden with crimson light
+ Floated, or seemed to sleep; and, highest there,
+ One planet broke the lingering ranks of night;
+ Daring day's company, so he might spy
+ The Virgin-queen once with his watchful eye.
+
+ And when I saw her, then I worshipped her,
+ And said,--O bounteous Spring, O beauteous Spring,
+ Mother of all my years, thou who dost stir
+ My heart to adore thee and my tongue to sing,
+ Flower of my fruit, of my heart's blood the fire,
+ Of all my satisfaction the desire!
+
+ How art thou every year more beautiful,
+ Younger for all the winters thou hast cast:
+ And I, for all my love grows, grow more dull,
+ Decaying with each season overpast!
+ In vain to teach him love must man employ thee,
+ The more he learns the less he can enjoy thee.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ WOOING
+
+ I know not how I came,
+ New on my knightly journey,
+ To win the fairest dame
+ That graced my maiden tourney.
+
+ Chivalry's lovely prize
+ With all men's gaze upon her,
+ Why did she free her eyes
+ On me, to do me honour?
+
+ Ah! ne'er had I my mind
+ With such high hope delighted,
+ Had she not first inclined,
+ And with her eyes invited.
+
+ But never doubt I knew,
+ Having their glance to cheer me,
+ Until the day joy grew
+ Too great, too sure, too near me.
+
+ When hope a fear became,
+ And passion, grown too tender,
+ Now trembled at the shame
+ Of a despised surrender;
+
+ And where my love at first
+ Saw kindness in her smiling,
+ I read her pride, and cursed
+ The arts of her beguiling.
+
+ Till winning less than won,
+ And liker wooed than wooing,
+ Too late I turned undone
+ Away from my undoing;
+
+ And stood beside the door,
+ Whereto she followed, making
+ My hard leave-taking more
+ Hard by her sweet leave-taking.
+
+ Her speech would have betrayed
+ Her thought, had mine been colder:
+ Her eyes' distress had made
+ A lesser lover bolder.
+
+ But no! Fond heart, distrust,
+ Cried Wisdom, and consider:
+ Go free, since go thou must:--
+ And so farewell I bid her.
+
+ And brisk upon my way
+ I smote the stroke to sever,
+ And should have lost that day
+ My life's delight for ever:
+
+ But when I saw her start
+ And turn aside and tremble;--
+ Ah! she was true, her heart
+ I knew did not dissemble.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ There is a hill beside the silver Thames,
+ Shady with birch and beech and odorous pine:
+ And brilliant underfoot with thousand gems
+ Steeply the thickets to his floods decline.
+ Straight trees in every place
+ Their thick tops interlace,
+ And pendant branches trail their foliage fine
+ Upon his watery face.
+
+ Swift from the sweltering pasturage he flows:
+ His stream, alert to seek the pleasant shade,
+ Pictures his gentle purpose, as he goes
+ Straight to the caverned pool his toil has made.
+ His winter floods lay bare
+ The stout roots in the air:
+ His summer streams are cool, when they have played
+ Among their fibrous hair.
+
+ A rushy island guards the sacred bower,
+ And hides it from the meadow, where in peace
+ The lazy cows wrench many a scented flower,
+ Robbing the golden market of the bees:
+ And laden barges float
+ By banks of myosote;
+ And scented flag and golden flower-de-lys
+ Delay the loitering boat.
+
+ And on this side the island, where the pool
+ Eddies away, are tangled mass on mass
+ The water-weeds, that net the fishes cool,
+ And scarce allow a narrow stream to pass;
+ Where spreading crowfoot mars
+ The drowning nenuphars,
+ Waving the tassels of her silken grass
+ Below her silver stars.
+
+ But in the purple pool there nothing grows,
+ Not the white water-lily spoked with gold;
+ Though best she loves the hollows, and well knows
+ On quiet streams her broad shields to unfold:
+ Yet should her roots but try
+ Within these deeps to lie,
+ Not her long reaching stalk could ever hold
+ Her waxen head so high.
+
+ Sometimes an angler comes, and drops his hook
+ Within its hidden depths, and 'gainst a tree
+ Leaning his rod, reads in some pleasant book,
+ Forgetting soon his pride of fishery;
+ And dreams, or falls asleep,
+ While curious fishes peep
+ About his nibbled bait, or scornfully
+ Dart off and rise and leap.
+
+ And sometimes a slow figure 'neath the trees,
+ In ancient-fashioned smock, with tottering care
+ Upon a staff propping his weary knees,
+ May by the pathway of the forest fare:
+ As from a buried day
+ Across the mind will stray
+ Some perishing mute shadow,--and unaware
+ He passeth on his way.
+
+ Else, he that wishes solitude is safe,
+ Whether he bathe at morning in the stream:
+ Or lead his love there when the hot hours chafe
+ The meadows, busy with a blurring steam;
+ Or watch, as fades the light,
+ The gibbous moon grow bright,
+ Until her magic rays dance in a dream,
+ And glorify the night.
+
+ Where is this bower beside the silver Thames?
+ O pool and flowery thickets, hear my vow!
+ O trees of freshest foliage and straight stems,
+ No sharer of my secret I allow:
+ Lest ere I come the while
+ Strange feet your shades defile;
+ Or lest the burly oarsman turn his prow
+ Within your guardian isle.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ A WATER-PARTY
+
+ Let us, as by this verdant bank we float,
+ Search down the marge to find some shady pool
+ Where we may rest awhile and moor our boat,
+ And bathe our tired limbs in the waters cool.
+ Beneath the noonday sun,
+ Swiftly, O river, run!
+
+ Here is a mirror for Narcissus, see!
+ I cannot sound it, plumbing with my oar.
+ Lay the stern in beneath this bowering tree!
+ Now, stepping on this stump, we are ashore.
+ Guard, Hamadryades,
+ Our clothes laid by your trees!
+
+ How the birds warble in the woods! I pick
+ The waxen lilies, diving to the root.
+ But swim not far in the stream, the weeds grow thick,
+ And hot on the bare head the sunbeams shoot.
+ Until our sport be done,
+ O merry birds, sing on!
+
+ If but to-night the sky be clear, the moon
+ Will serve us well, for she is near the full.
+ We shall row safely home; only too soon,--
+ So pleasant 'tis, whether we float or pull.
+ To guide us through the night,
+ O summer moon, shine bright!
+
+
+ 7
+
+ THE DOWNS
+
+ O bold majestic downs, smooth, fair and lonely;
+ O still solitude, only matched in the skies:
+ Perilous in steep places,
+ Soft in the level races,
+ Where sweeping in phantom silence the cloudland flies;
+ With lovely undulation of fall and rise;
+ Entrenched with thickets thorned,
+ By delicate miniature dainty flowers adorned!
+
+ I climb your crown, and lo! a sight surprising
+ Of sea in front uprising, steep and wide:
+ And scattered ships ascending
+ To heaven, lost in the blending
+ Of distant blues, where water and sky divide,
+ Urging their engines against wind and tide,
+ And all so small and slow
+ They seem to be wearily pointing the way they would go.
+
+ The accumulated murmur of soft plashing,
+ Of waves on rocks dashing and searching the sands,
+ Takes my ear, in the veering
+ Baffled wind, as rearing
+ Upright at the cliff, to the gullies and rifts he stands;
+ And his conquering surges scour out over the lands;
+ While again at the foot of the downs
+ He masses his strength to recover the topmost crowns.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ SPRING
+
+ ODE I
+
+ INVITATION TO THE COUNTRY
+
+ Again with pleasant green
+ Has Spring renewed the wood,
+ And where the bare trunks stood
+ Are leafy arbours seen;
+ And back on budding boughs
+ Come birds, to court and pair,
+ Whose rival amorous vows
+ Amaze the scented air.
+
+ The freshets are unbound,
+ And leaping from the hill,
+ Their mossy banks refill
+ With streams of light and sound:
+ And scattered down the meads,
+ From hour to hour unfold
+ A thousand buds and beads
+ In stars and cups of gold.
+
+ Now hear, and see, and note,
+ The farms are all astir,
+ And every labourer
+ Has doffed his winter coat;
+ And how with specks of white
+ They dot the brown hillside,
+ Or jaunt and sing outright
+ As by their teams they stride.
+
+ They sing to feel the Sun
+ Regain his wanton strength;
+ To know the year at length
+ Rewards their labour done;
+ To see the rootless stake
+ They set bare in the ground,
+ Burst into leaf, and shake
+ Its grateful scent around.
+
+ Ah now an evil lot
+ Is his, who toils for gain,
+ Where crowded chimneys stain
+ The heavens his choice forgot;
+ 'Tis on the blighted trees
+ That deck his garden dim,
+ And in the tainted breeze,
+ That sweet Spring comes to him.
+
+ Far sooner I would choose
+ The life of brutes that bask,
+ Than set myself a task,
+ Which inborn powers refuse:
+ And rather far enjoy
+ The body, than invent
+ A duty, to destroy
+ The ease which nature sent;
+
+ And country life I praise,
+ And lead, because I find
+ The philosophic mind
+ Can take no middle ways;
+ She will not leave her love
+ To mix with men, her art
+ Is all to strive above
+ The crowd, or stand apart.
+
+ Thrice happy he, the rare
+ Prometheus, who can play
+ With hidden things, and lay
+ New realms of nature bare;
+ Whose venturous step has trod
+ Hell underfoot, and won
+ A crown from man and God
+ For all that he has done.--
+
+ That highest gift of all,
+ Since crabbèd fate did flood
+ My heart with sluggish blood,
+ I look not mine to call;
+ But, like a truant freed,
+ Fly to the woods, and claim
+ A pleasure for the deed
+ Of my inglorious name:
+
+ And am content, denied
+ The best, in choosing right;
+ For Nature can delight
+ Fancies unoccupied
+ With ecstasies so sweet
+ As none can even guess,
+ Who walk not with the feet
+ Of joy in idleness.
+
+ Then leave your joyless ways,
+ My friend, my joys to see.
+ The day you come shall be
+ The choice of chosen days:
+ You shall be lost, and learn
+ New being, and forget
+ The world, till your return
+ Shall bring your first regret.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ SPRING
+
+ ODE II
+
+ REPLY
+
+ Behold! the radiant Spring,
+ In splendour decked anew,
+ Down from her heaven of blue
+ Returns on sunlit wing:
+ The zephyrs of her train
+ In fleecy clouds disport,
+ And birds to greet her reign
+ Summon their silvan court.
+
+ And here in street and square
+ The prisoned trees contest
+ Her favour with the best,
+ To robe themselves full fair:
+ And forth their buds provoke,
+ Forgetting winter brown,
+ And all the mire and smoke
+ That wrapped the dingy town.
+
+ Now he that loves indeed
+ His pleasure must awake,
+ Lest any pleasure take
+ Its flight, and he not heed;
+ For of his few short years
+ Another now invites
+ His hungry soul, and cheers
+ His life with new delights.
+
+ And who loves Nature more
+ Than he, whose painful art
+ Has taught and skilled his heart
+ To read her skill and lore?
+ Whose spirit leaps more high,
+ Plucking the pale primrose,
+ Than his whose feet must fly
+ The pasture where it grows?
+
+ One long in city pent
+ Forgets, or must complain:
+ But think not I can stain
+ My heaven with discontent;
+ Nor wallow with that sad,
+ Backsliding herd, who cry
+ That Truth must make man bad,
+ And pleasure is a lie.
+
+ Rather while Reason lives
+ To mark me from the beast,
+ I'll teach her serve at least
+ To heal the wound she gives:
+ Nor need she strain her powers
+ Beyond a common flight,
+ To make the passing hours
+ Happy from morn till night.
+
+ Since health our toil rewards,
+ And strength is labour's prize,
+ I hate not, nor despise
+ The work my lot accords;
+ Nor fret with fears unkind
+ The tender joys, that bless
+ My hard-won peace of mind,
+ In hours of idleness.
+
+ Then what charm company
+ Can give, know I,--if wine
+ Go round, or throats combine
+ To set dumb music free.
+ Or deep in wintertide
+ When winds without make moan,
+ I love my own fireside
+ Not least when most alone.
+
+ Then oft I turn the page
+ In which our country's name,
+ Spoiling the Greek of fame,
+ Shall sound in every age:
+ Or some Terentian play
+ Renew, whose excellent
+ Adjusted folds betray
+ How once Menander went.
+
+ Or if grave study suit
+ The yet unwearied brain,
+ Plato can teach again,
+ And Socrates dispute;
+ Till fancy in a dream
+ Confront their souls with mine,
+ Crowning the mind supreme,
+ And her delights divine.
+
+ While pleasure yet can be
+ Pleasant, and fancy sweet,
+ I bid all care retreat
+ From my philosophy;
+ Which, when I come to try
+ Your simpler life, will find,
+ I doubt not, joys to vie
+ With those I leave behind.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ ELEGY
+
+ AMONG THE TOMBS
+
+ Sad, sombre place, beneath whose antique yews
+ I come, unquiet sorrows to control;
+ Amid thy silent mossgrown graves to muse
+ With my neglected solitary soul;
+ And to poetic sadness care confide,
+ Trusting sweet Melancholy for my guide:
+
+ They will not ask why in thy shades I stray,
+ Among the tombs finding my rare delight,
+ Beneath the sun at indolent noonday,
+ Or in the windy moon-enchanted night,
+ Who have once reined in their steeds at any shrine,
+ And given them water from the well divine.--
+
+ The orchards are all ripened, and the sun
+ Spots the deserted gleanings with decay;
+ The seeds are perfected: his work is done,
+ And Autumn lingers but to outsmile the May;
+ Bidding his tinted leaves glide, bidding clear
+ Unto clear skies the birds applaud the year.
+
+ Lo, here I sit, and to the world I call,
+ The world my solemn fancy leaves behind,
+ Come! pass within the inviolable wall,
+ Come pride, come pleasure, come distracted mind;
+ Within the fated refuge, hither, turn,
+ And learn your wisdom ere 'tis late to learn.
+
+ Come with me now, and taste the fount of tears;
+ For many eyes have sanctified this spot,
+ Where grief's unbroken lineage endears
+ The charm untimely Folly injures not,
+ And slays the intruding thoughts, that overleap
+ The simple fence its holiness doth keep.
+
+ Read the worn names of the forgotten dead,
+ Their pompous legends will no smile awake;
+ Even the vainglorious title o'er the head
+ Wins its pride pardon for its sorrow's sake;
+ And carven Loves scorn not their dusty prize,
+ Though fallen so far from tender sympathies.
+
+ Here where a mother laid her only son,
+ Here where a lover left his bride, below
+ The treasured names their own are added on
+ To those whom they have followed long ago:
+ Sealing the record of the tears they shed,
+ That 'where their treasure there their hearts are fled.'
+
+ Grandfather, father, son, and then again
+ Child, grandchild, and great-grandchild laid beneath
+ Numbered in turn among the sons of men,
+ And gathered each one in his turn to death:
+ While he that occupies their house and name
+ To-day,--to-morrow too their grave shall claim.
+
+ And where are all the spirits? Ah! could we tell
+ The manner of our being when we die,
+ And see beyond the scene we know so well,
+ The country that so much obscured doth lie!
+ With brightest visions our fond hopes repair,
+ Or crown our melancholy with despair;
+
+ From death, still death, still would a comfort come:
+ Since of this world the essential joy must fall
+ In all distributed, in each thing some,
+ In nothing all, and all complete in all;
+ Till pleasure, ageing to her full increase,
+ Puts on perfection, and is throned in peace.
+
+ Yea, sweetest peace, unsought-for, undesired,
+ Loathed and misnamed, 'tis thee I worship here:
+ Though in most black habiliments attired,
+ Thou art sweet peace, and thee I cannot fear.
+ Nay, were my last hope quenched, I here would sit
+ And praise the annihilation of the pit.
+
+ Nor quickly disenchanted will my feet
+ Back to the busy town return, but yet
+ Linger, ere I my loving friends would greet,
+ Or touch their hands, or share without regret
+ The warmth of that kind hearth, whose sacred ties
+ Only shall dim with tears my dying eyes.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ DEJECTION
+
+ Wherefore to-night so full of care,
+ My soul, revolving hopeless strife,
+ Pointing at hindrance, and the bare
+ Painful escapes of fitful life?
+
+ Shaping the doom that may befall
+ By precedent of terror past:
+ By love dishonoured, and the call
+ Of friendship slighted at the last?
+
+ By treasured names, the little store
+ That memory out of wreck could save
+ Of loving hearts, that gone before
+ Call their old comrade to the grave?
+
+ O soul, be patient: thou shall find
+ A little matter mend all this;
+ Some strain of music to thy mind,
+ Some praise for skill not spent amiss.
+
+ Again shall pleasure overflow
+ Thy cup with sweetness, thou shalt taste
+ Nothing but sweetness, and shalt grow
+ Half sad for sweetness run to waste.
+
+ O happy life! I hear thee sing,
+ O rare delight of mortal stuff!
+ I praise my days for all they bring,
+ Yet are they only not enough.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ MORNING HYMN
+
+ O golden Sun, whose ray
+ My path illumineth:
+ Light of the circling day,
+ Whose night is birth and death:
+
+ That dost not stint the prime
+ Of wise and strong, nor stay
+ The changeful ordering time,
+ That brings their sure decay:
+
+ Though thou, the central sphere,
+ Dost seem to turn around
+ Thy creature world, and near
+ As father fond art found;
+
+ Thereon, as from above
+ To shine, and make rejoice
+ With beauty, life, and love,
+ The garden of thy choice,
+ To dress the jocund Spring
+ With bounteous promise gay
+ Of hotter months, that bring
+ The full perfected day;
+
+ To touch with richest gold
+ The ripe fruit, ere it fall;
+ And smile through cloud and cold
+ On Winter's funeral.
+
+ Now with resplendent flood
+ Gladden my waking eyes,
+ And stir my slothful blood
+ To joyous enterprise.
+
+ Arise, arise, as when
+ At first God said LIGHT BE!
+ That He might make us men
+ With eyes His light to see.
+
+ Scatter the clouds that hide
+ The face of heaven, and show
+ Where sweet Peace doth abide,
+ Where Truth and Beauty grow.
+
+ Awaken, cheer, adorn,
+ Invite, inspire, assure
+ The joys that praise thy morn,
+ The toil thy noons mature:
+
+ And soothe the eve of day,
+ That darkens back to death;
+ O golden Sun, whose ray
+ Our path illumineth!
+
+
+ 13
+
+ I have loved flowers that fade,
+ Within whose magic tents
+ Rich hues have marriage made
+ With sweet unmemoried scents:
+ A honeymoon delight,--
+ A joy of love at sight,
+ That ages in an hour:--
+ My song be like a flower!
+
+ I have loved airs, that die
+ Before their charm is writ
+ Along a liquid sky
+ Trembling to welcome it.
+ Notes, that with pulse of fire
+ Proclaim the spirit's desire,
+ Then die, and are nowhere:--
+ My song be like an air!
+
+ Die, song, die like a breath,
+ And wither as a bloom:
+ Fear not a flowery death,
+ Dread not an airy tomb!
+ Fly with delight, fly hence!
+ 'Twas thine love's tender sense
+ To feast; now on thy bier
+ Beauty shall shed a tear.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK III
+
+ TO
+
+ R. W. D.
+
+
+ 1
+
+ O my vague desires!
+ Ye lambent flames of the soul, her offspring fires:
+ That are my soul herself in pangs sublime
+ Rising and flying to heaven before her time:
+
+ What doth tempt you forth
+ To drown in the south or shiver in the frosty north?
+ What seek ye or find ye in your random flying,
+ Ever soaring aloft, soaring and dying?
+
+ Joy, the joy of flight!
+ They hide in the sun, they flare and dance in the night;
+ Gone up, gone out of sight: and ever again
+ Follow fresh tongues of fire, fresh pangs of pain.
+
+ Ah! they burn my soul,
+ The fires, devour my soul that once was whole:
+ She is scattered in fiery phantoms day by day,
+ But whither, whither? ay whither? away, away!
+
+ Could I but control
+ These vague desires, these leaping flames of the soul:
+ Could I but quench the fire: ah! could I stay
+ My soul that flieth, alas, and dieth away!
+
+
+ 2
+
+ LONDON SNOW
+
+ When men were all asleep the snow came flying,
+ In large white flakes falling on the city brown,
+ Stealthily and perpetually settling and loosely lying,
+ Hushing the latest traffic of the drowsy town;
+ Deadening, muffling, stifling its murmurs failing;
+ Lazily and incessantly floating down and down:
+ Silently sifting and veiling road, roof and railing;
+ Hiding difference, making unevenness even,
+ Into angles and crevices softly drifting and sailing.
+ All night it fell, and when full inches seven
+ It lay in the depth of its uncompacted lightness,
+ The clouds blew off from a high and frosty heaven;
+ And all woke earlier for the unaccustomed brightness
+ Of the winter dawning, the strange unheavenly glare:
+ The eye marvelled--marvelled at the dazzling whiteness;
+ The ear hearkened to the stillness of the solemn air;
+ No sound of wheel rumbling nor of foot falling,
+ And the busy morning cries came thin and spare.
+ Then boys I heard, as they went to school, calling,
+ They gathered up the crystal manna to freeze
+ Their tongues with tasting, their hands with snowballing;
+ Or rioted in a drift, plunging up to the knees;
+ Or peering up from under the white-mossed wonder,
+ 'O look at the trees!' they cried, 'O look at the trees!'
+ With lessened load a few carts creak and blunder,
+ Following along the white deserted way,
+ A country company long dispersed asunder:
+ When now already the sun, in pale display
+ Standing by Paul's high dome, spread forth below
+ His sparkling beams, and awoke the stir of the day.
+ For now doors open, and war is waged with the snow;
+ And trains of sombre men, past tale of number,
+ Tread long brown paths, as toward their toil they go:
+ But even for them awhile no cares encumber
+ Their minds diverted; the daily word is unspoken,
+ The daily thoughts of labour and sorrow slumber
+ At the sight of the beauty that greets them, for the
+ charm they have broken.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ THE VOICE OF NATURE
+
+ I stand on the cliff and watch the veiled sun paling
+ A silver field afar in the mournful sea,
+ The scourge of the surf, and plaintive gulls sailing
+ At ease on the gale that smites the shuddering lea:
+ Whose smile severe and chaste
+ June never hath stirred to vanity, nor age defaced.
+ In lofty thought strive, O spirit, for ever:
+ In courage and strength pursue thine own endeavour.
+
+ Ah! if it were only for thee, thou restless ocean
+ Of waves that follow and roar, the sweep of the tides;
+ Wer't only for thee, impetuous wind, whose motion
+ Precipitate all o'errides, and turns, nor abides:
+ For you sad birds and fair,
+ Or only for thee, bleak cliff, erect in the air;
+ Then well could I read wisdom in every feature,
+ O well should I understand the voice of Nature.
+
+ But far away, I think, in the Thames valley,
+ The silent river glides by flowery banks:
+ And birds sing sweetly in branches that arch an alley
+ Of cloistered trees, moss-grown in their ancient ranks:
+ Where if a light air stray,
+ 'Tis laden with hum of bees and scent of may.
+ Love and peace be thine, O spirit, for ever:
+ Serve thy sweet desire: despise endeavour.
+
+ And if it were only for thee, entrancèd river,
+ That scarce dost rock the lily on her airy stem,
+ Or stir a wave to murmur, or a rush to quiver;
+ Wer't but for the woods, and summer asleep in them:
+ For you my bowers green,
+ My hedges of rose and woodbine, with walks between,
+ Then well could I read wisdom in every feature,
+ O well should I understand the voice of Nature.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ ON A DEAD CHILD
+
+ Perfect little body, without fault or stain on thee,
+ With promise of strength and manhood full and fair!
+ Though cold and stark and bare,
+ The bloom and the charm of life doth awhile remain on thee.
+
+ Thy mother's treasure wert thou;--alas! no longer
+ To visit her heart with wondrous joy; to be
+ Thy father's pride;--ah, he
+ Must gather his faith together, and his strength make stronger.
+
+ To me, as I move thee now in the last duty,
+ Dost thou with a turn or gesture anon respond;
+ Startling my fancy fond
+ With a chance attitude of the head, a freak of beauty.
+
+ Thy hand clasps, as 'twas wont, my finger, and holds it:
+ But the grasp is the clasp of Death, heartbreaking and stiff;
+ Yet feels to my hand as if
+ 'Twas still thy will, thy pleasure and trust that enfolds it.
+
+ So I lay thee there, thy sunken eyelids closing,--
+ Go lie thou there in thy coffin, thy last little bed!--
+ Propping thy wise, sad head,
+ Thy firm, pale hands across thy chest disposing.
+
+ So quiet! doth the change content thee?--Death, whither
+ he taken thee?
+ To a world, do I think, that rights the disaster of this?
+ The vision of which I miss,
+ Who weep for the body, and wish but to warm thee and awaken thee?
+
+ Ah! little at best can all our hopes avail us
+ To lift this sorrow, or cheer us, when in the dark,
+ Unwilling, alone we embark,
+ And the things we have seen and have known and have heard of, fail us.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ THE PHILOSOPHER TO HIS MISTRESS
+
+ Because thou canst not see,
+ Because thou canst not know
+ The black and hopeless woe
+ That hath encompassed me:
+ Because, should I confess
+ The thought of my despair,
+ My words would wound thee less
+ Than swords can hurt the air:
+
+ Because with thee I seem
+ As one invited near
+ To taste the faery cheer
+ Of spirits in a dream;
+ Of whom he knoweth nought
+ Save that they vie to make
+ All motion, voice and thought
+ A pleasure for his sake:
+
+ Therefore more sweet and strange
+ Has been the mystery
+ Of thy long love to me,
+ That doth not quit, nor change,
+ Nor tax my solemn heart,
+ That kisseth in a gloom,
+ Knowing not who thou art
+ That givest, nor to whom.
+
+ Therefore the tender touch
+ Is more; more dear the smile:
+ And thy light words beguile
+ My wisdom overmuch:
+ And O with swiftness fly
+ The fancies of my song
+ To happy worlds, where I
+ Still in thy love belong.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ Haste on, my joys! your treasure lies
+ In swift, unceasing flight.
+ O haste: for while your beauty flies
+ I seize your full delight.
+ Lo! I have seen the scented flower,
+ Whose tender stems I cull,
+ For her brief date and meted hour
+ Appear more beautiful.
+
+ O youth, O strength, O most divine
+ For that so short ye prove;
+ Were but your rare gifts longer mine,
+ Ye scarce would win my love.
+ Nay, life itself the heart would spurn,
+ Did once the days restore
+ The days, that once enjoyed return,
+ Return--ah! nevermore.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ INDOLENCE
+
+ We left the city when the summer day
+ Had verged already on its hot decline,
+ And charmèd Indolence in languor lay
+ In her gay gardens, 'neath her towers divine:
+ 'Farewell,' we said, 'dear city of youth and dream!'
+ And in our boat we stepped and took the stream.
+
+ All through that idle afternoon we strayed
+ Upon our proposed travel well begun,
+ As loitering by the woodland's dreamy shade,
+ Past shallow islets floating in the sun,
+ Or searching down the banks for rarer flowers
+ We lingered out the pleasurable hours.
+
+ Till when that loveliest came, which mowers home
+ Turns from their longest labour, as we steered
+ Along a straitened channel flecked with foam,
+ We lost our landscape wide, and slowly neared
+ An ancient bridge, that like a blind wall lay
+ Low on its buried vaults to block the way.
+
+ Then soon the narrow tunnels broader showed,
+ Where with its arches three it sucked the mass
+ Of water, that in swirl thereunder flowed,
+ Or stood piled at the piers waiting to pass;
+ And pulling for the middle span, we drew
+ The tender blades aboard and floated through.
+
+ But past the bridge what change we found below!
+ The stream, that all day long had laughed and played
+ Betwixt the happy shires, ran dark and slow,
+ And with its easy flood no murmur made:
+ And weeds spread on its surface, and about
+ The stagnant margin reared their stout heads out.
+
+ Upon the left high elms, with giant wood
+ Skirting the water-meadows, interwove
+ Their slumbrous crowns, o'ershadowing where they stood
+ The floor and heavy pillars of the grove:
+ And in the shade, through reeds and sedges dank,
+ A footpath led along the moated bank.
+
+ Across, all down the right, an old brick wall,
+ Above and o'er the channel, red did lean;
+ Here buttressed up, and bulging there to fall,
+ Tufted with grass and plants and lichen green;
+ And crumbling to the flood, which at its base
+ Slid gently nor disturbed its mirrored face.
+
+ Sheer on the wall the houses rose, their backs
+ All windowless, neglected and awry,
+ With tottering coigns, and crooked chimney stacks;
+ And here and there an unused door, set high
+ Above the fragments of its mouldering stair,
+ With rail and broken step led out on air.
+
+ Beyond, deserted wharfs and vacant sheds,
+ With empty boats and barges moored along,
+ And rafts half-sunken, fringed with weedy shreds,
+ And sodden beams, once soaked to season strong.
+ No sight of man, nor sight of life, no stroke,
+ No voice the somnolence and silence broke.
+
+ Then I who rowed leant on my oar, whose drip
+ Fell without sparkle, and I rowed no more;
+ And he that steered moved neither hand nor lip,
+ But turned his wondering eye from shore to shore;
+ And our trim boat let her swift motion die,
+ Between the dim reflections floating by.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ I praise the tender flower,
+ That on a mournful day
+ Bloomed in my garden bower
+ And made the winter gay.
+ Its loveliness contented
+ My heart tormented.
+
+ I praise the gentle maid
+ Whose happy voice and smile
+ To confidence betrayed
+ My doleful heart awhile:
+ And gave my spirit deploring
+ Fresh wings for soaring.
+
+ The maid for very fear
+ Of love I durst not tell:
+ The rose could never hear,
+ Though I bespake her well:
+ So in my song I bind them
+ For all to find them.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ A winter's night with the snow about:
+ 'Twas silent within and cold without:
+ Both father and mother to bed were gone:
+ The son sat yet by the fire alone.
+
+ He gazed on the fire, and dreamed again
+ Of one that was now no more among men:
+ As still he sat and never aware
+ How close was the spirit beside his chair.
+
+ Nay, sad were his thoughts, for he wept and said
+ Ah, woe for the dead! ah, woe for the dead!
+ How heavy the earth lies now on her breast,
+ The lips that I kissed, and the hand I pressed.
+
+ The spirit he saw not, he could not hear
+ The comforting word she spake in his ear:
+ His heart in the grave with her mouldering clay
+ No welcome gave--and she fled away.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ My bed and pillow are cold,
+ My heart is faint with dread,
+ The air hath an odour of mould,
+ I dream I lie with the dead:
+ I cannot move,
+ O come to me, Love,
+ Or else I am dead.
+
+ The feet I hear on the floor
+ Tread heavily overhead:
+ O Love, come down to the door,
+ Come, Love, come, ere I be dead:
+ Make shine thy light,
+ O Love, in the night;
+ Or else I am dead.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ O thou unfaithful, still as ever dearest
+ That in thy beauty to my eyes appearest
+ In fancy rising now to re-awaken
+ My love unshaken;
+
+ All thou'st forgotten, but no change can free thee,
+ No hate unmake thee; as thou wert I see thee,
+ And am contented, eye from fond eye meeting
+ Its ample greeting.
+
+ O thou my star of stars, among things wholly
+ Devoted, sacred, dim and melancholy,
+ The only joy of all the joys I cherished
+ That hast not perished,
+
+ Why now on others squand'rest thou the treasure,
+ That to be jealous of is still my pleasure:
+ As still I dream 'tis me whom thou invitest,
+ Me thou delightest?
+
+ But day by day my joy hath feebler being,
+ The fading picture tires my painful seeing,
+ And faery fancy leaves her habitation
+ To desolation.
+
+ Of two things open left for lovers parted
+ 'Twas thine to scorn the past and go lighthearted:
+ But I would ever dream I still possess it,
+ And thus caress it.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Thou didst delight my eyes:
+ Yet who am I? nor first
+ Nor last nor best, that durst
+ Once dream of thee for prize;
+ Nor this the only time
+ Thou shalt set love to rhyme.
+
+ Thou didst delight my ear:
+ Ah! little praise; thy voice
+ Makes other hearts rejoice,
+ Makes all ears glad that hear;
+ And short my joy: but yet,
+ O song, do not forget.
+
+ For what wert thou to me?
+ How shall I say? The moon,
+ That poured her midnight noon
+ Upon his wrecking sea;--
+ A sail, that for a day
+ Has cheered the castaway.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ Joy, sweetest lifeborn joy, where dost thou dwell?
+ Upon the formless moments of our being
+ Flitting, to mock the ear that heareth well,
+ To escape the trainèd eye that strains in seeing,
+ Dost thou fly with us whither we are fleeing;
+ Or home in our creations, to withstand
+ Black-wingèd death, that slays the making hand?
+
+ The making mind, that must untimely perish
+ Amidst its work which time may not destroy,
+ The beauteous forms which man shall love to cherish,
+ The glorious songs that combat earth's annoy?
+ Thou dost dwell here, I know, divinest Joy:
+ But they who build thy towers fair and strong,
+ Of all that toil, feel most of care and wrong.
+
+ Sense is so tender, O and hope so high,
+ That common pleasures mock their hope and sense;
+ And swifter than doth lightning from the sky
+ The ecstasy they pine for flashes hence,
+ Leaving the darkness and the woe immense,
+ Wherewith it seems no thread of life was woven,
+ Nor doth the track remain where once 'twas cloven.
+
+ And heaven and all the stable elements
+ That guard God's purpose mock us, though the mind
+ Be spent in searching: for his old intents
+ We see were never for our joy designed:
+ They shine as doth the bright sun on the blind,
+ Or like his pensioned stars, that hymn above
+ His praise, but not toward us, that God is Love.
+
+ For who so well hath wooed the maiden hours
+ As quite to have won the worth of their rich show,
+ To rob the night of mystery, or the flowers
+ Of their sweet delicacy ere they go?
+ Nay, even the dear occasion when we know,
+ We miss the joy, and on the gliding day
+ The special glories float and pass away.
+
+ Only life's common plod: still to repair
+ The body and the thing which perisheth:
+ The soil, the smutch, the toil and ache and wear,
+ The grinding enginry of blood and breath,
+ Pain's random darts, the heartless spade of death;
+ All is but grief, and heavily we call
+ On the last terror for the end of all.
+
+ Then comes the happy moment: not a stir
+ In any tree, no portent in the sky:
+ The morn doth neither hasten nor defer,
+ The morrow hath no name to call it by,
+ But life and joy are one,--we know not why,--
+ As though our very blood long breathless lain
+ Had tasted of the breath of God again.
+
+ And having tasted it I speak of it,
+ And praise him thinking how I trembled then
+ When his touch strengthened me, as now I sit
+ In wonder, reaching out beyond my ken,
+ Reaching to turn the day back, and my pen
+ Urging to tell a tale which told would seem
+ The witless phantasy of them that dream.
+
+ But O most blessèd truth, for truth thou art,
+ Abide thou with me till my life shall end.
+ Divinity hath surely touched my heart;
+ I have possessed more joy than earth can lend:
+ I may attain what time shall never spend.
+ Only let not my duller days destroy
+ The memory of thy witness and my joy.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ The full moon from her cloudless skies
+ Turneth her face, I think, on me;
+ And from the hour when she doth rise
+ Till when she sets, none else will see.
+
+ One only other ray she hath,
+ That makes an angle close with mine,
+ And glancing down its happy path
+ Upon another spot doth shine.
+
+ But that ray too is sent to me,
+ For where it lights there dwells my heart:
+ And if I were where I would be,
+ Both rays would shine, love, where thou art.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ Awake, my heart, to be loved, awake, awake!
+ The darkness silvers away, the morn doth break,
+ It leaps in the sky: unrisen lustres slake
+ The o'ertaken moon. Awake, O heart, awake!
+
+ She too that loveth awaketh and hopes for thee;
+ Her eyes already have sped the shades that flee,
+ Already they watch the path thy feet shall take:
+ Awake, O heart, to be loved, awake, awake!
+
+ And if thou tarry from her,--if this could be,--
+ She cometh herself, O heart, to be loved, to thee;
+ For thee would unashamèd herself forsake:
+ Awake to be loved, my heart, awake, awake!
+
+ Awake, the land is scattered with light, and see,
+ Uncanopied sleep is flying from field and tree:
+ And blossoming boughs of April in laughter shake;
+ Awake, O heart, to be loved, awake, awake!
+
+ Lo all things wake and tarry and look for thee:
+ She looketh and saith, 'O sun, now bring him to me.
+ Come more adored, O adored, for his coming's sake,
+ And awake my heart to be loved: awake, awake!'
+
+
+ 16
+
+ SONG
+
+ I love my lady's eyes
+ Above the beauties rare
+ She most is wont to prize,
+ Above her sunny hair,
+ And all that face to face
+ Her glass repeats of grace.
+
+ For those are still the same
+ To her and all that see:
+ But oh! her eyes will flame
+ When they do look on me:
+ And so above the rest
+ I love her eyes the best.
+
+ Now say, [_Say, O say! saith the music_] who likes my song?--
+ I knew you by your eyes,
+ That rest on nothing long,
+ And have forgot surprise;
+ And stray [_Stray, O stray! saith the music_] as mine will stray,
+ The while my love's away.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ Since thou, O fondest and truest,
+ Hast loved me best and longest,
+ And now with trust the strongest
+ The joy of my heart renewest;
+
+ Since thou art dearer and dearer
+ While other hearts grow colder
+ And ever, as love is older,
+ More lovingly drawest nearer:
+
+ Since now I see in the measure
+ Of all my giving and taking,
+ Thou wert my hand in the making,
+ The sense and soul of my pleasure;
+
+ The good I have ne'er repaid thee
+ In heaven I pray be recorded,
+ And all thy love rewarded
+ By God, thy master that made thee.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ The evening darkens over
+ After a day so bright
+ The windcapt waves discover
+ That wild will be the night.
+ There's sound of distant thunder.
+
+ The latest sea-birds hover
+ Along the cliff's sheer height;
+ As in the memory wander
+ Last flutterings of delight,
+ White wings lost on the white.
+
+ There's not a ship in sight;
+ And as the sun goes under
+ Thick clouds conspire to cover
+ The moon that should rise yonder.
+ Thou art alone, fond lover.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ O youth whose hope is high,
+ Who dost to Truth aspire,
+ Whether thou live or die,
+ O look not back nor tire.
+
+ Thou that art bold to fly
+ Through tempest, flood and fire,
+ Nor dost not shrink to try
+ Thy heart in torments dire:
+
+ If thou canst Death defy,
+ If thy Faith is entire,
+ Press onward, for thine eye
+ Shall see thy heart's desire.
+
+ Beauty and love are nigh,
+ And with their deathless quire
+ Soon shall thine eager cry
+ Be numbered and expire.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK IV
+
+ TO
+
+ L. B. C. L. M.
+
+
+ 1
+
+ I love all beauteous things,
+ I seek and adore them;
+ God hath no better praise,
+ And man in his hasty days
+ Is honoured for them.
+
+ I too will something make
+ And joy in the making;
+ Altho' to-morrow it seem
+ Like the empty words of a dream
+ Remembered on waking.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ My spirit sang all day
+ O my joy.
+ Nothing my tongue could say,
+ Only My joy!
+
+ My heart an echo caught--
+ O my joy--
+ And spake, Tell me thy thought,
+ Hide not thy joy.
+
+ My eyes gan peer around,--
+ O my joy--
+ What beauty hast thou found?
+ Shew us thy joy.
+
+ My jealous ears grew whist;--
+ O my joy--
+ Music from heaven is't,
+ Sent for our joy?
+
+ She also came and heard;
+ O my joy,
+ What, said she, is this word?
+ What is thy joy?
+
+ And I replied, O see,
+ O my joy,
+ 'Tis thee, I cried, 'tis thee:
+ Thou art my joy.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ The upper skies are palest blue
+ Mottled with pearl and fretted snow:
+ With tattered fleece of inky hue
+ Close overhead the storm-clouds go.
+
+ Their shadows fly along the hill
+ And o'er the crest mount one by one:
+ The whitened planking of the mill
+ Is now in shade and now in sun.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ The clouds have left the sky,
+ The wind hath left the sea,
+ The half-moon up on high
+ Shrinketh her face of dree
+
+ She lightens on the comb
+ Of leaden waves, that roar
+ And thrust their hurried foam
+ Up on the dusky shore.
+
+ Behind the western bars
+ The shrouded day retreats,
+ And unperceived the stars
+ Steal to their sovran seats.
+
+ And whiter grows the foam,
+ The small moon lightens more;
+ And as I turn me home,
+ My shadow walks before.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ LAST WEEK OF FEBRUARY, 1890
+
+ Hark to the merry birds, hark how they sing!
+ Although 'tis not yet spring
+ And keen the air;
+ Hale Winter, half resigning ere he go,
+ Doth to his heiress shew
+ His kingdom fair.
+
+ In patient russet is his forest spread,
+ All bright with bramble red,
+ With beechen moss
+ And holly sheen: the oak silver and stark
+ Sunneth his aged bark
+ And wrinkled boss.
+
+ But neath the ruin of the withered brake
+ Primroses now awake
+ From nursing shades:
+ The crumpled carpet of the dry leaves brown
+ Avails not to keep down
+ The hyacinth blades.
+
+ The hazel hath put forth his tassels ruffed;
+ The willow's flossy tuft
+ Hath slipped him free:
+ The rose amid her ransacked orange hips
+ Braggeth the tender tips
+ Of bowers to be.
+
+ A black rook stirs the branches here and there,
+ Foraging to repair
+ His broken home:
+ And hark, on the ash-boughs! Never thrush did sing
+ Louder in praise of spring,
+ When spring is come.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ APRIL, 1885
+
+ Wanton with long delay the gay spring leaping cometh;
+ The blackthorn starreth now his bough on the eve of May:
+ All day in the sweet box-tree the bee for pleasure hummeth:
+ The cuckoo sends afloat his note on the air all day.
+
+ Now dewy nights again and rain in gentle shower
+ At root of tree and flower have quenched the winter's drouth:
+ On high the hot sun smiles, and banks of cloud uptower
+ In bulging heads that crowd for miles the dazzling south.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ Gáy Róbin is seen no more:
+ He is gone with the snow,
+ For winter is o'er
+ And Robin will go.
+ In need he was fed, and now he is fled
+ Away to his secret nest.
+ No more will he stand
+ Begging for crumbs,
+ No longer he comes
+ Beseeching our hand
+ And showing his breast
+ At window and door:--
+ Gay Robin is seen no more.
+
+ Blithe Robin is heard no more:
+ He gave us his song
+ When summer was o'er
+ And winter was long:
+ He sang for his bread and now he is fled
+ Away to his secret nest.
+ And there in the green
+ Early and late
+ Alone to his mate
+ He pipeth unseen
+ And swelleth his breast;
+ For us it is o'er:--
+ Blithe Robin is heard no more.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ Spring goeth all in white,
+ Crowned with milk-white may:
+ In fleecy flocks of light
+ O'er heaven the white clouds stray:
+
+ White butterflies in the air;
+ White daisies prank the ground:
+ The cherry and hoary pear
+ Scatter their snow around.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ My eyes for beauty pine,
+ My soul for Goddës grace:
+ No other care nor hope is mine;
+ To heaven I turn my face.
+
+ One splendour thence is shed
+ From all the stars above:
+ 'Tis namèd when God's name is said,
+ 'Tis Love, 'tis heavenly Love.
+
+ And every gentle heart,
+ That burns with true desire,
+ Is lit from eyes that mirror part
+ Of that celestial fire.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ O Love, my muse, how was't for me
+ Among the best to dare,
+ In thy high courts that bowed the knee
+ With sacrifice and prayer?
+
+ Their mighty offerings at thy shrine
+ Shamed me, who nothing bore
+ Their suits were mockeries of mine,
+ I sued for so much more.
+
+ Full many I met that crowned with bay
+ In triumph home returned,
+ And many a master on the way
+ Proud of the prize I scorned.
+
+ I wished no garland on my head
+ Nor treasure in my hand;
+ My gift the longing that me led,
+ My prayer thy high command,
+
+ My love, my muse; and when I spake
+ Thou mad'st me thine that day,
+ And more than hundred hearts could take
+ Gav'st me to bear away.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ Love on my heart from heaven fell,
+ Soft as the dew on flowers of spring,
+ Sweet as the hidden drops that swell
+ Their honey-throated chalicing.
+
+ Now never from him do I part,
+ Hosanna evermore I cry:
+ I taste his savour in my heart,
+ And bid all praise him as do I.
+
+ Without him noughtsoever is,
+ Nor was afore, nor e'er shall be:
+ Nor any other joy than his
+ Wish I for mine to comfort me.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ The hill pines were sighing,
+ O'ercast and chill was the day:
+ A mist in the valley lying
+ Blotted the pleasant May.
+
+ But deep in the glen's bosom
+ Summer slept in the fire
+ Of the odorous gorse-blossom
+ And the hot scent of the brier.
+
+ A ribald cuckoo clamoured,
+ And out of the copse the stroke
+ Of the iron axe that hammered
+ The iron heart of the oak.
+
+ Anon a sound appalling,
+ As a hundred years of pride
+ Crashed, in the silence falling:
+ And the shadowy pine-trees sighed.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ THE WINDMILL
+
+ The green corn waving in the dale,
+ The ripe grass waving on the hill:
+ I lean across the paddock pale
+ And gaze upon the giddy mill.
+
+ Its hurtling sails a mighty sweep
+ Cut thro' the air: with rushing sound
+ Each strikes in fury down the steep,
+ Rattles, and whirls in chase around.
+
+ Beside his sacks the miller stands
+ On high within the open door:
+ A book and pencil in his hands,
+ His grist and meal he reckoneth o'er.
+
+ His tireless merry slave the wind
+ Is busy with his work to-day:
+ From whencesoe'er, he comes to grind;
+ He hath a will and knows the way.
+
+ He gives the creaking sails a spin,
+ The circling millstones faster flee,
+ The shuddering timbers groan within,
+ And down the shoot the meal runs free.
+
+ The miller giveth him no thanks,
+ And doth not much his work o'erlook:
+ He stands beside the sacks, and ranks
+ The figures in his dusty book.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ When June is come, then all the day
+ I'll sit with my love in the scented hay:
+ And watch the sunshot palaces high,
+ That the white clouds build in the breezy sky.
+
+ She singeth, and I do make her a song,
+ And read sweet poems the whole day long:
+ Unseen as we lie in our haybuilt home.
+ O life is delight when June is come.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ The pinks along my garden walks
+ Have all shot forth their summer stalks,
+ Thronging their buds 'mong tulips hot,
+ And blue forget-me-not.
+
+ Their dazzling snows forth-bursting soon
+ Will lade the idle breath of June:
+ And waken thro' the fragrant night
+ To steal the pale moonlight.
+
+ The nightingale at end of May
+ Lingers each year for their display;
+ Till when he sees their blossoms blown,
+ He knows the spring is flown.
+
+ June's birth they greet, and when their bloom
+ Dislustres, withering on his tomb,
+ Then summer hath a shortening day;
+ And steps slow to decay.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ Fire of heaven, whose starry arrow
+ Pierces the veil of timeless night:
+ Molten spheres, whose tempests narrow
+ Their floods to a beam of gentle light,
+ To charm with a moon-ray quenched from fire
+ The land of delight, the land of desire!
+
+ Smile of love, a flower planted,
+ Sprung in the garden of joy that art:
+ Eyes that shine with a glow enchanted,
+ Whose spreading fires encircle my heart,
+ And warm with a noon-ray drenched in fire
+ My land of delight, my land of desire!
+
+
+ 17
+
+ The idle life I lead
+ Is like a pleasant sleep,
+ Wherein I rest and heed
+ The dreams that by me sweep.
+
+ And still of all my dreams
+ In turn so swiftly past,
+ Each in its fancy seems
+ A nobler than the last.
+
+ And every eve I say,
+ Noting my step in bliss,
+ That I have known no day
+ In all my life like this.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ Angel spirits of sleep,
+ White-robed, with silver hair,
+ In your meadows fair,
+ Where the willows weep,
+ And the sad moonbeam
+ On the gliding stream
+ Writes her scattered dream:
+
+ Angel spirits of sleep,
+ Dancing to the weir
+ In the hollow roar
+ Of its waters deep;
+ Know ye how men say
+ That ye haunt no more
+ Isle and grassy shore
+ With your moonlit play;
+ That ye dance not here,
+ White-robed spirits of sleep,
+ All the summer night
+ Threading dances light?
+
+
+ 19
+
+ ANNIVERSARY
+
+ What is sweeter than new-mown hay,
+ Fresher than winds o'er-sea that blow,
+ Innocent above children's play,
+ Fairer and purer than winter snow,
+ Frolic as are the morns of May?
+ --If it should be what best I know!
+
+ What is richer than thoughts that stray
+ From reading of poems that smoothly flow?
+ What is solemn like the delay
+ Of concords linked in a music slow
+ Dying thro' vaulted aisles away?
+ --If it should be what best I know!
+
+ What gives faith to me when I pray,
+ Setteth my heart with joy aglow,
+ Filleth my song with fancies gay,
+ Maketh the heaven to which I go,
+ The gladness of earth that lasteth for aye?
+ --If it should be what best I know!
+
+ But tell me thou--'twas on this day
+ That first we loved five years ago--
+ If 'tis a thing that I can say,
+ Though it must be what best we know.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ The summer trees are tempest-torn,
+ The hills are wrapped in a mantle wide
+ Of folding rain by the mad wind borne
+ Across the country side.
+
+ His scourge of fury is lashing down
+ The delicate-rankèd golden corn,
+ That never more shall rear its crown
+ And curtsey to the morn.
+
+ There shews no care in heaven to save
+ Man's pitiful patience, or provide
+ A season for the season's slave,
+ Whose trust hath toiled and died.
+
+ So my proud spirit in me is sad,
+ A wreck of fairer fields to mourn,
+ The ruin of golden hopes she had,
+ My delicate-rankèd corn.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ The birds that sing on autumn eves
+ Among the golden-tinted leaves,
+ Are but the few that true remain
+ Of budding May's rejoicing train.
+
+ Like autumn flowers that brave the frost,
+ And make their show when hope is lost,
+ These 'mong the fruits and mellow scent
+ Mourn not the high-sunned summer spent.
+
+ Their notes thro' all the jocund spring
+ Were mixed in merry musicking:
+ They sang for love the whole day long,
+ But now their love is all for song.
+
+ Now each hath perfected his lay
+ To praise the year that hastes away:
+ They sit on boughs apart, and vie
+ In single songs and rich reply:
+
+ And oft as in the copse I hear
+ These anthems of the dying year,
+ The passions, once her peace that stole,
+ With flattering love my heart console.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ When my love was away,
+ Full three days were not sped,
+ I caught my fancy astray
+ Thinking if she were dead,
+
+ And I alone, alone:
+ It seemed in my misery
+ In all the world was none
+ Ever so lone as I.
+
+ I wept; but it did not shame
+ Nor comfort my heart: away
+ I rode as I might, and came
+ To my love at close of day.
+
+ The sight of her stilled my fears,
+ My fairest-hearted love:
+ And yet in her eyes were tears:
+ Which when I questioned of,
+
+ O now thou art come, she cried,
+ 'Tis fled: but I thought to-day
+ I never could here abide,
+ If thou wert longer away.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ The storm is over, the land hushes to rest:
+ The tyrannous wind, its strength fordone,
+ Is fallen back in the west
+ To couch with the sinking sun.
+ The last clouds fare
+ With fainting speed, and their thin streamers fly
+ In melting drifts of the sky.
+ Already the birds in the air
+ Appear again; the rooks return to their haunt,
+ And one by one,
+ Proclaiming aloud their care,
+ Renew their peaceful chant.
+
+ Torn and shattered the trees their branches again reset,
+ They trim afresh the fair
+ Few green and golden leaves withheld from the storm,
+ And awhile will be handsome yet.
+ To-morrow's sun shall caress
+ Their remnant of loveliness:
+ In quiet days for a time
+ Sad Autumn lingering warm
+ Shall humour their faded prime.
+
+ But ah! the leaves of summer that lie on the ground!
+ What havoc! The laughing timbrels of June,
+ That curtained the birds' cradles, and screened their song,
+ That sheltered the cooing doves at noon,
+ Of airy fans the delicate throng,--
+ Torn and scattered around:
+ Far out afield they lie,
+ In the watery furrows die,
+ In grassy pools of the flood they sink and drown,
+ Green-golden, orange, vermilion, golden and brown,
+ The high year's flaunting crown
+ Shattered and trampled down.
+
+ The day is done: the tired land looks for night:
+ She prays to the night to keep
+ In peace her nerves of delight:
+ While silver mist upstealeth silently,
+ And the broad cloud driving moon in the clear sky
+ Lifts o'er the firs her shining shield,
+ And in her tranquil light
+ Sleep falls on forest and field.
+ Sée! sléep hath fallen: the trees are asleep:
+ The night is come. The land is wrapt in sleep.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ Ye thrilled me once, ye mournful strains,
+ Ye anthems of plaintive woe,
+ My spirit was sad when I was young;
+ Ah sorrowful long-ago!
+ But since I have found the beauty of joy
+ I have done with proud dismay:
+ For howsoe'er man hug his care
+ The best of his art is gay.
+
+ And yet if voices of fancy's choir
+ Again in mine ear awake
+ Your old lament, 'tis dear to me still,
+ Nor all for memory's sake:
+ 'Tis like the dirge of sorrow dead,
+ Whose tears are wiped away;
+ Or drops of the shower when rain is o'er,
+ That jewel the brightened day.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ Say who is this with silvered hair,
+ So pale and worn and thin,
+ Who passeth here, and passeth there,
+ And looketh out and in?
+
+ That useth not our garb nor tongue
+ And knoweth things untold:
+ Who teacheth pleasure to the young,
+ And wisdom to the old?
+
+ No toil he maketh his by day,
+ No home his own by night;
+ But wheresoe'er he take his way,
+ He killeth our delight.
+
+ Since he is come there's nothing wise
+ Nor fair in man or child,
+ Unless his deep divining eyes
+ Have looked on it and smiled.
+
+ Whence came he hither all alone
+ Among our folk to spy?
+ There's nought that we can call our own,
+ Till he shall hap to die.
+
+ And I would dig his grave full deep
+ Beneath the churchyard yew,
+ Lest thence his wizard eyes might peep
+ To mark the things we do.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ Crown Winter with green,
+ And give him good drink
+ To physic his spleen
+ Or ever he think.
+
+ His mouth to the bowl,
+ His feet to the fire;
+ And let him, good soul,
+ No comfort desire.
+
+ So merry he be,
+ I bid him abide:
+ And merry be we
+ This good Yuletide.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ The snow lies sprinkled on the beach,
+ And whitens all the marshy lea:
+ The sad gulls wail adown the gale,
+ The day is dark and black the sea.
+ Shorn of their crests the blighted waves
+ With driven foam the offing fleck:
+ The ebb is low and barely laves
+ The red rust of the giant wreck.
+
+ On such a stony, breaking beach
+ My childhood chanced and chose to be:
+ 'Twas here I played, and musing made
+ My friend the melancholy sea.
+ He from his dim enchanted caves
+ With shuddering roar and onrush wild
+ Fell down in sacrificial waves
+ At feet of his exulting child.
+
+ Unto a spirit too light for fear
+ His wrath was mirth, his wail was glee:--
+ My heart is now too fixed to bow
+ Tho' all his tempests howl at me:
+ For to the gain life's summer saves,
+ My solemn joy's increasing store,
+ The tossing of his mournful waves
+ Makes sweetest music evermore.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ My spirit kisseth thine,
+ My spirit embraceth thee:
+ I feel thy being twine
+ Her graces over me,
+ In the life-kindling fold
+ Of God's breath; where on high,
+ In furthest space untold
+ Like a lost world I lie:
+
+ And o'er my dreaming plains
+ Lightens, most pale and fair,
+ A moon that never wanes;
+ Or more, if I compare,
+
+ Like what the shepherd sees
+ On late mid-winter dawns,
+ When thro' the branchèd trees,
+ O'er the white-frosted lawns,
+
+ The huge unclouded sun,
+ Surprising the world whist,
+ Is all uprisen thereon,
+ Golden with melting mist.
+
+
+ 29
+
+ Ariel, O,--my angel, my own,--
+ Whither away then art thou flown
+ Beyond my spirit's dominion?
+ That makest my heart run over with rhyme,
+ Renewing at will my youth for a time,
+ My servant, my pretty minion.
+
+ Now indeed I have cause to mourn,
+ Now thou returnest scorn for scorn:
+ Leave me not to my folly:
+ For when thou art with me is none so gay
+ As I, and none when thou'rt away
+ Was ever so melancholy.
+
+
+ 30
+
+ LAUS DEO
+
+ Let praise devote thy work, and skill employ
+ Thy whole mind, and thy heart be lost in joy.
+ Well-doing bringeth pride, this constant thought
+ Humility, that thy best done is nought.
+ Man doeth nothing well, be it great or small,
+ Save to praise God; but that hath savèd all:
+ For God requires no more than thou hast done,
+ And takes thy work to bless it for his own.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK V
+
+ DEDICATED TO M. G. K.
+
+
+ I
+
+ THE WINNOWERS
+
+ Betwixt two billows of the downs
+ The little hamlet lies,
+ And nothing sees but the bald crowns
+ Of the hills, and the blue skies.
+
+ Clustering beneath the long descent
+ And grey slopes of the wold,
+ The red roofs nestle, oversprent
+ With lichen yellow as gold.
+
+ We found it in the mid-day sun
+ Basking, what time of year
+ The thrush his singing has begun,
+ Ere the first leaves appear.
+
+ High from his load a woodman pitched
+ His faggots on the stack:
+ Knee-deep in straw the cattle twitched
+ Sweet hay from crib and rack:
+
+ And from the barn hard by was borne
+ A steady muffled din,
+ By which we knew that threshèd corn
+ Was winnowing, and went in.
+
+ The sunbeams on the motey air
+ Streamed through the open door,
+ And on the brown arms moving bare,
+ And the grain upon the floor.
+
+ One turns the crank, one stoops to feed
+ The hopper, lest it lack,
+ One in the bushel scoops the seed,
+ One stands to hold the sack.
+
+ We watched the good grain rattle down,
+ And the awns fly in the draught;
+ To see us both so pensive grown
+ The honest labourers laughed:
+
+ Merry they were, because the wheat
+ Was clean and plump and good,
+ Pleasant to hand and eye, and meet
+ For market and for food.
+
+ It chanced we from the city were,
+ And had not gat us free
+ In spirit from the store and stir
+ Of its immensity:
+
+ But here we found ourselves again.
+ Where humble harvests bring
+ After much toil but little grain,
+ 'Tis merry winnowing.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ THE AFFLICTION OF RICHARD
+
+ Love not too much. But how,
+ When thou hast made me such,
+ And dost thy gifts bestow,
+ How can I love too much?
+ Though I must fear to lose,
+ And drown my joy in care,
+ With all its thorns I choose
+ The path of love and prayer.
+
+ Though thou, I know not why,
+ Didst kill my childish trust,
+ That breach with toil did I
+ Repair, because I must:
+ And spite of frighting schemes,
+ With which the fiends of Hell
+ Blaspheme thee in my dreams,
+ So far I have hoped well.
+
+ But what the heavenly key,
+ What marvel in me wrought
+ Shall quite exculpate thee,
+ I have no shadow of thought.
+ What am I that complain?
+ The love, from which began
+ My question sad and vain,
+ Justifies thee to man.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ Since to be loved endures,
+ To love is wise:
+ Earth hath no good but yours,
+ Brave, joyful eyes:
+
+ Earth hath no sin but thine,
+ Dull eye of scorn:
+ O'er thee the sun doth pine
+ And angels mourn.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ THE GARDEN IN SEPTEMBER
+
+ Now thin mists temper the slow-ripening beams
+ Of the September sun: his golden gleams
+ On gaudy flowers shine, that prank the rows
+ Of high-grown hollyhocks, and all tall shows
+ That Autumn flaunteth in his bushy bowers;
+ Where tomtits, hanging from the drooping heads
+ Of giant sunflowers, peck the nutty seeds;
+ And in the feathery aster bees on wing
+ Seize and set free the honied flowers,
+ Till thousand stars leap with their visiting:
+ While ever across the path mazily flit,
+ Unpiloted in the sun,
+ The dreamy butterflies
+ With dazzling colours powdered and soft glooms,
+ White, black and crimson stripes, and peacock eyes,
+ Or on chance flowers sit,
+ With idle effort plundering one by one
+ The nectaries of deepest-throated blooms.
+
+ With gentle flaws the western breeze
+ Into the garden saileth,
+ Scarce here and there stirring the single trees,
+ For his sharpness he vaileth:
+ So long a comrade of the bearded corn,
+ Now from the stubbles whence the shocks are borne,
+ O'er dewy lawns he turns to stray,
+ As mindful of the kisses and soft play
+ Wherewith he enamoured the light-hearted May,
+ Ere he deserted her;
+ Lover of fragrance, and too late repents;
+ Nor more of heavy hyacinth now may drink,
+ Nor spicy pink,
+ Nor summer's rose, nor garnered lavender,
+ But the few lingering scents
+ Of streakèd pea, and gillyflower, and stocks
+ Of courtly purple, and aromatic phlox.
+
+ And at all times to hear are drowsy tones
+ Of dizzy flies, and humming drones,
+ With sudden flap of pigeon wings in the sky,
+ Or the wild cry
+ Of thirsty rooks, that scour ascare
+ The distant blue, to watering as they fare
+ With creaking pinions, or--on business bent,
+ If aught their ancient polity displease,--
+ Come gathering to their colony, and there
+ Settling in ragged parliament,
+ Some stormy council hold in the high trees.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ So sweet love seemed that April morn,
+ When first we kissed beside the thorn,
+ So strangely sweet, it was not strange
+ We thought that love could never change.
+
+ But I can tell--let truth be told--
+ That love will change in growing old;
+ Though day by day is nought to see,
+ So delicate his motions be.
+
+ And in the end 'twill come to pass
+ Quite to forget what once he was,
+ Nor even in fancy to recall
+ The pleasure that was all in all.
+
+ His little spring, that sweet we found,
+ So deep in summer floods is drowned,
+ I wonder, bathed in joy complete,
+ How love so young could be so sweet.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ LARKS
+
+ What voice of gladness, hark!
+ In heaven is ringing?
+ From the sad fields the lark
+ Is upward winging.
+
+ High through the mournful mist that blots our day
+ Their songs betray them soaring in the grey.
+ See them! Nay, they
+ In sunlight swim; above the furthest stain
+ Of cloud attain; their hearts in music rain
+ Upon the plain.
+
+ Sweet birds, far out of sight
+ Your songs of pleasure
+ Dome us with joy as bright
+ As heaven's best azure.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ THE PALM WILLOW
+
+ See, whirling snow sprinkles the starvèd fields,
+ The birds have stayed to sing;
+ No covert yet their fairy harbour yields.
+ When cometh Spring?
+ Ah! in their tiny throats what songs unborn
+ Are quenched each morn.
+
+ The lenten lilies, through the frost that push,
+ Their yellow heads withhold:
+ The woodland willow stands a lonely bush
+ Of nebulous gold;
+ There the Spring-goddess cowers in faint attire
+ Of frightened fire.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ ASIAN BIRDS
+
+ In this May-month, by grace
+ of heaven, things shoot apace.
+ The waiting multitude
+ of fair boughs in the wood,
+ How few days have arrayed
+ their beauty in green shade.
+
+ What have I seen or heard?
+ it was the yellow bird
+ Sang in the tree: he flew
+ a flame against the blue;
+ Upward he flashed. Again,
+ hark! 'tis his heavenly strain.
+
+ Another! Hush! Behold,
+ many, like boats of gold,
+ From waving branch to branch
+ their airy bodies launch.
+ What music is like this,
+ where each note is a kiss?
+
+ The golden willows lift
+ their boughs the sun to sift:
+ Their sprays they droop to screen
+ the sky with veils of green,
+ A floating cage of song,
+ where feathered lovers throng.
+
+ How the delicious notes
+ come bubbling from their throats!
+ Full and sweet how they are shed
+ like round pearls from a thread!
+ The motions of their flight
+ are wishes of delight.
+
+ Hearing their song I trace
+ the secret of their grace.
+ Ah, could I this fair time
+ so fashion into rhyme,
+ The poem that I sing
+ would be the voice of spring.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ JANUARY
+
+ Cold is the winter day, misty and dark:
+ The sunless sky with faded gleams is rent:
+ And patches of thin snow outlying, mark
+ The landscape with a drear disfigurement.
+
+ The trees their mournful branches lift aloft:
+ The oak with knotty twigs is full of trust,
+ With bud-thronged bough the cherry in the croft;
+ The chestnut holds her gluey knops upthrust.
+
+ No birds sing, but the starling chaps his bill
+ And chatters mockingly; the newborn lambs
+ Within their strawbuilt fold beneath the hill
+ Answer with plaintive cry their bleating dams.
+
+ Their voices melt in welcome dreams of spring,
+ Green grass and leafy trees and sunny skies:
+ My fancy decks the woods, the thrushes sing,
+ Meadows are gay, bees hum and scents arise.
+
+ And God the Maker doth my heart grow bold
+ To praise for wintry works not understood,
+ Who all the worlds and ages doth behold,
+ Evil and good as one, and all as good.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ A ROBIN
+
+ Flame-throated robin on the topmost bough
+ Of the leafless oak, what singest thou?
+ Hark! he telleth how--
+ 'Spring is coming now; Spring is coming now.
+
+ Now ruddy are the elm-tops against the blue sky,
+ The pale larch donneth her jewelry;
+ Red fir and black fir sigh,
+ And I am lamenting the year gone by.
+
+ The bushes where I nested are all cut down,
+ They are felling the tall trees one by one,
+ And my mate is dead and gone,
+ In the winter she died and left me lone.
+
+ She lay in the thicket where I fear to go;
+ For when the March-winds after the snow
+ The leaves away did blow,
+ She was not there, and my heart is woe:
+
+ And sad is my song, when I begin to sing,
+ As I sit in the sunshine this merry spring:
+ Like a withered leaf I cling
+ To the white oak-bough, while the wood doth ring.
+
+ Spring is coming now, the sun again is gay;
+ Each day like a last spring's happy day.'--
+ Thus sang he; then from his spray
+ He saw me listening and flew away.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ I never shall love the snow again
+ Since Maurice died:
+ With corniced drift it blocked the lane
+ And sheeted in a desolate plain
+ The country side.
+
+ The trees with silvery rime bedight
+ Their branches bare.
+ By day no sun appeared; by night
+ The hidden moon shed thievish light
+ In the misty air.
+
+ We fed the birds that flew around
+ In flocks to be fed:
+ No shelter in holly or brake they found.
+ The speckled thrush on the frozen ground
+ Lay frozen and dead.
+
+ We skated on stream and pond; we cut
+ The crinching snow
+ To Doric temple or Arctic hut;
+ We laughed and sang at nightfall, shut
+ By the fireside glow.
+
+ Yet grudged we our keen delights before
+ Maurice should come.
+ We said, In-door or out-of-door
+ We shall love life for a month or more,
+ When he is home.
+
+ They brought him home; 'twas two days late
+ For Christmas day:
+ Wrapped in white, in solemn state,
+ A flower in his hand, all still and straight
+ Our Maurice lay.
+
+ And two days ere the year outgave
+ We laid him low.
+ The best of us truly were not brave,
+ When we laid Maurice down in his grave
+ Under the snow.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ NIGHTINGALES
+
+ Beautiful must be the mountains whence ye come,
+ And bright in the fruitful valleys the streams, wherefrom
+ Ye learn your song:
+ Where are those starry woods? O might I wander there,
+ Among the flowers, which in that heavenly air
+ Bloom the year long!
+
+ Nay, barren are those mountains and spent the streams:
+ Our song is the voice of desire, that haunts our dreams,
+ A throe of the heart,
+ Whose pining visions dim, forbidden hopes profound,
+ No dying cadence nor long sigh can sound,
+ For all our art.
+
+ Alone, aloud in the raptured ear of men
+ We pour our dark nocturnal secret; and then,
+ As night is withdrawn
+ From these sweet-springing meads and bursting boughs of May,
+ Dream, while the innumerable choir of day
+ Welcome the dawn.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ A song of my heart, as the sun peered o'er the sea,
+ Was born at morning to me:
+ And out of my treasure-house it chose
+ A melody, that arose
+
+ Of all fair sounds that I love, remembered together
+ In one; and I knew not whether
+ From waves of rustling wheat it was,
+ Recoveringly that pass:
+
+ Or a hum of bees in the queenly robes of the lime:
+ Or a descant in pairing time
+ Of warbling birds: or watery bells
+ Of rivulets in the hills:
+
+ Or whether on blazing downs a high lark's hymn
+ Alone in the azure dim:
+ Or a sough of pines, when the midnight wold
+ Is solitary and cold:
+
+ Or a lapping river-ripple all day chiding
+ The bow of my wherry gliding
+ Down Thames, between his flowery shores
+ Re-echoing to the oars:
+
+ Or anthem notes, wherever in archèd quires
+ The unheeded music twires,
+ And, centuries by, to the stony shade
+ Flies following and to fade:
+
+ Or a homely prattle of children's voices gay
+ 'Mong garden joys at play:
+ Or a sundown chaunting of solemn rooks:
+ Or memory of my books,
+
+ Which hold the words that poets in many a tongue
+ To the irksome world have sung:
+ Or the voice, my happy lover, of thee
+ Now separated from me.
+
+ A ruby of fire in the burning sleep of my brain
+ Long hid my thought had lain,
+ Forgotten dreams of a thousand days
+ Ingathering to its rays,
+
+ The light of life in darkness tempering long;
+ Till now a perfect song,
+ A jewel of jewels it leapt above
+ To the coronal of my love.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ FOUNDER'S DAY. A SECULAR ODE
+ ON THE NINTH JUBILEE OF
+ ETON COLLEGE
+
+ Christ and his Mother, heavenly maid,
+ Mary, in whose fair name was laid
+ Eton's corner, bless our youth
+ With truth, and purity, mother of truth!
+
+ O ye, 'neath breezy skies of June,
+ By silver Thames's lulling tune,
+ In shade of willow or oak, who try
+ The golden gates of poesy;
+
+ Or on the tabled sward all day
+ Match your strength in England's play,
+ Scholars of Henry, giving grace
+ To toil and force in game or race;
+
+ Exceed the prayer and keep the fame
+ Of him, the sorrowful king, who came
+ Here in his realm a realm to found,
+ Where he might stand for ever crowned.
+
+ Or whether with naked bodies flashing
+ Ye plunge in the lashing weir; or dashing
+ The oars of cedar skiffs, ye strain
+ Round the rushes and home again;--
+
+ Or what pursuit soe'er it be
+ That makes your mingled presence free,
+ When by the schoolgate 'neath the limes
+ Ye muster waiting the lazy chimes;
+ May Peace, that conquereth sin and death,
+ Temper for you her sword of faith;
+ Crown with honour the loving eyes,
+ And touch with mirth the mouth of the wise.
+
+ Here is eternal spring: for you
+ The very stars of heaven are new;
+ And aged Fame again is born,
+ Fresh as a peeping flower of morn.
+
+ For you shall Shakespeare's scene unroll,
+ Mozart shall steal your ravished soul,
+ Homer his bardic hymn rehearse,
+ Virgil recite his maiden verse.
+
+ Now learn, love, have, do, be the best;
+ Each in one thing excel the rest:
+ Strive; and hold fast this truth of heaven--
+ To him that hath shall more be given.
+
+ Slow on your dial the shadows creep,
+ So many hours for food and sleep,
+ So many hours till study tire,
+ So many hours for heart's desire.
+
+ These suns and moons shall memory save,
+ Mirrors bright for her magic cave;
+ Wherein may steadfast eyes behold
+ A self that groweth never old.
+
+ O in such prime enjoy your lot,
+ And when ye leave regret it not;
+ With wishing gifts in festal state
+ Pass ye the angel-sworded gate.
+
+ Then to the world let shine your light,
+ Children in play be lions in fight,
+ And match with red immortal deeds
+ The victory that made ring the meads:
+
+ Or by firm wisdom save your land
+ From giddy head and grasping hand:
+ IMPROVE THE BEST; so shall your sons
+ Better what ye have bettered once.
+
+ Send them here to the court of grace
+ Bearing your name to fill your place:
+ Ye in their time shall live again
+ The happy dream of Henry's reign:
+
+ And on his day your steps be bent
+ Where, saint and king, crowned with content,
+ He biddeth a prayer to bless his youth
+ With truth, and purity, mother of truth.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ The north wind came up yesternight
+ With the new year's full moon,
+ And rising as she gained her height,
+ Grew to a tempest soon.
+ Yet found he not on heaven's face
+ A task of cloud to clear;
+ There was no speck that he might chase
+ Off the blue hemisphere,
+ Nor vapour from the land to drive:
+ The frost-bound country held
+ Nought motionable or alive,
+ That 'gainst his wrath rebelled.
+ There scarce was hanging in the wood
+ A shrivelled leaf to reave;
+ No bud had burst its swathing hood
+ That he could rend or grieve:
+ Only the tall tree-skeletons,
+ Where they were shadowed all,
+ Wavered a little on the stones,
+ And on the white church-wall.
+
+ --Like as an artist in his mood,
+ Who reckons all as nought,
+ So he may quickly paint his nude,
+ Unutterable thought:
+ So Nature in a frenzied hour
+ By day or night will show
+ Dim indications of the power
+ That doometh man to woe.
+ Ah, many have my visions been,
+ And some I know full well:
+ I would that all that I have seen
+ Were fit for speech to tell.--
+
+ And by the churchyard as I came,
+ It seemed my spirit passed
+ Into a land that hath no name,
+ Grey, melancholy and vast;
+ Where nothing comes: but Memory,
+ The widowed queen of Death,
+ Reigns, and with fixed, sepulchral eye
+ All slumber banisheth.
+ Each grain of writhen dust, that drapes
+ That sickly, staring shore,
+ Its old chaotic change of shapes
+ Remembers evermore.
+ And ghosts of cities long decayed
+ And ruined shrines of Fate
+ Gather the paths, that Time hath made
+ Foolish and desolate.
+
+ Nor winter there hath hope of spring,
+ Nor the pale night of day,
+ Since the old king with scorpion sting
+ Hath done himself away.
+
+ * * *
+
+ The morn was calm; the wind's last breath
+ Had fal'n: in solemn hush
+ The golden moon went down beneath
+ The dawning's crimson flush.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ NORTH WIND IN OCTOBER
+
+ In the golden glade the chestnuts are fallen all;
+ From the sered boughs of the oak the acorns fall:
+ The beech scatters her ruddy fire;
+ The lime hath stripped to the cold,
+ And standeth naked above her yellow attire:
+ The larch thinneth her spire
+ To lay the ways of the wood with cloth of gold.
+
+ Out of the golden-green and white
+ Of the brake the fir-trees stand upright
+ In the forest of flame, and wave aloft
+ To the blue of heaven their blue-green tuftings soft.
+
+ But swiftly in shuddering gloom the splendours fail,
+ As the harrying North-wind beareth
+ A cloud of skirmishing hail
+ The grievèd woodland to smite:
+ In a hurricane through the trees he teareth,
+ Raking the boughs and the leaves rending,
+ And whistleth to the descending
+ Blows of his icy flail.
+ Gold and snow he mixeth in spite,
+ And whirleth afar; as away on his winnowing flight
+ He passeth, and all again for awhile is bright.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ FIRST SPRING MORNING
+
+ A CHILD'S POEM.
+
+ Look! Look! the spring is come:
+ O feel the gentle air,
+ That wanders thro' the boughs to burst
+ The thick buds everywhere!
+ The birds are glad to see
+ The high unclouded sun:
+ Winter is fled away, they sing,
+ The gay time is begun.
+
+ Adown the meadows green
+ Let us go dance and play,
+ And look for violets in the lane,
+ And ramble far away
+ To gather primroses,
+ That in the woodland grow,
+ And hunt for oxlips, or if yet
+ The blades of bluebells show:
+
+ There the old woodman gruff
+ Hath half the coppice cut,
+ And weaves the hurdles all day long
+ Beside his willow hut.
+ We'll steal on him, and then
+ Startle him, all with glee
+ Singing our song of winter fled
+ And summer soon to be.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ A VILLAGER
+
+ There was no lad handsomer than Willie was
+ The day that he came to father's house:
+ There was none had an eye as soft an' blue
+ As Willie's was, when he came to woo.
+
+ To a labouring life though bound thee be,
+ An' I on my father's ground live free,
+ I'll take thee, I said, for thy manly grace,
+ Thy gentle voice an' thy loving face.
+
+ 'Tis forty years now since we were wed:
+ We are ailing an' grey needs not to be said:
+ But Willie's eye is as blue an' soft
+ As the day when he wooed me in father's croft.
+
+ Yet changed am I in body an' mind,
+ For Willie to me has ne'er been kind:
+ Merrily drinking an' singing with the men
+ He 'ud come home late six nights o' the se'n.
+
+ An' since the children be grown an' gone
+ He 'as shunned the house an' left me lone:
+ An' less an' less he brings me in
+ Of the little he now has strength to win.
+
+ The roof lets through the wind an' the wet,
+ An' master won't mend it with us in 's debt:
+ An' all looks every day more worn,
+ An' the best of my gowns be shabby an' torn.
+
+ No wonder if words hav' a-grown to blows;
+ That matters not while nobody knows:
+ For love him I shall to the end of life,
+ An' be, as I swore, his own true wife.
+
+ An' when I am gone, he'll turn, an' see
+ His folly an' wrong, an' be sorry for me:
+ An' come to me there in the land o' bliss
+ To give me the love I looked for in this.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ Weep not to-day: why should this sadness be?
+ Learn in present fears
+ To o'ermaster those tears
+ That unhindered conquer thee.
+
+ Think on thy past valour, thy future praise:
+ Up, sad heart, nor faint
+ In ungracious complaint,
+ Or a prayer for better days.
+
+ Daily thy life shortens, the grave's dark peace
+ Draweth surely nigh,
+ When good-night is good-bye;
+ For the sleeping shall not cease.
+
+ Fight, to be found fighting: nor far away
+ Deem, nor strange thy doom.
+ Like this sorrow 'twill come,
+ And the day will be to-day.
+
+
+
+
+ NEW POEMS
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+ _PREVIOUS EDITION_
+
+ _Collected for the first time in 1899. Smith, Elder & Co. Vol. II.
+ See notes at end of that volume._
+
+
+
+
+ NEW POEMS
+
+
+ ECLOGUE I
+
+ THE MONTHS
+
+ _BASIL AND EDWARD_
+
+ Man hath with man on earth no holier bond
+ Than that the Muse weaves with her dreamy thread:
+ Nor e'er was such transcendent love more fond
+ Than that which Edward unto Basil led,
+ Wandering alone across the woody shires
+ To hear the living voice of that wide heart,
+ To see the eyes that read the world's desires,
+ And touch the hand that wrote the roving rhyme.
+ Diverse their lots as distant were their homes,
+ And since that early meeting, jealous Time
+ Knitting their loves had held their lives apart.
+
+ But now again were these fine lovers met
+ And sat together on a rocky hill
+ Looking upon the vales of Somerset,
+ Where the far sea gleam'd o'er the bosky combes,
+ Satisfying their spirits the livelong day
+ With various mirth and revelation due
+ And delicate intimacy of delight,
+ As there in happy indolence they lay
+ And drank the sun, while round the breezy height
+ Beneath their feet rabbit and listless ewe
+ Nibbled the scented herb and grass at will.
+
+ Much talked they at their ease; and at the last
+ Spoke Edward thus, ''Twas on this very hill
+ This time of the year,--but now twelve years are past,--
+ That you provoked in verse my younger skill
+ To praise the months against your rival song;
+ And ere the sun had westered ten degrees
+ Our rhyme had brought him thro' the Zodiac.
+ Have you remembered?'--Basil answer'd back,
+ 'Guest of my solace, how could I forget?
+ Years fly as months that seem'd in youth so long.
+ The precious life that, like indifferent gold,
+ Is disregarded in its worth to hold
+ Some jewel of love that God therein would set,
+ It passeth and is gone.'--'And yet not all,'
+ Edward replied: 'The passion as I please
+ Of that past day I can to-day recall;
+ And if but you, as I, remember yet
+ Your part thereof, and will again rehearse,
+ For half an hour we may old Time outwit.'
+ And Basil said, 'Alas for my poor verse!
+ What happy memory of it still endures
+ Will thank your love: I have forgotten it.
+ Speak you my stanzas, I will ransom yours.
+ Begin you then as I that day began,
+ And I will follow as your answers ran.'
+
+
+ JANUARY
+
+ ED. The moon that mounts the sun's deserted way,
+ Turns the long winter night to a silver day;
+ But setteth golden in face of the solemn sight
+ Of her lord arising upon a world of white.
+
+
+ FEBRUARY
+
+ BA. I have in my heart a vision of spring begun
+ In a sheltering wood, that feels the kiss of the sun:
+ And a thrush adoreth the melting day that dies
+ In clouds of purple afloat upon saffron skies.
+
+
+ MARCH
+
+ ED. Now carol the birds at dawn, and some new lay
+ Announceth a homecome voyager every day.
+ Beneath the tufted sallows the streamlet thrills
+ With the leaping trout and the gleam of the daffodils.
+
+
+ APRIL
+
+ BA. Then laugheth the year; with flowers the meads are bright;
+ The bursting branches are tipped with flames of light:
+ The landscape is light; the dark clouds flee above,
+ And the shades of the land are a blue that is deep as love.
+
+
+ MAY
+
+ ED. But if you have seen a village all red and old
+ In cherry-orchards a-sprinkle with white and gold,
+ By a hawthorn seated, or a witch-elm flowering high,
+ A gay breeze making riot in the waving rye!
+
+
+ JUNE
+
+ BA. Then night retires from heaven; the high winds go
+ A-sailing in cloud-pavilions of cavern'd snow.
+ O June, sweet Philomel sang thy cradle-lay;
+ In rosy revel thy spirit shall pass away.
+
+
+ JULY
+
+ ED. Heavy is the green of the fields, heavy the trees
+ With foliage hang, drowsy the hum of bees
+ In the thund'rous air: the crowded scents lie low:
+ Thro' tangle of weeds the river runneth slow.
+
+
+ AUGUST
+
+ BA. A reaper with dusty shoon and hat of straw
+ On the yellow field, his scythe in his armës braw:
+ Beneath the tall grey trees resting at noon
+ From sweat and swink with scythe and dusty shoon.
+
+
+ SEPTEMBER
+
+ ED. Earth's flaunting flower of passion fadeth fair
+ To ripening fruit in sunlit veils of the air,
+ As the art of man makes wisdom to glorify
+ The beauty and love of life born else to die.
+
+
+ OCTOBER
+
+ BA. On frosty morns with the woods aflame, down, down
+ The golden spoils fall thick from the chestnut crown.
+ May Autumn in tranquil glory her riches spend,
+ With mellow apples her orchard-branches bend.
+
+
+ NOVEMBER
+
+ ED. Sad mists have hid the sun, the land is forlorn:
+ The plough is afield, the hunter windeth his horn.
+ Dame Prudence looketh well to her winter stores,
+ And many a wise man finds his pleasure indoors.
+
+
+ DECEMBER
+
+ BA. I pray thee don thy jerkin of olden time,
+ Bring us good ice, and silver the trees with rime;
+ And I will good cheer, good music and wine bestow,
+ When the Christmas guest comes galloping over the snow.
+
+ Thus they in verse alternate sang the year
+ For rabbit shy and listless ewe to hear,
+ Among the grey rocks on the mountain green
+ Beneath the sky in fair and pastoral scene,
+ Like those Sicilian swains, whose doric tongue
+ After two thousand years is ever young,--
+ _Sweet the pine's murmur, and, shepherd, sweet thy pipe,--_
+ Or that which gentle Virgil, yet unripe,
+ Of Tityrus sang under the spreading beech
+ And gave to rustic clowns immortal speech,
+ By rocky fountain or on flowery mead
+ Bidding their idle flocks at will to feed,
+ While they, retreated to some bosky glade,
+ Together told their loves, and as they played
+ Sang what sweet thing soe'er the poet feigned:
+ But these were men when good Victoria reigned,
+ Poets themselves, who without shepherd gear
+ Each of his native fancy sang the year.
+
+
+ ECLOGUE II
+
+ GIOVANNI DUPRÈ
+
+ _LAWRENCE AND RICHARD_
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ Look down the river--against the western sky--
+ The Ponte Santa Trinità--what throng
+ Slowly trails o'er with waving banners high,
+ With foot and horse! Surely they bear along
+ The spoil of one whom Florence honoureth:
+ And hark! the drum, the trumpeting dismay,
+ The wail of the triumphal march of death.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ 'Twill be the funeral of Giovánn Duprè
+ Wending to Santa Croce. Let us go
+ And see what relic of old splendour cheers
+ The dying ritual.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ They esteem him well
+ To lay his bones with Michael Angelo.
+ Who might he be?
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ He too a sculptor, one
+ Who left a work long to resist the years.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ You make me question further.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ I can tell
+ All as we walk. A poor woodcarver's son,
+ Prenticed to cut his father's rude designs
+ (We have it from himself), maker of shrines,
+ In his mean workshop in Siena dreamed;
+ And saw as gods the artists of the earth,
+ And long'd to stand on their immortal shore,
+ And be as they, who in his vision gleam'd,
+ Dowering the world with grace for evermore.
+ So, taxing rest and leisure to one aim,
+ The boy of single will and inbred skill
+ Rose step by step to academic fame.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ Do I not know him then? His figures fill
+ The tympana o'er Santa Croce's gate;
+ In the museum too, his Cain, that stands
+ A left-handed discobolos....
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ So great
+ His vogue, that elder art of classic worth
+ Went to the wall to give his statues room;
+ And last--his country's praise could do no more--
+ He cut the stone that honoured good Cavour.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ I have seen the things.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ He, finding in his hands
+ His life-desire possest, fell not in gloom,
+ Nor froth'd in vanity: his Sabbath earn'd
+ He look'd to spend in meditative rest:
+ So laying chisel by, he took a pen
+ To tell his story to his countrymen,
+ And prove (he did it) that the flower of all,
+ Rarest to attain, is in the power of all.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ Yet nought he ever made, that I have learn'd,
+ In wood or stone deserved, nay not his best,
+ The Greek or Tuscan name for beautiful.
+ 'Twas level with its praise, had force to pull
+ Favour from fashion.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ Yet he made one thing
+ Worthy of the lily city in her spring;
+ For while in vain the forms of beauty he aped,
+ A perfect spirit in himself he shaped;
+ And all his lifetime doing less than well
+ Where he profess'd nor doubted to excel,
+ Now, where he had no scholarship, but drew
+ His art from love, 'twas better than he knew:
+ And when he sat to write, lo! by him stood
+ The heavenly Muse, who smiles on all things good;
+ And for his truth's sake, for his stainless mind,
+ His homely love and faith, she now grew kind,
+ And changed the crown, that from the folk he got,
+ For her green laurel, and he knew it not.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ Ah! Love of Beauty! This man then mistook
+ Ambition for her?
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ In simplicity
+ Erring he kept his truth; and in his book
+ The statue of his grace is fair to see.
+
+ LAWRENCE
+
+ Then buried with their great he well may be.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ And number'd with the saints, not among them
+ Who painted saints. Join we his requiem.
+
+
+ ECLOGUE III
+
+ FOURTH OF JUNE AT ETON
+
+ _RICHARD AND GODFREY_
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ Beneath the wattled bank the eddies swarm
+ In wandering dimples o'er the shady pool:
+ The same their chase as when I was at school;
+ The same the music, where in shallows warm
+ The current, sunder'd by the bushy isles,
+ Returns to join the main, and struggles free
+ Above the willows, gurgling thro' the piles:
+ Nothing is changed, and yet how changed are we!
+ --What can bring Godfrey to the Muses' bower?
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ What but brings you? The festal day of the year;
+ To live in boyish memories for an hour;
+ See and be seen: tho' you come seldom here.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ Dread of the pang it was, fear to behold
+ What once was all myself, that kept me away.
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ You miss new pleasures coveting the old.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ They need have prudence, who in courage lack;
+ 'Twas that I might go on I looked not back.
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ Of all our company he, who, we say,
+ Fruited the laughing flower of liberty!
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ Ah! had I my desire, so should it be.
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ Nay, but I know this melancholy mood;
+ 'Twas your poetic fancy when a boy.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ For Fancy cannot live on real food:
+ In youth she will despise familiar joy
+ To dwell in mournful shades; as they grow real,
+ Then buildeth she of joy her far ideal.
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ And so perverteth all. This stream to me
+ Sings, and in sunny ripples lingeringly
+ The water saith 'Ah me! where have I lept?
+ Into what garden of life? what banks are these,
+ What secret lawns, what ancient towers and trees?
+ Where the young sons of heav'n, with shouts of play
+ Or low delighted speech, welcome the day,
+ As if the poetry of the earth had slept
+ To wake in ecstasy. O stay me! alas!
+ Stay me, ye happy isles, ere that I pass
+ Without a memory on my sullen course
+ By the black city to the tossing seas!'
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ So might this old oak say 'My heart is sere;
+ With greater effort every year I force
+ My stubborn leafage: soon my branch will crack,
+ And I shall fall or perish in the wrack:
+ And here another tree its crown will rear,
+ And see for centuries the boys at play:
+ And 'neath its boughs, on some fine holiday,
+ Old men shall prate as these.' Come see the game.
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ Yes, if you will. 'Tis all one picture fair.
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ Made in a mirror, and who looketh there
+ Must see himself. Is not a dream the same?
+
+ GODFREY
+
+ _Life is a dream._
+
+ RICHARD
+
+ And you, who say it, seem
+ Dreaming to speak to a phantom in a dream.
+
+
+ 4
+
+ ELEGY
+
+ THE SUMMER-HOUSE ON THE MOUND
+
+ How well my eyes remember the dim path!
+ My homing heart no happier playground hath.
+ I need not close my lids but it appears
+ Through the bewilderment of forty years
+ To tempt my feet, my childish feet, between
+ Its leafy walls, beneath its arching green;
+ Fairer than dream of sleep, than Hope more fair
+ Leading to dreamless sleep her sister Care.
+
+ There grew two fellow limes, two rising trees,
+ Shadowing the lawn, the summer haunt of bees,
+ Whose stems, engraved with many a russet scar
+ From the spear-hurlings of our mimic war,
+ Pillar'd the portico to that wide walk,
+ A mossy terrace of the native chalk
+ Fashion'd, that led thro' the dark shades around
+ Straight to the wooden temple on the mound.
+ There live the memories of my early days,
+ There still with childish heart my spirit plays;
+ Yea, terror-stricken by the fiend despair
+ When she hath fled me, I have found her there;
+ And there 'tis ever noon, and glad suns bring
+ Alternate days of summer and of spring,
+ With childish thought, and childish faces bright,
+ And all unknown save but the hour's delight.
+
+ High on the mound the ivied arbour stood,
+ A dome of straw upheld on rustic wood:
+ Hidden in fern the steps of the ascent,
+ Whereby unto the southern front we went,
+ And from the dark plantation climbing free,
+ Over a valley look'd out on the sea.
+ That sea is ever bright and blue, the sky
+ Serene and blue, and ever white ships lie
+ High on the horizon steadfast in full sail,
+ Or nearer in the roads pass within hail,
+ Of naked brigs and barques that windbound ride
+ At their taut cables heading to the tide.
+
+ There many an hour I have sat to watch; nay, now
+ The brazen disk is cold against my brow,
+ And in my sight a circle of the sea
+ Enlarged to swiftness, where the salt waves flee,
+ And ships in stately motion pass so near
+ That what I see is speaking to my ear:
+ I hear the waves dash and the tackle strain,
+ The canvas flap, the rattle of the chain
+ That runs out thro' the hawse, the clank of the winch
+ Winding the rusty cable inch by inch,
+ Till half I wonder if they have no care,
+ Those sailors, that my glass is brought to bear
+ On all their doings, if I vex them not
+ On every petty task of their rough lot
+ Prying and spying, searching every craft
+ From painted truck to gunnel, fore and aft,--
+ Thro' idle Sundays as I have watch'd them lean
+ Long hours upon the rail, or neath its screen
+ Prone on the deck to lie outstretch'd at length,
+ Sunk in renewal of their wearied strength.
+
+ But what a feast of joy to me, if some
+ Fast-sailing frigate to the Channel come
+ Back'd here her topsail, or brought gently up
+ Let from her bow the splashing anchor drop,
+ By faint contrary wind stay'd in her cruise,
+ The _Phaethon_ or dancing _Arethuse_,
+ Or some immense three-decker of the line,
+ Romantic as the tale of Troy divine;
+ Ere yet our iron age had doom'd to fall
+ The towering freeboard of the wooden wall,
+ And for the engines of a mightier Mars
+ Clipp'd their wide wings, and dock'd their soaring spars.
+ The gale that in their tackle sang, the wave
+ That neath their gilded galleries dasht so brave
+ Lost then their merriment, nor look to play
+ With the heavy-hearted monsters of to-day.
+
+ One noon in March upon that anchoring ground
+ Came Napier's fleet unto the Baltic bound:
+ Cloudless the sky and calm and blue the sea,
+ As round Saint Margaret's cliff mysteriously,
+ Those murderous queens walking in Sabbath sleep
+ Glided in line upon the windless deep:
+ For in those days was first seen low and black
+ Beside the full-rigg'd mast the strange smoke-stack,
+ And neath their stern revolv'd the twisted fan.
+ Many I knew as soon as I might scan,
+ The heavy _Royal George_, the _Acre_ bright,
+ The _Hogue_ and _Ajax_, and could name aright
+ Others that I remember now no more;
+ But chief, her blue flag flying at the fore,
+ With fighting guns a hundred thirty and one,
+ The Admiral ship _The Duke of Wellington_,
+ Whereon sail'd George, who in her gig had flown
+ The silken ensign by our sisters sewn.
+ The iron Duke himself,--whose soldier fame
+ To England's proudest ship had given her name,
+ And whose white hairs in this my earliest scene
+ Had scarce more honour'd than accustom'd been,--
+ Was two years since to his last haven past:
+ I had seen his castle-flag to fall half-mast
+ One morn as I sat looking on the sea,
+ When thus all England's grief came first to me,
+ Who hold my childhood favour'd that I knew
+ So well the face that won at Waterloo.
+
+ But now 'tis other wars, and other men;--
+ The year that Napier sail'd, my years were ten--
+ Yea, and new homes and loves my heart hath found:
+ A priest has there usurped the ivied mound,
+ The bell that call'd to horse calls now to prayers,
+ And silent nuns tread the familiar stairs.
+ Within the peach-clad walls that old outlaw,
+ The Roman wolf, scratches with privy paw.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ O Love, I complain,
+ Complain of thee often,
+ Because thou dost soften
+ My being to pain:
+
+ Thou makest me fear
+ The mind that createth,
+ That loves not nor hateth
+ In justice austere;
+ Who, ere he make one,
+ With millions toyeth,
+ And lightly destroyeth
+ Whate'er is begun.
+
+ An' wer't not for thee,
+ My glorious passion,
+ My heart I could fashion
+ To sternness, as he.
+
+ But thee, Love, he made
+ Lest man should defy him,
+ Connive and outvie him,
+ And not be afraid:
+
+ Nay, thee, Love, he gave
+ His terrors to cover,
+ And turn to a lover
+ His insolent slave.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ THE SOUTH WIND
+
+ The south wind rose at dusk of the winter day,
+ The warm breath of the western sea
+ Circling wrapp'd the isle with his cloke of cloud,
+ And it now reach'd even to me, at dusk of the day,
+ And moan'd in the branches aloud:
+ While here and there, in patches of dark space,
+ A star shone forth from its heavenly place,
+ As a spark that is borne in the smoky chase;
+ And, looking up, there fell on my face--
+ Could it be drops of rain
+ Soft as the wind, that fell on my face?
+ Gossamers light as threads of the summer dawn,
+ Suck'd by the sun from midmost calms of the main,
+ From groves of coral islands secretly drawn,
+ O'er half the round of earth to be driven,
+ Now to fall on my face
+ In silky skeins spun from the mists of heaven.
+
+ Who art thou, in wind and darkness and soft rain
+ Thyself that robest, that bendest in sighing pines
+ To whisper thy truth? that usest for signs
+ A hurried glimpse of the moon, the glance of a star
+ In the rifted sky?
+ Who art thou, that with thee I
+ Woo and am wooed?
+ That robing thyself in darkness and soft rain
+ Choosest my chosen solitude,
+ Coming so far
+ To tell thy secret again,
+ As a mother her child, in her folding arm
+ Of a winter night by a flickering fire,
+ Telleth the same tale o'er and o'er
+ With gentle voice, and I never tire,
+ So imperceptibly changeth the charm,
+ As Love on buried ecstasy buildeth his tower,
+ --Like as the stem that beareth the flower
+ By trembling is knit to power;--
+ Ah! long ago
+ In thy first rapture I renounced my lot,
+ The vanity, the despondency and the woe,
+ And seeking thee to know
+ Well was 't for me, and evermore
+ I am thine, I know not what.
+
+ For me thou seekest ever, me wondering a day
+ In the eternal alternations, me
+ Free for a stolen moment of chance
+ To dream a beautiful dream
+ In the everlasting dance
+ Of speechless worlds, the unsearchable scheme,
+ To me thou findest the way,
+ Me and whomsoe'er
+ I have found my dream to share
+ Still with thy charm encircling; even to-night
+ To me and my love in darkness and soft rain
+ Under the sighing pines thou comest again,
+ And staying our speech with mystery of delight,
+ Of the kiss that I give a wonder thou makest,
+ And the kiss that I take thou takest.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ I climb the mossy bank of the glade:
+ My love awaiteth me in the shade.
+
+ She holdeth a book that she never heedeth:
+ In Goddës work her spirit readeth.
+
+ She is all to me, and I to her:
+ When we embrace, the stars confer.
+
+ O my love, from beyond the sky
+ I am calling thy heart, and who but I?
+
+ * * *
+
+ Fresh as love is the breeze of June,
+ In the dappled shade of the summer noon.
+
+ Catullus, throwing his heart away,
+ Gave fewer kisses every day.
+
+ Heracleitus, spending his youth
+ In search of wisdom, had less of truth.
+
+ Flame of fire was the poet's desire:
+ The thinker found that life was fire.
+
+ O my love! my song is done:
+ My kiss hath both their fires in one.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ To my love I whisper, and say
+ Knowest thou why I love thee?--Nay:
+ Nay, she saith; O tell me again.--
+
+ When in her ear the secret I tell,
+ She smileth with joy incredible--
+
+ Ha! she is vain--O nay--
+ Then tell us!--Nay, O nay.
+
+ But this is in my heart,
+ That Love is Nature's perfect art,
+ And man hath got his fancy hence,
+ To clothe his thought in forms of sense.
+
+ Fair are thy works, O man, and fair
+ Thy dreams of soul in garments rare,
+ Beautiful past compare,
+ Yea, godlike when thou hast the skill
+ To steal a stir of the heavenly thrill:
+
+ But O, have care, have care!
+ 'Tis envious even to dare:
+ And many a fiend is watching well
+ To flush thy reed with the fire of hell.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ My delight and thy delight
+ Walking, like two angels white,
+ In the gardens of the night:
+
+ My desire and thy desire
+ Twining to a tongue of fire,
+ Leaping live, and laughing higher;
+ Thro' the everlasting strife
+ In the mystery of life.
+
+ * * *
+
+ Love, from whom the world begun,
+ Hath the secret of the sun.
+
+ Love can tell, and love alone,
+ Whence the million stars were strewn,
+ Why each atom knows its own,
+ How, in spite of woe and death,
+ Gay is life, and sweet is breath:
+
+ This he taught us, this we knew,
+ Happy in his science true,
+ Hand in hand as we stood
+ Neath the shadows of the wood,
+ Heart to heart as we lay
+ In the dawning of the day.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ SEPTUAGESIMA
+
+ Now all the windows with frost are blinded,
+ As punctual day with greedy smile
+ Lifts like a Cyclops evil-minded
+ His ruddy eyeball over the isle.
+
+ In an hour 'tis paled, in an hour ascended
+ A dazzling light in the cloudless grey.
+ Steel is the ice; the snow unblended
+ Is trod to dust on the white highway.
+
+ The lambkins frisk; the shepherd is melting
+ Drink for the ewes with a fire of straw:
+ The red flames leap at the wild air pelting
+ Bitterly thro' the leafless shaw.
+
+ Around, from many a village steeple
+ The sabbath-bells hum over the snow:
+ I give a blessing to parson and people
+ Across the fields as away I go.
+
+ Over the hills and over the meadows
+ Gay is my way till day be done:
+ Blue as the heaven are all the shadows,
+ And every light is gold in the sun.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ The sea keeps not the Sabbath day,
+ His waves come rolling evermore;
+ His noisy toil grindeth the shore,
+ And all the cliff is drencht with spray.
+
+ Here as we sit, my love and I,
+ Under the pine upon the hill,
+ The sadness of the clouded sky,
+ The bitter wind, the gloomy roar,
+ The seamew's melancholy cry
+ With loving fancy suit but ill.
+
+ We talk of moons and cooling suns,
+ Of geologic time and tide,
+ The eternal sluggards that abide
+ While our fair love so swiftly runs,
+
+ Of nature that doth half consent
+ That man should guess her dreary scheme
+ Lest he should live too well content
+ In his fair house of mirth and dream:
+
+ Whose labour irks his ageing heart,
+ His heart that wearies of desire,
+ Being so fugitive a part
+ Of what so slowly must expire.
+
+ She in her agelong toil and care
+ Persistent, wearies not nor stays,
+ Mocking alike hope and despair.
+
+ --Ah, but she too can mock our praise,
+ Enchanted on her brighter days,
+
+ Days, that the thought of grief refuse,
+ Days that are one with human art,
+ Worthy of the Virgilian muse,
+ Fit for the gaiety of Mozart.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ Riding adown the country lanes
+ One day in spring,
+ Heavy at heart with all the pains
+ Of man's imagining:--
+
+ The mist was not yet melted quite
+ Into the sky:
+ The small round sun was dazzling white,
+ The merry larks sang high:
+
+ The grassy northern slopes were laid
+ In sparkling dew,
+ Out of the slow-retreating shade
+ Turning from sleep anew:
+
+ Deep in the sunny vale a burn
+ Ran with the lane,
+ O'erhung with ivy, moss and fern
+ It laughed in joyful strain:
+
+ And primroses shot long and lush
+ Their cluster'd cream;
+ Robin and wren and amorous thrush
+ Carol'd above the stream:
+
+ The stillness of the lenten air
+ Call'd into sound
+ The motions of all life that were
+ In field and farm around:
+
+ So fair it was, so sweet and bright,
+ The jocund Spring
+ Awoke in me the old delight
+ Of man's imagining,
+
+ Riding adown the country lanes:
+ The larks sang high.--
+ O heart! for all thy griefs and pains
+ Thou shalt be loth to die.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ PATER FILIO
+
+ Sense with keenest edge unusèd,
+ Yet unsteel'd by scathing fire;
+ Lovely feet as yet unbruisèd
+ On the ways of dark desire;
+ Sweetest hope that lookest smiling
+ O'er the wilderness defiling!
+
+ Why such beauty, to be blighted
+ By the swarm of foul destruction?
+ Why such innocence delighted,
+ When sin stalks to thy seduction?
+ All the litanies e'er chaunted
+ Shall not keep thy faith undaunted.
+
+ I have pray'd the sainted Morning
+ To unclasp her hands to hold thee;
+ From resignful Eve's adorning
+ Stol'n a robe of peace to enfold thee;
+ With all charms of man's contriving
+ Arm'd thee for thy lonely striving.
+
+ Me too once unthinking Nature,
+ --Whence Love's timeless mockery took me,--
+ Fashion'd so divine a creature,
+ Yea, and like a beast forsook me.
+ I forgave, but tell the measure
+ Of her crime in thee, my treasure.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ NOVEMBER
+
+ The lonely season in lonely lands, when fled
+ Are half the birds, and mists lie low, and the sun
+ Is rarely seen, nor strayeth far from his bed;
+ The short days pass unwelcomed one by one.
+
+ Out by the ricks the mantled engine stands
+ Crestfallen, deserted,--for now all hands
+ Are told to the plough,--and ere it is dawn appear
+ The teams following and crossing far and near,
+ As hour by hour they broaden the brown bands
+ Of the striped fields; and behind them firk and prance
+ The heavy rooks, and daws grey-pated dance:
+ As awhile, surmounting a crest, in sharp outline
+ (A miniature of toil, a gem's design,)
+ They are pictured, horses and men, or now near by
+ Above the lane they shout lifting the share,
+ By the trim hedgerow bloom'd with purple air;
+ Where, under the thorns, dead leaves in huddle lie
+ Packed by the gales of Autumn, and in and out
+ The small wrens glide
+ With a happy note of cheer,
+ And yellow amorets flutter above and about,
+ Gay, familiar in fear.
+
+ And now, if the night shall be cold, across the sky
+ Linnets and twites, in small flocks helter-skelter,
+ All the afternoon to the gardens fly,
+ From thistle-pastures hurrying to gain the shelter
+ Of American rhododendron or cherry-laurel:
+ And here and there, near chilly setting of sun,
+ In an isolated tree a congregation
+ Of starlings chatter and chide,
+ Thickset as summer leaves, in garrulous quarrel:
+ Suddenly they hush as one,--
+ The tree top springs,--
+ And off, with a whirr of wings,
+ They fly by the score
+ To the holly-thicket, and there with myriads more
+ Dispute for the roosts; and from the unseen nation
+ A babel of tongues, like running water unceasing,
+ Makes live the wood, the flocking cries increasing,
+ Wrangling discordantly, incessantly,
+ While falls the night on them self-occupied;
+ The long dark night, that lengthens slow,
+ Deepening with Winter to starve grass and tree,
+ And soon to bury in snow
+ The Earth, that, sleeping 'neath her frozen stole,
+ Shall dream a dream crept from the sunless pole
+ Of how her end shall be.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ WINTER NIGHTFALL
+
+ The day begins to droop,--
+ Its course is done:
+ But nothing tells the place
+ Of the setting sun.
+
+ The hazy darkness deepens,
+ And up the lane
+ You may hear, but cannot see,
+ The homing wain.
+
+ An engine pants and hums
+ In the farm hard by:
+ Its lowering smoke is lost
+ In the lowering sky.
+
+ The soaking branches drip,
+ And all night through
+ The dropping will not cease
+ In the avenue.
+
+ A tall man there in the house
+ Must keep his chair:
+ He knows he will never again
+ Breathe the spring air:
+
+ His heart is worn with work;
+ He is giddy and sick
+ If he rise to go as far
+ As the nearest rick:
+
+ He thinks of his morn of life,
+ His hale, strong years;
+ And braves as he may the night
+ Of darkness and tears.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ Since we loved,--(the earth that shook
+ As we kissed, fresh beauty took)--
+ Love hath been as poets paint,
+ Life as heaven is to a saint;
+
+ All my joys my hope excel,
+ All my work hath prosper'd well,
+ All my songs have happy been,
+ O my love, my life, my queen.
+
+
+ 17
+
+ When Death to either shall come,--
+ I pray it be first to me,--
+ Be happy as ever at home,
+ If so, as I wish, it be.
+
+ Possess thy heart, my own;
+ And sing to the child on thy knee,
+ Or read to thyself alone
+ The songs that I made for thee.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ WISHES
+
+ I wish'd to sing thy grace, but nought
+ Found upon earth that could compare:
+ Some day, maybe, in heaven, I thought,--
+ If I should win the welcome there,--
+
+ There might I make thee many a song:
+ But now it is enough to say
+ I ne'er have done our life the wrong
+ Of wishing for a happier day.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ A LOVE LYRIC
+
+ Why art thou sad, my dearest?
+ What terror is it thou fearest,
+ Braver who art than I
+ The fiend to defy?
+
+ Why art thou sad, my dearest?
+ And why in tears appearest,
+ Closer than I that wert
+ At hiding thy hurt?
+
+ Why art thou sad, my dearest,
+ Since now my voice thou hearest?
+ Who with a kiss restore
+ Thy valour of yore.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ ΕΡΩΣ
+
+ Why hast thou nothing in thy face?
+ Thou idol of the human race,
+ Thou tyrant of the human heart,
+ The flower of lovely youth that art;
+ Yea, and that standest in thy youth
+ An image of eternal Truth,
+ With thy exuberant flesh so fair,
+ That only Pheidias might compare,
+ Ere from his chaste marmoreal form
+ Time had decayed the colours warm;
+ Like to his gods in thy proud dress,
+ Thy starry sheen of nakedness.
+
+ Surely thy body is thy mind,
+ For in thy face is nought to find,
+ Only thy soft unchristen'd smile,
+ That shadows neither love nor guile,
+ But shameless will and power immense,
+ In secret sensuous innocence.
+
+ O king of joy, what is thy thought?
+ I dream thou knowest it is nought,
+ And wouldst in darkness come, but thou
+ Makest the light where'er thou go.
+ Ah yet no victim of thy grace,
+ None who e'er long'd for thy embrace,
+ Hath cared to look upon thy face.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ THE FAIR BRASS
+
+ An effigy of brass
+ Trodden by careless feet
+ Of worshippers that pass,
+ Beautiful and complete,
+
+ Lieth in the sombre aisle
+ Of this old church unwreckt,
+ And still from modern style
+ Shielded by kind neglect.
+
+ It shows a warrior arm'd:
+ Across his iron breast
+ His hands by death are charm'd
+ To leave his sword at rest,
+
+ Wherewith he led his men
+ O'ersea, and smote to hell
+ The astonisht Saracen,
+ Nor doubted he did well.
+
+ Would wé could teach our sons
+ His trust in face of doom,
+ Or give our bravest ones
+ A comparable tomb:
+
+ Such as to look on shrives
+ The heart of half its care;
+ So in each line survives
+ The spirit that made it fair;
+
+ So fair the characters,
+ With which the dusty scroll,
+ That tells his title, stirs
+ A requiem for his soul.
+
+ Yet dearer far to me,
+ And brave as he are they,
+ Who fight by land and sea
+ For England at this day;
+
+ Whose vile memorials,
+ In mournful marbles gilt,
+ Deface the beauteous walls
+ By growing glory built:
+
+ Heirs of our antique shrines,
+ Sires of our future fame,
+ Whose starry honour shines
+ In many a noble name
+
+ Across the deathful days,
+ Link'd in the brotherhood
+ That loves our country's praise,
+ And lives for heavenly good.
+
+
+ 22
+
+ THE DUTEOUS HEART
+
+ Spirit of grace and beauty,
+ Whom men so much miscall:
+ Maidenly, modest duty,
+ I cry thee fair befall!
+
+ Pity for them that shun thee,
+ Sorrow for them that hate,
+ Glory, hath any won thee
+ To dwell in high estate!
+
+ But rather thou delightest
+ To walk in humble ways,
+ Keeping thy favour brightest
+ Uncrown'd by foolish praise;
+ In such retirement dwelling,
+ Where, hath the worldling been,
+ He straight returneth telling
+ Of sights that he hath seen,
+
+ Of simple men and truest
+ Faces of girl and boy;
+ The souls whom thou enduest
+ With gentle peace and joy.
+
+ Fair from my song befall thee,
+ Spirit of beauty and grace!
+ Men that so much miscall thee
+ Have never seen thy face.
+
+
+ 23
+
+ THE IDLE FLOWERS
+
+ I have sown upon the fields
+ Eyebright and Pimpernel,
+ And Pansy and Poppy-seed
+ Ripen'd and scatter'd well,
+
+ And silver Lady-smock
+ The meads with light to fill,
+ Cowslip and Buttercup,
+ Daisy and Daffodil;
+
+ King-cup and Fleur-de-lys
+ Upon the marsh to meet
+ With Comfrey, Watermint,
+ Loose-strife and Meadowsweet;
+
+ And all along the stream
+ My care hath not forgot
+ Crowfoot's white galaxy
+ And love's Forget-me-not:
+
+ And where high grasses wave
+ Shall great Moon-daisies blink,
+ With Rattle and Sorrel sharp
+ And Robin's ragged pink.
+
+ Thick on the woodland floor
+ Gay company shall be,
+ Primrose and Hyacinth
+ And frail Anemone,
+
+ Perennial Strawberry-bloom,
+ Woodsorrel's pencilled veil,
+ Dishevel'd Willow-weed
+ And Orchis purple and pale,
+
+ Bugle, that blushes blue,
+ And Woodruff's snowy gem,
+ Proud Foxglove's finger-bells
+ And Spurge with milky stem.
+
+ High on the downs so bare,
+ Where thou dost love to climb,
+ Pink Thrift and Milkwort are,
+ Lotus and scented Thyme;
+
+ And in the shady lanes
+ Bold Arum's hood of green,
+ Herb Robert, Violet,
+ Starwort and Celandine;
+
+ And by the dusty road
+ Bedstraw and Mullein tall,
+ With red Valerian
+ And Toadflax on the wall,
+
+ Yarrow and Chicory,
+ That hath for hue no like,
+ Silene and Mallow mild
+ And Agrimony's spike,
+ Blue-eyed Veronicas
+ And grey-faced Scabious
+ And downy Silverweed
+ And striped Convolvulus:
+
+ Harebell shall haunt the banks,
+ And thro' the hedgerow peer
+ Withwind and Snapdragon
+ And Nightshade's flower of fear.
+
+ And where men never sow,
+ Have I my Thistles set,
+ Ragwort and stiff Wormwood
+ And straggling Mignonette,
+
+ Bugloss and Burdock rank
+ And prickly Teasel high,
+ With Umbels yellow and white,
+ That come to kexes dry.
+
+ Pale Chlora shalt thou find,
+ Sun-loving Centaury,
+ Cranesbill and Sinjunwort,
+ Cinquefoil and Betony:
+
+ Shock-headed Dandelion,
+ That drank the fire of the sun:
+ Hawkweed and Marigold,
+ Cornflower and Campion.
+
+ Let Oak and Ash grow strong,
+ Let Beech her branches spread;
+ Let Grass and Barley throng
+ And waving Wheat for bread;
+
+ Be share and sickle bright
+ To labour at all hours;
+ For thee and thy delight
+ I have made the idle flowers.
+
+ But now 'tis Winter, child,
+ And bitter northwinds blow,
+ The ways are wet and wild,
+ The land is laid in snow.
+
+
+ 24
+
+ DUNSTONE HILL
+
+ A cottage built of native stone
+ Stands on the mountain-moor alone,
+ High from man's dwelling on the wide
+ And solitary mountain-side,
+
+ The purple mountain-side, where all
+ The dewy night the meteors fall,
+ And the pale stars musically set
+ To the watery bells of the rivulet,
+
+ And all day long, purple and dun,
+ The vast moors stretch beneath the sun,
+ The wide wind passeth fresh and hale,
+ And whirring grouse and blackcock sail.
+
+ Ah, heavenly Peace, where dost thou dwell?
+ Surely 'twas here thou hadst a cell,
+ Till flaming Love, wandering astray
+ With fury and blood, drove thee away.--
+
+ Far down across the valley deep
+ The town is hid in smoky sleep,
+ At moonless nightfall wakening slow
+ Upon the dark with lurid glow:
+
+ Beyond, afar the widening view
+ Merges into the soften'd blue,
+ Cornfield and forest, hill and stream,
+ Fair England in her pastoral dream.
+
+ To one who looketh from this hill
+ Life seems asleep, all is so still:
+ Nought passeth save the travelling shade
+ Of clouds on high that float and fade:
+
+ Nor since this landscape saw the sun
+ Might other motion o'er it run,
+ Till to man's scheming heart it came
+ To make a steed of steel and flame.
+
+ Him may you mark in every vale
+ Moving beneath his fleecy trail,
+ And tell whene'er the motions die
+ Where every town and hamlet lie.
+
+ He gives the distance life to-day,
+ Rushing upon his level'd way
+ From man's abode to man's abode,
+ And mocks the Roman's vaunted road,
+
+ Which o'er the moor purple and dun
+ Still wanders white beneath the sun,
+ Deserted now of men and lone
+ Save for this cot of native stone.
+
+ There ever by the whiten'd wall
+ Standeth a maiden fair and tall,
+ And all day long in vacant dream
+ Watcheth afar the flying steam.
+
+
+ 25
+
+ SCREAMING TARN
+
+ The saddest place that e'er I saw
+ Is the deep tarn above the inn
+ That crowns the mountain-road, whereby
+ One southward bound his way must win.
+
+ Sunk on the table of the ridge
+ From its deep shores is nought to see:
+ The unresting wind lashes and chills
+ Its shivering ripples ceaselessly.
+
+ Three sides 'tis banked with stones aslant,
+ And down the fourth the rushes grow,
+ And yellow sedge fringing the edge
+ With lengthen'd image all arow.
+
+ 'Tis square and black, and on its face
+ When noon is still, the mirror'd sky
+ Looks dark and further from the earth
+ Than when you gaze at it on high.
+
+ At mid of night, if one be there,
+ --So say the people of the hill--
+ A fearful shriek of death is heard,
+ One sudden scream both loud and shrill.
+
+ And some have seen on stilly nights,
+ And when the moon was clear and round,
+ Bubbles which to the surface swam
+ And burst as if they held the sound.--
+
+ 'Twas in the days ere hapless Charles
+ Losing his crown had lost his head,
+ This tale is told of him who kept
+ The inn upon the watershed:
+
+ He was a lowbred ruin'd man
+ Whom lawless times set free from fear:
+ One evening to his house there rode
+ A young and gentle cavalier.
+
+ With curling hair and linen fair
+ And jewel-hilted sword he went;
+ The horse he rode he had ridden far,
+ And he was with his journey spent.
+
+ He asked a lodging for the night,
+ His valise from his steed unbound,
+ He let none bear it but himself
+ And set it by him on the ground.
+
+ 'Here's gold or jewels,' thought the host,
+ 'That's carrying south to find the king.'
+ He chattered many a loyal word,
+ And scraps of royal airs gan sing.
+
+ His guest thereat grew more at ease
+ And o'er his wine he gave a toast,
+ But little ate, and to his room
+ Carried his sack behind the host.
+
+ 'Now rest you well,' the host he said,
+ But of his wish the word fell wide;
+ Nor did he now forget his son
+ Who fell in fight by Cromwell's side.
+
+ Revenge and poverty have brought
+ Full gentler heart than his to crime;
+ And he was one by nature rude,
+ Born to foul deeds at any time.
+
+ With unshod feet at dead of night
+ In stealth he to the guest-room crept,
+ Lantern and dagger in his hand,
+ And stabbed his victim while he slept.
+
+ But as he struck a scream there came,
+ A fearful scream so loud and shrill:
+ He whelm'd the face with pillows o'er,
+ And lean'd till all had long been still.
+
+ Then to the face the flame he held
+ To see there should no life remain:--
+ When lo! his brutal heart was quell'd:
+ 'Twas a fair woman he had slain.
+
+ The tan upon her face was paint,
+ The manly hair was torn away,
+ Soft was the breast that he had pierced;
+ Beautiful in her death she lay.
+
+ His was no heart to faint at crime,
+ Tho' half he wished the deed undone.
+ He pulled the valise from the bed
+ To find what booty he had won.
+
+ He cut the straps, and pushed within
+ His murderous fingers to their theft.
+ A deathly sweat came o'er his brow,
+ He had no sense nor meaning left.
+
+ He touched not gold, it was not cold,
+ It was not hard, it felt like flesh.
+ He drew out by the curling hair
+ A young man's head, and murder'd fresh;
+
+ A young man's head, cut by the neck.
+ But what was dreader still to see,
+ Her whom he had slain he saw again,
+ The twain were like as like can be.
+
+ Brother and sister if they were,
+ Both in one shroud they now were wound,--
+ Across his back and down the stair,
+ Out of the house without a sound.
+
+ He made his way unto the tarn,
+ The night was dark and still and dank;
+ The ripple chuckling neath the boat
+ Laughed as he drew it to the bank.
+
+ Upon the bottom of the boat
+ He laid his burden flat and low,
+ And on them laid the square sandstones
+ That round about the margin go.
+
+ Stone upon stone he weighed them down,
+ Until the boat would hold no more;
+ The freeboard now was scarce an inch:
+ He stripp'd his clothes and push'd from shore.
+
+ All naked to the middle pool
+ He swam behind in the dark night;
+ And there he let the water in
+ And sank his terror out of sight.
+
+ He swam ashore, and donn'd his dress,
+ And scraped his bloody fingers clean;
+ Ran home and on his victim's steed
+ Mounted, and never more was seen.
+
+ But to a comrade ere he died
+ He told his story guess'd of none:
+ So from his lips the crime returned
+ To haunt the spot where it was done.
+
+
+ 26
+
+ THE ISLE OF ACHILLES
+
+ (FROM THE GREEK)
+
+ Τὁν φἱλτατὁν σοι παἱδ' ἑμοἱ τ', Ἁχιλλἑα
+ ὑψει δὑμους ναἱοντα νησιωτικοὑς
+ Δευκἡν κατ' ἁκτἡν ἑντὁς Εὑξεἱνου πὁρου.
+
+ Eur. And. 1250.
+
+ Voyaging northwards by the western strand
+ Of the Euxine sea we came to where the land
+ Sinks low in salt morass and wooded plain:
+ Here mighty Ister pushes to the main,
+ Forking his turbid flood in channels three
+ To plough the sands wherewith he chokes the sea.
+
+ Against his middle arm, not many a mile
+ In the offing of black water is the isle
+ Named of Achilles, or as Leukê known,
+ Which tender Thetis, counselling alone
+ With her wise sire beneath the ocean-wave
+ Unto her child's departed spirit gave,
+ Where he might still his love and fame enjoy,
+ Through the vain Danaan cause fordone at Troy.
+ Thither Achilles passed, and long fulfill'd
+ His earthly lot, as the high gods had will'd,
+ Far from the rivalries of men, from strife,
+ From arms, from woman's love and toil of life.
+ Now of his lone abode I will unfold
+ What there I saw, or was by others told.
+
+ There is in truth a temple on the isle;
+ Therein a wooden statue of rude style
+ And workmanship antique with helm of lead:
+ Else all is desert, uninhabited;
+ Only a few goats browse the wind-swept rocks,
+ And oft the stragglers of their starving flocks
+ Are caught and sacrificed by whomsoe'er,
+ Whoever of chance or purpose hither fare:
+ About the fence lie strewn their bleaching bones.
+
+ But in the temple jewels and precious stones,
+ Upheapt with golden rings and vials lie,
+ Thankofferings to Achilles, and thereby,
+ Written or scratch'd upon the walls in view,
+ Inscriptions, with the givers' names thereto,
+ Some in Romaic character, some Greek,
+ As each man in the tongue that he might speak
+ Wrote verse of praise, or prayer for good to come,
+ To Achilles most, but to Patroclus some;
+ For those who strongly would Achilles move
+ Approach him by the pathway of his love.
+
+ Thousands of birds frequent the sheltering shrine,
+ The dippers and the swimmers of the brine,
+ Sea-mew and gull and diving cormorant,
+ Fishers that on the high cliff make their haunt
+ Sheer inaccessible, and sun themselves
+ Huddled arow upon the narrow shelves:--
+ And surely no like wonder e'er hath been
+ As that such birds should keep the temple clean;
+ But thus they do: at earliest dawn of day
+ They flock to sea and in the waters play,
+ And when they well have wet their plumage light,
+ Back to the sanctuary they take flight
+ Splashing the walls and columns with fresh brine,
+ Till all the stone doth fairly drip and shine,
+ When off again they skim asea for more
+ And soon returning sprinkle steps and floor,
+ And sweep all cleanly with their wide-spread wings.
+
+ * * *
+
+ From other men I have learnt further things.
+ If any of free purpose, thus they tell,
+ Sail'd hither to consult the oracle,--
+ For oracle there was,--they sacrificed
+ Such victims as they brought, if such sufficed,
+ And some they slew, some to the god set free:
+ But they who driven from their course at sea
+ Chanced on the isle, took of the goats thereon
+ And pray'd Achilles to accept his own.
+ Then made they a gift, and when they had offer'd once,
+ If to their question there was no response,
+ They added to the gift and asked again;
+ Yea twice and more, until the god should deign
+ Answer to give, their offering they renew'd;
+ Whereby great riches to the shrine ensued.
+ And when both sacrifice and gifts were made
+ They worship'd at the shrine, and as they pray'd
+ Sailors aver that often hath been seen
+ A man like to a god, of warrior mien,
+ A beauteous form of figure swift and strong;
+ Down on his shoulders his light hair hung long
+ And his full armour was enchast with gold:
+ While some, who with their eyes might nought behold,
+ Say that with music strange the air was stir'd;
+ And some there are, who have both seen and heard:
+ And if a man wish to be favour'd more,
+ He need but spend one night upon the shore;
+ To him in sleep Achilles will appear
+ And lead him to his tent, and with good cheer
+ Show him all friendliness that men desire;
+ Patroclus pours the wine, and he his lyre
+ Takes from the pole and plays the strains thereon
+ Which Cheiron taught him first on Pelion.
+
+ * * *
+
+ These things I tell as they were told to me,
+ Nor do I question but it well may be:
+ For sure I am that, if man ever was,
+ Achilles was a hero, both because
+ Of his high birth and beauty, his country's call,
+ His valour of soul, his early death withal,
+ For Homer's praise, the crown of human art;
+ And that above all praise he had at heart
+ A gentler passion in her sovran sway,
+ And when his love died threw his life away.
+
+
+ 27
+
+ AN ANNIVERSARY
+
+ HE
+
+ Bright, my belovèd, be thy day,
+ This eve of Summer's fall:
+ And Autumn mass his flowers gay
+ To crown thy festival!
+
+ SHE
+
+ I care not if the morn be bright,
+ Living in thy love-rays:
+ No flower I need for my delight,
+ Being crownèd with thy praise.
+
+ HE
+
+ O many years and joyfully
+ This sun to thee return;
+ Ever all men speak well of thee,
+ Nor any angel mourn!
+
+ SHE
+
+ For length of life I would not pray,
+ If thy life were to seek;
+ Nor ask what men and angels say
+ But when of thee they speak.
+
+ HE
+
+ Arise! The sky hath heard my song,
+ The flowers o'erhear thy praise;
+ And little loves are waking long
+ To wish thee happy days.
+
+
+ 28
+
+ REGINA CARA
+
+ JUBILEE-SONG, FOR MUSIC, 1897
+
+ Hark! The world is full of thy praise,
+ England's Queen of many days;
+ Who, knowing how to rule the free,
+ Hast given a crown to monarchy.
+
+ Honour, Truth and growing Peace
+ Follow Britannia's wide increase,
+ And Nature yield her strength unknown
+ To the wisdom born beneath thy throne!
+
+ In wisdom and love firm is thy fame:
+ Enemies bow to revere thy name:
+ The world shall never tire to tell
+ Praise of the queen that reignèd well.
+
+ O FELIX ANIMA, DOMINA PRAECLARA,
+ AMORE SEMPER CORONABERE
+ REGINA CARA.
+
+
+
+
+ LATER POEMS
+
+ OCCASIONAL ODES &C.]
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+
+ _PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS_
+
+ _1. Monthly Review. February, 1903._
+
+ _2. Country Life. 1906._
+
+ _3. 'Volunteer Haversack.' 1902._
+
+ _4. Daniel Press. Poems by A. Buckton.
+ 1901._
+
+ _5, 6. Saturday Review._
+
+ _7. 'The Sheaf.' June, 1902._
+
+ _8. English Review. March, 1911._
+
+ _9. Academy. April 1, 1905._
+
+ _10, 11. Monthly Review. June, 1904._
+
+ _13. Speaker._
+
+ _14. Monthly Review. March, 1902._
+
+ _15. 'Wayfarer's Love.' 1904._
+
+ _16. Saturday Review. April 13, 1907.
+ Book of the Oxford Pageant. July
+ 1907._
+
+ _17, 18, 19. Published with the Music by
+ Novello, Ewer & Co._
+
+
+
+
+ LATER POEMS
+
+
+ 1
+
+ RECOLLECTIONS OF SOLITUDE
+
+ AN ELEGY
+
+ Ended are many days, and now but few
+ Remain; since therefore it is happy and true
+ That memoried joys keep ever their delight,
+ Like steadfast stars in the blue vault of night,
+ While hours of pain (among those heavenly spheres
+ Like falling meteors, the martyr's tears)
+ Dart their long trails at random, and anon,
+ Ere we exclaim, pass, and for aye are gone;
+ Therefore my heedy thought will oft restore
+ The long light-hearted days that are no more,
+ Save where in her memorial crypt they shine
+ Spangling the silent past with joy divine.
+
+ But why in dream of this enchanted mood
+ Should all my boyhood seem a solitude?
+ Good reason know I, when I wander there,
+ In that transmuted scene, why all is fair;
+ The woods as when in holiday of spring
+ Million buds burst, and flowers are blossoming;
+ The meadows deep in grass, the fields unshorn
+ In beauty of the multitudinous corn,
+ Where the strait alleys hide me, wall'd between
+ High bloomy stalks and rustling banners green;
+ The gardens, too, in dazzling hues full-blown,
+ With wafted scent and blazing petals strewn;
+ The orchards reddening thro' the patient hours,
+ While idle autumn in his mossy bowers
+ Inviteth meditation to endear
+ The sanctuaries of the mellowing year;
+ And every spot wherein I loved to stray
+ Hath borrowed radiance of eternal day;
+ But why am I ever alone, alone?
+ Here in the corner of a field my throne,
+ Now in the branching chair of some tall tree
+ Drinking the gale in bird-like liberty;
+ Or to the seashore wandered in the sun
+ To watch the fateful waves break one by one;
+ Or if on basking downs supine I lie
+ Bathing my spirit in blue calms of the sky;
+ Or to the river bank am stolen by night
+ Hearkening unto the moonlit ripple bright
+ That warbles o'er the shallows of smooth stone;
+ Why should my memory find me all alone,
+ When I had such companions every day
+ Jocund and dear? 'Twixt glimpses of their play
+ 'Tis a vast solitude, wherein I see
+ Only myself and what I came to be.
+
+ Yet never think, dear spirits, if now ye may
+ Remember aught of that brief earthly day,
+ Ere ye the mournful Stygian river crost,
+ From our familiar home too early lost,--
+ O never think that I your tears forget,
+ Or that I loved not well, or love not yet.
+ Nor ye who held my heart in passion's chain,--
+ As kings and queens succeed in glorious reign--
+ When, as a man, I made you to outvie
+ God's work, and, as a god, then set you by
+ Among the sainted throng in holiest shrine
+ Of mythic creed and poetry divine;
+ True was my faith, and still your loves endure,
+ The jewels of my fancy, bright and pure.
+
+ Nor only in fair places do I see
+ The picture fair now it has ceased to be:
+ For fate once led me, and myself some days
+ Did I devote, to dull laborious ways,
+ By soaring thought detained to tread full low,--
+ Yea might I say unbeauteous paths of woe
+ And dreary abodes, had not my youthful sprite
+ Hallow'd each nook with legends of delight.
+ Ah! o'er that smoky town who looketh now
+ By winter sunset from the dark hill-brow,
+ Under the dying trees exultantly
+ Nursing the sting of human tragedy?
+ Or in that little room upstair'd so high,
+ Where London's roofs in thickest huddle lie,
+ Who now returns at evening to entice
+ To his fireside the joys of Paradise?
+ Once sacred was that hearth, and bright the air;
+ The flame of man's redemption flickered there,
+ In worship of those spirits, whose deathless fames
+ Have thrilled the stars of heaven to hear their names;
+ They that excell'd in wisdom to create
+ Beauty, with mortal passion conquering fate;
+ And, mid the sovran powers of elder time,
+ The loveliness of music and new rhyme,
+ The masters young that first enthrallèd me;
+ Of whom if I should name, whom then but thee,
+ Sweet Shelley, or the boy whose book was found
+ Thrust in thy bosom on thy body drowned?
+
+ O mighty Muse, wooer of virgin thought,
+ Beside thy charm all else counteth as nought;
+ The revelation of thy smile doth make
+ Him whom thou lovest reckless for thy sake;
+ Earthborn of suffering, that knowest well
+ To call thine own, and with enamouring spell
+ Feedest the stolen powers of godlike youth
+ On dear imagination's only truth,
+ Building with song a temple of desire;
+ And with the yearning music of thy quire,
+ In nuptial sacrament of thought and sense
+ Hallowest for toil the hours of indolence:
+ Thou in thy melancholic beauty drest,
+ Subduest ill to serve thy fair behest,
+ With tragic tears, and sevenfold purified
+ Silver of mirth; and with extremest pride,
+ With secret doctrine and unfathomed lore
+ Remainest yet a child for evermore,
+ The only enchantress of the earth that art
+ To cheer his day and staunch man's bleeding heart.
+
+ O heavenly Muse, for heavenly thee we call
+ Who in the fire of love refinest all,
+ Accurst is he who heark'neth not thy voice;
+ But happy he who, numbered of thy choice,
+ Walketh aloof from nature's clouded plan:
+ For all God's world is but the thought of man;
+ Wherein hast thou re-formed a world apart,
+ The mutual mirror of his better heart.
+ There is no foulness, misery, nor sin,
+ But he who loves finds his desire therein,
+ And there with thee in lonely commerce lives:
+ Nay, all that nature gave or fortune gives,
+ Joys that his spirit is most jealous of,
+ His only-embraced and best-deserving love,
+ Who walketh in the noon of heavenly praise,
+ The troubled godhead of his children's gaze,
+ Wear thine eternity, and are loved best
+ By thee transfigured and in thee possest;
+ Who madest beauty, and from thy boundless store
+ Of beauty shalt create for evermore.
+
+ 1900.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ Gay Marigold is frolic,
+ She laughs till summer is done;
+ She hears the Grillie chirping
+ All day i' the blazing sun.
+
+ But when the pale moon rises,
+ She fain her face would hide;
+ For the high Queen of sorrows
+ Disdains her empty pride.
+
+ * * *
+
+ Fair Primrose haunts the shadow
+ With children of the Spring,
+ Till in the bloomy woodland
+ The nightingale will sing.
+
+ And when he lauds the May-night
+ And spirits throng the grove,
+ The moon shines thro' the branches
+ And floods her heart with love.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ MATRES DOLOROSAE
+
+ Ye Spartan mothers, gentle ones,
+ Of lion-hearted, loving sons,
+ Fal'n, the flower of English youth,
+ To a barbarous foe in a land uncouth:--
+
+ O what a delicate sacrifice!
+ Unequal the stake and costly the price
+ As when the queen of Love deplor'd
+ Her darling by the wild-beast gor'd.
+
+ They rode to war as if to the hunt,
+ But ye at home, ye bore the brunt,
+ Bore the siege of torturing fears,
+ Fed your hope on the bread of tears.
+
+ Proud and spotless warriors they
+ With love or sword to lead the way;
+ For ye had cradled heart and hand,
+ The commander hearken'd to your command.
+
+ Ah, weeping mothers, now all is o'er,
+ Ye know your honour and mourn no more:
+ Nor ask ye a name in England's story,
+ Who gave your dearest for her glory.
+
+ _May 20, 1902._
+
+
+ 4
+
+ A VIGNETTE
+
+ Among the meadows
+ lightly going,
+ With worship and joy
+ my heart o'erflowing,
+
+ Far from town
+ and toil of living,
+ To a holy day
+ my spirit giving,...
+
+ * * *
+
+ Thou tender flower,
+ I kneel beside thee
+ Wondering why God
+ so beautified thee.--
+
+ An answering thought
+ within me springeth,
+ A bloom of the mind
+ her vision bringeth.
+
+ Between the dim hill's
+ distant azure
+ And flowery foreground
+ of sparkling pleasure
+
+ I see the company
+ of figures sainted,
+ For whom the picture
+ of earth was painted.
+
+ Those robèd seers
+ who made man's story
+ The crown of Nature,
+ Her cause his glory.
+
+ They walk in the city
+ which they have builded,
+ The city of God
+ from evil shielded:
+
+ To them for canopy
+ the vault of heaven,
+ The flowery earth
+ for carpet is given;
+
+ Whereon I wander
+ not unknowing,
+ With worship and joy
+ my heart o'erflowing.
+
+ 1901.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ MILLICENT
+
+ Thou dimpled Millicent, of merry guesses,
+ Strong-limb'd and tall, tossing thy wayward tresses,
+ What mystery of the heart can so surprise
+ The mirth and music of thy brimming eyes?
+
+ Pale-brow, thou knowest not and diest to learn
+ The mortal secret that doth in thee burn;
+ With look imploring 'If you love me, tell,
+ What is it in me that you love so well?'
+
+ And suddenly thou stakest all thy charms,
+ And leapest on me; and in thy circling arms
+ When almost stifled with their wild embrace,
+ I feel thy hot tears sheltering on my face.
+
+ 1901.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ VIVAMUS
+
+ When thou didst give thy love to me,
+ Asking no more of gods or men
+ I vow'd I would contented be,
+ If Fate should grant us summers ten.
+
+ But now that twice the term is sped,
+ And ever young my heart and gay,
+ I fear the words that then I said,
+ And turn my face from Fate away.
+
+ To bid thee happily good-bye
+ I have no hope that I can see,
+ No way that I shall bravely die,
+ Unless I give my life for thee.
+
+ 1901.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ One grief of thine
+ if truth be confest
+ Was joy to me;
+ for it drave to my breast
+ Thee, to my heart
+ to find thy rest.
+
+ How long it was
+ I never shall know:
+ I watcht the earth
+ so stately and slow,
+ And the ancient things
+ that waste and grow.
+
+ But now for me
+ what speed devours
+ Our heavenly life,
+ our brilliant hours!
+ How fast they fly,
+ the stars and flowers!
+
+
+ 8
+
+ In still midsummer night
+ When the moon is late
+ And the stars all watery and white
+ For her coming wait,
+
+ A spirit, whose eyes are possest
+ By wonder new,
+ Passeth--her arms upon her breast
+ Enwrapt from the dew
+ In a raiment of azure fold
+ With diaper
+ Of flower'd embroidery of gold
+ Bestarr'd with silver.
+
+ * * *
+
+ The daisy folk are awake
+ Their carpet to spread,
+ And the thron'd stars gazing on her make
+ Fresh crowns for her head,
+
+ Netted in her floating hair
+ As she drifteth free
+ Between the starriness of the air
+ And the starry lea,
+
+ From the silent-shadow'd vale
+ By the west wind drawn
+ Aloft to melt into the pale
+ Moonrise of dawn.
+
+ 1910.
+
+
+ 9
+
+ MELANCHOLIA
+
+ The sickness of desire, that in dark days
+ Looks on the imagination of despair,
+ Forgetteth man, and stinteth God his praise;
+ Nor but in sleep findeth a cure for care.
+ Incertainty that once gave scope to dream
+ Of laughing enterprise and glory untold,
+ Is now a blackness that no stars redeem,
+ A wall of terror in a night of cold.
+
+ Fool! thou that hast impossibly desired
+ And now impatiently despairest, see
+ How nought is changed: Joy's wisdom is attired
+ Splendid for others' eyes if not for thee:
+ Not love or beauty or youth from earth is fled:
+ If they delite thee not, 'tis thou art dead.
+
+ 1904.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ TO THE PRESIDENT OF MAGDALEN
+ COLLEGE, OXFORD
+
+ Since now from woodland mist and flooded clay
+ I am fled beside the steep Devonian shore,
+ Nor stand for welcome at your gothic door,
+ 'Neath the fair tower of Magdalen and May,
+ Such tribute, Warren, as fond poets pay
+ For generous esteem, I write, not more
+ Enhearten'd than my need is, reckoning o'er
+ My life-long wanderings on the heavenly way:
+
+ But well-befriended we become good friends,
+ Well-honour'd honourable; and all attain
+ Somewhat by fathering what fortune sends.
+ I bid your presidency a long reign,
+ True friend; and may your praise to greater ends
+ Aid better men than I, nor me in vain.
+
+
+ 11
+
+ TO JOSEPH JOACHIM
+
+ Belov'd of all to whom that Muse is dear
+ Who hid her spirit of rapture from the Greek,
+ Whereby our art excelleth the antique,
+ Perfecting formal beauty to the ear;
+ Thou that hast been in England many a year
+ The interpreter who left us nought to seek,
+ Making Beethoven's inmost passion speak,
+ Bringing the soul of great Sebastian near:
+
+ Their music liveth ever, and 'tis just
+ That thou, good Joachim, so high thy skill,
+ Rank (as thou shalt upon the heavenly hill)
+ Laurel'd with them, for thy ennobling trust
+ Remember'd when thy loving hand is still
+ And every ear that heard thee stopt with dust.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ TO THOS. FLOYD
+
+ How fares it, friend, since I by Fate annoy'd
+ Left the old home in need of livelier play
+ For body and mind? How fare, this many a day,
+ The stubborn thews and ageless heart of Floyd?
+ If not too well with country sport employ'd,
+ Visit my flock, the breezy hill that they
+ Choose for their fold; and see, for thence you may,
+ From rising walls all roofless yet and void,
+
+ The lovely city, thronging tower and spire,
+ The mind of the wide landscape, dreaming deep,
+ Grey-silvery in the vale; a shrine where keep
+ Memorial hopes their pale celestial fire:
+ Like man's immortal conscience of desire,
+ The spirit that watcheth in me ev'n in my sleep.
+
+ 1906.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ LA GLOIRE DE VOLTAIRE
+
+ A DIALOGUE IN VERSE.
+
+ A.
+
+ _Je donnerais pour revivre à vingt ans
+ L'or de Rothschild, la gloire de Voltaire._
+ I like that: Béranger in his printems,
+ Voltaire and Rothschild: what three graces there
+ Foot it together! But of old Voltaire,
+ I'd ask what Béranger found so sublime
+ In that man's glory to adorn his rhyme.
+ Was it mere fame?
+
+ B.
+
+ Nay: for as wide a fame
+ Was won by the gold-garnering millionaire,
+ Who in the poet's verse might read his name
+ And what is that? when so much froth and scum
+ Float down the stream of Time (as Bacon saith),
+ What is that for deliverance from the death?
+ Could any sober man be proud to hold
+ A lease of common talk, or die consoled
+ For thinking that on lips of fools to come
+ He'll live with Pontius Pilate and Tom Thumb?
+ That were more like eternal punishment,
+ The true fool's Paradise by all consent.
+ Béranger thought to set a crown on merit.
+
+ A.
+
+ Man's merit! and to crown it in Voltaire?
+ The modest eye, the gentle, fearless heart,
+ The mouth of peace and truth, the angelic spirit!
+ Why Arouet was _soufflé_ with the leaven,
+ Of which the little flock was bid beware:
+ His very ambition was to play a part;
+ Indifferent whether he did wrong or right,
+ So he won credit; eager to deny
+ A lie that failed, by adding lie to lie;
+ Repaying evil unto seven-times-seven;
+ A fount of slander, flattery and spite;
+ Vain, irritable; true but to his face
+ Of mockery and mischievous grimace,
+ A monkey of the schools, the saints' despair!
+
+ B.
+
+ Yet for his voice half Europe stood at pause
+ To hear, and when he spoke rang with applause.
+
+ A.
+
+ Granted he was a wonder of his kind.
+ There is a devilish mockery in things
+ Which only a born devil can enjoy.
+ True banter is of melancholy mind,
+ Akin to madness; thus must Shakespeare toy
+ With Hamlet's reason, ere his fine art dare
+ Push his relentless humour to the quick;
+ And so his mortal thrusts pierce not the skin.
+ But for the superficial bickerings
+ That poison life and never seem to prick,
+ The reasonable educated grin,
+ Truly no wag is equal to Voltaire;
+ His never-dying ripple, wide and light,
+ Has nigh the force of Nature: to compare,
+ 'Tis like the ocean when the sky is bright,
+ And the cold north-wind tickles with surprise
+ The briny levels of the infinite sea.
+ --Shall we conclude his merit was his wit,
+ His magic art and versatility?
+
+ B.
+
+ And think of those foredoom'd in Dante's pit,
+ Who, sunk at bottom of the loathly slough,
+ Made the black mud up-bubble with their sighs;
+ And all because they were unkind to Mirth,
+ And went with smoky heart and gloomy brow
+ The while they lived upon the pleasant earth
+ In the sweet air that rallies to the sun,
+ And ne'er so much as smiled or gave God thanks:
+ Surely a sparkle of the Frenchman's fun
+ Had rescued all their souls.
+
+ A.
+
+ I think I see
+ The Deity who in this Heaven abides,
+ _Le bon Dieu_, holding both his aching sides,
+ With radiant face of Pan, ruddy and hairy:
+ Give him his famous whistles and goat-shanks,
+ And then present him to Alighieri.
+
+ B.
+
+ Nay, 'twixt the Frenchman and the Florentine
+ I ask no truce, grave Dante weaving well
+ His dark-eyed thought into a song divine,
+ Drawing high poetry from heaven and hell--
+ And him who lightly mockt at all in turn.
+
+ A.
+
+ It follow'd from his mundane thought of art
+ That he contemn'd religion: his concern
+ Was comfort, taste, and wit: he had no heart
+ For man's attempt to build and beautify
+ His home in Nature; so he set all by
+ That wisdom had evolved with purpose kind;
+ Stamped it as folly, or as fraud attacked;
+ Never discerning how his callow zest
+ Was impiously defiling his own nest;
+ Whereas the least philosophy may find
+ The truths are the ideas; the sole fact
+ Is the long story of man's growing mind.
+
+ B.
+
+ Upon your thistle now I see my fig--
+ Béranger thought of Voltaire as a seer,
+ A latter-day John Baptist in a wig;
+ A herald of that furious gospel-storm
+ Of words and blood, that made the nations fear;
+ When sickening France adulterously sinn'd
+ With Virtue, and went mad conceiving wind.
+ He ranks him with those captains of reform,
+ Luther and Calvin; who, whate'er they taught,
+ Led folk from superstition to free thought.
+
+ A.
+
+ They did. But whence or whither led Voltaire?
+ The steward with fifty talents given in charge,
+ Who spent them on himself, and liv'd at large;
+ His only virtue that he did not hide
+ The pounds, but squander'd them to serve his pride;
+ His praise that, cunning in his generation,
+ He of the heavenly treasure did not spare
+ To win himself an earthly habitation.
+
+ B.
+
+ Deny him not this laurel, nor to France
+ The apostolate of modern tolerance:
+ Their Theseus he, who slew the Minotaur,
+ The Dragon Persecution, in which war
+ He tipp'd the shafts that made the devil bleed;
+ And won a victory that hath overcome
+ Many misdoings in a well-done deed;
+ And more, I think, the mind of Christ revealing,
+ Yea, more of common-sense and human feeling
+ Than all the Creeds and Bulls of Christendom.
+
+ A.
+
+ Yet was he only one of them that slew:
+ The fiend had taken a deadly wound from Bayle;
+ And did he 'roar to see his kingdom fail'
+ 'Neath Robespierre, or raise his head anew?
+ Nay, Voltaire's teaching never cured the heart:
+ The lack of human feeling blots his art.
+ When most his phrase with indignation burns,
+ Still to the gallery his face he turns.
+
+ B.
+
+ You bear him hard. Men are of common stuff,
+ Each hath some fault, and he had faults enough:
+ But of all slanderers that ever were
+ A virtuous critic is the most unfair.
+ In greatness ever is some good to see;
+ And what is character, unless it be
+ The colour of persistent qualities,
+ That, like a ground in painting, balances
+ All hues and forms, combining with one tone
+ Whatever lights or shades are on it thrown?
+ Now Voltaire had of Nature a rich ground,
+ Two virtues rarely in conjunction found:
+ Industry, which no pedant could excel,
+ He matched with gaiety inexhaustible;
+ And with heroic courage held these fast,
+ As sailors nail their colours to the mast,
+ With ruling excellence atoning all.
+ Though, for the rest, he still for praise may call;
+ Prudent to gain, as generous to share
+ _Le superflu, chose si nécessaire_;
+ To most a rare companion above scorn,
+ To not a few a kind, devoted friend
+ Through his long battling life, which in the end
+ He strove with good works richly to adorn.
+ I have admired, and why should I abuse
+ A man who can so long and well amuse?
+
+ A.
+
+ To some Parisian art there's this objection,
+ 'Tis mediocrity pushed to perfection.
+
+ B.
+
+ 'Judge not,' say I, 'and ye shall not be judged!'
+
+ A.
+
+ Let me say, 'praise men, if ye would be praised:'
+ Let your unwholesome flattery flow ungrudged,
+ And with ungrudging measure shall men pour
+ Their stifling homage back till ye be crazed,
+ And sane men humour you as fools past cure.
+ But these wise maxims deal not with the dead,
+ 'Tis by example that the young are led,
+ And judgement owes its kindness but to them;
+ Nor will I praise, call you me hard or nice,
+ One that degraded art, and varnished vice.
+ They that praise ill thereby themselves condemn.
+
+ B.
+
+ Béranger could not praise.
+
+ A.
+
+ Few are who can;
+ Not he: if ever he assay'd to impart
+ A title loftier than his own renown,
+ Native irreverence defied his art,
+ His fingers soil'd the lustre of his crown.
+ Here he adored what he was envious of,
+ The vogue and dazzling fashion of the man.
+ But man's true praise, the poet's praise, is love.
+
+ B.
+
+ And that, perhaps, was hardly his affair....
+ Pray, now, what set you talking of Voltaire?
+
+ A.
+
+ This only, that in weeding out my shelves,
+ In fatherly regard for babes upgrown,
+ Until they learn to garden for themselves,
+ Much as I like to keep my sets entire,
+ When I came out to you I had just thrown
+ Three of his precious works behind the fire.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ TO ROBERT BURNS
+
+ AN EPISTLE ON INSTINCT
+
+ 1
+
+ Thou art a poet, Robbie Burns,
+ Master of words and witty turns,
+ Of lilting songs and merry yarns,
+ Drinking and kissing:
+ There's much in all thy small concerns,
+ But more that's missing.
+
+ 2
+
+ The wisdom of thy common sense,
+ Thy honest hate of vain pretence,
+ Thy love and wide benevolence
+ Full often lead thee
+ Where feeling is its own defence;
+ Yet while I read thee,
+
+ 3
+
+ It seems but chance that all our race
+ Trod not the path of thy disgrace,
+ And, living freely to embrace
+ The moment's pleasure,
+ Snatch'd not a kiss of Nature's face
+ For all her treasure.
+
+ 4
+
+ The feelings soft, the spirits gay
+ Entice on such a flowery way,
+ And sovran youth in high heyday
+ Hath such a fashion
+ To glorify the bragging sway
+ Of sensual passion.
+
+ 5
+
+ But rakel Chance and Fortune blind
+ Had not the power:--Eternal Mind
+ Led man upon a way design'd,
+ By strait selection
+ Of pleasurable ways, to find
+ Severe perfection.
+
+ 6
+
+ For Nature did not idly spend
+ Pleasure: she ruled it should attend
+ On every act that doth amend
+ Our life's condition:
+ 'Tis therefore not well-being's end,
+ But its fruition.
+
+ 7
+
+ Beasts that inherited delight
+ In what promoted health or might,
+ Survived their cousins in the fight:
+ If some--like Adam--
+ Prefer'd the wrong tree to the right,
+ The devil had 'em.
+
+ 8
+
+ So when man's Reason took the reins,
+ She found that she was saved her pains;
+ She had but to approve the gains
+ Of agelong inscience,
+ And spin it fresh into her brains
+ As moral conscience.
+
+ 9
+
+ But Instinct in the beasts that live
+ Is of three kinds; (Nature did give
+ To man three shakings in her sieve)--
+ The first is Racial,
+ The second Self-preservative,
+ The third is Social.
+
+ 10
+
+ Without the first no race could be,
+ So 'tis the strongest of the three;
+ Nay, of such forceful tyranny
+ 'Tis hard to attune it,
+ Because 'twas never made to agree
+ To serve the unit:
+
+ 11
+
+ Art will not picture it, its name
+ In common talk is utter shame:
+ And yet hath Reason learn'd to tame
+ Its conflagration
+ Into a sacramental flame
+ Of consecration.
+
+ 12
+
+ Those hundred thousand years, ah me!
+ Of budding soul! What slow degree,
+ With aim so dim, so true! We see,
+ Now that we know them,
+ Our humble cave-folk ancestry,
+ How much we owe them:
+
+ 13
+
+ While with the savage beasts around
+ They fought at odds, yet underground
+ Their miserable life was sound;
+ Their loves and quarrels
+ Did well th' ideal bases found
+ Of art and morals:
+
+ 14
+
+ One prime distinction, Good and Ill,
+ Was all their notion, all their skill;--
+ But Unity stands next to Nil;--
+ Want of analysis
+ Saved them from doubts that wreck the Will
+ With pale paralysis.
+
+ 15
+
+ In vain philosophers dispute
+ 'Is Good or Pleasure our pursuit?'--
+ The fruit likes man, not man the fruit;
+ The good that likes him,
+ The good man's pleasure 'tis to do 't;
+ That's how it strikes him.
+
+ 16
+
+ Tho' Science hide beneath her feet
+ The point where moral reasonings meet,
+ The vicious circle is complete;
+ There is no lodgement
+ Save Aristotle's own retreat,
+ The just man's judgement.
+
+ 17
+
+ And if thou wert not that just man,
+ Wild Robin, born to crown his plan,
+ We shall not for that matter ban
+ Thy petty treason,
+ Nor closely thy defection scan
+ From highest Reason.
+
+ 18
+
+ Thou might'st have lived like Robin Hood
+ Waylaying Abbots in the wood,
+ Doing whate'er thee-seemèd good,
+ The law defying,
+ And 'mong the people's heroes stood
+ Living and dying:
+
+ 19
+
+ Yet better bow than his thou bendest,
+ And well the poor man thou befriendest,
+ And oftentime an ill amendest;
+ When, if truth touch thee,
+ Sharply the arrow home thou sendest;
+ There's none can match thee.
+
+ 20
+
+ So pity it is thou knew'st the teen
+ Of sad remorse: the Might-have-been
+ Shall not o'ercloud thy merry scene
+ With vain repentance,
+ Nor forfeit from thy spirit keen
+ My friendly sentence.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ THE PORTRAIT OF A GRANDFATHER
+
+ With mild eyes agaze, and lips ready to speak,
+ Whereon the yearning of love, the warning of wisdom plays,
+ One portrait ever charms me and teaches me when I seek:
+ It is of him whom I, remembering my young days,
+ Imagine fathering my father; when he, in sonship afore,
+ Liv'd honouring and obeying the eyes now pictur'd agaze,
+ The lips ready to speak, that promise but speak no more.
+
+ O high parental claim, that were not but for the knowing,
+ O fateful bond of duty, O more than body that bore,
+ The smile that guides me to right, the gaze that follows my going,
+ How had I stray'd without thee! and yet how few will seek
+ The spirit-hands, that heaven, in tender-free bestowing,
+ Holds to her children, to guide the wandering and aid the weak.
+
+ And Thee! ah what of thee, thou lover of men? if truly
+ A painter had stell'd thee there, with thy lips ready to speak,
+ In all-fathering passion to souls enchanted newly,
+ --Tenderer call than of sire to son, or of lover to maiden,--
+ Ever ready to speak to us, if we will hearken duly,
+ 'Come, O come unto me, ye weary and heavy-laden!'
+
+ [1880.]
+
+
+ 16
+
+ AN INVITATION TO THE OXFORD
+ PAGEANT, JULY 1907
+
+ Fair lady of learning, playfellow of spring,
+ Who to thy towery hospice in the vale
+ Invitest all, with queenly claim to bring
+ Scholars from every land within thy pale;
+ If aught our pageantry may now avail
+ To paint thine antique story to the eye,
+ Inspire the scene, and bid thy herald cry
+ Welcome to all, and to all comers hail!
+
+ Come hither, then he crieth, and hail to all.
+ Bow each his heart a pilgrim at her shrine,
+ Whatever chance hath led you to my call,
+ Ye that love pomp, and ye that seek a sign,
+ Or on the low earth look for things divine;
+ Nor ye, whom reverend Camus near-allied,
+ Writes in the roll of his ennobled pride,
+ Refrain your praise and love to mix with mine.
+
+ Praise her, the mother of celestial moods,
+ Who o'er the saints' inviolate array
+ Hath starr'd her robe of fair beatitudes
+ With jewels worn by Hellas, on the day
+ She grew from girlhood into wisdom gay;
+ And hath laid by her crozier, evermore
+ With both hands gathering to enrich her store,
+ And make her courts with music ring alway.
+
+ Love her, for that the world is in her heart,
+ Man's rude antiquity and doubtful goal,
+ The heaven-enthralling luxury of art,
+ The burden'd pleading of his clay-bound soul,
+ The mutual office of delight and dole,
+ The merry laugh of youth, the joy of life
+ Older than thought, and the unamending strife
+ 'Twixt liberty and politic control.
+
+ There is none holier, not the lilied town
+ By Arno, whither the spirit of Athens fled,
+ Escap't from Hades to a less renown,
+ Yet joyful to be risen from the dead;
+ Nor she whose wide imperious arms were spread
+ To spoil mankind, until the avenger came
+ In darkening storm, and left a ruin'd name,
+ A triple crown, upon a vanquish't head.
+
+ What love in myriad hearts in every clime
+ The vision of her beauty calls to pray'r:
+ Where at his feet Himâlaya sublime
+ Holds up aslope the Arabian floods, or where
+ Patriarchal Nile rears at his watery stair;
+ In the broad islands of the Antipodes,
+ By Esperanza, or in the coral seas
+ Where Buddha's vain pagodas throng the air;
+
+ Or where the chivalry of Nipon smote
+ The wily Muscovite, intent to creep
+ Around the world with half his pride afloat,
+ And sent his battle to the soundless deep;
+ Or with our pilgrim-kin, and them that reap
+ The prairie-corn beyond cold Labrador
+ To California and the Alaskan shore,
+ Her exiled sons their pious memory keep:
+
+ Bright memories of young poetic pleasure
+ In free companionship, the loving stress
+ Of all life-beauty lull'd in studious leisure,
+ When every Muse was jocund with excess
+ Of fine delight and tremulous happiness;
+ The breath of an indolent unbridled June,
+ When delicate thought fell from the dreamy moon:
+ But now strange care, sorrow, and grief oppress.
+
+ '_Ah! fewer tears shall be_,--'tis thus they dream,--
+ _Ah, fewer, softer tears, when we lie low:
+ On younger brows shall brighter laurel gleam:
+ Lovelier and earlier shall the rosebuds blow_.'
+ For in this hope she nurs'd them, and to know
+ That Truth, while men regard a tetter'd page,
+ Leaps on the mountains, and from age to age
+ Reveals the dayspring's inexhausted glow.
+
+ Yet all their joy is mingled with regret:
+ As the lone scholar on a neighbouring height,
+ Brooding disconsolate with eyelids wet
+ Ere o'er the unkind world he took his flight,
+ Look'd down upon her festal lamps at night,
+ And while the far call of her warning bell
+ Reach't to his heart, sang us his fond farewell,
+ Beneath the stars thinking of lost delight;
+
+ 'Farewell! for whether we be young or old,
+ Thou dost remain, but we shall pass away:
+ Time shall against himself thy house uphold,
+ And build thy sanctuary from decay;
+ Children unborn shall be thy pride and stay.
+ May Earth protect thee, and thy sons be true;
+ And God with heavenly food thy life renew,
+ Thy pleasure and thy grace from day to day.'
+
+
+ 17
+
+ IN MEMORY OF THE OLD-ETONIANS
+
+ WHOSE LIVES WERE LOST IN THE S. AFRICAN WAR
+
+ _An ode set to music by Sir Hubert Parry and performed when
+ K. Edward VII inaugurated the Memorial Hall at
+ Eton College_
+
+ I
+
+ Resound! Resound! To jubilant music ring!
+ Your birthday trumpets sound the alarm of strenuous days.
+ Ye new-built walls, awake! and welcome England's King
+ With a high GLORY-TO-GOD, and holy cheer of praise.
+ Awake to fairest hope of fames unknown, unseen,
+ When ye-too silver and solemn with age shall be:
+ For all that is fair upon earth is reared with tend'rest teen,
+ As the burden'd years to memory flee.
+
+ II
+
+ Lament, O Muse of the Thames, in pride lament again,
+ With low melodious grief remember them in this hour!--
+ Beyond your dauntless joy, my brother, was our pain.
+ Above all gold, my country, the lavish price of thy power--
+ The ancient groves have mourn'd our sons, for whom no more
+ The sisterly kisses of life, the loved embraces.
+ Remember the love of them who came not home from the war,
+ The fatherly tears and the veil'd faces.
+
+ III
+
+ Now henceforth their shrine is builded, high and vast,
+ Alway drawing noble hearts to noble deeds;
+ In the toil of glory to be, and the tale of glory past:
+ While ever the laughing waves of youth pass over the meads,
+ And the tongue of Hellas is heard, and old Time slumbereth light
+ In the cradle of Peace. O let thy dancing feet
+ Roam in our land and abide, dear Peace, thou child of Right,
+ Giver of happiness, gentle and sweet.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ ODE TO MUSIC
+
+ WRITTEN FOR THE BICENTENARY COMMEMORATION OF
+
+ HENRY PURCELL
+
+ _Music composed by Sir Hubert Parry, and performed at the
+ Leeds Festival and Commemoration Festival in
+ London, 1895_
+
+ I
+
+ Myriad-voiced Queen, Enchantress of the air,
+ Bride of the life of man! With tuneful reed,
+ With string and horn and high-adoring quire
+ Thy welcome we prepare.
+ In silver-speaking mirrors of desire,
+ In joyous ravishment of mystery draw thou near,
+ With heavenly echo of thoughts, that dreaming lie
+ Chain'd in unborn oblivion drear,
+ Thy many-hearted grace restore
+ Unto our isle our own to be,
+ And make again our Graces three.
+
+ II
+
+ Turn, O return! In merry England
+ Foster'd thou wert with infant Liberty.
+ Her gloried oaks, that stand
+ With trembling leaves and giant heart
+ Drinking in beauty from the summer moon,
+ Her wild-wood once was dear to thee.
+
+ There the birds with tiny art
+ Earth's immemorial cradle-tune
+ Warble at dawn to fern and fawn,
+ In the budding thickets making merry;
+ And for their love the primrose faint
+ Floods the green shade with youthful scent.
+
+ Come, thy jocund spring renew
+ By hyacinthine lakes of blue:
+ Thy beauty shall enchant the buxom May;
+ And all the summer months shall strew thy way,
+ And rose and honeysuckle rear
+ Their flowery screens, till under fruit and berry
+ The tall brake groweth golden with the year.
+
+ III
+
+ Thee fair Poetry oft hath sought,
+ Wandering lone in wayward thought,
+ On level meads by gliding streams,
+ When summer noon is full of dreams:
+ And thy loved airs her soul invade,
+ Haunting retired the willow shade.
+
+ Or in some walled orchard nook
+ She communes with her ancient book,
+ Beneath the branches laden low;
+ While the high sun o'er bosom'd snow
+ Smiteth all day the long hill-side
+ With ripening cornfields waving wide.
+
+ There if thou linger all the year,
+ No jar of man can reach thine ear,
+ Or sweetly comes, as when the sound
+ From hidden villages around,
+ Threading the woody knolls, is borne
+ Of bells that dong the Sabbath morn.
+
+ IV
+
+ 1
+
+ The sea with melancholy war
+ Moateth about our castled shore;
+ His world-wide elemental moan
+ Girdeth our lives with tragic zone.
+
+ He, ere men dared his watery path,
+ Fenced them aloof in wrath;
+ Their jealous brotherhoods
+ Sund'ring with bitter floods:
+ Till science grew and skill,
+ And their adventurous will
+ Challenged his boundaries, and went free
+ To know the round world, and the sea
+ From midday night to midnight sun
+ Binding all nations into one.
+
+ 2
+
+ Yet shall his storm and mastering wave
+ Assure the empire to the brave;
+ And to his billowy bass belongs
+ The music of our patriot songs,
+ When to the wind his ridges go
+ In furious following, careering a-row,
+ Lasht with hail and withering snow:
+ And ever undaunted hearts outride
+ His rushing waters wide.
+
+ 3
+
+ But when the winds fatigued or fled
+ Have left the drooping barks unsped,
+ And nothing stirs his idle plain
+ Save fire-breathed ships with silvery train,
+ While lovingly his waves he layeth,
+ And his slow heart in passion swells
+ To the pale moon in heav'n that strayeth,
+ And all his mighty music deep
+ Whispers among the heapèd shells,
+ Or in dark caverns lies asleep;--
+ Then dreams of Peace invite,
+ Haunting our shore with kisses light:
+ Nay--even Love's Paphian Queen hath come
+ Out of her long retirèd home
+ To show again her beauty bright;
+ And twice or thrice in sight hath play'd
+ Of a young lover unaffray'd,
+ And all his verse immortal made.
+
+ V
+
+ 1
+
+ Love to Love calleth,
+ Love unto Love replieth:
+ From the ends of the earth, drawn by invisible bands,
+ Over the dawning and darkening lands
+ Love cometh to Love.
+ To the pangs of desire;
+ To the heart by courage and might
+ Escaped from hell,
+ From the torment of raging fire,
+ From the sighs of the drowning main,
+ From shipwreck of fear and pain,
+ From the terror of night.
+
+ 2
+
+ All mankind by Love shall be banded
+ To combat Evil, the many-handed:
+ For the spirit of man on beauty feedeth,
+ The airy fancy he heedeth,
+ He regardeth Truth in the heavenly height,
+ In changeful pavilions of loveliness dight,
+ The sovran sun that knows not the night;
+ He loveth the beauty of earth,
+ And the sweet birds' mirth;
+ And out of his heart there falleth
+ A melody-making river
+ Of passion, that runneth ever
+ To the ends of the earth and crieth,
+ That yearneth and calleth;
+ And Love from the heart of man
+ To the heart of man replieth:
+ On the wings of desire
+ Love cometh to Love.
+
+ VI
+
+ 1
+
+ To me, to me, fair hearted Goddess, come,
+ To Sorrow come,
+ Where by the grave I linger dumb;
+ With sorrow bow thine head,
+ For all my beauty is dead,
+ Leave Freedom's vaunt and playful thought awhile,
+ Come with thine unimpassioned smile
+ Of heavenly peace, and with thy fourfold choir
+ Of fair uncloying harmony
+ Unveil the palaces where man's desire
+ Keepeth celestial solemnity.
+
+ 2
+
+ Lament, fair hearted queen, lament with me:
+ For when thy seer died no song was sung,
+ Nor for our heroes fal'n by land or sea
+ Hath honour found a tongue:
+ Nor aught of beauty for their tomb can frame
+ Worthy their noble name.
+ Let Mirth go bare: make mute thy dancing string:
+ With thy majestic consolation
+ Sweeten our suffering.
+ Speak thou my woe; that from her pain
+ My spirit arise to see again
+ The Truth unknown that keeps our faith,
+ The Beauty unseen that bates our breath,
+ The heaven that doth our joy renew,
+ And drinketh up our tears as dew.
+
+ VII
+
+ DIRGE
+
+ Man born of desire
+ Cometh out of the night,
+ A wandering spark of fire,
+ A lonely word of eternal thought
+ Echoing in chance and forgot.
+
+ 1
+
+ He seeth the sun,
+ He calleth the stars by name,
+ He saluteth the flowers.--
+ Wonders of land and sea,
+ The mountain towers
+ Of ice and air
+ He seeth, and calleth them fair:
+ Then he hideth his face;--
+ Whence he came to pass away
+ Where all is forgot,
+ Unmade--lost for aye
+ With the things that are not.
+
+ 2
+
+ He striveth to know,
+ To unravel the Mind
+ That veileth in horror:
+ He wills to adore.
+ In wisdom he walketh
+ And loveth his kind;
+ His labouring breath
+ Would keep evermore:
+ Then he hideth his face;--
+ Whence he came to pass away
+ Where all is forgot,
+ Unmade--lost for aye
+ With the things that are not.
+
+ 3
+
+ He dreameth of beauty,
+ He seeks to create
+ Fairer and fairer
+ To vanquish his Fate;
+ No hindrance he--
+ No curse will brook,
+ He maketh a law
+ No ill shall be:
+ Then he hideth his face;--
+ Whence he came to pass away
+ Where all is forgot,
+ Unmade--lost for aye
+ With the things that are not.
+
+ VIII
+
+ Rejoice, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell,
+ Rejoice that yet on earth your fame is bright,
+ And that your names, remember'd day and night,
+ Live on the lips of those who love you well.
+ 'Tis ye that conquer'd have the powers of Hell
+ Each with the special grace of your delight;
+ Ye are the world's creators, and by might
+ Alone of Heavenly love ye did excel.
+
+ Now ye are starry names
+ Behind the sun ye climb
+ To light the glooms of Time
+ With deathless flames.
+
+ IX
+
+ Open for me the gates of delight,
+ The gates of the garden of man's desire;
+ Where spirits touch'd by heavenly fire
+ Have planted the trees of life.--
+ Their branches in beauty are spread,
+ Their fruit divine
+ To the nations is given for bread,
+ And crush'd into wine.
+
+ To thee, O man, the sun his truth hath given,
+ The moon hath whisper'd in love her silvery dreams;
+ Night hath unlockt the starry heaven,
+ The sea the trust of his streams:
+ And the rapture of woodland spring
+ Is stay'd in its flying;
+ And Death cannot sting
+ Its beauty undying.
+
+ Fear and Pity disentwine
+ Their aching beams in colours fine;
+ Pain and woe forgo their might.
+ After darkness thy leaping sight,
+ After dumbness thy dancing sound,
+ After fainting thy heavenly flight,
+ After sorrow thy pleasure crown'd:
+ O enter the garden of thy delight,
+ Thy solace is found.
+
+ X
+
+ To us, O Queen of sinless grace,
+ Now at our prayer unveil thy face:
+ Awake again thy beauty free;
+ Return and make our Graces three.
+ And with our thronging strength to the ends of the earth
+ Thy myriad-voicèd loveliness go forth,
+ To lead o'er all the world's wide ways
+ God's everlasting praise,
+ And every heart inspire
+ With the joy of man in the beauty of Love's desire.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ A HYMN OF NATURE
+
+ AN ODE WRITTEN FOR MUSIC
+
+ _The music composed by Sir Hubert Parry, performed at
+ the Gloucester Festival, 1898_
+
+ I
+
+ Power eternal, power unknown, uncreate:
+ Force of force, fate of fate.
+
+ Beauty and light are thy seeing,
+ Wisdom and right thy decreeing,
+ Life of life is thy being.
+ In the smile of thine infinite starry gleam,
+ Without beginning or end,
+ Measure or number,
+ Beyond time and space,
+ Without foe or friend,
+ In the void of thy formless embrace,
+ All things pass as a dream
+ Of thine unbroken slumber.
+
+ II
+
+ Gloom and the night are thine:
+ On the face of thy mirror darkness and terror,
+ The smoke of thy blood, the frost of thy breath.
+
+ In silence and woful awe
+ Thy harrying angels of death
+ Destroy whate'er thou makest--
+ Makest, destroyest, destroyest and makest.
+ Thy gems of life thou dost squander,
+ Their virginal beauty givest to plunder,
+ Doomest to uttermost regions of age-long ice
+ To starve and expire:
+ Consumest with glance of fire,
+ Or back to confusion shakest
+ With earthquake, elemental storm and thunder.
+
+ III
+
+ In ways of beauty and peace
+ Fair desire, companion of man,
+ Leadeth the children of earth.
+
+ As when the storm doth cease,
+ The loving sun the clouds dispelleth,
+ And woodland walks are sweet in spring;
+ The birds they merrily sing
+ And every flower-bud swelleth.
+ Or where the heav'ns o'erspan
+ The lonely downs
+ When summer is high:
+ Below their breezy crowns
+ And grassy steep
+ Spreadeth the infinite smile of the sunlit sea;
+ Whereon the white ships swim,
+ And steal to havens far
+ Across the horizon dim,
+ Or lie becalm'd upon the windless deep,
+ Like thoughts of beauty and peace,
+ When the storm doth cease,
+ And fair desire, companion of man,
+ Leadeth the children of earth.
+
+ IV
+
+ Man, born to toil, in his labour rejoiceth;
+ His voice is heard in the morn:
+ He armeth his hand and sallieth forth
+ To engage with the generous teeming earth,
+ And drinks from the rocky rills
+ The laughter of life.
+
+ Or else, in crowded cities gathering close,
+ He traffics morn and eve
+ In thronging market-halls;
+ Or within echoing walls
+ Of busy arsenals
+ Weldeth the stubborn iron to engines vast;
+ Or tends the thousand looms
+ Where, with black smoke o'ercast,
+ The land mourns in deep glooms.
+
+ Life is toil, and life is good:
+ There in loving brotherhood
+ Beateth the nation's heart of fire.
+ Strife! Strife! The strife is strong!
+ There battle thought and voice, and spirits conspire
+ In joyous dance around the tree of life,
+ And from the ringing choir
+ Riseth the praise of God from hearts in tuneful song.
+
+ V
+
+ Hark! What spirit doth entreat
+ The love-obedient air?
+ All the pomp of his delight
+ Revels on the ravisht night,
+ Wandering wilful, soaring fair:
+ There! 'Tis there, 'tis there.
+ Like a flower of primal fire
+ Late redeem'd by man's desire.
+
+ Away, on wings away
+ My spirit far hath flown,
+ To a land of love and peace,
+ Of beauty unknown.
+ The world that earth-born man,
+ By evil undismay'd,
+ Out of the breath of God
+ Hath for his heaven made.
+
+ Where all his dreams soe'er
+ Of holy things and fair
+ In splendour are upgrown,
+ Which thro' the toilsome years
+ Martyrs and faithful seers
+ And poets with holy tears
+ Of hope have sown.
+
+ There, beyond power of ill,
+ In joy and blessing crown'd,
+ Christ with His lamp of truth
+ Sitteth upon the hill
+ Of everlasting youth,
+ And calls His saints around.
+
+ VI
+
+ Sweet compassionate tears
+ Have dimm'd my earthly sight,
+ Tears of love, the showers wherewith
+ The eternal morn is bright:
+ Dews of the heav'nly spheres.
+ With tears my eyes are wet,
+ Tears not of vain regret,
+ Tears of no lost delight,
+ Dews of the heav'nly spheres
+ Have dimm'd my earthly sight,
+ Sweet compassionate tears.
+
+ VII
+
+ Gird on thy sword, O man, thy strength endue,
+ In fair desire thine earth-born joy renew.
+ Live thou thy life beneath the making sun
+ Till Beauty, Truth, and Love in thee are one.
+
+ Thro' thousand ages hath thy childhood run:
+ On timeless ruin hath thy glory been:
+ From the forgotten night of loves fordone
+ Thou risest in the dawn of hopes unseen.
+
+ Higher and higher shall thy thoughts aspire,
+ Unto the stars of heaven, and pass away,
+ And earth renew the buds of thy desire
+ In fleeting blooms of everlasting day.
+
+ Thy work with beauty crown, thy life with love;
+ Thy mind with truth uplift to God above:
+ For whom all is, from whom was all begun,
+ In whom all Beauty, Truth, and Love are one.
+
+
+
+
+ POEMS
+ IN
+ CLASSICAL PROSODY
+
+ [Illustration: decoration]
+
+
+ _PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS_
+
+ _Fp. I._ Daniel Press. 1903.
+
+ _" II._ _Monthly Review. July, 1903, with
+ an abstract of Stone's Prosody, as
+ there used._
+
+ _No. 3._ _Printed by C. H. Daniel. 1903._
+
+ _" 8._ _In 'Pelican,' C.C.C., Oxford._
+
+ _" 9._ _English Review. March, 1912._
+
+ _" 21._ _New Quarterly. Jan. 1909, with
+ an essay on the Virgilian Hexameter,
+ &c._
+/#
+ These experiments in quantitive verse were made in fulfilment of a
+ promise to William Johnson Stone that I would some day test his
+ theory. His premature death converted my consent into a serious
+ obligation. This personal explanation is due to myself for two
+ reasons: because I might otherwise appear firstly as an advocate of
+ the system, secondly as responsible for Stone's determination of
+ the lengths of English syllables. Before writing quantitive verse
+ it is necessary to learn to _think_ in quantities. This is no light
+ task, and a beginner requires fixed rules. Except for a few minor
+ details, which I had disputed with Mr. Stone, I was bound to take
+ his rules as he had elaborated them; and it was not until I had
+ made some progress and could think fairly well in his prosody that
+ I seriously criticized it. The two chief errors that I find in it
+ are that he relied too much on the quality of a vowel in
+ determining its syllabic length, and that he regarded the _h_ as
+ _always_ consonantal in quality. His valuation of the _er_ sound is
+ doubtful, but defensible and convenient, and I have never discarded
+ it. My earlier experiments contain therefore a good many 'false
+ quantities', and these, where they could not be very easily (though
+ _inconsistently_) amended, I have left, and marked most of them in
+ the text: a few false quantities do not make a poem less readable.
+ Thus a long mark over a syllable means that Stone reckoned it as
+ long, and that the verse requires it to be so pronounced, but that
+ I regard it as short, or at least as _doubtful_. For example on p.
+ 414 _Rūin_ is thus written. Of all accented long vowels in 'open'
+ position the long _u_ seems perhaps to retain its quantity best,
+ but there is evidence that Tennyson held it to be shortened, and I
+ do not know whether it might be an exception or go with thĕory,
+ pĭety, pŏetry, &c. Again, where a final syllable should be
+ lengthened or not shortened by position, but lacks its consonantal
+ support, I have put a [v] in the gap: these weak places are chiefly
+ due to my accepting Stone's unchanging valuation of _h_. My
+ emancipation from Stone's rules was gradual, so that I have not
+ been able to distinguish definitely my earlier experiments from the
+ later, in which the quantities are such as I have now come to
+ approve of: but my line-for-line paraphrase of Virgil is such a
+ later experiment. It was accompanied in the _New Quarterly_ by a
+ long examination of the Virgilian hexameter, to which I would refer
+ any one who is interested in the subject. In these English
+ hexameters I have used and advocate the use of Miltonic elision.
+ The mark ' in the text shows where I have purposely allowed a short
+ syllable to sustain a long place. Though the difficulty of adapting
+ our English syllables to the Greek rules is very great, and even
+ deterrent--for I cannot pretend to have attained to an absolutely
+ consistent scheme--yet the experiments that I have made reveal a
+ vast unexplored field of delicate and expressive rhythms hitherto
+ unknown in our poetry: and this amply rewarded me for my friendly
+ undertaking.
+#/
+
+ 1
+
+ EPISTLE I
+
+ TO L. M.
+
+ WINTRY DELIGHTS
+
+ Now in wintry delights, and long fireside meditation,
+ 'Twixt studies and routine paying due court to the Muses,
+ My solace in solitude, when broken roads barricade me
+ Mudbound, unvisited for months with my merry children,
+ Grateful t'ward Providence, and heeding a slander against me
+ Less than a rheum, think of me to-day, dear Līonel, and take
+ This letter as some account of Will Stone's versification.
+
+ We, whose first memories reach half of a century backward,
+ May praise our fortune to have outliv'd so many dangers,--
+ Faultiness of Nature's unruly machinery or man's--; 10
+ For, once born, whatever 'tis worth, LIFE is to be held to,
+ Its mere persistence esteem'd as rēal attainment,
+ Its crown of silver reverenc'd as one promise of youth
+ Fruiting, of existence one needful purpose accomplish'd:
+ And 'twere worth the living, howe'er unkindly bereft of
+ Those joys and comforts, throu' which we chiefly regard it:
+ Nay,--set aside the pleasant unhinder'd order of our life,
+ Our happy enchantments of Fortune, easy surroundings,
+ Courteous acquaintance, dwelling in fair homes, the delight of
+ Long-plann'd excursions, the romance of journeying in lands
+ Historic, of sēeing their glory, the famous adornments 21
+ Giv'n to memorial Earth by man, decorator of all-time,
+ (--As wē saw with virginal eyes travelling to behold them,--)
+ Her gorgeous palaces, [v]her tow'rs and stately cathedrals;
+ Where the turrets and domes of pictured Tuscany slumber,
+ Or the havoc'd splendours of Rome imperial, or where
+ Glare the fretted minarets and mosks of trespassing Islam,
+ And old Nilus, amid the mummied suzerainty of Egypt,
+ Glideth, a godly presence, consciously regardless of all things,
+ Save his unending toil and ēternal recollections:-- 30
+
+ Set these out of account, and with them too put away ART,
+ Those ravishings of mind, those sensuous intelligences,
+ By whose grace the elect enjoy their sacred aloofness
+ From Life's meagre affairs, in beauty's rēgenerate youth
+ Reading immortality's sublime revelation, adoring
+ Their own heav'nly desire; nor alone in worship assist they,
+ But take, call'd of God, part and pleasure in crēation
+ Of that beauty, the first of His first purposes extoll'd:--
+
+ Yea, set aside with these all NATURE'S beauty, the wildwood's
+ Flow'ry domain, the flushing, softcrowding loveliness of Spring, 40
+ Lazy Summer's burning dīal, the serenely solemn spells
+ Of Sibylline Autumn, with gay-wing'd Plenty departing;
+ All fair change, whether of seasons or bright recurrent day,
+ Morning or eve; the divine night's wonderous empyrean;
+ High noon's melting azure, his thin cloud-country, the landscape
+ Mountainous or maritime, blue calms of midsummer Ocean,
+ Broad corn-grown champaign goldwaving in invisible wind,
+ Wide-water'd pasture, with shade of whispering aspen;
+ All whereby Nature winneth our love, fondly appearing
+ As to caress her children, or all that in exaltation 50
+ Lifteth aloft our hearts to an unseen glory beyond her:--
+
+ Put these out of account; yea, more I say, banish also
+ From the credit sŭm of enjoyment those simple AFFECTIONS,
+ Whose common exercise informs our natural instinct;
+ That, set in our animal flesh-fabric, of our very lifeblood
+ Draw their subsistence, and even in ungenerous hearts
+ Root, like plants in stony deserts and 'neath pitiless snows.
+ Yea, put away all LOVE, the blessings and pīeties[v]of home,
+ All delicate heart-bonds, vital tendernesses untold,
+ Joys that fear to be named, feelings too holy to gaze on; 60
+ And with his inviolate peace-trīumph his passionate war
+ Be forgone, his mighty desire, thrilling ecstasies, ardours
+ Of mystic reverence, his fierce flame-eager emotions,
+ Idolatrous service, blind faith and ritual of fire.
+
+ If from us all these things were taken away, (that is all art
+ And all beauty whate'er, and all love's varied affection,)
+ Yet would enough subsist in other concerns to suffice us,
+ And feed intelligence, and make life's justification.
+ What this is, if you should ask me, beyond or above the rejoicing
+ In vegetant or brute existence, answer is easy; 70
+ 'Tis the reflective effort of mind that, conscious of itself,
+ Fares forth exploring nature for principle and cause,
+ Keenly with all the cunning pleasure and instinct of a hunter,
+ Who, in craft fashioning weapon and sly snare, tracketh after
+ His prey fl[=y]ing afield, and that which his arm killeth eateth.
+
+ History and SCĪENCE our playthings are: what an untold
+ Wealth of inexhaustive treasure is stored up for amusement!
+ Shall the amass'd Earth-structure appeal to me less than in early
+ Childhood an old fives-ball, whose wraps I wondering unwound,
+ Untwining the ravel'd worsted, that mere rubbish and waste
+ Of leather and shavings had bound and moulded elastic 81
+ Into a perfect sphere? Shall not the celestial earth-ball
+ Equally entertain a mature enquiry, reward our
+ Examination of its contexture, conglomerated
+ Of layer'd débris, the erosion of infinite ages?
+ Tho' I lack the wizard Darwin's scīentific insight
+ On the barren sea-beaches of East Patagonia gazing,
+ I must wond'ring attend, nay learn myself to decipher
+ Time's rich hīeroglyph, with vast elemental pencil
+ Scor'd upon Earth's rocky crust,--minute shells slowly collecting 90
+ Press'd to a stone, uprais'd to a mountain, again to a fine sand
+ Worn, burying the remains of an alien organic epoch,
+ In the flat accretions of new sedimentary strata;
+ All to be crush'd, crumpled, confused, contorted, abandon'd,
+ Broke, as a child's puzzle is, to be recompos'd with attention;
+ Nature's history-book, which shē hath torn as asham'd of;
+ And lest those pictures on[v]her fragmentary pages
+ Should too lightly reveal frustrate Antiquity, hath laid
+ Rūin upon rūin, revolution upon revolution:
+ Yet no single atom, no least insignificant grain 100
+ But, having order alike of fate, and faulty disorder,
+ Holds a record of Time, very vestiges of the Creation;
+ Which who will not attend scorns blindly the only commandments
+ By God's finger of old inscribed on table of earth-stone.
+
+ This for me wer' enough: yet confin'd Gēology's field
+ Counts not in all Scīence more than the planet to the Cosmos;
+ Where our central Sun, almighty material author,
+ And sustainer, appears as a half-consumed vanishing spark,
+ Bearing along with it, entangled in immensity's onward
+ Spiral eddies, the blacken'd dust-motes whirl'd off from around it. 110
+ But tho' man's microscopical functions measure all things
+ By his small footprints, finger-spans and ticking of clocks,
+ And thereby conceive the immense--such multiple extent
+ As to defy Idēas of imperative cerebration,--
+ None the less observing, measuring, patiently recording,
+ Hē mappeth out the utter wilderness of unlimited space;
+ Carefully weigheth a weight to the sun, reckoneth for it its path
+ Of trackless travelling, the precise momentary places
+ Of the planets and their satellites, their annual orbits,
+ Times, perturbations of times, and orbit of orbit. 120
+ What was Alexander's subduing of Asia, or that
+ Sheep-worry of Europe, when pigmy Napoleon enter'd
+ Her sovereign chambers, and her kings with terror eclips'd?
+ His footsore soldiers inciting across the ravag'd plains,
+ Thro' bloody fields of death tramping to an ugly disaster?
+ Shows any crown, set above the promise (so rudely accomplisht)
+ Of their fair godlike young faces, a glory to compare
+ With the immortal olive that circles bold Galileo's
+ Brows, the laurel'd halo[v]of Newton's unwithering fame? 129
+ Or what a child's surmise, how trifling a journey Columbus
+ Adventur'd, to a land like that which he sail'd from arriving,
+ If compar'd to Bessel's magic divination, awarding
+ Magnificent Sirius[v]his dark and invisible bride;
+ Or when Adams by Cam, (more nearly Leverrier in France,)
+ From the minutely measur'd vacillation of Uranus, augur'd
+ Where his mighty brother Neptune went wandering unnamed,
+ And thro' those thousand-million league-darknesses of space
+ Drew him slowly whene'er he pass'd, and slowly released him!
+ _Nil admirari!_ 'Tis surely a most shabby thinker 139
+ Who, looking on Nature, finds not the reflection appalling
+
+ And if these wonders we must with wonder abandon,
+ Astronomy's Cosmos, the Immense, and those physical laws
+ That link mind to matter, laws mutual in revelation,
+ Which measure and analyse Nature's primordial orgasm,
+ Lifegiving omnipotential LIGHT, its speed to determine,
+ Untwist its rainbow of various earthcoloring rays,
+ Counting strictly to each its own millionth-millimetred
+ Wave-length, and mapping out on fray'd diffraction of ether
+ All the adust elements and furnaced alchemy of[v]heav'n;
+ Laws which atone the disorder of infinit observation 150
+ With tyrannous numbers and abstract theory, closing
+ Protean Nature with nets of principle exact;
+ Her metamorphoses transmuting by correlation,
+ All heat, all chemical concourse or electrical action,
+ All force and all motion of all matter, or subtle or gross:--
+ If we these wonders, I say, with wonder abandon,
+ Nor can for mental heaviness their high study pursue,
+ Yet no story of adventures or fabulous exploit
+ Of famous'd heroes hath so rōmantic a discourse,
+ As these growing annals of long heav'n-scaling achievement
+ And far discoveries, which he who[v]idly neglecteth 161
+ Is but a boor as truly ridiculous as the village clown,
+ In whose thought the pleasant sun-ball performeth a circuit
+ Daily above mother earth, and resteth nightly beneath her.
+
+ Nor will a man, whose mind respects its own operations,
+ Lightly resign himself to remain in darkness uninform'd,
+ While any true scīence of fact lies easy within reach
+ Concerning Nature's ēternal essential object,
+ Self-matter, embodying substratum of ev'ry relation
+ Both of Time and Space, at once the machinery and stuff
+ Of those Idēas; carrier, giver, only receiver 171
+ Of such perceptions as arise in sensible organs.
+ Now whether each element is a cōherency of equal
+ Strictly symmetric atoms, or among themselves the atoms are
+ Like animals in a herd, having each an identity distinct,
+ --So that atoms of gold compar'd with sulphur or iron
+ Are but as ancient Greeks compar'd with Chinamen and Turks;--
+ Nor whether all elements are untransmutable offspring
+ From one kind or more thro' endless eternity changing,
+ Or whether invisibles claim rightly the name of immortals,
+ I make no[v]enquiry; matter minutely divided 181
+ Showing a like paradox, with ever-continuous extent,
+ And, as Adam, the atom will pose as a naked assumption:--
+ But since all the knowledge which man was born to attain to
+ Hath these only channels, (which must limit and qualify[v]it,)
+ We shall con the grammar, the material alphabet of life,
+ Yea, ev'n more from error to preserve our inquisitive mind,
+ Than to secure well-bēing against adversity and ill.
+ Surely if all is a flux, 'tis well to look into the flūid,
+ Inspect and question the apparent, shifty behaviour, 190
+ Wherein lurketh alone our witness of all physical law,
+ As we read the habits unchanging of invisible things,
+ Their timeless chronicles, the unintelligent ethic of dust:
+ In which dense labyrinth he who was guiding avised me,
+ With caution saying 'Were this globe's area of land
+ Wholly cover'd from sight, pack'd close to the watery margins
+ With mere empty vessels, I could myself put in each one
+ Some different substance, and write its formula thereon.'
+
+ Thus would speak the chemist; and Nature's superabundance,
+ Her vast infinitude of waste vāriety untold, 200
+ As[v]her immense extent and inconceivable object,
+ Squandering activities throughout ēternity, dwarfeth
+ Man's little aim and hour, his doubtful fancy: what are we?
+ Our petty selfseekings, our speedily passing affections?
+ Life having existed so extravagantly before us;
+ Earth bearing so slight a regard or care for us; and all
+ After us unconcern'd to remain, strange, beautiful as now.
+ May not an idle echo[v]of an antique pōetry haunt me,
+ 'Friendship is all feigning, yea[v]all loving is folly only'?
+ --Yet doth not very mention of antique pōetry and love 210
+ Quickly recall to better motions my dispirited faith?
+ And I see man's discontent as witness asserting
+ His moral idēal, that, born of Nature, is heir to
+ Her children's titles, which nought may cancel or impugn;
+ Not wer' of all her works man least, but ranking among them
+ Highly or ev'n as best, he wrongs himself to imagine
+ His soul foe to her aim, or from[v]her sanction an outlaw.
+ Nay, but just as man should appear more fully accordant
+ With things not himself, would they rank with[v]him as equals:
+ Judging other creatures he sets them wholly beneath him;
+ His disquīet among manifold and alien objects 221
+ Bēing sure evidence, the effect of an understanding,
+ And perception allow'd by Nature solely to himself.
+
+ Highly then is to be prais'd the resourceful wisdom of our time,
+ That spunged out the written science and thēories of life,
+ And, laying foundation of its knowledge in physical law,
+ Gave it prēeminence o'er all enquiry, erecting
+ Superstructive of all, bringing ev'ry research to the object,
+ Boldly a new scīence of MAN, from dreamy scholastic
+ Imprisoning set free, and inveterate divination, 230
+ Into the light of truth, to the touch of history and fact.
+ Since 'the proper study of mankind is man',--nor aforetime
+ Was the proverb esteem'd as a truism less than it is now,--
+ 'Tis strange that the method lay out of sight unaccomplisht,
+ And that we, so late to arrive, should first set a value
+ On the delusive efforts of human babyhood; and so
+ Witnessing impatiently the rear of their disappearance,
+ Upgathering the relics and vestiges of primitive man,
+ Should ratify[v]instinct for scīence, look to the darkness
+ For light, find a knowledge where 'twas most groping or unknown: 240
+ While civilization's advances mutely regarding
+ Talk we of old scapegoats, discuss bloodrites, immolations,
+ Worship of ancestors; explain complexities involved
+ Of tribal marriages, derivation of early religions,
+ Priestly taboos, totems, archaic mysteries of trees,
+ All the devils and dreams abhorr'd of barbarous ages.
+
+ And 'tis a far escape from wires, wheels and penny papers
+ And the worried congestion of our Victorian era,
+ Whose many inventions of world-wide luxury have changed
+ Life's very face:--but enough wē hear of progress, enough have 250
+ Our conscious scīence and comforts trumpeted; altho'
+ Hardly can I, who so many years eagerly frequented
+ Bartholomew's fountain, not speak of things to awaken
+ Kind old HIPPOCRATES, howe'er hē; slumbereth, entomb'd
+ 'Neath the shatter'd winejars and rūined factories of Cos,
+ Or where hē wander'd in Thessalian Larissa:
+ For when his doctrine, which Rome had wisely adopted,
+ Sank lost with the treasures of[v]her deep-foundering empire,
+ No[v]art or scīence grew so contemptible, order'd 259
+ So by mere folly, windy caprice, superstition and chance,
+ As boastful MEDICINE, with humours fit for a madhouse,
+ Save when some Sydenham, like Samson among the Philistines,
+ Strode bond-bursting along with a smile of genial instinct.
+ Nor when here and there some ray, in darkness arising,
+ Hopefully seem'd to herald the coming dawn, (as when a Laennec
+ Or Jenner invented his meed of worthy remembrance,)
+ Did one mind foresee, one seer foretell the appearance
+ Of that unexpected daylight that arose upon our time.
+ Who dream'd that living air poison'd our SURGERY, coating
+ All our sheeny weapons with germs of an invisible death, 270
+ Till he saw the sterile steel work with immunity, and save
+ Quickly as its warring scimitars of victory had slain?
+ Saw what school-tradition for nature's kind method admir'd,
+ --In those lifedraining slow cures and bedridden agues,--
+ Forgotten, or condemn'd as want of care in a surgeon?
+ Tho' MEDICINE makes not so plain an appeal to the vulgar,
+ Yet she lags not a whit: her pregnant thēory touches
+ Deeper discoveries,[v]her more complete revolution
+ Gives promise of wider benefits in larger abundance.
+ Where she nam'd the disease she now separates the bacillus; 280
+ Sets the atoms of offence, those blind and sickly bloodeaters,
+ 'Neath lens and daylight, forcing their foul propagations,
+ Which had ever prosper'd in dark impunity unguest,
+ Now to behave in sight, deliver their poisonous extract
+ And their strange self-brew'd, self-slaying juice to be handled,
+ Experimented upon, set aside and stor'd to oppose them.
+ So novel and obscure a research, such hard revelations
+ Of Nature's cabinet,--tho' with fact amply accordant,
+ And by hypothesis much dark difficulty resolving,
+ Are not quickly receiv'd nor approv'd, and sensitive idlers,
+ Venturing in the profound terrible penetralia of life, 291
+ Are shock'd by[v]a method that shuns not contamination
+ With crūel Nature's most secret processes unmaskt.
+ And yet in all mankind's disappointed history, now first
+ Have[v]his scouts push'd surely within[v]his foul enemies' lines,
+ And his sharpshooters descried their insidious foe,
+ Those swarming parasites, that barely within the detection
+ Of manifold search-light, have bred, swimming unsuspected
+ Thro' man's brain and limbs, slaying with loathly pollution
+ His beauty's children,[v]his sweet scīons of affection, 300
+ In fev'rous torment and tears, his home desolating
+ Of their fair innocence, breaking[v]his proud passionate heart,
+ And his kindly belief in GOD'S good justice arraigning.
+ With what wildly directed attack, what an armory illjudged,
+ Has he, (alas, poor man,) with what cumbrous machination
+ Sought to defend himself from their Lilliputian onslaught;
+ Aye discharging around him, in obscure night, at a venture,
+ Ev'ry missile which[v]his despair confus'dly imagin'd;
+ His simples, compounds, specifics, chemical therapeutics,
+ Juice of plants, whatever was nam'd in lordly Salerno's 310
+ Herbaries and gardens, vipers, snails, all animal filth,
+ Incredible quackeries, the pretentious jugglery of knaves,
+ Green electricities, saints' bones and priestly anointings.
+ Fools! that oppose his one scīentific intelligent hope!
+ Grant us an hundred years, and man shall hold in abeyance
+ These foul distempers, and with this world's benefactors
+ Shall PASTEUR obtain the reward of saintly devotion,
+ His crown hēroic, who fought not destiny in vain.
+
+ 'Tis success that attracts: 'twas therefore so many workers
+ Ran pellmell to the schools of Nature in our generation, 320
+ While other employments have lack'd their genius and pined.
+ Our fathers' likings wē thought semibarbarous, our art
+ Self-consciously sickens in qualms of an æsthetic aura,
+ Noisily in the shallows splashing and disporting uninspir'd.
+ Our famed vulgarities whether in speech, taste or amusement,
+ Are not amended: Is it foolish, hoping for a rescue,
+ First to appeal to the strong, for health to the healthy amongst us?
+ --For the Sophists' doctrine that GRACE is dying of old age
+ I hold in derision, their inkpot thēories of man,
+ Of his cradle of art, his deathbed of algebra;--and see 330
+ How Scīence has wrought, since we went idling at Eton,
+ One thing above surmise:--An' if I may dare to remind you
+ How Vergil praises your lov'd Lucretius, (of whom
+ My matter and metre[v]have set you thinking, as I fear,)
+ In that glory which ends 'et inexorabile fatum
+ Subjecit pedibus strepitumque Acherontis avari':
+ Sounded not most empty to us such boast of a pagan,
+ Strangely to us tutor'd to believe, with faith mediæval,
+ Torture everlasting to be justly the portion of all souls,
+ Nor but by the elects' secret prēdestiny escaped? 340
+ If you think to reply,--making this question in answer,--
+ 'Did the belief disturb for a moment our pleasure in life?'
+ No.--And men gather in harvest on slopes of an active
+ Volcano: natheless the terror's ēnormity was there;
+ Now 'tis away: Scīence has pierced man's cloudy common-sense,
+ Dow'rd his homely vision with more expansive an embrace,
+ And the rotten foundation of old superstition exposed.
+ That trouble of Pascal, those vain paradoxes of Austin,
+ Those Semitic parables of Paul, those tomes of Aquinas,
+ All are thrown to the limbo of antediluvian idols, 350
+ Only because we learn mankind's true history, and know
+ That not at all from a high perfection sinfully man fell,
+ But from baseness arose: We have with sympathy enter'd
+ Those dark caves, his joyless abodes, where with ravening brutes,
+ Bear or filthy hyena, he once disputed a shelter:--
+ That was his Paradise, his garden of Eden,--abandon'd
+ Ages since to the drift and drip, the cementing accretions
+ Whence we now separate his bones buried in the stalagma,
+ His household makeshifts, his hunting tools, his adornments,
+ From the scatter'd skeletons of a lost prehistoric order, 360
+ Its mammoth and woolly rhinoceros, the machairodos, and beasts
+ Whose unnamed pastures the immense Atlantic inundates.
+ In what corner of earth lie not dispersed the familiar
+ Flinty relics of his old primitive stone-cutlery? what child
+ Kens not now the design, the adapted structure of each one
+ Of those hand-labor'd chert-flakes, whether axe, chisel, or knife,
+ Spearhead, barb of arrow, rough plane or rudely serrate saw?
+ Stones that in our grandsires' time told no sermon, (awaiting
+ Indestructible, unnumber'd, on chary attention,)
+ From their prēadamite pulpits now cry Revelation. 370
+ Not to a Greek his chanted epic had mortal allurement,
+ Conjuring old-world fancies of Ilium and of Olympus,
+ As this story to me, this tale primæval of unsung,
+ Unwritten, ancestral fate and adversity, this siege
+ Of courage and happiness protracted so many thousand
+ Thousand years in a slow persistent victory of brain
+ And right hand o'er all the venom'd stings, sharpnesses of fang
+ And dread fury whate'er Nature, tirelessly devising,
+ Could develop with tooth, claw, tusk, or horn to oppose them.
+ See now Herakles, who strangled snakes when an infant 380
+ In[v]his cradle alone; and nought but those petty stonechips
+ For the battle: 'twas wonder above wonders his achievement:
+ Yea, and since he thought as a child 'twas natural in[v]him,
+ Meeting in existence with purposes antagonistic,
+ Circumstances oppos'd to desire, vast activities, which
+ Thwarted effort, to assume All-might as spiteful against him.
+ Nay, as an artist born, impell'd to devise a religion,--
+ So to relate himself idēally with the immortal,--
+ This quarrel of reason with what displeas'd his affections
+ Was not amiss. The desire and love of beauty possess man:
+ Art is of all that beauty the best outwardly presented; 391
+ Truth to the soul is merely the best that mind can imagine.
+ No lover ēternal will hold to an older opinion
+ If but lovelier ideas, with Nature agrēeing,
+ Are to his understanding offer'd.... But enough: 'tis an unsolv'd
+ Mystery.--Yet man dreams to flatter[v]his dēity saying
+ 'Beautiful is Nature!' rather 'tis various, endless,
+ And her efforts fertile in error tho' grand in attainment.
+ If wé, while praising[v]her scheme and infinite order,
+ Are compell'd to select, our choice condemns the remainder;
+ Nor can wisdom honour those loathly polluting offences, 401
+ Whose very names to the Muse are either accursèd or unknown.
+ Nay, if such foul things thou deemest worthy, the fault was
+ Making us, O Nature, thy judge and tearful accuser.
+ Turn our thought for awhile to the symphonies of Beethoven,
+ Or the rever'd preludes of mighty Sebastian; Is there
+ One work of Nature's contrivance beautiful as these?
+ Judg'd by beauty alone man wins, as sensuous artist;
+ And for other qualities, the spirit's differentia, Nature
+ Scarce observes them at all: that keen unfaltering insight, 410
+ Whereby[v]earthly desire's roaming wildernesses are changed
+ Into a garden a-bloom; its wandering impossible ways
+ Into pillar'd avenues, alleys and fair-flow'ry terrac'd walks,
+ (Where GOD talks with man, as once 'twas fancied of Eden;)
+ That transcendental supreme interpreting of sense,
+ Rendering intelligence passionate with mystery, linking
+ Sympathy with grandeur, the reserve of dignity with play;
+ Those soul-formalities, the balance held 'twixt the denīal
+ And the betrayal of intention, whose masteries invite,
+ Entice, welcome ever, meet, and with kindliness embrace; 420
+ Those guarded floodgates of boundless, lovely resources,
+ Whence nothing ill issues, no distraction nor abortion
+ Hindering enjoyment, but in easy security flow forth
+ Ecstasies of fitness, raptures and harmonies of heav'n.
+ Surely before such work of man, so kindly attemper'd,
+ Nature must be asham'd, had shē not this ready answer,
+ 'Fool, and who made thee?'--
+ I shall not seem a deserter,
+ Where in an idle essay my verse to a fancy abandon'd
+ Praiseth others: rather while art and beauty delight us,
+ While hope, faith and love are warm and lively in our hearts,
+ Sweet our earthly desire and dear our human affection, 431
+ We may, joyfully despising the pedantries of old age,
+ Hold to the time, nor lose the delight of mortal attainment;
+ Keenly rejoicing in all that wisdom approves, nor allowing
+ Ourselves at the challenge of younger craft to be outsailed;
+ But trimming our old canvas in all change of weather and wind,
+ Freely without fear urge o'erseas our good vessel onward,
+ Piloting into the far, unmapp'd futurity.--Farewell.
+
+
+ 2
+
+ EPISTLE II
+
+ TO A SOCIALIST IN LONDON
+
+ No[v]ethical system, no contemplation or action,
+ No reason'd attitude of mind nor principle of faith,
+ Neither Sōcratical wisdom nor saintly devotion,
+ Buildeth a fortress against heart-ache & compassionate grief,
+ Nor responds to desire, nor with true mastery yieldeth
+ Easy repose to the mind; And since all our study endeth
+ Emptily in full doubt,--fathoming the divine intention
+ In this one thing alone, that, howsōe'er it affect us,
+ 'Twas never intended for mortal fancy to compass,--
+ I[v]have concluded that from first purposes unknown 10
+ None should seek to deduce idēal laws to be liv'd by;
+ And, loving art, am true to the Muse, & pōetry extol:
+ Therefore 'twas that afore I prais'd & heartily enjoy'd
+ Your human verses, FRASER, when nobody bought them,
+ More than again I praise those serious exhortations,
+ Wherewith you wu'd amend the degraded people about you.
+ Nay tho' like a prophet with heav'n-sent dignity inspir'd,
+ With ready convincement and stern example assuring,
+ Mightily you proclaim your love-messag' in the assembly,
+ Exhibiting panacēas of ancient ill, propagating 20
+ Out of a Scotch cerebrum the reforming zeal of a TOLSTOI,
+ I listen all unmov'd, as a sceptic among the believers.
+ Yet what a charm has an earnest soul, whom sympathy uncheckt
+ For human suffering has strengthen'd and dedicated
+ Bravely to serve his kind, to renounce his natural instinct,
+ And liv' apart, indulging in acts of mercy, delighted
+ In wisdom's rock-hewn citadel[v]her law to illustrate,
+ Embodying the pattern of self-integrity complete.
+ Yea, what a charm pervades discourse, that loftily reason'd
+ Points the narrow pathway throu' this world's ugly disorder;
+ How very fair will appear any gate of cleanliness, open 30
+ From the city's tumult, its rank impurity, its dread
+ Vulgarity's triumph: Nay sure & bounteous as Truth,
+ Beautiful in confusion appeareth Simplicity's way.
+ --'Simple it is, (yóu say) God is good,--Nature is ample,--
+ 'Earth yields plenty for all,--and all might share in abundance,
+ 'Were profit and labour but fairly divided among them.
+ 'Scarce any laws are needed in our Utopia but these,--
+ 'No fruitless labour to provide mere useless adornment,
+ 'No money encouraging man's sloth & slavery, no rents 40
+ 'Of titeld landlords, no pamper'd luxury breeding
+ 'Fleshly disease, worst fiend & foe of mind body and soul;
+ 'All should work, and only produce life's only requirements:
+ 'So with days all halfholidays, toil healthfully enjoy'd,
+ 'Each might, throu' leisure hours of amusement pīety and peace,
+ 'In the domestic joys & holy community partake.--'
+ --This wer' a downleveling, my friend; yoū need, to assure me,
+ Fix a limit to the folk; else, as their number is increas't,
+ Their happiness may dwindle away, & what was at outset
+ Goal & prize, the provoker of all your wise revolution, 50
+ Will by subdivision disappear in course of atainment.
+ When goods are[v]increas'd, mouths are[v]increas'd to devour them:
+ If the famine be reliev'd this season in India, next dearth
+ Will be a worse. Yoū know how one day Herschel acosted
+ Súch a philanthropical Save-all, who claimed to acomplish
+ Some greatest happiness for a greatest number; 'Attend, man;
+ (Saíd-he) Resólve me anon one query: Suppose Adam and Eve
+ First crēated on Earth but twice ten centuries ere Christ,
+ That they gat four children in all, who liv'd, getting also
+ Four to the pair: Had thus mankind ever equaly increast 60
+ By moderate families but doubling in each generation,
+ How many souls would now be alive to revise the conundrum
+ Of greatest happiness? No[v]answer? Well, 'tis a long sum.
+ Say if on earth such a crowd could stand. No? Pray then imágine
+ All earth's land as a plain, & all this company thereon,
+ Piled together like peas in a pintpot: How many layers?
+ No guess? Then how high the column? How far wu'd it extend
+ Into the sky?--To the moon?--Further--To the sun?--To the sun! Pshaw!
+ That column of happy men would reach up, as I fathom its height,
+ Million dīameters of Neptune's infinit' orbit.' 70
+ My[v]objection annoys your kindly philanthropy?--'It proves
+ 'Too much.'--Yes nature shows in that scrutiny bankrupt;
+ Mere matter in deposit gives out. Yóu wish to determine
+ No limit of future polities: your actual object
+ Is to relieve suffering, to repeal injustice acruing
+ From monied inheritance, which makes a nonentity potent
+ For public mischief, who might, if usefully harness'd
+ In common employment, have assisted social order.
+ Why should Law give fifty talents where Nature alloys one?
+ For money is the talent of supreme empery: Gold, Gold 80
+ Envieth all, getteth all, absorbeth, mastereth all things:
+ It pusheth out & thrusteth away pitilessly the weak ones,
+ Those ill-fated, opprest, unfortun'd needy: Beneath them
+ Yawns the abyss. Down down they fall, as a stream on a mountain,
+ With ceaseless cataract. None hearkeneth; only the silent
+ Grave, that darkly devours their cry of desperate anguish.
+ Spáre me the story; believe more feel this grief than avow it:
+ 'Tis put aside from thought with death's incurable evil;
+ Left for them, that assume mankind as cause, to lament it.
+ And what if all Nature ratify this merciless outrage? 90
+ If her wonder of arch-wonders, her fair animal life,
+ Her generate creatures, her motion'd warmblooded offspring,
+ Haunters of the forest & royal country, her antler'd
+ Mild-gazers, that keep silvan sabbath idly without end;
+ Her herded galopers, sleeksided stately careerers
+ Of trembling nostril; her coy unapproachable estrays,
+ Stealthy treaders, climbers; her leapers furry, lissom-limb'd;
+ Her timorous burrowers, and grangers thrifty, the sandy
+ Playmates of the warren; her clumsy-footed, shaggy roamers;
+ Her soarers, the feather'd fast-fliers, loftily floating 100
+ Sky-sailers, exiles of high solitudinous eyries;
+ Her perching carolers, twitterers, & sweetly singing birds;
+ All ocean's finny clans, mute-mouthers, watery breathers,
+ Furtive arrow-darters, and fan-tail'd easy balancers,
+ Silvery-scale, gilt-head, thorn-back, frill'd harlequinading
+ Globe and slimy ribbon: Shell-builders of many-chamber'd
+ Pearly dwellings, soft shapes mosslike or starry, adorning
+ With rich floral fancy the gay rock-garden of ebb-tide:
+ All life, from the massive-bulkt, ivory-tusht, elephantine
+ Centēnarian, acknowledging with crouching obeisance 110
+ Man's will, ev'n to the least petty whiffling ephemeral insect,
+ Which in a hot sunbeam engend'ring, when summer is high,
+ Vaunteth an hour his speck of tinsely gaudiness and dies:
+ Ah! what if all & each of Nature's favorite offspring,
+ 'Mong many distinctions, have this portentous agreement,
+ MOUTH, STOMACH, INTESTINE? Question that brute apparatus,
+ So manifoldly devis'd, set alert with furious instinct:
+ What doth it interpret but this, that LIFE LIVETH ON LIFE?
+ That the select creatures, who[v]inherit earth's domination,
+ Whose happy existence is Nature's intelligent smile, 120
+ Are bloody survivors of a mortal combat, a-tweenwhiles
+ Chanting a brief pæan for victory on the battlefield?
+ Since that of all their kinds most owe their prosperous estate
+ Unto the art, whereby they more successfully destroy'd
+ Their weaker brethren, more insatiably devour'd them;
+ And all fine qualities, their forms pictorial, admired,
+ Their symmetries, their grace, & beauty, the loveliness of them,
+ Were by Murder evolv'd, to 'scape from it or to effect it.
+ 'Surely again (yoū say) too much is proven, it argues
+ 'Mere horror & despair; unless persuasion avail us 130
+ 'That the moral virtues are man's idēa, awaken'd
+ 'By the spirit's motions; & therefore not to be conceiv'd
+ 'In Nature's outward & mainly material aspect,
+ 'As that is understood. You, since you hold that opinion,
+ 'Run your own ship aground invoking Nature against me.'--
+ Then withdraw the appeal, my friend, to her active alīance;
+ Bē pessimist Nature with a pitchfork manfully expell'd,
+ Not to return. Yet _soul in hand_, with brutal alegiance,
+ Hunters & warriors _do not forget the comandment_.
+ See how lively the old animal continueth in them: 140
+ Of what trifling account they hold life, yet what a practis'd
+ Art pursue to preserve it: if I should rightly define sport
+ SLAUGHTER WITH DANGER, what were more serious and brave?
+ Their love of air, of strength, of wildness, afford us an inkling
+ Of the delight of beasts, with whom they might innocently
+ Boast a fellow-feeling, summoning them forth to the combat.
+ Nay dream not so quickly to see her ladyship expell'd.
+ Those prowling Līons of stony Kabylia, whose roar
+ Frights from sleep the huddled herdsmen, soon as the sudden night
+ Falls on Mount Atlas, those grave uxorious outlaws 150
+ Wandering in the Somali desert or waste Kalahari,
+ Sound a challenge that amid summer-idling London is answer'd
+ Haply in Old Bond Street, where some fashionably attired youth
+ Daintily stands poising the weapon foredoom'd to appay them:
+ Or[v]he mentally sighteth a tiger of India, that low
+ Crouches among the river jungles, or hunts desolating
+ Grassy Tarâi, 'neath lofty Himálya, or far southward
+ Outacamund, Mysore's residency, the Nilgherry mountains
+ By Malabar; yea, and ere-long shall sight him in earnest,
+ Stalked as a deer, surprised where hē lay slumbering at noon
+ Under a rock full-gorged, or deep in reedy covert hid 160
+ By the trackers disturbed: Two grand eyes shall for a moment
+ Glare upon either side the muzzle. Woe then to the hunter,
+ If hē blench! That fury beclouded in invisible speed
+ What marksman could arrest? what mortal abide his arrachement?
+ Standing above the immense carcase hē gratefully praiseth
+ God for a man-eater so fine, so worthy the slaying.
+ See him again; 'tis war: one hill-rock strongly defended
+ Checks advance, to be stormed at cost of half the assailants.
+ Gaily away they go, Highlanders, English, or Irish, 170
+ Or swart Ghoorkas against the leaden hail, climbing, ascending,
+ Lost in a smoke, scattering, creeping, here there, ever upwards:
+ Till some change cometh o'er confusion. Who winneth? ah! see!
+ Ours have arrived, and he who led their bravery is there.
+ None that heard will ever forget that far-echoing cheer:
+ Such heard Nelson, above the crashings & thundering of guns:
+ At Marathon 'twas heard and all time's story remembers.
+ See him again, when at home visiting[v]his episcopal uncle:
+ That good priest contrast with this good captain, assay them:
+ Find a common-measure equating their rival emotions; 180
+ Ēvaporate the rubbish, the degrading pestiferous fuss
+ Of stuck-up importance, the palatial coterie, weigh out
+ Then the solids: whose life would claim the award of an umpire
+ For greatest happiness? High-priest or soldier? Adjudge it
+ By their books: Let a child give sentence. Ev'n as a magnet
+ Turns and points to the north, so children's obstinate insight
+ Flies to the tale of war, hairbreadth scapes, daring achievements,
+ Discoveries, conquests, the romance of history: these things
+ Win them away from play to devour with greedy attention
+ Till they long to be men; while all that clerkly palaver 190
+ Tastes like wormwood.--'Avast! (I hear yoū calling) Avast there!
+ I forbid the appeal.'--Well, style my humour atrocious;
+ Granted a child cannot understand; yet see what a huge growth
+ Stands to be extermin'd, ere you can set dibble in ground.
+ Nay, more yet; that mighty forest, whose wildness offends you,
+ And silences appal, where earth-life self-suffocating
+ Seethes, lavish as sun-life in a red star's fi'ry corona;
+ That waste magnificence, and vain fecundity, breeding
+ Gīants & parasites embrac'd in flowery tangle,
+ Interwoven alive and dead, where one tyrannous tree 200
+ Blights desolating around it a swamp of rank vegetation;
+ Where Reason yet dreams unawakt, & throu' the solemn day
+ Only the monkey chatters, & discordant the parrot screams:
+ All this is in man's heart with dateless sympathy worshipt,
+ With filial reverence, & awful pīeties involv'd;
+ While that other picture, your formal fancy, the garden
+ Of your stingy promise, must that not quench his imágin'd
+ Idēals of beauty, his angel hope of attainment?
+ What to him are the level'd borders, the symmetric allotments,
+ Where nothing exceedeth, nothing encroacheth, nor assaileth;
+ Where Reason now drudgeth a sad monomaniac, all day 211
+ Watering & weeding, digging & diligently manuring
+ Her label'd families, starch-makers, nitrogen-extract-
+ Purveyors, classified potherbs & empty pretenders
+ Of medical virtues; nay ev'n and _their_ little impulse
+ T'ward liberal fruiting disallow'd by stern regulation;
+ So many beans to a pod, with so many pods to a beanstalk;
+ Prun'd, pincht, economiz'd miserly til' all is abortion,
+ Save in such specimens as, but for an extravagant care,
+ Had miserably perish'd. What madness works to delude you, 220
+ Bēing a man, that yoū see not mankind's predilection
+ Is for Magnificence, Force, Freedom, Bounty; his inborn
+ Love for Beauty, his aim to possess, his pride to devise it:
+ And from everlasting his heart is fixt with affections
+ Prēengag'd to a few sovranly determinate objects,
+ Toys of an ēternal distraction. Beautiful is GOLD,
+ Clear as a trumpet-call, stirring where'er it appeareth
+ All high pow'rs to battle; with mágisterial ardour
+ Glowing among the metals, elemental drops of a fire-god's
+ Life-blood of old outpour'd in Chāos: Mágical also 230
+ EV'RY recondite j[=ew]el of Earth, with their seraphim-names,
+ RUBY, JACYNTH, EMERALD, AMETHYST, SAPPHIRE; amaranthine
+ Starry essences, elect emblems of purity, heirlooms
+ Of deathless glories, most like to divine imanences.
+ Then that heart-gladdening highpriz'd ambrosia, blending
+ Their dissolute purples & golds with sparkling aroma,
+ That ruddy juice exprest from favour'd vintages, infus'd
+ With cosmic laughter, when upon some sécular epact
+ Blandly the sun's old heart is stirr'd to a septennial smile,
+ Causing strangefortun'd comfort to melancholy mortals: 240
+ Friend to the flésh, if mind be fatigued; rallying to the sound mind,
+ When succour is needed 'gainst fainting weariness of flesh;
+ Shall Wine not be belov'd? Or now let Aristotle answer
+ What goods are,--Time leaves the scholar's inventory unchang'd;--
+ All Virtues & Pow'rs, Honour & Pleasure, all that in our life
+ Makes us self-sufficient, Friends, Riches, Comeliness, and Strength;
+ They that[v]have these things in plenty desire to retain them,
+ And win more; while they that lack are pleas'd to desire them.
+ Nay and since possession will leave the desire unappeasèd,
+ Save in mere appetites that vary with our physical state, 250
+ Surely delight in goods is an ecstasy rather attendant
+ On their mental image, than on experienc'd operation.
+ So the shepherd envies the monarch, the monarch the shepherd's lot,--
+ 'O what a life were this, How sweet, how lovely!' the king cries.
+ Whence, I say, as a man feels brave who reads of ACHILLES;
+ One looking on riches may learn some kindred elation,
+ And whatever notions of fortune, luxury, comfort,
+ Genius or virtue, are shown to him, only as aspects
+ Of possible bēing, 'tis so much gain to desire them;
+ Learning Magnificence in mean obscurity, tasting 260
+ Something of all those goods which Fate outwardly denies him.
+ But say none shall again be king or prosperous or great,--
+ Arguing 'all eminence is unequal, unequal is unjust',--
+ Should that once come about, then alas for this merry England,
+ Sunk in a grey monotone of drudgery, dreamily poring
+ O'er her illumin'd page of history, faln to regretful
+ Worship of ancestors, with nought now left to delight her,
+ Nought to attain, save one nurst hope, one ambition only
+ Red Revolution, a wild Reawakening, & a Renaissance.
+ Impatiently enough yoū hear me, longing to refute me, 270
+ While I[v]in privileg'd pulpit my period expand.
+ Who could allow such a list of strange miscellaneous items,
+ So-call'd goods, Strength, Ríches, Honour, Gold, Genius, and Wine?
+ Is not Wisdom above Rubies? more than Coral or Pearl?
+ Yours is a scheme deep-laid on true distinctive asortment,
+ Parting use or good from useless or evil asunder;
+ Dismissing accessories, while half my heathenish invoice
+ Are Vanity's vanities. Well; truly, as old SOLOMON said,
+ So they _be_: What is excepted? What scapes his araignment?
+ Is't Pleasure or Wisdom? Nay ask THEOLOGIA: Good-works, 280
+ Saith-she, offend her nostril. If I distinguish, asserting,
+ Say, that if I[v]enjoyed my neighbour's excessive income
+ I would hire me a string-quartett not an automaton car,
+ You blame equally both our tastes for luxury, indeed
+ His shows more of a use. If man's propensity is vain,
+ Vulgar, inane, unworthy; 'tis also vain to bewail it:
+ Think you to change his skin? 'Twere scale by scale to regraft it
+ With purer traditions; and who shall amend the amenders?
+ Nay let bé the bubbles, till man grow more solid in mind,
+ Condemn not the follies: My neighbour's foolery were worse,
+ Sat he agape listening to Mozart, intently desiring 291
+ All that time to be rattling alóng on a furious engine
+ In caoutchouc carapace, with a trail of damnable oilstench.
+ Yea, blame not the pleasures; they are not enough; pleasure only
+ Makes this life liveable: nor scout that doctrine as unsound:
+ Consider if mankind from puling birth to bitter death
+ Knew nought but the sorrows, endured unrespited always
+ Those agonizing assaults which no flesh wholly can escape;
+ Were his hunger a pang like his starvation, alievement
+ Thereof a worse torture, like that which full many die with;
+ Did love burn his soul as fire his skin; did affections 300
+ Rend his will, as Turks rend men with horses asunder;
+ Were his labour a breathless effort; his slumber occasion
+ For visiting Furies to repair his temple of anguish;
+ Were thoughts all mockeries; slow intelligence a deception;
+ His mind's far ventures, her voyages into the unseen
+ But horror & terrified nightmare; None then had ever heard
+ Praise of a Crēator, nor seen any Dēity worshipped.
+ 'Twas for heav'nly Pleasure that God did first fashion all thing,
+ Nor with other benefit would holy Religion attract us 310
+ Picturing of Paradise. Consult our Lady's Evangel,
+ Where Saint Luke,--colouring (was it unconsciously, suppose you?)
+ Fact and fable alike,--contrasts a beggar with a rich man,
+ And from holding a fool's happiness too greatly in esteem
+ Makes pleasure ēternal the balance of temporal evil,
+ And the reverse; nor shrinks, ascribing thus to the next world
+ Vaster inequalities, harsher perversity than this.
+ _You_ have a soul's paradise, its entry the loop of a needle,
+ Come hither & prithy tell me what I must do to be savèd
+ I, that feeding on Idēals in temperat' estate 320
+ Seem so wealthy to poor Lazarus, so needy to Dives:
+ What from my heav'n-bound schooner's dispensable outfit
+ Has to be cast o'erboard? What see yoū here that offends you?
+ These myriad volumes, these tons of music:--allow them
+ Or disallow? Fiddle and trichord?--Must all be relinquished?
+ Such toys have not a place in your socīety; you say
+ Nobody shall make them, nor made may justly acquire them.
+ Yet, should a plea be alleged for life's most gracious adornment,
+ For contemplative art's last transcendental achievement,
+ Grief's almighty solace, frolicking Mirth's Purification, 330
+ For Man's unparagon'd High-pōetess, inseparate Muse
+ Companion, the belov'd most dearly among her sisters,
+ Revivifīer of age, fairest instructor of all grace,
+ His peacemaker alert with varied sympathy, whose speech
+ Not to arede and love is wholly to miss the celestial
+ Consolatries, the divine interpreting of physical life,--
+ Yoū wince? make exception? allow things musical? admit
+ So many faked viols, penny trumpets, and amateurish
+ Performers? Nay, nay! stand firm, for concession is vain.
+ Music is outmeasurably a barefaced luxury, her plea 340
+ Will cover art, (--almost to atone art's vile imitations--);
+ My Japanese paintings, my fair blue Cheney, Hellenic
+ Statues and Caroline silver, my beautiful Aldines,
+ Prized more highly because so few, so fondly familiar,
+ Need no tongue to defend them against rude hands, that assail them
+ Only because their name is RARITY; hands insensate,
+ Rending away pitilessly the fair embroideries of life,
+ That close-clust'ring man, his comfort pared to the outskirts
+ Of[v]his discomfort, may share in meanness unenvied
+ But what if I[v]unveil the figure that closely beside you 350
+ Half hides his Hell-charred skeleton with mysteries obscene,
+ That foul one, that Moloch of all Utopias, ancient
+ Poisoner & destroyer-elect of innumerous unborn?
+ Know you the story of our hive-bees, the yellow honey-makers,
+ Whose images from of old have haunted Pōetry, settling
+ On the blossoms of man's dream-garden, as on the summer-flow'rs,
+ Pictures of happy toil, sunny glances, gendering always
+ Such sweet thoughts, as be by slumbrous music awaken'd?
+ How all their outward happiness,--that fairy demeanour
+ Of busy contentment, singing at their work,--is an inborn 360
+ Empty habit, the relics of a time when considerate joy
+ Truly possest their tiny bodies; when golden abundance
+ Was not a State-kept hoard; when feasts were plentiful indulg'd
+ With wine well-fermented, or old-stored spicy metheglin:
+ For they died not then miserably within the second moon
+ Forgotten, unrespected of all; but slept many winters,
+ Saw many springs, liv'd, lov'd like men, consciously rejoicing
+ In Nature's promises, with like hopes and recollections.
+ Intelligence had brought them Scīence, Genius enter'd;
+ Seers and sages arose, great Bees, perfecting among them 370
+ Copious inventions, with man's art worthily compared.
+ Then was a time when that, which haps not in ages of ages,
+ Strangely befel: they stole from Nature's secresy one key,
+ Found the hidden motive which works to varīety of kind;
+ And thus came wondrously possest of pow'r to determine
+ Their children's qualities, habitudes, yea their specialized form
+ Masculine or feminine to produce, or asexual offspring
+ Redow'rd and differenced with such alternative organs
+ As they chose, to whate'er preferential function adapted,
+ Wax-pocket or honey-bag, with an instinct rightly acordant.
+ We know well the result, but not what causes effected 381
+ Their decision to prefer so blindly the race to the unit,
+ As to renounce happiness for a problem, a vain abstraction;
+ Making home and kingdom a vast egg-factory, wherein
+ Food and life are stor'd up alike, and strictly proportion'd
+ In loveless labour with mean anxīety. Wondrous
+ Their reason'd motive, their altrūistic obedience
+ Unto a self-impos'd life-sentence of prison or toil.
+ Wonder wisely! then ask if these ingenious insects,
+ (Who made Natur' against her will their activ' acomplice,
+ And, methodizing anew her heartless system, averted 391
+ From their house the torrent of whelming natural increase,)
+ Are blood-guiltless among their own-born prógeny: What skill
+ Keeps their peace, or what price buys it? Alack! 'tis murder,
+ Murder again. No worst Oriental despot, assuring
+ 'Gainst birthright or faction or envy his ill-gotten empire,
+ So decimates his kin, as do these rown-bodied egg-queens
+ Surprise competitors, and stab their slumbering infants,
+ Into the wax-cradles replunging their double-edged stings.
+ Or what a deed of blood some high-day, when the summer[v]hath 400
+ Their clammy cells o'erbrim'd, and already ripening orchards
+ And late flow'rs proclaim that starving winter approacheth,
+ Nor will again any queen lead forth her swarm, dispeopling
+ Their strawbuilt citadel; then watch how these busy workers
+ Cease for awhile from toil; how crowding upon the devoted
+ Drones they fall; those easy fellows gave some provocation;
+ Yet 'tis a foul massacre, cold murder of unsuspecting
+ Life-long companions; and done bloodthirstily:--is not
+ Exercise of pow'r a delight? have yóu not a doctrine
+ That calls duty pleasure? What an if they make merry, saying
+ 'Lazy-livers, runagates, evil beasts, greedy devourers, 411
+ 'Too happy and too long ye've liv'd, unashamed to have outliv'd
+ 'Your breeders, feeders, warmers and toiling attendants;
+ 'Had-ye ever been worthy a public good to accomplish,
+ 'Each had nobly perish'd long-ago. Unneeded, obese ones,
+ 'Impious encumbrance, whose hope of service is over,
+ 'Who did not, now can not, assist the community, YE DIE!'
+ My parable may serve. What wisdom man hath attain'd to
+ Came to him of Nature's goodwill throu' tardy selection:
+ Should her teaching accuse herself and her method impugn,
+ I may share with her the reproach of approving as artist 421
+ Far other idēals than what seem needful in action.
+ This difficulty besets our time. If you have an answer,
+ Write me it, as you keep your salt in savour; or if toil
+ Grant you an indulgence, here lies fair country, direct then
+ Your Sabbath excursion westward, and spend a summer-day
+ Preaching among the lilies what you[v]have preached to the chimneys.
+
+
+ 3
+
+ PEACE ODE
+
+ ON CONCLUSION OF THE BOER WAR, JUNE 1902
+
+ Now joy in all hearts with happy auguries,
+ And praise on all lips: for sunny June cometh
+ Chasing the thick warcloud, that outspread
+ Sulfurous and sullen over England.
+
+ Full thirty moons since unwilling enmity,
+ Since daily suspense for hideous peril
+ Of brethren unrescued, beleaguer'd
+ Plague-stricken in cities unprovided,
+
+ Had quencht accustom'd gaiety, from the day
+ When first the Dutchman's implacable folly,
+ The country of Shakspeare def[=y]ing,
+ Thought with a curse to appal the nation:
+
+ Whose threat to quell their kinsmen in Africa
+ Anger'd awhile our easy democracy;
+ That, reckless and patient of insult,
+ Will not abide arrogant defīance:
+
+ They called to arms; and war began evilly.
+ From slily forestor'd, well-hidden armouries,
+ And early advantage, the despot
+ Stood for a time prevalent against us:
+
+ Till from the coil of slow-gathering battle
+ He rancorous, with full moneybags hurried,
+ Peddling to European envy
+ His traffic of pennyworthy slander.
+
+ For since the first keel launch'd upon Ocean
+ Ne'er had before so mighty an armament
+ O'errun the realm of dark Poseidon,
+ So resolutely measur'd the waters,
+
+ As soon from our ports in diligent passage
+ O'er half the round world plow'd hither & thither
+ The pathless Atlantic, revengeful
+ Soldiery pouring on Esperanza:
+
+ Nor shows the Argive story of Ilium,
+ With tale of ancient auxiliar cities,
+ So vast a roll of wide alliance
+ As, rallying to the aid of England,
+
+ Came from the swarming counties accoutering,
+ And misty highlands of Caledonia,
+ With Cambria's half-Celtic offspring,
+ And the ever-merry fighting Irish:
+
+ Came too the new world's hardy Canadians,
+ And from remote Australia champions
+ Like huntsmen, and from those twin islands
+ Lying off antipodal beyond her,
+
+ Under the old flag sailing across the sea:
+ For mighty is blood's empery, where honour
+ And freedom ancestral have upbuilt
+ Inheritance to a lovely glory.
+
+ Thee, France, love I, fair lawgiver and scholar:
+ Thy lively grace, thy temper illustrious;
+ And thee, in all wisdom Diviner,
+ Germany, deep melodist immortal;
+
+ Nor less have envied soft Italy's spirit,
+ In marble unveil'd and eloquent colour:
+ But best love I England, wer' I not
+ Born to her aery should envy also.
+
+ Wherefore to-day one gift above every gift
+ Let us beseech, that God will accord to her
+ Always a right judgement in all things;
+ Ev'n to celestial excellencies;
+
+ And grant us in long peace to accumulate
+ Joy, and to stablish friendliness and commerce,
+ And barter in markets for unpriced
+ Beauty, the pearl of unending empire.
+
+ _May, 1902._
+
+
+ 4
+
+ EVENING
+
+ FROM WM. BLAKE[A]
+
+ Come, rosy angel, thy coronet donning
+ Of starry j[=ew]els, smile upon ev'ry bed,
+ And grant what each day-weary mortal,
+ Labourer or lover, asketh of thee.
+
+ Smile thou on our loves, enveloping the land
+ With dusky curtain: consider each blossom
+ That timely upcloseth, that opens
+ Her treasure of heavy-laden odours.
+
+ Now, while the west-wind slumbereth on the lake,
+ Silently dost thou with delicate shimmer
+ O'erbloom the frowning front of awful
+ Night to a glance of unearthly silver.
+
+ No hungry wild beast rangeth in our forest,
+ No tiger or wolf prowleth around the fold:
+ Keep thou from our sheepcotes the tainting
+ Invisible peril of the darkness.
+
+
+ 5
+
+ POVRE AME AMOUREUSE
+
+ FROM LOUISE LABE, 1555
+
+ (_Sapphics_)
+
+ When to my lone soft bed at eve returning
+ Sweet desir'd sleep already stealeth o'er me,
+ My spirit flīeth to the fairy-land of
+ her tyrannous love.
+
+ Him then I think fondly to kiss, to hold him
+ Frankly then to my bosom; I that all day
+ Have lookèd for[v]him suffering, repining,
+ yea many long days.
+
+ O blessèd sleep, with flatteries beguile me;
+ So,[v]if I ne'er may[v]of a surety have[v]him,
+ Grant to my poor soul amorous the dark gift
+ of this illusion.
+
+
+ 6
+
+ THE FOURTH DIMENSION
+
+ (_Hendecasyllables_)
+
+ Truest-hearted of early friends, that Eton
+ Long since gáve to me,--Ah! 'tis all a life-time,--
+ With my faithfully festive auspication
+ Of Christmas merriment, this idle item.
+
+ Plato truly believ'd his archetypal
+ Idēas to possess the fourth dimension:
+ For since our solid is triple, but always
+ Its shade only double, solids as _umbrae_
+ Must lack equally one dimension also.
+ Could Plato[v]have avoided or denied it?
+
+ So Saint Paul, when in argument opposing
+ To our earthly bodies bodies celestial,
+ Meant just those pretty Greek aforesaid abstracts
+ Of four Plātonical divine dimensions.
+
+ If this be not a holy consolation
+ More than plumpudding and a turkey roasted,
+ Whereto you but address a third dimension,
+ Try it, pray, as a pill to aid digestion:
+ I can't find anything better to send you.
+
+
+ 7
+
+ JOHANNES MILTON, Senex
+
+ _Scazons_
+
+ Since I believe in God the Father Almighty,
+ Man's Maker and Judge, Overruler of Fortune,
+ 'Twere strange should I praise anything and refuse Him praise,
+ Should love the creature forgetting the Crēator,
+ Nor unto Him[v]in suff'ring and sorrow turn me:
+ Nay how coud I withdraw me from[v]His embracing?
+
+ But since that I have seen not, and cannot know Him,
+ Nor in my earthly temple apprehend rightly
+ His wisdom and the heav'nly purpose ēternal;
+ Therefore will I be bound to no studied system
+ Nor argument, nor with delusion enslave me,
+ Nor seek to pléase Him in any foolish invention,
+ Which my spirit within me, that loveth beauty
+ And hateth evil, hath reprov'd as unworthy:
+
+ But I cherish my freedom in loving service,
+ Gratefully adoring for delight beyond asking
+ Or thinking, and in hours of anguish and darkness
+ Confiding always on[v]His excellent greatness.
+
+
+ 8
+
+ PYTHAGORAS
+
+ _Seasons_
+
+ Thou vainly, O Man, self-deceiver, exaltest
+ Thyself the king and only thinker of this world,
+ Where life aboundeth infinite to destroy thee.
+
+ Well-guided are thy forces and govern'd bravely,
+ But like a tyrant crūel or savage monster
+ Thou disregardest ignorantly all bēing
+ Save only thine own insubordinate ruling:
+
+ As if the flowër held not a happy pact with Spring;
+ As if the brutes lack'd reason and sorrow's torment;
+ Or ev'n divine love from the small atoms grew not,
+ Their grave affection unto thy passion mingling.
+
+ * * *
+
+ An truly were it nobler and better wisdom
+ To fear the blind thing blindly, lest it espy thee;
+ And scrupulously do[v]honour to dumb creatures,
+
+ No one offending impiously, nor forcing
+ To service of vile uses; ordering rather
+ Thy slave to beauty, compelling lovingkindness.
+
+ So should desire, the only priestess of Nature
+ Divinely inspir'd, like a good monarch rule thee,
+ And lead thee onward in the consummate motion
+ Of life eternal unto heav'nly perfection.
+
+
+ _Elegiacs_
+
+
+ 9
+
+ AMIEL
+
+ Why, O Maker of all, madest thou man with affections
+ Tender above thyself, scrupulous and passionate?
+ Nay, if compassionate thou art, why, thou lover of men,
+ Hidest thou thy face so pitilessly from us?
+ If thou in priesthoods and altar-glory delitest,
+ In torment and tears of trouble and suffering,
+ Then wert thou displeas'd looking on soft human emotion,
+ Thou must scorn the devout love of a sire to a son.
+ 'Twas but vainly of old, Man, making Faith to approach thee,
+ Held an imagin'd scheme of providence in honour;
+ And, to redeem thy praise, judg'd himself cause, took upon him
+ Humbly the impossible burden of all misery.
+ Now casteth he away his books and logical idols
+ Leaveth again his cell of terrified penitence;
+ And that stony goddess, his first-born fancy, dethroning,
+ Hath made after his own homelier art another;
+ Made sweet Hope, the modest unportion'd daughter of anguish,
+ Whose brimming eye sees but dimly what it looketh on;
+ Dreaming a day when fully, without curse or horrible cross,
+ Thou wilt deign to reveal her vision of happiness.
+
+
+ 10
+
+ Ah, what a change! Thou, who didst emptily thy happiness seek
+ In pleasure, art finding thy pleasure in happiness.
+ Slave to the soul, whom thou heldest in slavery, art thou?
+ Thou, that wert but a vain idol, adored a goddess?
+
+
+ 11
+
+ WALKING HOME
+
+ FROM THE CHINESE
+
+ Thousand threads of rain and fine white wreathing of air-mist
+ Hide from us earth's greenness, hide the enarching azure.
+ Yet will a breath of Spring homeward convoying attend us,
+ And the mellow flutings of passionate Philomel.
+
+
+ 12
+
+ THE RUIN
+
+ FROM THE CHINESE
+
+ These grey stones have rung with mirth and lordly carousel;
+ Here proud kings mingled pōetry and ruddy wine.
+ All hath pass'd long ago; nought but this rūin abideth,
+ Sadly in eyeless trance gazing upon the river.
+ Wouldst thou know who here visiteth, dwelleth and singeth also,
+ Ask the swallows fl[=y]ing from sunny-wall'd Italy.
+
+
+ 13
+
+ REVENANTS
+
+ FROM THE FRENCH
+
+ At dead of unseen night ghosts of the departed assembling
+ Flit to the graves, where each in body had burial.
+ Ah, then rēvisiting my sad heart their desolate tomb
+ Troop the desires and loves vainly buried long ago.
+
+
+ 14
+
+ FROM THE GREEK
+
+ Mortal though I bé, yea ephemeral, if but a moment
+ I gaze up to the night's starry domain of heaven,
+ Then no longer on earth I stand; I touch the Creator,
+ And my lively spirit drinketh immortality.
+
+
+ 15
+
+ ANNIVERSARY
+
+ See, Love, a year is pass'd: in harvest our summer endeth:
+ Praising thee the solemn festival I celebrate.
+ Unto us all our days are love's anniversaries, each one
+ In turn hath ripen'd something of our happiness.
+ So, lest heart-contented adown life easily floating,
+ We note not the passage while living in the delight,
+ I have honour'd always the attentive vigil of Autumn,
+ And thy day set apart holy to fair Memory.
+
+
+ 16
+
+ COMMUNION OF SAINTS
+
+ FROM ANDRE CHENIER
+
+ What happy bonds together unite you, ye living and dead,
+ Your fadeless love-bloom, your manifold memories.
+
+
+
+ EPITAPHS
+
+ 17
+
+ Fight well, my comrades, and prove your bravery. Me too
+ God call'd out, but crown'd early before the battle.
+
+
+ 18
+
+ I died in very flow'r: yet call me not unhappy therefore,
+ Ye that against sweet life once a lament have utter'd.
+
+
+ 19
+
+ When thou, my belovèd, diedst, I saw heaven open,
+ And all earthly delight inhabiting Paradise.
+
+
+ 20
+
+ Where thou art better I too were, dearest, anywhere, than
+ Wanting thy well-lov'd lovely presence anywhere.
+
+
+ 21
+
+ IBANT OBSCURI
+
+ _A line for line paraphrase of a part of
+ Virgil's Æneid, Bk. VI._
+
+ They wer' amid the shadows by night in loneliness obscure
+ Walking forth i' the void and vasty dominyon of Ades;
+ As by an uncertain moonray secretly illumin'd 270
+ One goeth in the forest, when heav'n is gloomily clouded,
+ And black night hath robb'd the colours and beauty from all things.
+ Here in Hell's very jaws, the threshold of darkening Orcus,
+ Have the avenging Cares laid their sleepless habitation,
+ Wailing Grief, pallid Infections, & heart-stricken Old-age,
+ Dismal Fear, unholy Famine, with low-groveling Want,
+ Forms of spectral horror, gaunt Toil and Death the devourer,
+ And Death's drowsy brother, Torpor; with whom, an inane rout, 278
+ All the Pleasures of Sin; there also the Furies in ambusht
+ Chamber of iron, afore whose bars wild War bloodyhanded
+ Raged, and mad Discord high brandisht her venomous locks.
+ Midway of all this tract, with secular arms an immense elm
+ Reareth a crowd of branches, aneath whose leafy protection
+ Vain dreams thickly nestle, clinging unto the foliage on high:
+ And many strange creatures of monstrous form and features
+ Stable about th' entrance, Centaur and Scylla's abortion,
+ And hundred-handed Briareus, and Lerna the wildbeast
+ Roaring amain, and clothed in frightful flame the Chimæra,
+ Gorgons and Harpies, ['] and Pluto's three-bodied ogre.
+ In terror Æneas upheld his sword to defend him, 290
+ With ready naked point confronting their dreaded onset:
+ And had not the Sibyl warn'd how these lively spirits were
+ All incorporeal, flitting in thin maskery of form,
+ He had assail'd their host, and wounded vainly the void air.
+ Hence is a road that led them a-down to the Tartarean streams,
+ Where Acheron's whirlpool impetuous, into the reeky
+ Deep of Cokytos disgorgeth, with muddy burden.
+ These floods one ferryman serveth, most awful of aspect,
+ Of squalor infernal, Chāron: all filthily unkempt
+ That woolly white cheek-fleece, and fiery the blood-shotten eyeballs: 300
+ On one shoulder a cloak knotted-up his nudity vaunteth.
+ He himself plieth oar or pole, manageth tiller and sheet,
+ And the relics of mén in his ash-grey barge ferries over;
+ Already old, but green to a god and hearty will age be.
+ Now hitherward to the bank much folk were crowding, a medley
+ Of men and matrons; nor did death's injury conceal
+ Bravespirited heroes, young maidens beauteous unwed,
+ And boys borne to the grave in sight of their sorrowing sires.
+ Countless as in the forest, at a first white frosting of autumn
+ Sere leaves fall to the ground; or like whenas over the ocean
+ Myr[^ia]d birds come thickly flocking, when wintry December 311
+ Drives them afar southward for shelter upon sunnier shores,
+ So throng'd they; and each his watery journey demanded,
+ All to the further bank stretching-oút their arms impatient:
+ But the sullen boatman took now one now other at will,
+ While some from the river forbade he', an' drave to a distance.
+ Æneas in wonder alike and deep pity then spake.
+ 'Tell-me,' said he, 'my guide, why flock these crowds to the water?
+ Or what seek the spirits? or by what prejudice are these
+ Rudely denied, while those may upon the solemn river embark?' 320
+ T'whom[B] then briefly again the Avern[^ia]n priestess in answer.
+ 'O Son of Anchises, heavn's true-born glorious offspring,
+ Deep Cokytos it is thou s[^ee]st & Hell's Styg[^ia]n flood,
+ Whose dread sanct[^io]n alone Jove's oath from falsehood assureth.
+ These whom thou pitiedst, th' outcast and unburied are they;
+ That ferryman Chāron; those whom his bark carries over
+ Are the buried; nor ever may mortal across the livid lake
+ Journey, or e'er upon Earth his bones lie peacefully entomb'd:
+ Haunting a hundred years this mournful plain they wander
+ Doom'd for a term, which term expired they win to deliv'rance.' 330
+ Then he that harken'd stood agaze, his journey arrested,
+ Grieving at heart and much pitying their unmerited lot.
+ There miserably fellow'd in death's indignity saw he
+ Leucaspis with his old Lycian seachieften Orontes,
+ Whom together from Troy in home-coming over the waters
+ Wild weather o'ermaster'd, engulphing both shipping and men.
+ And lo! his helmsman, Palinurus, in eager emotion,
+ Who on th' Afric course, in bright star-light, with a fair wind,
+ Fell by slumber opprest unheedfully into the wide sea:
+ Whom i' the gloom when hardly he knew, now changed in affliction, 340
+ First he addrest. 'What God, tell-me O Palinurus, of all gods
+ Plúckt you away and drown'd i' the swift wake-water abandon'd?
+ For never erst nor in else hath kind responsive Apollo
+ Led-me astray, but alone in this thing wholly deluded,
+ When he aver'd that you, to remote Ausōnia steering,
+ Safe would arrive. Where now his truth? Is this the promis'd faith?'
+ But he, 'Neither again did Phœbus wrongly bespeak thee,
+ My general, nor yet did a god in his enmity drown me:
+ For the tiller, wherewith I led thy fleet's navigation,
+ And still clung to, was in my struggling hold of it unshipt, 350
+ And came with-me' o'erboard. Ah! then, by ev'ry accurst sea,
+ Tho' in utter despair, far less mine own peril awed me
+ Than my thought o' the ship, what harm might háp to her, yawing
+ In the billows helmless, with a high wind and threatening gale.
+ Two nights and one day buffeted held I to the good spar
+ Windborne, with the current far-drifting, an' on the second morn
+ Saw, when a great wave raised me aloft, the Italyan highlands;
+ And swimming-on with effort got ashore, nay already was saved,
+ Had not there the wrecking savages, who spied-me defenceless,
+ Scarce clinging outwearied to a rock, half-drowned & speechless, 360
+ Beát me to death for hope of an unfound booty upon me.
+ Now to the wind and tidewash a sport my poor body rolleth.
+ Wherefore thee, by heav'n's sweet light & airness, I pray,
+ By thy Sire's memories, thy hope of youthful Iulus,
+ Rescue-me from these ills, brave master; Go to Velija,
+ O'er my mortality's spoil cast thou th' all-hallowing dust;
+ Or better, if so be the goddess, heav'n's lady-Creatress,
+ Show-thee the way,--nor surely without high favoring impulse
+ Mak'st thou ventur' across these floods & black Ereban lake,--
+ Give thy hand-to-me', an' o'er their watery boundary bring me 370
+ Unto the haven of all, death's home of quiet abiding.'
+ Thus-he lamented, anon spake sternly the maid of Avernus.
+ 'Whence can such unruly desire, Palinurus, assail thee?
+ Wilt thou th' Eumenidan waters visit unburied? o'erpass
+ Hell's Stygian barrier? Chāron's boat unbidden enter?
+ Cease to believe that fate can bé by prayër averted.
+ Let my sooth a litel thy cruel destiny comfort
+ Surely the people of all thy new-found country, determin'd
+ By heav'n-sent omens will achieve thy purification, 379
+ Build thee a tomb of honour with yearly solemnity ordain'd,
+ And dedicate for ever thy storied name to the headland.'
+ These words lighten awhile his fear, his sadness allaying,
+ Nor vain was the promise his name should eternally survive.
+ They forthwith their journey renew, tending to the water:
+ Whom when th' old boatman descried silently emerging
+ Out o' the leafy shadows, advancing t'ward the river-shore,
+ Angrily gave-he challenge, imperious in salutation.
+ 'Whosoever thou be, that approachest my river all-arm'd,
+ Stand to announce thyself, nor further make footing onward.
+ Here 'tis a place of ghosts, of night & drowsy delusion: 390
+ Forbidden unto living mortals is my Stygian keel:
+ Truly not Alkides embarkt I cheerfully, nor took
+ Of Theseus or Pirithous glad custody, nay though
+ God-sprung were they both, warriors invincible in might:
+ Hé 'twas would sportively the guard of Tartarus enchain,
+ Yea and from the palace with gay contumely dragged him:
+ Théy to ravish Hell's Queen from Pluto's chamber attempted.'
+ Then thus th' Amphrysian prophetess spake briefly in answer.
+ 'No such doughty designs are ours, Cease thou to be movèd!
+ Nor these sheeny weapons intend force. Cerberus unvext
+ Surely for us may affray the spirits with 'howling eternal, 401
+ And chaste Persephone enjoy her queenly seclusion.
+ Troian Æneas, bravest and gentlest-hearted,
+ Hath left earth to behold his father in out-lying Ades.
+ If the image ' of a so great virtue doth not affect thee,
+ Yet this bough'--glittering she reveal'd its golden avouchment--
+ 'Thou mayst know.' Forthwith his bluster of heart was appeasèd:
+ Nor word gave-he, but admiring the celestial omen,
+ That bright sprigg of weird for so long period unseen,
+ Quickly he-túrneth about his boat, to the margin approaching, 410
+ And the spirits, that along the gun'al benchways sat in order,
+ Drave he ashore, offering readyroom: but when the vessel took
+ Ponderous Æneas, her timbers crankily straining
+ Creak'd, an' a brown water came trickling through the upper seams.
+ Natheless both Sibyl ánd Hero, slow wafted across stream,
+ Safe on th' ooze & slime's hideous desolation alighted.
+ Hence the triple-throated bellowings of Cerberus invade
+ All Hell, where opposite the arrival he lies in a vast den.
+ But the Sibyl, who mark'd his necklaces of stiffening snakes,
+ Cast him a cake, poppy-drench'd with drowsiness and honey-sweeten'd. 420
+ He, rabid and distending a-hungry' his triply-cavern'd jaws,
+ Gulp'd the proffer'd morsel; when slow he-relaxt his immense bulk,
+ And helplessly diffused fell out-sprawl'd over the whole cave.
+ Æneas fled by, and left full boldly the streamway,
+ That biddeth all men across but alloweth ne'er a returning.
+ Already now i' the air were voices heard, lamentation,
+ And shrilly crying of infant souls by th' entry of Ades.
+ Babes, whom unportion'd of sweet life, unblossoming buds,
+ One black day carried off and chokt in dusty corruption.--
+ Next are they who falsely accused were wrongfully condemn'd
+ Unto the death: but here their lot by justice is order'd. 431
+ Inquisitor Minos, with his urn, summoning to assembly
+ His silent council, their deed or slander arraigneth.--
+ Next the sullen-hearted, who rashly with else-innocent hand
+ Their own life did-away, for hate or weariness of light,
+ Imperiling their souls. How gladly, if only in Earth's air,
+ Would-they again their toil, discomfort, and pities endure!
+ Fate obstructs: deep sadness now, unloveliness awful
+ Rings them about, & Styx with ninefold circle enarmeth.--
+ Not far hence they come to a land extensive on all sides; 440
+ Weeping Plain 'tis call'd:--such name such country deserveth.
+ Here the lovers, whom fiery passion hath cruelly consumed,
+ Hide in leafy alleys ' and pathways bow'ry, sequester'd
+ By woodland myrtle, nor hath Death their sorrow ended.
+ Here was Phædra to see, Procris ' and sad Eriphyle,
+ She of her unfilial deathdoing wound not ashamèd,
+ Evadne, ' and Pasiphae ' and Laodamia,
+ And epicene Keneus, a woman to a man metamorphos'd,
+ Now by Fate converted again to her old feminine form.
+ 'Mong these shades, her wound yet smarting ruefully, Dido
+ Wander'd throu' the forest-obscurity; and Æneas 451
+ Standing anigh knew surely the dim form, though i' the darkness
+ Veil'd,--as when one seëth a young moon on the horizon,
+ Or thinketh to' have seen i' the gloaming her delicate horn;
+ Tearfully in oncelov'd accents he-lovingly addrest her.
+ 'Unhappy! ah! too true 'twas told me' O unhappy Dido,
+ Dead thou wert; to the fell extreme didst thy passion ensue.
+ And was it I that slew-thee? Alas! Smile falsity, ye heav'ns!
+ And Hell-fury attest-me', if here any sanctity reigneth,
+ Unwilling, O my Queen, my step thy kingdom abandon'd. 460
+ Me the command of a god, who here my journey determines
+ Through Ereban darkness, through fields sown with desolation,
+ Drave-me to wrong my heart. Nay tho' deep-pain'd to desert thee
+ I ne'er thought to provoke thy pain of mourning eternal.
+ Stay yet awhile, ev'n here unlook'd-for again look upon me:
+ Fly-me not ere the supreme words that Fate granteth us are said.'
+ Thus he: but the spirit was raging, fiercely defiant,
+ Whom he approach'd with words to appease, with tears for atonement.
+ She to the ground downcast her ' eyes in fixity averted;
+ Nor were her features more by his pleading affected, 470
+ Than wer' a face of flint, or of ensculptur'd alabaster.
+ At length she started disdainful, an' angrily withdrew
+ Into a shady thicket: where her grief kindly Sychæus
+ Sooth'd with other memories, first love and virginal embrace.
+ And ever Æneas, to remorse by deep pity soften'd,
+ With brimming eyes pursued her queenly figure disappearing.
+ Thence the Sibyl to the plain's extremest boundary led him,
+ Where world-fam'd warriors, a lionlike company, haunted.
+ Here great Tydeus saw he eclips'd, & here the benighted
+ Phantom of Adrastus, ' of stalwart Parthenopæus. 480
+ Here long mourn'd upon earth went all that prowess of Ilium
+ Fallen in arms; whom, when he-beheld them, so many and great,
+ Much he-bewail'd. By Thersilochus his mighty brothers stood,
+ Children of Antenor; here Demetr[^ia]n Polyphates,
+ And Idæus, in old chariot-pose dreamily stalking.
+ Right and left the spirits flocking on stood crowding around him;
+ Nor their eyes have enough; they touch, find joy unwonted
+ Marching in equal stép, and eager of his coming enquire.
+ But th' Argive leaders, and they that obey'd Agamemnon
+ When they saw that Trojan in arms come striding among them, 490
+ Old terror invaded their ranks: some fled stricken, as once
+ They to the ships had fled for shelter; others the alarm raise,
+ But their thin utterance mock'd vainly the lips wide parted.
+ Here too Deiphobus he espied, his fair body mangled,
+ Cruelly dismember'd, disfeatur'd cruelly his face,
+ Face and hands; and lo! shorn closely from either temple,
+ Gone wer' his ears, and maim'd each nostril in impious outrage.
+ Barely he-knew him again cow'ring shamefastly' an' hiding
+ His dire plight, & thus he 'his old companyon accosted.
+ 'Noblest Deiphobus, great Teucer's intrepid offspring, 500
+ Who was it, inhuman, coveted so cruel a vengeance?
+ Who can hav' adventur'd on thée? That last terrible night
+ Thou wert said to hav' exceeded thy bravery, an' only
+ On thy faln enemies wert faln by weariness o'ercome.
+ Wherefor' upon the belov'd sea-shore thine empty sepulchral
+ Mound I erected, aloud on thy ghost tearfully calling.
+ Name and shield keep for-thee the place; but thy body, dear friend,
+ Found I not, to commit to the land ere sadly' I left it.'
+ Then the son of Priam ['] 'I thought not, friend, to reproach thee:
+ Thou didst all to the full, ev'n my shade's service, accomplish. 510
+ 'Twas that uninterdicted adultress from Lacedæmon
+ Drave-me to doom, & planted in hell, her trophy triumphant.
+ On that night,--how vain a security and merrymaking
+ Then sullied us thou know'st, yea must too keenly remember,--
+ When the ill-omened horse o'erleapt Troy's lofty defences,
+ Dragg'd in amidst our town pregnant with a burden of arm'd men.
+ She then, her Phrygian women in feign'd phrenzy collecting,
+ All with torches aflame, in wild Bacchic orgy paraded,
+ Flaring a signal aloft to her ambusht confederate Greeks.
+ I from a world of care had fled with weariful eyelids 520
+ Unto my unhappy chamber', an' lay fast lockt in oblivyon,
+ Sunk to the depth of rest as a child that nought will awaken.
+ Meanwhile that paragon helpmate had robb'd me of all arms,
+ E'en from aneath the pillow my blade of trust purloining;--
+ Then to the gate; wide flíngs she it op'n an' calls Menelaus.
+ Would not a so great service attach her faithful adorer?
+ Might not it extinguish the repute of her earlier illdeeds?
+ Brief-be the tale. Menelaus arrives: in company there came
+ His crime-counsellor Æolides. So, and more also
+ Déal-ye', O Gods, to the Greeks! an' if I call justly upon you.-- 530
+ But thou; what fortune hitherward, in turn prithy tell me,
+ Sent-thee alive, whether erring upon the bewildering Ocean,
+ Or high-prompted of heav'n, or by Fate wearily hunted,
+ That to the sunless abodes and dusky demesnes thou approachest?'
+ Ev'n as awhile they thus converse it is already mid-day
+ Unperceiv'd, but aloft earth's star had turn'd to declining.
+ And haply' Æneas his time in parley had outgone,
+ Had not then the Sibyl with word of warning avized him.
+ 'Night hieth, Æneas; in tears our journey delayeth.
+ See our road, that it here in twain disparteth asunder; 540
+ This to the right, skirting by th' high city-fortresses of Dis,
+ Endeth in Elysium, our path; but that to the leftward
+ Only receives their feet who wend to eternal affliction.'
+ Deiphobus then again, 'Speak not, great priestess, in anger;
+ I will away to refill my number among th' unfortun'd.
+ Thou, my champyon, adieu! Go where thy glory awaits thee!'
+ When these words he 'had spok'n, he-turn'd and hastily was fled.
+ Æneas then look'd where leftward, under a mountain,
+ Outspread a wide city lay, threefold with fortresses engirt,
+ Lickt by a Tartarean river of live fire, the torrent[^ia]l 550
+ Red Phlegethon, and huge boulders his roundy bubbles be:
+ Right i' the front stareth the columnar gate adamantine,
+ Such that no battering warfare of mén or immortals
+ E'er might shake; blank-faced to the cloud its bastion upstands.
+ Tisiphone thereby in a bloodspotty robe sitteth alway
+ Night and day guarding sleeplessly the desperat entrance,
+ Wherefrom an awestirring groan-cry and fierce clamour outburst,
+ Sharp lashes, insane yells, dragg'd chains and clanking of iron.
+ Æneas drew back, his heart by' his hearing affrighted:
+ 'What manner of criminals, my guide, now tell-me,' he-question'd, 560
+ 'Or what their penalties? what this great wail that ariseth?'
+ Answering him the divine priestess, 'Brave hero of Il[îû]m,
+ O'er that guilty threshold no breath of purity may come:
+ But Hecate, who gave-me to rule i' the groves of Avernus,
+ Herself led me around, & taught heav'n's high retribution.
+ Here Cretan Rhadamanthus in unblest empery reigneth,
+ Secret crime to punish,--full surely he-wringeth avowal
+ Even of all that on earth, by vain impunity harden'd,
+ Men sinning have put away from thought till[v]impenitent death.
+ On those convicted tremblers then leapeth avenging 570
+ Tisiphone with keen flesh-whips and vipery scourges,
+ And of her implacable sisters inviteth attendance.'
+ --Now sudden on screeching hinges that portal accursèd
+ Flung wide its barriers.--'In what dire custody, mark thou,
+ Is the threshold! guarded by how grim sentry the doorway!
+ More terrible than they the ravin'd insatiable Hydra
+ That sitteth angry within. Know too that Tartarus itself
+ Dives sheer gaping aneath in gloomy profundity downward
+ Twice that height that a man looketh-up t'ward airy Olympus.
+ Lowest there those children of Earth, Titanian elders, 580
+ In the abyss, where once they fell hurl'd, yet wallowing lie.
+ There the Alöīdæ saw I, th' ungainly rebel twins
+ Primæval, that assay'd to devastate th' Empyræan
+ With huge hands, and rob from Jove his kingdom immortal.
+ And there Salmoneus I saw, rend'ring heavy payment,
+ For that he idly' had mockt heav'n's fire and thunder electric;
+ With chariot many-yoked and torches brandishing on high
+ Driving among 'his Graian folk in Olympian Elis;
+ Exultant as a God he rode in blasphemy worshipt. 589
+ Fool, who th' unreckoning tempest and deadly dreaded bolt
+ Thought to mimic with brass and confus'd trample of horses!
+ But 'him th' Omnipotent, from amidst his cloudy pavilyon,
+ Blasted, an' eke his rattling car and smoky pretences
+ Extinguish'd at a stroke, scattering ' his dust to the whirlwind.
+ There too huge Tityos, whom Earth that gendereth all things
+ Once foster'd, spreadeth-out o'er nine full roods his immense limbs.
+ On him a wild vulture with hook-beak greedily gorgeth
+ His liver upsprouting quick as that Hell-chicken eateth.
+ Shé diggeth and dwelleth under the vast ribs, her bloody bare neck
+ Lifting anon: ne'er loathes-she the food, ne'er fails the renewal. 600
+ Where wer' an end their names to relate, their crimes and torments?
+ Some o'er whom a hanging black rock, slipping at very point of
+ Falling, ever threateneth: Couches luxurious invite
+ Softly-cushion'd to repose: Tables for banqueting outlaid
+ Tempt them ever-famishing: hard by them a Fury regardeth,
+ And should théy but a hand uplift, trembling to the dainties,
+ She with live firebrand and direful yell springeth on them.
+ Their crimes,--not to' hav lov'd a brother while love was allow'd them;
+ Or to' hav struck their father, or inveigled a dependant; 609
+ Or who chancing alone on wealth prey'd lustfully thereon,
+ Nor made share with others, no greater company than they:
+ Some for adultery slain; some their bright swords had offended
+ Drawn i' the wrong: or a master's trust with perfidy had met:
+ Dungeon'd their penalties they await. Look not to be answer'd
+ What that doom, nor th' end of these men think to determine.
+ Sóme aye roll heavy rocks, some whirl dizzy on the revolving
+ Spokes of a pendant wheel: sitteth and to eternity shall sit
+ Unfortun'd Theseus; while sad Phlegias saddeneth hell
+ With vain oyez to' all loud crying a tardy repentance,
+ "Walk, O man, i' the fear of Gód, and learn to be righteous!"
+ Here another, who sold for gold his country, promoting 621
+ Her tyrant; or annull'd for a base bribe th' inviolate law.
+ This one had unfather'd his blood with bestial incest:
+ All some fearful crime had dared & vaunted achievement.
+ What mind could harbour the offence of such recollection,
+ Or lend welcoming ear to the tale of iniquity and shame,
+ And to the pains wherewith such deeds are justly requited?
+ Ev'n when thus she' had spok'n, the priestess dear to Apollo,
+ 'But, ready, come let us ón, perform-we the order appointed!
+ Hast'n-we (saith-she), the wall forged on Cyclopian anvils
+ Now I see, an' th' archway in Ætna's furnace attemper'd, 631
+ Where my lore biddeth us to depose our high-privileg'd gift.'
+ Then together they trace i' the drooping dimness a footpath,
+ Whereby, faring across, they arrive at th' arches of iron.
+ Æneas stept into the porch, and duly besprinkling
+ His body with clear water affixt his bough to the lintel;
+ And, having all perform'd at length with ritual exact,
+ They came out on a lovely pleasance, that dream'd-of oasis,
+ Fortunate isle, the abode o' the blest, their fair Happy Woodland.
+ Here is an ampler sky, those meads ar' azur'd by a gentler
+ Sun than th' Earth, an' a new starworld their darkness adorneth. 641
+ Some were matching afoot their speed on a grassy arena,
+ In playful combat some wrestling upon the yellow sand,
+ Part in a dance-rhythm or poetry's fine phantasy engage;
+ While full-toga'd anear their high-priest musical Orpheus
+ Bade his prime sev'n tones in varied harmony discourse,
+ Now with finger, anon sounding with an ivory plectrum.
+ And here Æneas met Teucer's fortunate offspring,
+ High-spirited heroes, fair-favor'd sons o' the morning,
+ Assarac and Ilos ' and Dardan founder of Il[^iu]m: 650
+ Their radiant chariots he' espied rank't empty afar off,
+ Their spears planted afield, their horses wandering at large,
+ Grazing around:--as on earth their joy had been, whether armour
+ Or chariot had charmed them, or if 'twer' good manage and care
+ Of the gallant warhorse, the delight liv'd here unabated;
+ Lo! then others, that about the meadow sat feasting in idless,
+ And chanting for joy a familyar pæan of old earth,
+ By fragrant laurel o'ercanopied, where 'twixt enamel'd banks
+ Bountiful Eridanus glides throu' their bosky retirement.
+ Here were men who bled for honour, their country defending; 660
+ Priests, whose lives wer' a flame of chastity on God's altar;
+ Holy poets, content to await their crown of Apollo;
+ Discoverers, whose labour had aided life or ennobled;
+ Or who fair memories had left though kindly deserving.
+ On their brow a fillet pearl-white distinguisheth all these:
+ Whom the Sibyl, for they drew round, in question accosted,
+ And most Musæus, who tower'd noble among them,
+ Center of all that sea of bright faces looking upward.
+ 'Tell, happy souls, and thou poet and high mystic illustrious,
+ Where dwelleth Anchises? what home hath he? for 'tis in his quest 670
+ We hither have made journey across Hell's watery marches.'
+ Thertó with brief parley rejoin'd that mystic of old-time.
+ 'In no certain abode we-remain: by turn the forest glade
+ Haunt-we, lilied stream-bank, sunny mead; and o'er valley and rock
+ At will rove-we: but if ye aright your purpose arede me,
+ Mount-ye the hill: myself will prove how easy the pathway.'
+ Speaking he léd: and come to the upland, sheweth a fair plain
+ Gleaming aneath; and they, with grateful adieu, the descent made.
+ Now Lord Anchises was down i' the green valley musing,
+ Where the spirits confin'd that await mortal resurrection 680
+ While diligently he-mark'd, his thought had turn'd to his own kin,
+ Whose numbers he-reckon'd, an' of all their progeny foretold
+ Their fate and fortune, their ripen'd temper an' action.
+ He then, when he' espied Æneas t'ward him approaching
+ O'er the meadow, both hands uprais'd and ran to receive him,
+ Tears in his eyes, while thus his voice in high passion outbrake.
+ 'Ah, thou'rt come, thou'rt come! at length thy dearly belov'd grace
+ Conquering all hath won-thee the way. 'Tis allow'd to behold thee,
+ O my son,--yea again the familyar raptur' of our speech.
+ Nay, I look't for 't thus, counting patiently the moments, 690
+ And ever expected; nor did fond fancy betray me.
+ From what lands, my son, from what life-dangering ocean
+ Art-thou arrived? full mighty perils thy path hav' opposèd:
+ And how nearly the dark Libyan thy destiny o'erthrew!'
+ Then 'he, 'Thy spirit, O my sire, 'twas thy spirit often
+ Sadly appearing aroused-me to seek thy fair habitation.
+ My fleet moors i' the blue Tyrrhene: all with-me goeth well.
+ Grant-me to touch thy hand as of old, and thy body embrace.'
+ Speaking, awhile in tears his feeling mutinied, and when
+ For the longing contact of mortal affection, he out-held 700
+ His strong arms, the figure sustain'd them not: 'twas as empty
+ E'en as a windworn cloud, or a phantom of irrelevant sleep.
+ On the level bosom of this vale more thickly the tall trees
+ Grow, an' aneath quivering poplars and whispering alders
+ Lethe's dreamy river throu' peaceful scenery windeth.
+ Whereby now flitted in vast swarms many people of all lands,
+ As when in early summer 'honey-bees on a flowery pasture
+ Pill the blossoms, hurrying to' an' fro,--innumerous are they,
+ Revisiting the ravish'd lily cups, while all the meadow hums.
+ Æneas was turn'd to the sight, and marvelling inquired, 710
+ 'Say, sir, what the river that there i' the vale-bottom I see?
+ And who they that thickly along its bank have assembled?'
+ Then Lord Anchises, 'The spirits for whom a second life
+ And body are destined ar' arriving thirsty to Lethe,
+ And here drink th' unmindful draught from wells of oblivyon.
+ My heart greatly desired of this very thing to acquaint thee,
+ Yea, and show-thee the men to-be-born, our glory her'after,
+ So to gladden thine heart where now thy voyaging endeth.'
+ 'Must it then be-believ'd, my sire, that a soul which attaineth
+ Elysium will again submit to her old body-burden? 720
+ Is this well? what hap can awake such dire longing in them?'
+ 'I will tell thee', O son, nor keep thy wonder awaiting,'
+ Answereth Anchises, and all expoundeth in order.
+ Know first that the heavens, and th' Earth, and space fluid or void,
+ Night's pallid orb, day's Sun, and all his starry coævals,
+ Are by one spirit inly quickened, and, mingling in each part,
+ Mind informs the matter, nature's complexity ruling.
+ Thence the living creatures, man, brute, and ev'ry feather'd fowl,
+ And what breedeth in Ocean aneath her surface of argent:
+ Their seed knoweth a fiery vigour, 'tis of airy divine birth, 730
+ In so far as unimpeded by an alien evil,
+ Nor dull'd by the body's framework condemn'd to corruption.
+ Hence the desires and vain tremblings that assail them, unable
+ Darkly prison'd to arise to celestial exaltation;
+ Nor when death summoneth them anon earth-life to relinquish,
+ Can they in all discard their stain, nor wholly away with
+ Mortality's plaguespots. It must-be that, O, many wild graffs
+ Deeply at 'heart engrain'd have rooted strangely upon them:
+ Wherefore must suffering purge them, yea, Justice atone them
+ With penalties heavy as their guilt: some purify exposed 740
+ Hung to the viewless winds, or others long watery searchings
+ Low i' the deep wash clean, some bathe in f[^ie]ry renewal:
+ Each cometh unto his own retribution,--if after in ample
+ Elysium we attain, but a few, to the fair Happy Woodland,
+ Yet slow time still worketh on us to remove the defilement,
+ Till it hath eaten away the acquir'd dross, leaving again free
+ That first f[^ie]ry vigour, the celest[^ia]l virtue of our life.
+ All whom here thou s[^ee]st, hav' accomplished purification:
+ Unto the stream of Lethe a god their company calleth,
+ That forgetful of old failure, pain & disappointment, 750
+ They may again into' earthly bodies with glad courage enter.'
+
+ * * *
+
+ Twín be the gates o' the house of sleep: as fable opineth 893
+ One is of horn, and thence for a true dream outlet is easy:
+ Fair the other, shining perfected of ivory carven;
+ But false are the visions that thereby find passage upward.
+ Soon then as Anchises had spok'n, he-led the Sibyl forth
+ And his son, and both dismisst from th' ivory portal.
+
+
+FINIS
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+INDEX OF FIRST LINES
+
+ PAGE
+
+A cottage built of native stone, 354
+
+A coy inquisitive spirit, 27
+
+After long sleep when Psyche first awoke, 105
+
+Again with pleasant green, 252
+
+Ah heavenly joy, 219
+
+Ah, what a change, 445
+
+All earthly beauty hath one cause, 204
+
+All women born, 241
+
+A man that sees by chance, 206
+
+Among the meadows, 372
+
+And truly need there was, 113
+
+An effigy of brass, 349
+
+Angel spirits of sleep, 291
+
+An idle June day, 206
+
+A poppy grows upon the shore, 234
+
+Ariel, O,--my angel, my own, 299
+
+A single lamp there stood, 161
+
+A song of my heart, 311
+
+Assemble, all ye maidens, 238
+
+At dead of unseen night, 446
+
+A thousand times hath in my heart's behoof, 201
+
+At times with hurried hoofs, 205
+
+Awake, my heart, to be loved, 277
+
+Away now, lovely Muse, 221
+
+A winter's night with the snow about, 272
+
+
+Beautiful must be the mountains, 311
+
+Beauty sat with me, 215
+
+Because thou canst not see, 268
+
+Behold! the radiant Spring, 255
+
+Belov'd of all to whom that Muse is dear, 377
+
+Beneath the wattled bank, 330
+
+Betwixt two billows of the downs, 301
+
+Bright day succeedeth unto day, 61
+
+Bright, my beloved, be thy day, 363
+
+But Aphrodite to the house of Zeus, 153
+
+But Eros now recover'd from his hurt, 169
+
+But fairest Psyche still in favour rose, 97
+
+
+Christ and his Mother, 313
+
+Clear and gentle stream, 225
+
+Close up, bright flow'rs, 71
+
+Cold is the winter day, 308
+
+Come gentle sleep, I woo thee, 211
+
+Come, rosy angel, thy coronet donning, 441
+
+Crown Winter with green, 297
+
+
+Dear lady, when thou frownest, 232
+
+Dreary was winter, 220
+
+
+Ended are many days, 367
+
+Eternal Father, who didst all create, 221
+
+
+Fair lady of learning, 390
+
+Fight well, my comrades, 447
+
+Fire of heaven, whose starry arrow, 290
+
+Flame-throated robin, 309
+
+For beauty being the best of all we know, 191
+
+For thou art mine, 188
+
+
+Gay and lovely is earth, 53
+
+Gay Marigold is frolic, 371
+
+Gay Robin is seen no more, 285
+
+Gird on thy sword, O man, 407
+
+Gloom and the night are thine, 403
+
+
+Hark! the world is full of thy praise, 364
+
+Hark to the merry birds, 283
+
+Hark! what spirit doth entreat, 405
+
+Haste on, my joys, 269
+
+Heavy meanwhile at heart, 145
+
+His poisoned shafts, 240
+
+How coud I quarrel or blame you, 193
+
+How fares it, friend, since I, 378
+
+How well my eyes remember, 332
+
+
+I care not if I live, 203
+
+I climb the mossy bank, 338
+
+I died in very flow'r, 448
+
+If I coud but forget and not recall, 207
+
+I found to-day out walking, 233
+
+I have loved flowers that fade, 263
+
+I have sown upon the fields, 351
+
+I heard a linnet courting, 231
+
+I heard great Hector, 213
+
+I know not how I came, 246
+
+I live on hope, 218
+
+I love all beauteous things, 281
+
+I love my lady's eyes, 278
+
+I made another song, 237
+
+In all things beautiful, 202
+
+In autumn moonlight, 215
+
+I never shall love the snow again, 309
+
+In midmost length of hundred-citied Crete, 89
+
+In still midsummer night, 375
+
+In the golden glade, 317
+
+In thee my spring of life, 190
+
+In this May-month, 307
+
+In this neglected, ruin'd edifice, 209
+
+In ways of beauty and peace, 404
+
+I praise the tender flower, 272
+
+I saw the Virgin-mother, 245
+
+I stand on the cliff, 266
+
+I travel to thee with the sun's first rays, 201
+
+I will be what God made me, 218
+
+I will not let thee go, 232
+
+I wish'd to sing thy grace, 347
+
+I would be a bird, 198
+
+
+_Je donnerais pour revivre à vingt ans_, 379
+
+Joy, sweetest lifeborn joy, 275
+
+
+Let praise devote thy work, 300
+
+Let us, as by this verdant bank, 250
+
+Long are the hours the sun is above, 235
+
+Look down the river, 327
+
+Look! Look! the spring is come, 318
+
+Love not too much, 302
+
+Love on my heart from heaven fell, 287
+
+Love that I know, 217
+
+Love to Love calleth, 397
+
+Lo where the virgin veiled in airy beams, 71
+
+
+Man, born of desire, 399
+
+Man, born to toil, 404
+
+Man hath with man, 323
+
+Mortal though I be, yea ephemeral, 447
+
+My bed and pillow are cold, 273
+
+My delight and thy delight, 339
+
+My eyes for beauty pine, 286
+
+My lady pleases me and I please her, 202
+
+Myriad-voiced Queen, 394
+
+My soul is drunk with joy, 46
+
+My spirit kisseth thine, 298
+
+My spirit sang all day, 281
+
+My wearied heart, 220
+
+
+No ethical system, no contemplation, 425
+
+Nothing is joy without thee, 199
+
+Now all the windows, 340
+
+Now in wintry delights, 411
+
+Now joy in all hearts, 439
+
+Now since to me altho' by thee refused, 193
+
+Now thin mists temper, 304
+
+
+O bold majestic downs, 251
+
+O flesh and blood, comrade to tragic pain, 197
+
+O golden Sun, whose ray, 261
+
+O heavenly fire, life's life, 40
+
+O Love, I complain, 335
+
+O Love, my muse, 286
+
+O miserable man, 37
+
+_O my goddess divine_, 204
+
+O my life's mischief, 205
+
+O my uncared-for songs, 212
+
+O my vague desires, 46, 264
+
+Once I would say, 210
+
+One grief of thine, 375
+
+On the Hellenic board of Crete's fair isle, 137
+
+Open for me the gates of delight, 401
+
+O that the earth, or only this fair isle, 72
+
+O thou unfaithful, 273
+
+O weary pilgrims, 198
+
+O youth whose hope is high, 280
+
+
+Perfect little body, 267
+
+Poor withered rose, 228
+
+Power eternal, power unknown, 403
+
+
+Rejoice, ye dead, 196, 401
+
+Resound! Resound! To jubilant music ring, 393
+
+Riding adown the country lanes, 342
+
+
+Sad, sombre place, 258
+
+Say who be these, 195
+
+Say who is this with silvered hair, 296
+
+See, Love, a year is pass'd, 447
+
+See, whirling snow, 306
+
+Sense with keenest edge unused, 343
+
+Since I believe in God, 443
+
+Since not the enamour'd sun, 214
+
+Since now from woodland mist, 377
+
+Since then 'tis only pity looking back, 210
+
+Since thou, O fondest and truest, 279
+
+Since to be loved endures, 303
+
+Since we loved, 346
+
+Sometimes when my lady sits by me, 234
+
+So sweet love seemed, 305
+
+Spirit of grace and beauty, 350
+
+Spring goeth all in white, 286
+
+Spring hath her own bright days, 199
+
+Sweet compassionate tears, 406
+
+
+Tears of love, tears of joy, 207
+
+The birds that sing on autumn eves, 293
+
+The cliff-top has a carpet, 229
+
+The clouds have left the sky, 283
+
+The dark and serious angel, 217
+
+The day begins to droop, 345
+
+Thee fair Poetry oft hath sought, 395
+
+The evening darkens over, 279
+
+The fabled sea-snake, old Leviathan, 200
+
+The full moon from her cloudless skies, 277
+
+The green corn waving in the dale, 288
+
+The hill pines were sighing, 288
+
+The idle life I lead, 290
+
+The image of thy love, 209
+
+The lonely season in lonely lands, 314
+
+The north wind came up, 315
+
+The pinks along my garden walks, 289
+
+The poets were good teachers, 189
+
+There is a hill, 248
+
+There's many a would-be poet, 192
+
+There was no lad handsomer, 319
+
+The saddest place, 355
+
+The sea keeps not the Sabbath day, 341
+
+The sea with melancholy war, 396
+
+These grey stones have rung with mirth, 446
+
+These meagre rhymes, 214
+
+The sickness of desire, 376
+
+The snow lies sprinkled on the beach, 298
+
+The south wind rose at dusk, 336
+
+The spirit's eager sense, 211
+
+The storm is over, 294
+
+The summer trees are tempest-torn, 292
+
+The upper skies are palest blue, 282
+
+The very names of things belov'd, 189
+
+The whole world now is but the minister, 188
+
+The wood is bare, 227
+
+The work is done, 200
+
+The world comes not to an end, 212
+
+The world still goeth about to shew and hide, 197
+
+They that in play can do the thing they would, 187
+
+They wer' amid the shadows, 448
+
+This world is unto God a work of art, 195
+
+Thou art a poet, Robbie Burns, 385
+
+Thou didst delight my eyes, 274
+
+Thou dimpled Millicent, 374
+
+Thousand threads of rain, 446
+
+Thou vainly, O Man, self-deceiver, 444
+
+Thus to be humbled, 203
+
+Thus to thy beauty, 191
+
+To me, to me, fair hearted Goddess, come, 398
+
+To my love I whisper, 339
+
+To us, O Queen of sinless grace, 402
+
+Truest-hearted of early friends, 442
+
+Turn, O return, 395
+
+'Twas on the very day winter took leave, 216
+
+
+Voyaging northwards, 359
+
+
+Wanton with long delay, 284
+
+Weep not to-day, 320
+
+We left the city when the summer day, 270
+
+What happy bonds together unite you, 447
+
+What is sweeter than new-mown hay, 292
+
+'What think you, sister', 121
+
+What voice of gladness, 306
+
+When Death to either shall come, 347
+
+When first I saw thee, dearest, 216
+
+When first we met, 241
+
+When from the lowest ebbing, 129
+
+When I see childhood, 208
+
+When June is come, 289
+
+When men were all asleep, 265
+
+When my love was away, 294
+
+When parch'd with thirst, 208
+
+When sometimes in an ancient house, 194
+
+When thou didst give thy love to me, 374
+
+When thou, my beloved, diedst, 448
+
+When to my lone soft bed, 442
+
+Wherefore to-night so full of care, 260
+
+Where San Miniato's convent, 196
+
+Where thou art better I too were, 448
+
+While Eros in his chamber hid his tears, 177
+
+While yet we wait for spring, 190
+
+Whither, O splendid ship, 244
+
+Who builds a ship, 194
+
+Who has not walked upon the shore, 236
+
+Who takes the census of the living dead, 213
+
+Why art thou sad, 347
+
+Why hast thou nothing, 348
+
+Why, O Maker of all, 445
+
+Will Love again awake, 242
+
+Winter was not unkind, 192
+
+With mild eyes agaze, 389
+
+
+Ye blessed saints, 219
+
+Ye Spartan mothers, 371
+
+Ye thrilled me once, 296
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[A] There is another alcaic translation from Blake on p. 71 in
+'Demeter'. The Ode on p. 72 is iambic, and the Chorus on pp. 53, 54 is
+in choriambics.
+
+[B] Line 321. 'T'whom' is from Milton, in imitation of Virgil's admired
+Olli. It is not admitted in the ordinary prosody.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37804 ***
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+ position: absolute;
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+ } /* poetry number */
+ </style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37804 ***</div>
+
+ <hr class="full">
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/cover_lg.jpg">
+ <img
+ src="images/cover.jpg"
+ width="359"
+ height="550"
+ alt="image of the book's cover"
+ title="image of the book's cover"
+ ></a>
+ </p>
+
+ <h1>
+ POETICAL WORKS<br><br>
+ OF<br><br>
+ ROBERT BRIDGES
+ </h1>
+
+ <div class="boxx">
+ <p class="c">
+ <small>UNIFORM EDITION OF</small><br>
+ ROBERT BRIDGES' POETICAL WORKS<br>
+ <br>
+ <i>In Seven Volumes, Small Post 8vo, 6s. each.</i><br>
+ <br>
+ <i>CONTENTS</i>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 1px;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left; vertical-align: top'>
+ <span class="smcap">Volume&nbsp;I</span>:
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ Prometheus the Firegiver&mdash;Eros and Psyche&mdash;The Growth of
+ Love&mdash;Notes.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left; vertical-align: top'>
+ <span class="smcap">Volume&nbsp;II</span>:
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>Shorter Poems&mdash;New Poems&mdash;Notes.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left; vertical-align: top'>
+ <span class="smcap">Volume&nbsp;III</span>:
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ The First Part of Nero&mdash;Achilles in Scyros&mdash;Notes.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left; vertical-align: top'>
+ <span class="smcap">Volume&nbsp;IV</span>:
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>Palicio&mdash;The Return of Ulysses&mdash;Notes.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left; vertical-align: top">
+ <span class="smcap">Volume&nbsp;V</span>:
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ The Christian Captives&mdash;Humours of the Court&mdash;Notes.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align:left; vertical-align: top">
+ <span class="smcap">Volume&nbsp;VI</span>:
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ The Feast of Bacchus&mdash;Second Part of the History of
+ Nero&mdash;Notes.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <span class="smcap">Volume VII</span> in preparation<br>
+
+ *** This Volume completes the Uniform Edition of Mr. Robert<br>
+ Bridges' Works.<br>
+ <br>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<br>
+ L<small>ONDON</small>: SMITH, ELDER &amp; CO., 15 W<small
+ >ATERLOO</small
+ >
+ P<small>LACE</small>, S.W.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/ill_bridges_lg.jpg">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_bridges_sml.jpg"
+ width="361"
+ height="550"
+ alt="Robert Bridges
+Aug 1912"
+ title="Robert Bridges; Aug 1912"
+ ></a>
+ </p>
+
+ <h1>
+ POETICAL WORKS<br>
+ <br>
+ <small><small>OF</small></small
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="font-size: larger;">ROBERT BRIDGES</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <small
+ >EXCLUDING<br>
+ THE EIGHT DRAMAS</small
+ >
+ </h1>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/colophon.png"
+ width="70"
+ height="90"
+ alt="colophon"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ HENRY FROWDE<br>
+ OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS<br>
+ LONDON, NEW YORK, TORONTO AND MELBOURNE<br>
+ 1912
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <small
+ >OXFORD: HORACE HART<br>
+ PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY</small
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="NOTE"></a>NOTE</h2>
+
+ <p class="nind">
+ <span class="letra">T</span><small>HIS</small> book consists of the Poems
+ and Masks (as apart from the Dramas) contained in the collected editions
+ of the Poetical Works of Robert Bridges, together with two groups of Later
+ Poems and Poems in Classical Prosody now published for the first time or
+ now first collected.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ A record of the previous publication of the poems will be found in the
+ bibliographical notes prefixed to the various sections of the present
+ book.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ The spelling of certain words is not uniform throughout the poems. This is
+ due to observance of the text of the earlier editions of different dates,
+ in the notes to which the author's justification of these peculiarities
+ was given.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 4px;">
+ <tr>
+ <th colspan="2" style='text-align:center'>
+ <a id="CONTENTS"></a><span style="font-size: larger;">CONTENTS</span>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2" style='text-align:right'><small>PAGE</small></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <span class="smcap">Prometheus the Firegiver.</span> A Mask in the
+ Greek Manner
+ </td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_001">1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Demeter.</span> A Mask</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_049">49</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Eros and Psyche</span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_087">87</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The Growth of Love</span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_185">185</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Shorter Poems.</span></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span style="margin-left: 2em">Book I </span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_225">225</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span style="margin-left: 2em">Book II </span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_242">242</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span style="margin-left: 2em">Book III </span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_264">264</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span style="margin-left: 2em">Book IV </span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_281">281</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span style="margin-left: 2em">Book V </span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_301">301</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">New Poems</span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_321">321</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Later Poems</span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_365">365</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Poems in Classical Prosody</span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_409">409</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Index of First Lines</span></td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_465">465</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_001"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{Page 1}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ P<small>ROMETHEUS THE</small> F<small>IREGIVER</small><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="script">
+ <i
+ >A Mask<br>
+ in the Greek Manner</i
+ ></span
+ >
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_logo_bridges.png"
+ width="30"
+ height="48"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 1px;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>PREVIOUS EDITIONS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 1. <i>Private Press of H. Daniel. Oxford, 1883.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 2. <i>Chiswick Press. G. Bell &amp; Sons, 1884.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 3. <i>Clarendon Press. Smith, Elder &amp; Co. Vol. I, 1898.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_002"></a><span class="pagenumb">{2}</span
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{2}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><a id="ARGUMENT"></a>ARGUMENT</p>
+
+ <p>
+ <i
+ >Prometheus coming on earth to give fire to men appears before the
+ palace of Inachus in Argos on a festival of Zeus. He interrupts the
+ ceremony by announcing fire and persuades Inachus to dare the anger of
+ Zeus and accept the gift. Inachus fetching Argeia his wife from the
+ palace has in turn to quiet her fears. He asks a prophecy of Prometheus
+ who foretells the fate of Io their daughter. Prometheus then setting
+ flame to the altar and writing his own name thereon in the place of Zeus
+ disappears.</i
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <i
+ >The Chorus sing (1) a Hymn to Zeus with the stories of the birth of
+ Zeus and the marriage of Hera with the dances of the Curetes and the
+ Hesperides, (2) their anticipation of fire with an Ode on Wonder, (3) a
+ Tragic Hymn on the lot of man, (4) a Fire-chorus, (5) a final Chorus in
+ praise of Prometheus.</i
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <i
+ >All the characters are good. Prometheus prologizes. He carries a long
+ reed.</i
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">DRAMATIS PERSONÆ</p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>PROMETHEUS.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>INACHUS.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>ARGEIA.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>SERVANT.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>IO</i> (<i>persona muta</i>).</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ <i>CHORUS:</i> <i>Youths and maidens of the house of Inachus.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <i
+ >The SCENE is in ARGOS before the palace of Inachus.<br>
+ An altar inscribed to Zeus is at the<br>
+ centre of the stage.</i
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_003"></a><span class="pagenumb">{3}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="PROMETHEUS"></a>PROMETHEUS THE FIREGIVER</h2>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>PROMETHEUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ From high Olympus and the ætherial courts,<br>
+ Where mighty Zeus our angry king confirms<br>
+ The Fates' decrees and bends the wills of the gods,<br>
+ I come: and on the earth step with glad foot.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >This variegated ocean-floor of the air,</span
+ ><br>
+ The changeful circle of fair land, that lies<br>
+ Heaven's dial, sisterly mirror of night and day:<br>
+ The wide o'er-wandered plain, this nether world<br>
+ My truant haunt is, when from jealous eyes<br>
+ I steal, for hither 'tis I steal, and here <span class="linenum">10</span
+ ><br>
+ Unseen repair my joy: yet not unseen<br>
+ Methinks, nor seen unguessed of him I seek.<br>
+ Rather by swath or furrow, or where the path<br>
+ Is walled with corn I am found, by trellised vine<br>
+ Or olive set in banks or orchard trim:<br>
+ I watch all toil and tilth, farm, field and fold,<br>
+ And taste the mortal joy; since not in heaven<br>
+ Among our easeful gods hath facile time<br>
+ A touch so keen, to wake such love of life<br>
+ As stirs the frail and careful being, who here,
+ <span class="linenum">20</span><br>
+ The king of sorrows, melancholy man,<br>
+ Bows at his labour, but in heart erect<br>
+ A god stands, nor for any gift of god<br>
+ Would barter his immortal-hearted prime.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Could I but win this world from Zeus for mine,</span
+ ><br>
+ With not a god to vex my happy rule,<br>
+ I would inhabit here and leave high heaven:<br>
+ So much I love it and its race of men,<a id="page_004"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{4}</span><br>
+ Even as he hates them, hates both them, and me<br>
+ For loving what he hates, and would destroy me,
+ <span class="linenum">30</span><br>
+ Outcast in the scorn of all his cringing crew,<br>
+ For daring but to save what he would slay:<br>
+ And me must first destroy. Thus he denieth<br>
+ My heart's wish, thus my counsel sets at naught,<br>
+ Which him saved once, when all at stake he stood<br>
+ Uprisen in rebellion to overthrow<br>
+ The elderseated Titans, for I that day<br>
+ Gave him the counsels which his foes despised.<br>
+ Unhappy they, who had still their blissful seats<br>
+ Preserved and their Olympian majesty, <span class="linenum">40</span
+ ><br>
+ Had they been one with me. Alas, my kin!<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But he, when he had taken the throne and chained</span
+ ><br>
+ His foes in wasteful Tartarus, said no more<br>
+ Where is Prometheus our wise counsellor?<br>
+ What saith Prometheus? tell us, O Prometheus,<br>
+ What Fate requires! but waxing confident<br>
+ And wanton, as a youth first tasting power,<br>
+ He wrecked the timeless monuments of heaven,<br>
+ The witness of the wisdom of the gods,<br>
+ And making all about him new, beyond <span class="linenum">50</span><br>
+ Determined to destroy the race of men,<br>
+ And that create afresh or else have none.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then his vain mind imagined a device,</span
+ ><br>
+ And at his bidding all the opposèd winds<br>
+ Blew, and the scattered clouds and furlèd snows,<br>
+ From every part of heaven together flying,<br>
+ He with brute hands in huge disorder heaped:<br>
+ They with the winds' weight and his angry breath<br>
+ Were thawed: in cataracts they fell, and earth<br>
+ In darkness deep and whelmèd tempest lay, <span class="linenum">60</span
+ ><br>
+ Drowned 'neath the waters. Yet on the mountain-tops<br>
+ Some few escaped, and some, thus warned by me,<br>
+ Made shift to live in vessels which outrode<br>
+ The season and the fury of the flood.<a id="page_005"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{5}</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And when his rain was spent and from clear skies</span
+ ><br>
+ Zeus looking down upon the watery world,<br>
+ Beheld these few, the remnant of mankind,<br>
+ Who yet stood up and breathed; he next withdrew<br>
+ The seeds of fire, that else had still lain hid<br>
+ In withered branch and the blue flakes of flint
+ <span class="linenum">70</span><br>
+ For man to exact and use, but these withdrawn,<br>
+ Man with the brutes degraded would be man<br>
+ No more; and so the tyrant was content.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But I, despised again, again upheld</span
+ ><br>
+ The weak, and pitying them sent sweet Hope,<br>
+ Bearer of dreams, enchantress fond and kind,<br>
+ From heaven descending on the unhindered rays<br>
+ Of every star, to cheer with visions fair<br>
+ Their unamending pains. And now this day<br>
+ Behold I come bearing the seal of all <span class="linenum">80</span
+ ><br>
+ Which Hope had promised: for within this reed<br>
+ A prisoner I bring them stolen from heaven,<br>
+ The flash of mastering fire, and it have borne<br>
+ So swift to earth, that when yon noontide sun<br>
+ Rose from the sea at morning I was by,<br>
+ And unperceived of Hêlios plunged the point<br>
+ I' the burning axle, and withdrew a tongue<br>
+ Of breathing flame, which lives to leap on earth<br>
+ For man the father of all fire to come.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And hither have I brought it even to Argos
+ <span class="linenum">90</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Unto king Inachus, him having chosen<br>
+ Above all mortals to receive my gift:<br>
+ For he is hopeful, careful, wise, and brave.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >He first, when first the floods left bare the land,</span
+ ><br>
+ Grew warm with enterprise, and gathered men<br>
+ Together, and disposed their various tasks<br>
+ For common weal combined; for soon were seen<br>
+ The long straight channels dwindling on the plain,<br>
+ Which slow from stagnant pool and wide morass<br>
+ The pestilent waters to the rivers bore: <span class="linenum">100</span
+ ><a id="page_006"></a><span class="pagenumb">{6}</span
+ ><br>
+ Then in the ruined dwellings and old tombs<br>
+ He dug, unbedding from the wormèd ooze<br>
+ Vessels and tools of trade and husbandry;<br>
+ Wherewith, all seasonable works restored,<br>
+ Oil made he and wine anew, and taught mankind<br>
+ To live not brutally though without fire,<br>
+ Tending their flocks and herds and weaving wool,<br>
+ Living on fruit and milk and shepherds' fare,<br>
+ Till time should bring back flame to smithy and hearth,<br>
+ Or Zeus relent. Now at these gates I stand,
+ <span class="linenum">110</span><br>
+ At this mid hour, when Inachus comes forth<br>
+ To offer sacrifice unto his foe.<br>
+ For never hath his faithful zeal forborne<br>
+ To pay the power, though hard, that rules the world<br>
+ The smokeless sacrifice; which first to-day<br>
+ Shall smoke, and rise at heaven in flame to brave<br>
+ The baffled god. See here a servant bears<br>
+ For the cold altar ceremonial wood:<br>
+ My shepherd's cloak will serve me for disguise.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>SERVANT.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ With much toil have I hewn these sapless logs.
+ <span class="linenum">120</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> But toil brings health, and health is
+ happiness.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> Here's one I know not&mdash;nay, how came
+ he here<br>
+ Unseen by me? I pray thee, stranger, tell me<br>
+ What wouldst thou at the house of Inachus?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Intruders, friend, and travellers have glib
+ tongues,<br>
+ Silence will question such.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> If 'tis a message,<br>
+ To-day is not thy day&mdash;who sent thee hither?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> The business of my leisure was well
+ guessed:<br>
+ But he that sent me hither is I that come.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> I smell the matter&mdash;thou wouldst
+ serve the house?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> 'Twas for that very cause I fled my own.
+ <span class="linenum">131</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> From cruelty or fear of punishment?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Cruel was my master, for he slew his
+ father.<a id="page_007"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{7}</span><br>
+ His punishments thou speakest of are crimes.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> Thou dost well flying one that slew his
+ father.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Thy lord, they say, is kind.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> Well, thou wilt see<br>
+ Thou may'st at once begin&mdash;come, give a hand.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> A day of freedom is a day of pleasure:<br>
+ And what thou doest have I never done,<br>
+ And understanding not might mar thy work. <span class="linenum">140</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> Ay true&mdash;there is a right way and a
+ wrong<br>
+ In laying wood.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Then let me see thee lay it:<br>
+ The sight of a skill'd hand will teach an art.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> Thou seest this faggot which I now
+ unbind,<br>
+ How it is packed within.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> I see the cones<br>
+ And needles of the fir, which by the wind<br>
+ In melancholy places ceaselessly<br>
+ Sighing are strewn upon the tufted floor.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> These took I from a sheltered bank,
+ whereon<br>
+ The sun looks down at noon; for there is need
+ <span class="linenum">150</span><br>
+ The things be dry. These first I spread; and then<br>
+ Small sticks that snap i' the hand.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Such are enough<br>
+ To burden the slow flight of labouring rooks,<br>
+ When on the leafless tree-tops in young March<br>
+ Their glossy herds assembling soothe the air<br>
+ With cries of solemn joy and cawings loud.<br>
+ And such the long-necked herons will bear to mend<br>
+ Their airy platform, when the loving spring<br>
+ Bids them take thought for their expected young.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> See even so I cross them and cross them
+ so: <span class="linenum">160</span><br>
+ Larger and by degrees a steady stack<br>
+ Have built, whereon the heaviest logs may lie:<br>
+ And all of sun-dried wood: and now 'tis done.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> And now 'tis done, what means it now 'tis
+ done?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span> Well, thus 'tis rightly done: but why
+ 'tis so<a id="page_008"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{8}</span><br>
+ I cannot tell, nor any man here knows;<br>
+ Save that our master when he sacrificeth,<br>
+ As thou wilt hear anon, speaketh of fire;<br>
+ And fire he saith is good for gods and men;<br>
+ And the gods have it and men have it not: <span class="linenum">170</span
+ ><br>
+ And then he prays the gods to send us fire;<br>
+ And we, against they send it, must have wood<br>
+ Laid ready thus as I have shewn thee here.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> To-day he sacrificeth?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Serv.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Ay, this noon.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Hark! hear'st thou not? they come. The solemn flutes<br>
+ Warn us away; we must not here be seen<br>
+ In these our soilèd habits, yet may stand<br>
+ Where we may hear and see and not be seen.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Exeunt R.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <i>Enter</i> CHORUS, <i>and from the palace</i>
+ <span class="smcap">Inachus</span>
+ <i>bearing cakes: he comes to stand behind the altar</i>.
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>CHORUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ God of Heaven!<br>
+ We praise thee, Zeus most high, <span class="linenum">180</span><br>
+ To whom by eternal Fate was given<br>
+ The range and rule of the sky;<br>
+ When thy lot, first of three<br>
+ Leapt out, as sages tell,<br>
+ And won Olympus for thee,<br>
+ Therein for ever to dwell:<br>
+ But the next with the barren sea<br>
+ To grave Poseidôn fell,<br>
+ And left fierce Hades his doom, to be<br>
+ The lord and terror of hell. <span class="linenum">190</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">(2) Thou sittest for aye</span><br>
+ Encircled in azure bright,<br>
+ Regarding the path of the sun by day,<br>
+ And the changeful moon by night:<a id="page_009"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{9}</span><br>
+ Attending with tireless ears<br>
+ To the song of adoring love,<br>
+ With which the separate spheres<br>
+ Are voicèd that turn above:<br>
+ And all that is hidden under<br>
+ The clouds thy footing has furl'd <span class="linenum">200</span><br>
+ Fears the hand that holdeth the thunder,<br>
+ The eye that looks on the world.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c"><i>Semichorus of youths.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ Of all the isles of the sea<br>
+ Is Crete most famed in story:<br>
+ Above all mountains famous to me<br>
+ Is Ida and crowned with glory.<br>
+ There guarded of Heaven and Earth<br>
+ Came Rhea at fall of night<br>
+ To hide a wondrous birth<br>
+ From the Sire's unfathering sight. <span class="linenum">210</span><br>
+ The halls of Cronos rang<br>
+ With omens of coming ill,<br>
+ And the mad Curêtes danced and sang<br>
+ Adown the slopes of the hill.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then all the peaks of Gnossus kindled red</span
+ ><br>
+ Beckoning afar unto the sinking sun,<br>
+ he thro' the vaporous west plunged to his bed,<br>
+ Sunk, and the day was done.<br>
+ But they, though he was fled,<br>
+ Such light still held, as oft <span class="linenum">220</span><br>
+ Hanging in air aloft,<br>
+ At eve from shadowed ship<br>
+ The Egyptian sailor sees:<br>
+ Or like the twofold tip<br>
+ That o'er the topmost trees<br>
+ Flares on Parnassus, and the Theban dames<br>
+ Quake at the ghostly flames.<a id="page_010"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{10}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then friendly night arose</span><br>
+ To succour Earth, and spread<br>
+ Her mantle o'er the snows <span class="linenum">230</span><br>
+ And quenched their rosy red;<br>
+ But in the east upsprings<br>
+ Another light on them,<br>
+ Selêné with white wings<br>
+ And hueless diadem.<br>
+ Little could she befriend<br>
+ Her father's house and state,<br>
+ Nor her weak beams defend<br>
+ Hyperion from his fate.<br>
+ Only where'er she shines, <span class="linenum">240</span><br>
+ In terror looking forth,<br>
+ She sees the wailing pines<br>
+ Stoop to the bitter North:<br>
+ Or searching twice or thrice<br>
+ Along the rocky walls,<br>
+ She marks the columned ice<br>
+ Of frozen waterfalls:<br>
+ But still the darkened cave<br>
+ Grew darker as she shone,<br>
+ Wherein was Rhea gone <span class="linenum">250</span><br>
+ Her child to bear and save.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>They dance.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then danced the Dactyls and Curêtes wild,</span
+ ><br>
+ And drowned with yells the cries of mother and child;<br>
+ Big-armed Damnámeneus gan prance and shout:<br>
+ And burly Acmon struck the echoes out:<br>
+ And Kermis leaped and howled: and Titias pranced<br>
+ And broad Cyllenus tore the air and danced:<br>
+ While deep within the shadowed cave at rest<br>
+ Lay Rhea, with her babe upon her breast.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_011"></a><span class="pagenumb">{11}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>INACHUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ If any here there be whose impure hands <span class="linenum">260</span
+ ><br>
+ Among pure hands, or guilty heart among<br>
+ Our guiltless hearts be stained with blood or wrong,<br>
+ Let him depart!<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >If there be any here in whom high Zeus</span
+ ><br>
+ Seeing impiety might turn away,<br>
+ Now from our sacrifice and from his sin<br>
+ Let him depart!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c"><i>Semichorus of maidens.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ I have chosen to praise<br>
+ Hêra the wife, and bring<br>
+ A hymn for the feast on marriage days <span class="linenum">270</span
+ ><br>
+ To the wife of the gods' king.<br>
+ How on her festival<br>
+ The gods had loving strife,<br>
+ Which should give of them all<br>
+ The fairest gift to the wife.<br>
+ But Earth said, Fair to see<br>
+ Is mine and yields to none,<br>
+ I have grown for her joy a sacred tree,<br>
+ With apples of gold thereon.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then Hêra, when she heard what Earth had given,
+ <span class="linenum">280</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Smiled for her joy, and longed and came to see:<br>
+ On dovewings flying from the height of heaven,<br>
+ Down to the golden tree:<br>
+ As tired birds at even<br>
+ Come flying straight to house<br>
+ On their accustomed boughs.<br>
+ 'Twas where, on tortured hands<br>
+ Bearing the mighty pole.<br>
+ Devoted Atlas stands:<br>
+ And round his bowed head roll <span class="linenum">290</span
+ ><a id="page_012"></a><span class="pagenumb">{12}</span
+ ><br>
+ Day-light and night, and stars unmingled dance,<br>
+ Nor can he raise his glance.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She saw the rocky coast</span><br>
+ Whereon the azured waves<br>
+ Are laced in foam, or lost<br>
+ In water-lighted caves;<br>
+ The olive island where,<br>
+ Amid the purple seas,<br>
+ Night unto Darkness bare<br>
+ The four Hesperides: <span class="linenum">300</span><br>
+ And came into the shade<br>
+ Of Atlas, where she found<br>
+ The garden Earth had made<br>
+ And fenced with groves around.<br>
+ And in the midst it grew<br>
+ Alone, the priceless stem,<br>
+ As careful, clear and true<br>
+ As graving on a gem.<br>
+ Nature had kissèd Art<br>
+ And borne a child to stir <span class="linenum">310</span><br>
+ With jealousy the heart<br>
+ Of heaven's Artificer.<br>
+ From crown to swelling root<br>
+ It mocked the goddess' praise,<br>
+ The green enamelled sprays,<br>
+ The emblazoned golden fruit.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>They dance</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And 'neath the tree, with hair and zone unbound,</span
+ ><br>
+ The fair Hesperides aye danced around,<br>
+ And Ægle danced and sang 'O welcome, Queen!'<br>
+ And Erytheia sang 'The tree is green!' <span class="linenum">320</span
+ ><br>
+ And Hestia danced and sang 'The fruit is gold!'<br>
+ And Arethusa sang 'Fair Queen, behold!'<br>
+ And all joined hands and danced about the tree,<br>
+ And sang 'O Queen, we dance and sing for thee!'<a
+ id="page_013"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{13}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> If there be any here who has complaint<br>
+ Against our rule or claim or supplication,<br>
+ Now in the name of Zeus let it appear,<br>
+ Now let him speak!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c"><i>Prometheus re-enters.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> All hail, most worthy king, such claim have
+ I.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> May grace be with thee, stranger; speak thy
+ mind.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> To Argos, king of Argos, at thy house
+ <span class="linenum">331</span><br>
+ I bring long journeying to an end this hour,<br>
+ Bearing no idle message for thine ears.<br>
+ For know that far thy fame has reached, and men<br>
+ That ne'er have seen thee tell that thou art set<br>
+ Upon the throne of virtue, that goodwill<br>
+ And love thy servants are, that in thy land<br>
+ Joy, honour, trust and modesty abide<br>
+ And drink the air of peace, that kings must see<br>
+ Thy city, would they know their peoples' good
+ <span class="linenum">340</span><br>
+ And stablish them therein by wholesome laws.<br>
+ But one thing mars the tale, for o'er thy lands<br>
+ Travelling I have not seen from morn till eve,<br>
+ Either from house or farm or labourer's cot,<br>
+ In any village, nor this town of Argos<br>
+ A blue-wreathed smoke arise: the hearths are cold,<br>
+ This altar cold: I see the wood and cakes<br>
+ Unbaken&mdash;O king, where is the fire?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> If hither, stranger, thou wert come to
+ find<br>
+ That which thou findest wanting, join with us
+ <span class="linenum">350</span><br>
+ Now in our sacrifice, take food within,<br>
+ And having learnt our simple way of life<br>
+ Return unto thy country whence thou camest.<br>
+ But hast thou skill or knowledge of this thing,<br>
+ How best it may be sought, or by what means<br>
+ Hope to be reached, O speak! I wait to hear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> There is, O king, fire on the earth this
+ day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> On earth there is fire thou sayest!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> There is fire.<a
+ id="page_014"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{14}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> On earth this day!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">There is fire on earth this day.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> This is a sacred place, a solemn hour,
+ <span class="linenum">360</span><br>
+ Thy speech is earnest: yet even if thou speak truth,<br>
+ O welcome messenger of happy tidings,<br>
+ And though I hear aright, yet to believe<br>
+ Is hard: thou canst not know what words thou speakest<br>
+ Into what ears: they never heard before<br>
+ This sound but in old tales of happier times,<br>
+ In sighs of prayer and faint unhearted hope:<br>
+ Maybe they heard not rightly, speak again!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> There is, O king, fire on the earth this
+ day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Yes, yes, again. Now let sweet Music blab
+ <span class="linenum">370</span><br>
+ Her secret and give o'er; here is a trumpet<br>
+ That mocks her method. Yet 'tis but the word.<br>
+ Maybe thy fire is not the fire I seek;<br>
+ Maybe though thou didst see it, now 'tis quenched,<br>
+ Or guarded out of reach: speak yet again<br>
+ And swear by heaven's truth is there fire or no;<br>
+ And if there be, what means may make it mine.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> There is, O king, fire on the earth this
+ day:<br>
+ But not as thou dost seek it to be found.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> How seeking wrongly shall I seek aright?
+ <span class="linenum">380</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Thou prayest here to Zeus, and him thou
+ callest<br>
+ Almighty, knowing he could grant thy prayer:<br>
+ That if 'twere but his will, the journeying sun<br>
+ Might drop a spark into thine outstretched hand:<br>
+ That at his breath the splashing mountain brooks<br>
+ That fall from Orneæ, and cold Lernè's pool<br>
+ Would change their element, and their chill streams<br>
+ Bend in their burning banks a molten flood:<br>
+ That at his word so many messengers<br>
+ Would bring thee fire from heaven, that not a hearth
+ <span class="linenum">390</span><br>
+ In all thy land but straight would have a god<br>
+ To kneel and fan the flame: and yet to him,<br>
+ It is to him thou prayest.<a id="page_015"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{15}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Therefore to him.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Is this thy wisdom, king, to sow thy
+ seed<br>
+ Year after year in this unsprouting soil?<br>
+ Hast thou not proved and found the will of Zeus<br>
+ A barren rock for man with prayer to plough?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> His anger be averted! we judge not god<br>
+ Evil, because our wishes please him not.<br>
+ Oft our shortsighted prayers to heaven ascending
+ <span class="linenum">400</span><br>
+ Ask there our ruin, and are then denied<br>
+ In kindness above granting: were 't not so,<br>
+ Scarce could we pray for fear to pluck our doom<br>
+ Out of the merciful withholding hands.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Why then provokest thou such great
+ goodwill<br>
+ In long denial and kind silence shown?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Fie, fie! Thou lackest piety: the god's
+ denial<br>
+ Being nought but kindness, there is hope that he<br>
+ Will make that good which is not:&mdash;or if indeed<br>
+ Good be withheld in punishment, 'tis well <span class="linenum">410</span
+ ><br>
+ Still to seek on and pray that god relent.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> O Sire of Argos, Zeus will not relent.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Yet fire thou say'st is on the earth this
+ day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Not of his knowledge nor his gift, O
+ king.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> By kindness of what god then has man
+ fire?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> I say but on the earth unknown to Zeus.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> How boastest thou to know, not of his
+ knowledge?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> I boast not: he that knoweth not may
+ boast.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Thy daring words bewilder sense with
+ sound.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> I thought to find thee ripe for daring
+ deeds. <span class="linenum">420</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> And what the deed for which I prove
+ unripe?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> To take of heaven's fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">And were I ripe,</span><br>
+ What should I dare, beseech you?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">The wrath of Zeus.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Madman, pretending in one hand to hold<br>
+ The wrath of god and in the other fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Thou meanest rather holding both in one.<a
+ id="page_016"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{16}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Both impious art thou and incredible.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Yet impious only till thou dost believe.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> And what believe? Ah, if I could
+ believe!<br>
+ It was but now thou saidst that there was fire,
+ <span class="linenum">430</span><br>
+ And I was near believing; I believed:<br>
+ Now to believe were to be mad as thou.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chorus.</span> He may be mad and yet say
+ true&mdash;maybe<br>
+ The heat of prophecy like a strong wine<br>
+ Shameth his reason with exultant speech.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Thou say'st I am mad, and of my sober
+ words<br>
+ Hast called those impious which thou fearest true,<br>
+ Those which thou knowest good, incredible.<br>
+ Consider ere thou judge: be first assured<br>
+ All is not good for man that seems god's will.
+ <span class="linenum">440</span><br>
+ See, on thy farming skill, thy country toil<br>
+ Which bends to aid the willing fruits of earth,<br>
+ And would promote the seasonable year,<br>
+ The face of nature is not always kind:<br>
+ And if thou search the sum of visible being<br>
+ To find thy blessing featured, 'tis not there:<br>
+ Her best gifts cannot brim the golden cup<br>
+ Of expectation which thine eager arms<br>
+ Lift to her mouthèd horn&mdash;what then is this<br>
+ Whose wide capacity outbids the scale <span class="linenum">450</span
+ ><br>
+ Of prodigal beauty, so that the seeing eye<br>
+ And hearing ear, retiring unamazed<br>
+ Within their quiet chambers, sit to feast<br>
+ With dear imagination, nor look forth<br>
+ As once they did upon the varying air?<br>
+ Whence is the fathering of this desire<br>
+ Which mocks at fated circumstance? nay though<br>
+ Obstruction lie as cumbrous as the mountains,<br>
+ Nor thy particular hap hath armed desire<br>
+ Against the brunt of evil,&mdash;yet not for this
+ <span class="linenum">460</span><br>
+ Faints man's desire: it is the unquenchable<br>
+ Original cause, the immortal breath of being:<a
+ id="page_017"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{17}</span><br>
+ Nor is there any spirit on Earth astir,<br>
+ Nor 'neath the airy vault, nor yet beyond<br>
+ In any dweller in far-reaching space,<br>
+ Nobler or dearer than the spirit of man:<br>
+ That spirit which lives in each and will not die,<br>
+ That wooeth beauty, and for all good things<br>
+ Urgeth a voice, or in still passion sigheth,<br>
+ And where he loveth draweth the heart with him.
+ <span class="linenum">470</span><br>
+ Hast thou not heard him speaking oft and oft,<br>
+ Prompting thy secret musings and now shooting<br>
+ His feathered fancies, or in cloudy sleep<br>
+ Piling his painted dreams? O hark to him!<br>
+ For else if folly shut his joyous strength<br>
+ To mope in her dark prison without praise,<br>
+ The hidden tears with which he wails his wrong<br>
+ Will sour the fount of life. O hark to him!<br>
+ Him may'st thou trust beyond the things thou seest.<br>
+ For many things there be upon this earth <span class="linenum">480</span
+ ><br>
+ Unblest and fallen from beauty, to mislead<br>
+ Man's mind, and in a shadow justify<br>
+ The evil thoughts and deeds that work his ill;<br>
+ Fear, hatred, lust and strife, which, if man question<br>
+ The heavenborn spirit within him, are not there.<br>
+ Yet are they bold of face, and Zeus himself,<br>
+ Seeing that Mischief held her head on high,<br>
+ Lest she should go beyond his power to quell<br>
+ And draw the inevitable Fate that waits<br>
+ On utmost ill, himself preventing Fate <span class="linenum">490</span
+ ><br>
+ Hasted to drown the world, and now would crush<br>
+ Thy little remnant: but among the gods<br>
+ Is one whose love and courage stir for thee;<br>
+ Who being of manlike spirit, by many shifts<br>
+ Has stayed the hand of the enemy, who crieth<br>
+ Thy world is not destroyed, thy good shall live:<br>
+ Thou hast more power for good than Zeus for ill,<br>
+ More courage, justice, more abundant art,<a
+ id="page_018"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{18}</span><br>
+ More love, more joy, more reason: though around thee<br>
+ Rank-rooting evil bloom with poisonous crown,
+ <span class="linenum">500</span><br>
+ Though wan and dolorous and crooked things<br>
+ Have made their home with thee, thy good shall live.<br>
+ Know thy desire: and know that if thou seek it,<br>
+ And seek, and seek, and fear not, thou shall find.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). Is this a god that
+ speaketh thus?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). He speaketh as a man<br>
+ In love or great affliction yields his soul.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Thou, whencesoe'er thou comest, whoe'er
+ thou art,<br>
+ Who breakest on our solemn sacrifice<br>
+ With solemn words, I pray thee not depart <span class="linenum">510</span
+ ><br>
+ Till thou hast told me more. This fire I seek<br>
+ Not for myself, whose thin and silvery hair<br>
+ Tells that my toilsome age nears to its end,<br>
+ But for my children and the aftertime,<br>
+ For great the need thereof, wretched our state;<br>
+ Nay, set by what has been, our happiness<br>
+ Is very want, so that what now is not<br>
+ Is but the measure of what yet may be.<br>
+ And first are barest needs, which well I know<br>
+ Fire would supply, but I have hope beyond, <span class="linenum">520</span
+ ><br>
+ That Nature in recovering her right<br>
+ Would kinder prove to man who seeks to learn<br>
+ Her secrets and unfold the cause of life.<br>
+ So tell me, if thou knowest, what is fire?<br>
+ Doth earth contain it? or, since from the sun<br>
+ Fire reaches us, since in the glimmering stars<br>
+ And pallid moon, in lightning, and the glance<br>
+ Of tracking meteors that at nightfall show<br>
+ How in the air a thousand sightless things<br>
+ Travel, and ever on their windswift course <span class="linenum">530</span
+ ><br>
+ Flame when they list and into darkness go,&mdash;<br>
+ Since in all these a fiery nature dwells,<br>
+ Is fire an airy essence, a thing of heaven,<br>
+ That, could we poise it, were an alien power<a
+ id="page_019"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{19}</span><br>
+ To make our wisdom less, our wonder more?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Thy wish to know is good, and happy is
+ he<br>
+ Who thus from chance and change has launched his mind<br>
+ To dwell for ever with undisturbèd truth.<br>
+ This high ambition doth not prompt his hand<br>
+ To crime, his right and pleasure are not wronged
+ <span class="linenum">540</span><br>
+ By folly of his fellows, nor his eye<br>
+ Dimmed by the griefs that move the tears of men.<br>
+ Son of the earth, and citizen may be<br>
+ Of Argos or of Athens and her laws,<br>
+ But still the eternal nature, where he looks,<br>
+ O'errules him with the laws which laws obey,<br>
+ And in her heavenly city enrols his heart.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Thus ever have I held of happiness,<br>
+ The child of heavenly truth, and thus have found it<br>
+ In prayer and meditation and still thought,
+ <span class="linenum">550</span><br>
+ And thus my peace of mind based on a floor<br>
+ That doth not quaver like the joys of sense:<br>
+ Those I possess enough in seeing my slaves<br>
+ And citizens enjoy, having myself<br>
+ Tasted for once and put their sweets away.<br>
+ But of that heavenly city, of which thou sayest<br>
+ Her laws o'errule us, have I little learnt,<br>
+ For when my wandering spirit hath dared alone<br>
+ The unearthly terror of her voiceless halls,<br>
+ She hath fallen from delight, and without guide
+ <span class="linenum">560</span><br>
+ Turned back, and from her errand fled for fear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Think not that thou canst all things know,
+ nor deem<br>
+ Such knowledge happiness: the all-knowing Fates<br>
+ No pleasure have, who sit eternally<br>
+ Spinning the unnumbered threads that Time hath woven,<br>
+ And weaves, upgathering in his furthest house<br>
+ To store from sight; but what 'tis joy to learn<br>
+ Or use to know, that may'st thou ask of right.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Then tell me, for thou knowest, what is
+ fire?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Know then, O king, that this fair earth of
+ men, <span class="linenum">570</span><a id="page_020"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{20}</span><br>
+ The Olympus of the gods, and all the heavens<br>
+ Are lesser kingdoms of the boundless space<br>
+ Wherein Fate rules; they have their several times,<br>
+ Their seasons and the limit of their thrones,<br>
+ And from the nature of eternal things<br>
+ Springing, themselves are changed; even as the trees<br>
+ Or birds or beasts of earth, which now arise<br>
+ To being, now in turn decay and die.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The heaven and earth thou seest, for long were held</span
+ ><br>
+ By Fire, a raging power, to whom the Fates <span class="linenum">580</span
+ ><br>
+ Decreed a slow diminishing old age,<br>
+ But to his daughter, who is that gentle goddess,<br>
+ Queen of the clear and azure firmament,<br>
+ In heaven called Hygra, but by mortals Air,<br>
+ To her, the child of his slow doting years,<br>
+ Was given a beauteous youth, not long to outlast<br>
+ His life, but be the pride of his decay,<br>
+ And win to gentler sway his lost domains.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And when the day of time arrived, when Air</span
+ ><br>
+ Took o'er from her decrepit sire the third <span class="linenum">590</span
+ ><br>
+ Of the Sun's kingdoms, the one-moonèd earth,<br>
+ Straight came she down to her inheritance.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Gaze on the sun with thine unshaded eye</span
+ ><br>
+ And shrink from what she saw. Forests of fire<br>
+ Whose waving trunks, sucking their fuel, reared<br>
+ In branched flame roaring, and their torrid shades<br>
+ Aye underlit with fire. The mountains lifted<br>
+ And fell and followed like a running sea,<br>
+ And from their swelling flanks spumed froth of fire;<br>
+ Or, like awakening monsters, mighty mounds <span class="linenum">600</span
+ ><br>
+ Rose on the plain awhile.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>).
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">He discovers a foe.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). An enemy he paints.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 14%">These all she quenched,</span><br>
+ Or charmed their fury into the dens and bowels<br>
+ Of earth to smoulder, there the vital heat<a
+ id="page_021"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{21}</span><br>
+ To hold for her creation, which then&mdash;to her aid<br>
+ Summoning high Reason from his home in heaven,&mdash;<br>
+ She wrought anew upon the temperate lands.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). 'Twas well Air won this
+ kingdom of her sire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). Now say how made she
+ green this home of fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> The waters first she brought, that in their
+ streams<br>
+ And pools and seas innumerable things <span class="linenum">611</span
+ ><br>
+ Brought forth, from whence she drew the fertile seeds<br>
+ Of trees and plants, and last of footed life,<br>
+ That wandered forth, and roaming to and fro,<br>
+ The rejoicing earth peopled with living sound.<br>
+ Reason advised, and Reason praised her toil;<br>
+ Which when she had done she gave him thanks, and said,<br>
+ 'Fair comrade, since thou praisest what is done,<br>
+ Grant me this favour ere thou part from me:<br>
+ Make thou one fair thing for me, which shall suit
+ <span class="linenum">620</span><br>
+ With what is made, and be the best of all.'<br>
+ 'Twas evening, and that night Reason made man.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). Children of Air are we,
+ and live by fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). The sons of Reason
+ dwelling on the earth.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). Folk of a pleasant
+ kingdom held between<br>
+ Fire's reign of terror and the latter day<br>
+ When dying, soon in turn his child must die.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). Having a wise creator,
+ above time<br>
+ Or youth or change, from whom our kind inherit<br>
+ The grace and pleasure of the eternal gods.
+ <span class="linenum">630</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> But how came gods to rule this earth of
+ Air?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> They also were her children who first
+ ruled,<br>
+ Cronos, Iapetus, Hypérion,<br>
+ Theia and Rhea, and other mighty names<br>
+ That are but names&mdash;whom Zeus drave out from heaven,<br>
+ And with his tribe sits on their injured thrones.<a
+ id="page_022"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{22}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> There is no greater god in heaven than
+ he.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Nor none more cruel nor more tyrannous.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> But what can man against the power of
+ god?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Doth not man strive with him? thyself dost
+ pray.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> That he may pardon our contrarious deeds.
+ <span class="linenum">641</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Alas! Alas! what more contrarious deed,<br>
+ What greater miracle of wrong than this,<br>
+ That man should know his good and take it not?<br>
+ To what god wilt thou pray to pardon this?<br>
+ In vain was reason given, if man therewith<br>
+ Shame truth, and name it wisdom to cry down<br>
+ The unschooled promptings of his best desire.<br>
+ The beasts that have no speech nor argument<br>
+ Confute him, and the wild hog in the wood <span class="linenum">650</span
+ ><br>
+ That feels his longing, hurries straight thereto,<br>
+ And will not turn his head.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> How mean'st thou this?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Thou hast desired the good, and now canst
+ feel<br>
+ How hard it is to kill the heart's desire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Shall Inachus rise against Zeus, as he<br>
+ Rose against Cronos and made war in heaven?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> I say not so, yet, if thou didst rebel,<br>
+ The tongue that counselled Zeus should counsel thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). This is strange
+ counsel.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). He is not<br>
+ A counsellor for gods or men. <span class="linenum">660</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> O that I knew where I might counsel
+ find,<br>
+ That one were sent, nay, were't the least of all<br>
+ The myriad messengers of heaven, to me!<br>
+ One that should say 'This morn I stood with Zeus,<br>
+ He hath heard thy prayer and sent me: ask a boon,<br>
+ What thing thou wilt, it shall be given thee.'<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> What wouldst thou say to such a
+ messenger?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> No need to ask then what I now might
+ ask,<br>
+ How 'tis the gods, if they have care for mortals,<br>
+ Slubber our worst necessities&mdash;and the boon,
+ <span class="linenum">670</span><a id="page_023"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{23}</span><br>
+ No need to tell him that.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Now, king, thou seest<br>
+ Zeus sends no messenger, but I am here.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Thy speech is hard, and even thy kindest
+ words<br>
+ Unkind. If fire thou hast, in thee 'tis kind<br>
+ To proffer it: but thou art more unkind<br>
+ Yoking heaven's wrath therewith. Nay, and how knowest thou<br>
+ Zeus will be angry if I take of it?<br>
+ Thou art a prophet: ay, but of the prophets<br>
+ Some have been taken in error, and honest time<br>
+ Has honoured many with forgetfulness. <span class="linenum">680</span
+ ><br>
+ I'll make this proof of thee; Show me thy fire&mdash;<br>
+ Nay, give't me now&mdash;if thou be true at all,<br>
+ Be true so far: for the rest there's none will lose,<br>
+ Nor blame thee being false&mdash;where is thy fire?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> O rather, had it thus been mine to give,<br>
+ I would have given it thus: not adding aught<br>
+ Of danger or diminishment or loss;<br>
+ So strong is my goodwill; nor less than this<br>
+ My knowledge, but in knowledge all my power.<br>
+ Yet since wise guidance with a little means
+ <span class="linenum">690</span><br>
+ Can more than force unminded, I have skill<br>
+ To conjure evil and outcompass strength.<br>
+ Now give I thee my best, a little gift<br>
+ To work a world of wonder; 'tis thine own<br>
+ Of long desire, and with it I will give<br>
+ The cunning of invention and all arts<br>
+ In which thy hand instructed may command,<br>
+ Interpret, comfort, or ennoble nature;<br>
+ With all provision that in wisdom is,<br>
+ And what prevention in foreknowledge lies. <span class="linenum">700</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Great is the gain.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> O king, the gain is thine,<br>
+ The penalty I more than share.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Enough,<a id="page_024"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{24}</span><br>
+ I take thy gift; nor hast thou stood more firm<br>
+ To every point of thy strange chequered tale,<br>
+ Revealing, threatening, offering more and more,<br>
+ And never all, than I to this resolve.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> I knew thy heart would fail not at the
+ hour.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Nay, failed I now, what were my years of
+ toil<br>
+ More than the endurance of a harnessed brute,<br>
+ Flogged to his daily work, that cannot view
+ <span class="linenum">710</span><br>
+ The high design to which his labour steps?<br>
+ And I of all men were dishonoured most<br>
+ Shrinking in fear, who never shrank from toil,<br>
+ And found abjuring, thrusting stiffly back,<br>
+ The very gift for which I stretched my hands.<br>
+ What though I suffer? are these wintry years<br>
+ Of growing desolation to be held<br>
+ As cherishable as the suns of spring?<br>
+ Nay, only joyful can they be in seeing<br>
+ Long hopes accomplished, long desires fulfilled.
+ <span class="linenum">720</span><br>
+ And since thou hast touched ambition on the side<br>
+ Of nobleness, and stirred my proudest hope,<br>
+ And wilt fulfil this, shall I count the cost?<br>
+ Rather decay will triumph, and cold death<br>
+ Be lapped in glory, seeing strength arise<br>
+ From weakness, from the tomb go forth a flame.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> 'Tis well; thou art exalted now, the
+ grace<br>
+ Becomes thy valiant spirit.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Lo! on this day<br>
+ Which hope despaired to see, hope manifests<br>
+ A vision bright as were the dreams of youth;
+ <span class="linenum">730</span><br>
+ When life was easy as a sleeper's faith<br>
+ Who swims in the air and dances on the sea;<br>
+ When all the good that scarce by toil is won,<br>
+ Or not at all is won, is as a flower<br>
+ Growing in plenty to be plucked at will:<br>
+ Is it a dream again or is it truth,<br>
+ This vision fair of Greece inhabited?<a id="page_025"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{25}</span><br>
+ A fairer sight than all fair Iris sees,<br>
+ Footing her airy arch of colours spun<br>
+ From Ida to Olympus, when she stays <span class="linenum">740</span><br>
+ To look on Greece and thinks the sight is fair;<br>
+ Far fairer now, clothed with the works of men.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Ay, fairer far: for nature's varied
+ pleasaunce<br>
+ Without man's life is but a desert wild,<br>
+ Which most, where most she mocks him, needs his aid.<br>
+ She knows her silence sweeter when it girds<br>
+ His murmurous cities, her wide wasteful curves<br>
+ Larger beside his economic line;<br>
+ Or what can add a mystery to the dark,<br>
+ As doth his measured music when it moves <span class="linenum">750</span
+ ><br>
+ With rhythmic sweetness through the void of night?<br>
+ Nay, all her loveliest places are but grounds<br>
+ Of vantage, where with geometric hand,<br>
+ True square and careful compass he may come<br>
+ To plan and plant and spread abroad his towers,<br>
+ His gardens, temples, palaces and tombs.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And yet not all thou seest, with trancèd eye</span
+ ><br>
+ Looking upon the beauty that shall be,<br>
+ The temple-crownèd heights, the wallèd towns,<br>
+ Farms and cool summer seats, nor the broad ways
+ <span class="linenum">760</span><br>
+ That bridge the rivers and subdue the mountains,<br>
+ Nor all that travels on them, pomp or war<br>
+ Or needful merchandise, nor all the sails<br>
+ Piloting over the wind-dappled blue<br>
+ Of the summer-soothed Ægean, to thy mind<br>
+ Can picture what shall be: these are the face<br>
+ And form of beauty, but her heart and life<br>
+ Shall they be who shall see it, born to shield<br>
+ A happier birthright with intrepid arms,<br>
+ To tread down tyranny and fashion forth <span class="linenum">770</span
+ ><br>
+ A virgin wisdom to subdue the world,<br>
+ To build for passion an eternal song,<br>
+ To shape her dreams in marble, and so sweet<a
+ id="page_026"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{26}</span><br>
+ Their speech, that envious Time hearkening shall stay<br>
+ In fear to snatch, and hide his rugged hand.<br>
+ Now is the birthday of thy conquering youth,<br>
+ O man, and lo! Thy priest and prophet stand<br>
+ Beside the altar and have blessed the day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Ay, blessed be this day. Where is thy
+ fire?<br>
+ Or is aught else to do, ere I may take? <span class="linenum">780</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> This was my message, speak and there is
+ fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> There shall be fire. Await me here
+ awhile.<br>
+ I go to acquaint my house, and bring them forth.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ <span class="smcap">Chorus.</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ Hearken, O Argos, hearken!<br>
+ There will be fire.<br>
+ And thou, O Earth, give ear!<br>
+ There will be fire.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). Who shall be sent to
+ fetch this fire for the king?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). Shall we put forth in
+ boats to reap,<br>
+ And shall the waves for harvest yield <span class="linenum">790</span
+ ><br>
+ The rootless flames that nimbly leap<br>
+ Upon their ever-shifting field?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). Or we in olive-groves go
+ shake<br>
+ And beat the fruiting sprays, till all<br>
+ The silv'ry glitter which they make<br>
+ Beneath into our baskets fall?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). To bind in sheaves and
+ bear away<br>
+ The white unshafted darts of day?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). And from the shadow one
+ by one<br>
+ Pick up the playful oes of sun? <span class="linenum">800</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). Or wouldst thou mine a
+ passage deep<br>
+ Until the darksome fire is found,<br>
+ Which prisoned long in seething sleep<br>
+ Vexes the caverns underground?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). Or bid us join our palms
+ perchance,<a id="page_027"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{27}</span><br>
+ To cup the slant and chinkèd beam,<br>
+ Which mounting morn hath sent to dance<br>
+ Across our chamber while we dream?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>youths</i>). Say whence and how shall
+ we fetch this fire for the king?<br>
+ Our hope is impatient of vain debating. <span class="linenum">810</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Sem.</span> (<i>maidens</i>). My heart is stirred at
+ the name of the wondrous thing,<br>
+ And trembles awaiting.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>ODE.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ A coy inquisitive spirit, the spirit of wonder,<br>
+ Possesses the child in his cradle, when mortal things<br>
+ Are new, yet a varied surface and nothing under.<br>
+ It busies the mind on trifles and toys and brings<br>
+ Her grasp from nearer to further, from smaller to greater,<br>
+ And slowly teaches flight to her fledgeling wings.<br>
+ <br>
+ Where'er she flutters and falls surprises await her:<br>
+ She soars, and beauty's miracles open in sight,
+ <span class="linenum">820</span><br>
+ The flowers and trees and beasts of the earth ; and later<br>
+ The skies of day, the moon and the stars of night;<br>
+ 'Neath which she scarcely venturing goes demurely,<br>
+ With mystery clad, in the awe of depth and height.<br>
+ <br>
+ O happy for still unconscious, for ah ! how surely,<br>
+ How soon and surely will disenchantment come,<br>
+ When first to herself she boasts to walk securely,<br>
+ And drives the master spirit away from his home;<br>
+ <br>
+ Seeing the marvellous things that make the morning<br>
+ Are marvels of every-day, familiar, and some
+ <span class="linenum">830</span><br>
+ Have lost with use, like earthly robes, their adorning,<br>
+ As earthly joys the charm of a first delight,<br>
+ And some are fallen from awe to neglect and scorning;<br>
+ Until&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em"
+ >O tarry not long, dear needed sprite!<a
+ id="page_028"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{28}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Till thou, though uninvited, with fancy returnest<br>
+ To hallow beauty and make the dull heart bright:<br>
+ To inhabit again thy gladdened kingdom in earnest;<br>
+ Wherein&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em"
+ >from the smile of beauty afar forecasting</span
+ ><br>
+ The pleasure of god, thou livest at peace and yearnest<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em"
+ >With wonder everlasting. <span class="linenum">840</span></span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><a id="SECOND_PART"></a>SECOND PART</p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <i>Re-enter from the palace</i> <span class="smcap">Inachus</span>,
+ <i>with</i> <span class="smcap">Argeia</span> <i>and</i>
+ <span class="smcap">Io</span>.
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>INACHUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ That but a small and easy thing now seems,<br>
+ Which from my house when I came forth at noon<br>
+ A dream was and beyond the reach of man.<br>
+ 'Tis now a fancy of the will, a word,<br>
+ Liberty's lightest prize. Yet still as one<br>
+ Who loiters on the threshold of delight,<br>
+ Delaying pleasure for the love of pleasure,<br>
+ I dally&mdash;Come, Argeia, and share my triumph!<br>
+ And set our daughter by thee; though her eyes<br>
+ Are young, there are no eyes this day so young
+ <span class="linenum">850</span><br>
+ As shall forget this day&mdash;while one thing more<br>
+ I ask of thee; this evil, will it light<br>
+ On me or on my house or on mankind?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Scarce on mankind, O Inachus, for Zeus<br>
+ A second time failing will not again<br>
+ Measure his spite against their better fate.<br>
+ And now the terror, which awhile o'er Earth<br>
+ Its black wings spread, shall up to Heaven ascend<br>
+ And gnaw the tyrant's heart: for there is whispered<br>
+ A word gone forth to scare the mighty gods;
+ <span class="linenum">860</span><br>
+ How one must soon be born, and born of men,<a
+ id="page_029"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{29}</span><br>
+ Who shall drive out their impious host from heaven,<br>
+ And from their skyey dwellings rule mankind<br>
+ In truth and love. So scarce on man will fall<br>
+ This evil, nay, nor on thyself, O king;<br>
+ Thy name shall live an honoured name in Greece.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Then on my house 'twill be. Know'st thou no
+ more?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Know I no more? Ay, if my purpose fail<br>
+ 'Tis not for lack of knowing: if I suffer,<br>
+ 'Tis not that poisonous fear hath slurred her task,
+ <span class="linenum">870</span><br>
+ Or let brave resolution walk unarmed.<br>
+ My ears are callous to the threats of Zeus,<br>
+ The direful penalties his oath hath laid<br>
+ On every good that I in heart and hand<br>
+ Am sworn to accomplish, and for all his threats,<br>
+ Lest their accomplishment should outrun mine,<br>
+ Am bound the more. Nay, nor his evil minions,<br>
+ Nor force, nor strength, shall bend me to his will.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>ARGEIA.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ Alas, alas, what heavy words are these,<br>
+ That in the place of joy forbid your tongue,
+ <span class="linenum">880</span><br>
+ That cloud and change his face, while desperate sorrow<br>
+ Sighs in his heart? I came to share a triumph:<br>
+ All is dismay and terror. What is this?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> True, wife, I spake of triumph, and I told
+ thee<br>
+ The winter-withering hope of my whole life<br>
+ Has flower'd to-day in amaranth: what the hope<br>
+ Thou knowest, who hast shared; but the condition<br>
+ I told thee not and thou hast heard: this prophet,<br>
+ Who comes to bring us fire, hath said that Zeus<br>
+ Wills not the gift he brings, and will be wroth
+ <span class="linenum">890</span><br>
+ With us that take it.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">O doleful change, I came</span><br>
+ In pious purpose, nay, I heard within<br>
+ The hymn to glorious Zeus: I rose and said,<br>
+ The mighty god now bends, he thrusts aside<a
+ id="page_030"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{30}</span><br>
+ His heavenly supplicants to hear the prayer<br>
+ Of Inachus his servant; let him hear.<br>
+ O let him turn away now lest he hear.<br>
+ Nay, frown not on me; though a woman's voice<br>
+ That counsels is but heard impatiently,<br>
+ Yet by thy love, and by the sons I bare thee,
+ <span class="linenum">900</span><br>
+ By this our daughter, our last ripening fruit,<br>
+ By our long happiness and hope of more,<br>
+ Hear me and let me speak.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Well, wife, speak on.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Thy voice forbids more than thy words
+ invite:<br>
+ Yet say whence comes this stranger. Know'st thou not?<br>
+ Yet whencesoe'er, if he but wish us well,<br>
+ He will not bound his kindness in a day.<br>
+ Do nought in haste. Send now to Sicyon<br>
+ And fetch thy son Phorôneus, for his stake<br>
+ In this is more than thine, and he is wise.
+ <span class="linenum">910</span><br>
+ 'Twere well Phorôneus and Ægialeus<br>
+ Were both here: maybe they would both refuse<br>
+ The strange conditions which this stranger brings.<br>
+ Were we not happy too before he came?<br>
+ Doth he not offer us unhappiness?<br>
+ Bid him depart, and at some other time,<br>
+ When you have well considered, then return.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> 'Tis his conditions that we now shall
+ hear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> O hide them yet! Are there not tales
+ enough<br>
+ Of what the wrathful gods have wrought on men?
+ <span class="linenum">920</span><br>
+ Nay, 'twas this very fire thou now wouldst take,<br>
+ Which vain Salmoneus, son of Æolus,<br>
+ Made boast to have, and from his rattling car<br>
+ Threw up at heaven to mock the lightning. Him<br>
+ The thunderer stayed not to deride, but sent<br>
+ One blinding fork, that in the vacant sky<br>
+ Shook like a serpent's tongue, which is but seen<br>
+ In memory, and he was not, or for burial<br>
+ Rode with the ashes of his royal city<a id="page_031"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{31}</span><br>
+ Upon the whirlwind of the riven air. <span class="linenum">930</span
+ ><br>
+ And after him his brother Athamas,<br>
+ King of Orchomenos, in frenzy fell<br>
+ For Hera's wrath, and raving killed his son;<br>
+ And would have killed fair Ino, but that she fled<br>
+ Into the sea, preferring there to woo<br>
+ The choking waters, rather than that the arm<br>
+ Which had so oft embraced should do her wrong.<br>
+ For which old crimes the gods yet unappeased<br>
+ Demand a sacrifice, and the king's son<br>
+ Dreads the priest's knife, and all the city mourns.
+ <span class="linenum">940</span><br>
+ Or shall I say what shameful fury it was<br>
+ With which Poseidon smote Pasiphaë,<br>
+ But for neglect of a recorded vow:<br>
+ Or how Actæon fared of Artemis<br>
+ When he surprised her, most himself surprised:<br>
+ And even while he looked his boasted bow<br>
+ Fell from his hands, and through his veins there ran<br>
+ A strange oblivious trouble, darkening sense<br>
+ Till he knew nothing but a hideous fear<br>
+ Which bade him fly, and faster, as behind <span class="linenum">950</span
+ ><br>
+ He heard his hounds give tongue, that through the wood<br>
+ Were following, closing, caught him and tore him down.<br>
+ And many more thus perished in their prime;<br>
+ Lycaon and his fifty sons, whom Zeus<br>
+ In their own house spied on, and unawares<br>
+ Watching at hand, from his disguise arose.<br>
+ And overset the table where they sat<br>
+ Around their impious feast and slew them all:<br>
+ Alcyonè and Ceyx, queen and king,<br>
+ Who for their arrogance were changed to birds:
+ <span class="linenum">960</span><br>
+ And Cadmus now a serpent, once a king:<br>
+ And saddest Niobe, whom not the love<br>
+ Of Leto aught availed, when once her boast<br>
+ Went out, though all her crime was too much pride<br>
+ Of heaven's most precious gift, her children fair.<a
+ id="page_032"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{32}</span><br>
+ Six daughters had she, and six stalwart sons;<br>
+ But Leto bade her two destroy the twelve.<br>
+ And somewhere now, among lone mountain rocks<br>
+ On Sipylus, where couch the nymphs at night<br>
+ Who dance all day by Achelous' stream, <span class="linenum">970</span
+ ><br>
+ The once proud mother lies, herself a rock,<br>
+ And in cold breast broods o'er the goddess' wrong.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Now hush thy fear. See how thou tremblest
+ still.<br>
+ Or if thou fear, fear passion; for the freshes<br>
+ Of tenderness and motherly love will drown<br>
+ The eye of judgment: yet, since even excess<br>
+ Of the soft quality fits woman well,<br>
+ I praise thee; nor would ask thee less to aid<br>
+ With counsel, than in love to share my choice.<br>
+ Tho' weak thy hands to poise, thine eye may mark
+ <span class="linenum">980</span><br>
+ This balance, how the good of all outweighs<br>
+ The good of one or two, though these be us.<br>
+ Let not reluctance shame the sacrifice<br>
+ Which in another thou wert first to praise.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Alas for me, for thee and for our
+ children,<br>
+ Who, being our being, having all our having,<br>
+ If they fare ill, our pride lies in the dust.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> O deem not a man's children are but
+ those<br>
+ Out of his loins engendered&mdash;our spirit's love<br>
+ Hath such prolific consequence, that Virtue
+ <span class="linenum">990</span><br>
+ Cometh of ancestry more pure than blood,<br>
+ And counts her seed as sand upon the shore.<br>
+ Happy is he whose body's sons proclaim<br>
+ Their father's honour, but more blest to whom<br>
+ The world is dutiful, whose children spring<br>
+ Out of all nations, and whose pride the proud<br>
+ Rise to regenerate when they call him sire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Thus, husband, ever have I bought and
+ buy<br>
+ Nobleness cheaply being linked with thee.<br>
+ Forgive my weakness; see, I now am bold; <span class="linenum">1000</span
+ ><br>
+ Tell me the worst I'll hear and wish 'twere more.<a
+ id="page_033"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{33}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Retire&mdash;thy tears perchance may stir
+ again.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Nay, I am full of wonder and would hear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Bid me not tell if ye have fear to hear;<br>
+ But have no fear. Knowledge of future things<br>
+ Can nothing change man's spirit: and though he seem<br>
+ To aim his passion darkly, like a shaft<br>
+ Shot toward some fearful sound in thickest night,<br>
+ He hath an owl's eye, and must blink at day.<br>
+ The springs of memory, that feed alike <span class="linenum">1010</span
+ ><br>
+ His thought and action, draw from furthest time<br>
+ Their constant source, and hardly brook constraint<br>
+ Of actual circumstance, far less attend<br>
+ On glassed futurity; nay, death itself,<br>
+ His fate unquestioned, his foretasted pain,<br>
+ The certainty foreknown of things unknown,<br>
+ Cannot discourage his habitual being<br>
+ In its appointed motions, to make waver<br>
+ His eager hand, nor loosen the desire<br>
+ Of the most feeble melancholy heart <span class="linenum">1020</span
+ ><br>
+ Even from the unhopefullest of all her dreams.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Since then I long to know, now something
+ say<br>
+ Of what will come to mine when I am gone.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> And let the maid too hear, for 'tis of
+ her<br>
+ I speak, to tell her whither she should turn<br>
+ The day ye drive her forth from hearth and home.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> What say'st thou? drive her out? and we?
+ from home?<br>
+ Banish the comfort of our eyes? Nay rather<br>
+ Believe that these obedient hands will tear<br>
+ The heart out of my breast, ere it do this.
+ <span class="linenum">1030</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> When her wild cries arouse the house at
+ night,<br>
+ And, running to her bed, ye see her set<br>
+ Upright in trancèd sleep, her starting hair<br>
+ With deathly sweat bedewed, in horror shaking,<br>
+ Her eyeballs fixed upon the unbodied dark,<br>
+ Through which a draping mist of luminous gloom<a
+ id="page_034"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{34}</span><br>
+ Drifts from her couch away,&mdash;when, if asleep,<br>
+ She walks as if awake, and if awake<br>
+ Dreams, and as one who nothing hears or sees,<br>
+ Lives in a sick and frantic mood, whose cause
+ <span class="linenum">1040</span><br>
+ She understands not or is loth to tell&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Ah, ah, my child, my child!&mdash;Dost thou
+ feel aught?<br>
+ Speak to me&mdash;nay, 'tis nothing&mdash;hearken not.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Ye then distraught with sorrow, neither
+ knowing<br>
+ Whether to save were best or lose, will seek<br>
+ Apollo's oracle.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">And what the answer?</span><br>
+ Will it discover nought to avert this sorrow?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Or else thy whole race perish root and
+ branch.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Alas! Alas!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Yet shall she live though lost; from human
+ form<br>
+ Changed, that thou wilt not know thy daughter more.
+ <span class="linenum">1051</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Woe, woe! my thought was praying for her
+ death.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> In Hera's temple shall her prison be<br>
+ At high Mycenæ, till from heaven be sent<br>
+ Hermes, with song to soothe and sword to slay<br>
+ The beast whose hundred eyes devour the door.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Enough, enough is told, unless indeed,<br>
+ The beast once slain, thou canst restore our child.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Nay, with her freedom will her
+ wanderings<br>
+ Begin. Come hither, child&mdash;nay, let her come:
+ <span class="linenum">1060</span><br>
+ What words remain to speak will not offend her.<br>
+ And shall in memory quicken, when she looks<br>
+ To learn where she should go;&mdash;for go she must,<br>
+ Stung by the venomous fly, whose angry flight<br>
+ She still will hear about her, till she come<br>
+ To lay her sevenfold-carried burden down<br>
+ Upon the Æthiop shore where he shall reign.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> But say&mdash;say first, what
+ form&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">In snow-white hide</span><br>
+ Of those that feel the goad and wear the yoke.
+ <span class="linenum">1069</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Round-hoofed, or such as tread with cloven
+ foot?<a id="page_035"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{35}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Wide-horned, large-eyed, broad-fronted, and
+ the feet<br>
+ Cloven which carry her to her far goal.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Will that of all these evils be the
+ term?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Ay, but the journey first which she must
+ learn.<br>
+ Hear now, my child; the day when thou art free,<br>
+ Leaving the lion-gate, descend and strike<br>
+ The Trêtan road to Nemea, skirting wide<br>
+ The unhunted forest o'er the watered plain<br>
+ To walled Cleônæ, whence the traversed stream<br>
+ To Corinth guides: there enter not, but pass
+ <span class="linenum">1080</span><br>
+ To narrow Isthmus, where Poseidon won<br>
+ A country from Apollo, and through the town<br>
+ Of Crommyon, till along the robber's road<br>
+ Pacing, thy left eye meet the westering sun<br>
+ O'er Geraneia, and thou reach the hill<br>
+ Of Megara, where Car thy brother's babe<br>
+ In time shall rule; next past Eleusis climb<br>
+ Stony Panactum and the pine-clad slopes<br>
+ Of Phyle; shun the left-hand way, and keep<br>
+ The rocks; the second day thy feet shall tread
+ <span class="linenum">1090</span><br>
+ The plains of Græa, whence the roadway serves<br>
+ Aulis and Mycalessus to the point<br>
+ Of vext Euripus: fear not then the stream,<br>
+ Nor scenting think to taste, but plunging in<br>
+ Breast its salt current to the further shore.<br>
+ For on this island mayst thou lose awhile<br>
+ Thy maddening pest, and rest and pasture find,<br>
+ And from the heafs of bold Macistus see<br>
+ The country left and sought: but when thou feel<br>
+ Thy torment urge, move down, recross the flood,
+ <span class="linenum">1100</span><br>
+ And west by Harma's fencèd gap arrive<br>
+ At seven-gated Thebes: thy friendly goddess<br>
+ Ongan Athenè has her seat without.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> Now if she may not stay thy toilsome
+ destined steps,<br>
+ I pray that she may slay for thee the maddening fly.<a
+ id="page_036"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{36}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Keep not her sanctuary long, but seek<br>
+ B&oelig;otian Ascra, where the Muses' fount,<br>
+ Famed Aganippè, wells: Ocalea<br>
+ Pass, and Tilphusa's northern steeps descend<br>
+ By Alalcomenæ, the goddess' town. <span class="linenum">1110</span><br>
+ Guard now the lake's low shore, till thou have crossed<br>
+ Hyrcana and Cephissus, the last streams<br>
+ Which feed its reedy pools, when thou shalt come<br>
+ Between two mountains that enclose the way<br>
+ By peakèd Abæ to Hyampolis.<br>
+ The right-hand path that thither parts the vale<br>
+ Opes to Cyrtonè and the Locrian lands;<br>
+ Toward Elateia thou, where o'er the marsh<br>
+ A path with stones is laid; and thence beyond<br>
+ To Thronium, Tarphè, and Thermopylæ, <span class="linenum">1120</span
+ ><br>
+ Where rocky Lamia views the Maliac gulf.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> If further she should go, will she not
+ see<br>
+ That other Argos, the Dodonian land?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Crossing the Phthian hills thou next shall
+ reach<br>
+ Pharsalus, and Olympus' peakèd snows<br>
+ Shall guide thee o'er the green Pelasgic plains<br>
+ For many a day, but to Argissa come<br>
+ Let old Peneius thy slow pilot be<br>
+ Through Tempè, till they turn upon his left<br>
+ Crowning the wooded slopes with splendours bare.
+ <span class="linenum">1130</span><br>
+ Thence issuing forth on the Pierian shore<br>
+ Northward of Ossa thou shalt touch the lands<br>
+ Of Macedon.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">Alas, we wish thee speed,</span><br>
+ But bid thee here farewell; for out of Greece<br>
+ Thou goest 'mongst the folk whose chattering speech<br>
+ Is like the voice of birds, nor home again<br>
+ Wilt thou return.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Thy way along the coast</span><br>
+ Lies till it southward turn, when thou shalt seek<br>
+ Where wide on Strymon's plain the hindered flood<a
+ id="page_037"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{37}</span><br>
+ Spreads like a lake; thy course to his oppose
+ <span class="linenum">1140</span><br>
+ And face him to the mountain whence he comes:<br>
+ Which doubled, Thrace receives thee: barbarous names<br>
+ Of mountain, town and river, and a people<br>
+ Strange to thine eyes and ears, the Agathyrsi,<br>
+ Of pictured skins, who owe no marriage law,<br>
+ And o'er whose gay-spun garments sprent with gold<br>
+ Their hanging hair is blue. Their torrent swim<br>
+ That measures Europe in two parts, and go<br>
+ Eastward along the sea, to mount the lands<br>
+ Beyond man's dwelling, and the rising steeps
+ <span class="linenum">1150</span><br>
+ That face the sun untrodden and unnamed.&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Know to earth's verge remote thou then art come,</span
+ ><br>
+ The Scythian tract and wilderness forlorn,<br>
+ Through whose rude rocks and frosty silences<br>
+ No path shall guide thee then, nor my words now.<br>
+ There as thou toilest o'er the treacherous snows,<br>
+ A sound then thou shall hear to stop thy breath,<br>
+ And prick thy trembling ears; a far-off cry,<br>
+ Whose throat seems the white mountain and its passion<br>
+ The woe of earth. Flee not, nor turn not back:
+ <span class="linenum">1160</span><br>
+ Let thine ears drink and guide thine eyes to see<br>
+ That sight whose terrors shall assuage thy terror,<br>
+ Whose pain shall kill thy pain. Stretched on the rock,<br>
+ Naked to scorching sun, to pinching frost,<br>
+ To wind and storm and beaks of wingèd fiends<br>
+ From year to year he lies. Refrain to ask<br>
+ His name and crime&mdash;nay, haply when thou see him<br>
+ Thou wilt remember&mdash;'tis thy tyrant's foe,<br>
+ Man's friend, who pays his chosen penalty.<br>
+ Draw near, my child, for he will know thy need,
+ <span class="linenum">1170</span><br>
+ And point from land to land thy further path.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><span class="smcap">Chorus.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O miserable man, hear now the worst.</span
+ ><br>
+ O weak and tearful race,<a id="page_038"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{38}</span><br>
+ Born to unhappiness, see now thy cause<br>
+ Doomed and accurst!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >It surely were enough, the bad and good</span
+ ><br>
+ Together mingled, against chance and ill<br>
+ To strive, and prospering by turns,<br>
+ Now these, now those, now folly and now skill,<br>
+ Alike by means well understood <span class="linenum">1180</span><br>
+ Or 'gainst all likelihood;<br>
+ Loveliness slaving to the unlovely will<br>
+ That overrides the right and laughs at law.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But always all in awe</span><br>
+ And imminent dread:<br>
+ Because there is no mischief thought or said,<br>
+ Imaginable or unguessed,<br>
+ But it may come to be; nor home of rest,<br>
+ Nor hour secure: but anywhere,<br>
+ At any moment; in the air, <span class="linenum">1190</span><br>
+ Or on the earth or sea,<br>
+ Or in the fair<br>
+ And tender body itself it lurks, creeps in,<br>
+ Or seizes suddenly,<br>
+ Torturing, burning, withering, devouring,<br>
+ Shaking, destroying; till tormented life<br>
+ Sides with the slayer, not to be,<br>
+ And from the cruel strife<br>
+ Falls to fate overpowering.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Or if some patient heart, <span class="linenum">1200</span></span
+ ><br>
+ In toilsome steps of duty tread apart,<br>
+ Thinking to win her peace within herself,<br>
+ And thus awhile succeed:<br>
+ She must see others bleed,<br>
+ At others' misery moan,<br>
+ And learn the common suffering is her own,<br>
+ From which it is no freedom to be freed:<a
+ id="page_039"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{39}</span><br>
+ Nay, Nature, her best nurse,<br>
+ Is tender but to breed a finer sense,<br>
+ Which she may easier wound, with smart the worse
+ <span class="linenum">1210</span><br>
+ And torture more intense.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And no strength for thee but the thought of duty,</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor any solace but the love of beauty.<br>
+ O Right's toil unrewarded!<br>
+ O Love's prize unaccorded!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I say this might suffice,</span><br>
+ O tearful and unstable<br>
+ And miserable man,<br>
+ Were't but from day to day<br>
+ Thy miserable lot, <span class="linenum">1220</span><br>
+ This might suffice, I say,<br>
+ To term thee miserable.<br>
+ But thou of all thine ills too must take thought,<br>
+ Must grow familiar till no curse astound thee,<br>
+ With tears recall the past,<br>
+ With tears the times forecast;<br>
+ With tears, with tears thou hast<br>
+ The scapeless net spread in thy sight around thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">How then support thy fate,</span><br>
+ O miserable man, if this befall, <span class="linenum">1230</span><br>
+ That he who loves thee and would aid thee, daring<br>
+ To raise an arm for thy deliverance,<br>
+ Must for his courage suffer worse than all?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Bravest deliverer, for thy prophecy<br>
+ Has torn the veil which hid thee from my eyes,<br>
+ If thyself art that spirit, of whom some things<br>
+ Were darkly spoken,&mdash;nor can I doubt thou art,<br>
+ Being that the heaven its fire withholds not from thee<br>
+ Nor time his secrets,&mdash;tell me now thy name,<br>
+ That I may praise thee rightly; and my late
+ <span class="linenum">1240</span><a id="page_040"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{40}</span><br>
+ Unwitting words pardon thou, and these who still<br>
+ In blinded wonder kneel not to thy love.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> Speak not of love. See, I am moved with
+ hate,<br>
+ And fiercest anger, which will sometimes spur<br>
+ The heart to extremity, till it forget<br>
+ That there is any joy save furious war.<br>
+ Nay, were there now another deed to do,<br>
+ Which more could hurt our enemy than this,<br>
+ Which here I stand to venture, here would I leave thee<br>
+ Conspiring at his altar, and fly off <span class="linenum">1250</span
+ ><br>
+ To plunge the branding terror in his soul.<br>
+ But now the rising passion of my will<br>
+ Already jars his reaching sense, already<br>
+ From heaven he bids his minion Hermes forth<br>
+ To bring his only rebel to his feet.<br>
+ Therefore no more delay, the time is short.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> I take, I take. 'Tis but for thee to
+ give.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Pr.</span> O heavenly fire, life's life, the eye of
+ day,<br>
+ Whose nimble waves upon the starry night<br>
+ Of boundless ether love to play, <span class="linenum">1260</span><br>
+ Carrying commands to every gliding sprite<br>
+ To feed all things with colour, from the ray<br>
+ Of thy bright-glancing, white<br>
+ And silver-spinning light:<br>
+ Unweaving its thin tissue for the bow<br>
+ Of Iris, separating countless hues<br>
+ Of various splendour for the grateful flowers<br>
+ To crown the hasting hours,<br>
+ Changing their special garlands as they choose.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >O spirit of rage and might, <span class="linenum">1270</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Who canst unchain the links of winter stark,<br>
+ And bid earth's stubborn metals flow like oil,<br>
+ Her porphyrous heart-veins boil;<br>
+ Whose arrows pierce the cloudy shields of dark;<br>
+ Let now this flame, which did to life awaken<a
+ id="page_041"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{41}</span><br>
+ Beyond the cold dew-gathering veils of morn,<br>
+ And thence by me was taken,<br>
+ And in this reed was borne,<br>
+ A smothered theft and gift to man below,<br>
+ Here with my breath revive, <span class="linenum">1280</span><br>
+ Restore thy lapsèd realm, and be the sire<br>
+ Of many an earthly fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O flame, flame bright and live,</span
+ ><br>
+ Appear upon the altar as I blow.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> 'Twas in the marish reed.<br>
+ See to his mouth he sets its hollow flute<br>
+ And breathes therein with heed,<br>
+ As one who from a pipe with breathings mute<br>
+ Will music's voice evoke.&mdash;<br>
+ See, the curl of a cloud. <span class="linenum">1290</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> The smoke, the smoke!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Semichorus.</span> Thin clouds mounting higher.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> 'Tis smoke, the smoke of fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Semichorus.</span> Thick they come and thicker,
+ </p>
+ <p class="poem20">
+ Quick arise and quicker,<br>
+ Higher still and higher.<br>
+ Their wreaths the wood enfold.<br>
+ &mdash;I see a spot of gold.<br>
+ They spring from a spot of gold,<br>
+ Red gold, deep among <span class="linenum">1300</span><br>
+ The leaves: a golden tongue.<br>
+ O behold, behold,<br>
+ Dancing tongues of gold,<br>
+ That leaping aloft flicker,<br>
+ Higher still and higher.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> 'Tis fire, the flame of fire!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Semichorus.</span> The blue smoke overhead<br>
+ Is turned to angry red.<br>
+ The fire, the fire, it stirs.<br>
+ Hark, a crackling sound, <span class="linenum">1310</span
+ ><a id="page_042"></a><span class="pagenumb">{42}</span
+ ><br>
+ As when all around<br>
+ Ripened pods of furze<br>
+ Split in the parching sun<br>
+ Their dry caps one by one,<br>
+ And shed their seeds on the ground.<br>
+ &mdash;Ah! what clouds arise.<br>
+ Away! O come away.<br>
+ The wind-wafted smoke,<br>
+ Blowing all astray,<br>
+ Blinds and pricks my eyes.<br>
+ <span class="linenum"
+ >[<span class="smcap">Prometheus</span>,<br>
+ <i
+ >after writing his<br>
+ name on the altar,<br>
+ goes out<br>
+ unobserved</i
+ >.]</span
+ >
+
+ Ah! I choke, I choke.<br>
+ &mdash;All the midst is rent:<br>
+ See, the twigs are all<br>
+ By the flaming spent<br>
+ White and gold, and fall.<br>
+ How they writhe, resist,<br>
+ Blacken, flake, and twist,<br>
+ Snap in gold and fall.<br>
+ &mdash;See the stars that mount,<br>
+ Momentary bright <span class="linenum">1330</span><br>
+ Flitting specks of light<br>
+ More than eye can count.<br>
+ Insects of the air,<br>
+ As in summer night<br>
+ Show a fire in flying<br>
+ Flickering here and there,<br>
+ Waving past and dying.<br>
+ &mdash;Look, a common cone<br>
+ Of the mountain pine<br>
+ Solid gold is grown; <span class="linenum">1340</span><br>
+ Till its scales outshine,<br>
+ Standing each alone<br>
+ In the spiral rows<br>
+ Of their fair design,<br>
+ All the brightest shows<br>
+ Of the sun's decline.<a id="page_043"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{43}</span><br>
+ &mdash;Hark, there came a hiss,<br>
+ Like a startled snake<br>
+ Sliding through the brake.<br>
+ Oh, and what is this? <span class="linenum">1350</span><br>
+ Smaller flames that flee<br>
+ Sidelong from the tree,<br>
+ Hark, they hiss, they hiss.<br>
+ &mdash;How the gay flames flicker,<br>
+ Spurting, dancing, leaping<br>
+ Quicker yet and quicker,<br>
+ Higher yet and higher,<br>
+ &mdash;Flaming, flaring, fuming,<br>
+ Cracking, crackling, creeping,<br>
+ Hissing and consuming: <span class="linenum">1360</span><br>
+ Mighty is the fire.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Stay, stay, cease your rejoicings. Where is
+ he,<br>
+ The prophet,&mdash;nay, what say I,&mdash;the god, the giver?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> He is not here&mdash;he is gone.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Search, search around.</span><br>
+ Search all, search well.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">He is gone,&mdash;he is not here.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> The palace gate lies open: go, Argeia,<br>
+ Maybe he went within: go seek him there.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Exit</i> <span class="smcap">Ar.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ Look down the sea road, down the country road:<br>
+ Follow him if ye see him.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">He is not there.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> Strain, strain your eyes: look well: search
+ everywhere.<br>
+ Look townwards&mdash;is he there?<br>
+ <br>
+ <i>Part of</i> <span class="smcap">Chorus</span> <i>returning</i>. He is
+ not there.&mdash; <span class="linenum">1371</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <i>Other part returning.</i> He is not there.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c"><i>Argeia re-entering.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> He is not there.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> O see!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">See where?</span
+ ><a id="page_044"></a><span class="pagenumb">{44}</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> See on the altar&mdash;see!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> What see ye on the altar?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Here in front</span><br>
+ Words newly writ.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">What words?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7%"> A name&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Ay true&mdash;</span><br>
+ There is the name. How like a child was I,<br>
+ That I must wait till these dumb letters gave<br>
+ The shape and soul to knowledge: when the god<br>
+ Stood here so self-revealed to ears and eyes<br>
+ That, 'tis a god I said, yet wavering still,
+ <span class="linenum">1380</span><br>
+ Doubting what god,&mdash;and now, who else but he?<br>
+ I knew him, yet not well; I knew him not:<br>
+ Prometheus&mdash;ay, Prometheus. Know ye, my children,<br>
+ This name we see was writ by him we seek.<br>
+ 'Tis his own name, his own heart-stirring name,<br>
+ Feared and revered among the immortal gods;<br>
+ Divine Prometheus: see how here the large<br>
+ Cadmeian characters run, scoring out<br>
+ The hated title of his ancient foe,&mdash;<br>
+ To Zeus 'twas made,&mdash;and now 'tis to Prometheus&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">1390</span><br>
+ Writ with the charrèd reed&mdash;theft upon theft.<br>
+ He hath stolen from Zeus his altar, and with his fire<br>
+ Hath lit our sacrifice unto himself.<br>
+ Ió Prometheus, friend and firegiver,<br>
+ For good or ill thy thefts and gifts are ours.<br>
+ We worshipped thee unknowing.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">But now where is he?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">In.</span> No need to search&mdash;we shall not see
+ him more.<br>
+ We look in vain. The high gods when they choose<br>
+ Put on and off the solid visible shape<br>
+ Which more deceives our hasty sense, than when
+ <span class="linenum">1400</span><br>
+ Seeing them not we judge they stand aloof.<br>
+ And he, he now is gone; his work is done:<br>
+ 'Tis ours to see it be not done in vain.<a
+ id="page_045"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{45}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> What is to do? speak, bid, command, we
+ fly.<br>
+ <br>
+ In. Go some and fetch more wood to feed the fire;<br>
+ And some into the city to proclaim<br>
+ That fire is ours: and send out messengers<br>
+ To Corinth, Sicyon, Megara and Athens<br>
+ And to Mycenæ, telling we have fire:<br>
+ And bid that in the temples they prepare <span class="linenum">1410</span
+ ><br>
+ Their altars, and send hither careful men<br>
+ To learn of me what things the time requires.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Exit part of</i> <span class="smcap">Chorus</span>.</p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ The rest remain to end our feast; and now<br>
+ Seeing this altar is no more to Zeus,<br>
+ But shall for ever be with smouldering heat<br>
+ Fed for the god who first set fire thereon,<br>
+ Change ye your hymns, which in the praise of Zeus<br>
+ Ye came to sing, and change the prayer for fire<br>
+ Which ye were wont to raise, to high thanksgiving,<br>
+ Praising aloud the giver and his gift. <span class="linenum">1420</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <i>Part of</i> <span class="smcap">Chorus</span>. Now our happy feast hath
+ ending,<br>
+ While the sun in heaven descending<br>
+ Sees us gathered round a light<br>
+ Born to cheer his vacant night.<br>
+ Praising him to-day who came<br>
+ Bearing far his heavenly flame:<br>
+ Came to crown our king's desire<br>
+ With his gift of golden fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Semichorus.</span> My heart, my heart is freed.<br>
+ Now can I sing. I loose a shaft from my bow,
+ <span class="linenum">1430</span><br>
+ A song from my heart to heaven, and watch it speed.<br>
+ It revels in the air, and straight to its goal doth go.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >I have no fear. I praise distinguishing duly:</span
+ ><br>
+ I praise the love that I love and I worship truly.<br>
+ Goodness I praise, not might,<br>
+ Nor more will I speak of wrong,<a id="page_046"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{46}</span><br>
+ But of lovingkindness and right;<br>
+ And the god of my love shall rejoice at the sound of my song.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I praise him whom I have seen:</span><br>
+ As a man he is beautiful, blending prime and youth,
+ <span class="linenum">1440</span><br>
+ Of gentle and lovely mien,<br>
+ With the step and the eyes of truth,<br>
+ As a god,&mdash;O were I a god, but thus to be man!<br>
+ As a god, I set him above<br>
+ The rest of the gods; for his gifts are pledges of love,<br>
+ The words of his mouth rare and precious,<br>
+ His eyes' glance and the smile of his lips are love.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He is the one</span><br>
+ Alone of all the gods,<br>
+ Of righteous Themis the lofty-spirited son,
+ <span class="linenum">1450</span><br>
+ Who hates the wrongs they have done.<br>
+ He is the one I adore.<br>
+ For if there be love in heaven with evil to cope,&mdash;<br>
+ And he promised us more and more,&mdash;<br>
+ For what may we not hope?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>ODE.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >My soul is drunk with joy, her new desire</span
+ ><br>
+ In far forbidden places wanders away.<br>
+ Her hopes with free bright-coloured wings of fire<br>
+ Upon the gloom of thought<br>
+ Are sailing out. <span class="linenum">1460</span><br>
+ Awhile they rise, awhile to rest they softly fall,<br>
+ Like butterflies, that flit<br>
+ Across the mountains, or upon a wall<br>
+ Winking their idle fans at pleasure sit.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">O my vague desires!</span><br>
+ Ye lambent flames of the soul, her offspring fires:<br>
+ That are my soul herself in pangs sublime<br>
+ Rising and flying to heaven before her time:<a
+ id="page_047"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{47}</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">What doth tempt you forth</span><br>
+ To melt in the south or shiver in the frosty north?
+ <span class="linenum">1470</span><br>
+ What seek ye or find ye in your random flying,<br>
+ For ever soaring aloft, soaring and dying?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Joy, the joy of flight;</span><br>
+ They hide in the sun, they flare and dance in the night.<br>
+ Gone up, gone out of sight&mdash;and ever again<br>
+ Follow fresh tongues of fire, fresh pangs of pain.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Ah! could I control</span><br>
+ These vague desires, these leaping flames of the soul:<br>
+ Could I but quench the fire, ah! could I stay<br>
+ My soul that flieth, alas, and dieth away!
+ <span class="linenum">1480</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">
+ [<i>Enter other part of</i> <span class="smcap">Chorus</span>.
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <i>Part of</i> <span class="smcap">Chor.</span> Here is wood to feed the
+ fire&mdash;<br>
+ Never let its flames expire.<br>
+ Sing ye still while we advance<br>
+ Round the fire in measured dance,<br>
+ While the sun in heaven descending<br>
+ Sees our happy feast have ending.<br>
+ Weave ye still your joyous song,<br>
+ While we bear the wood along.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Semichorus.</span> But O return,<br>
+ Return, thou flower of the gods! <span class="linenum">1490</span><br>
+ Remember the limbs that toil and the hearts that yearn,<br>
+ Remember, and soon return!<br>
+ To prosper with peace and skill<br>
+ Our hands in the works of pleasure, beauty and use.<br>
+ Return, and be for us still<br>
+ Our shield from the anger of Zeus.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And he, if he raise his arm in anger to smite thee,</span
+ ><br>
+ And think for the good thou hast done with pain to requite thee,<br>
+ Vengeance I heard thee tell,<br>
+ And the curse I take for my own, <span class="linenum">1500</span><br>
+ That his place is prepared in hell,<a id="page_048"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{48}</span><br>
+ And a greater than he shall hurl him down from his throne<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Down, down from his throne!</span><br>
+ For the god who shall rule mankind from the deathless skies<br>
+ By mercy and truth shall be known,<br>
+ In love and peace shall arise.<br>
+ For him,&mdash;if again I hear him thunder above,<br>
+ O then, if I crouch or start,<br>
+ I will press thy lovingkindness more to my heart,<br>
+ Remember the words of thy mouth rare and precious,
+ <span class="linenum">1510</span><br>
+ Thy heart of hearts and gifts of divine love.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_049"></a><span class="pagenumb">{49}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ DEMETER<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="script"><i>A Mask</i></span>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="c">"<i>Dreams &amp; the light imaginings of men</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_049a.png"
+ width="75"
+ height="32"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <span class="smcap"
+ >Written for the ladies at<br>
+ Somerville College<br>
+ &amp; acted by them<br>
+ at the inauguration of their new building<br>
+ in 1904</span
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_049b.png"
+ width="75"
+ height="65"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <i>PREVIOUS EDITION</i><br>
+ <br>
+ <i>Oxford: at the Clarendon Press, 1905</i><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_050"></a><span class="pagenumb">{50}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ <a id="ARGUMENT_OF_THE_PLAY"></a>ARGUMENT OF
+ THE PLAY
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <i
+ >The scene is in the flowery valley below Enna. Hades prologizes, and
+ tells how he has come with consent of Zeus to carry off Persephone to be
+ his queen. The Chorus of Ocean nymphs entering praise Sicily and the
+ spring. Persephone enters with Athena and Artemis to gather flowers for
+ the festival of Zeus. Persephone being left alone is carried off by
+ Hades.</i
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <i
+ >In the second act, which is ten days later, the Chorus deplore the loss
+ of Persephone. Demeter entering upbraids them in a choric scene and
+ describes her search for Persephone until she learnt her fate from
+ Helios. Afterwards she describes her plan for compelling Zeus to restore
+ her. Hermes brings from Zens a command to Demeter that she shall return
+ to Olympus. She sends defiance to Zeus, and the Chorus end the scene by
+ vowing to win Poseidon to aid Demeter.</i
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <i
+ >In the third act, which is a year later, the Chorus, who have been
+ summoned by Demeter to witness the restoration of Persephone, lament
+ Demeter's anger. Demeter narrates the Eleusinian episode of her
+ wanderings, until Hermes enters leading Persephone. After their greeting
+ Demeter hears from Hermes the terms of Persephone's restoration; she is
+ reconciled thereto by Persephone, and invites her to Eleusis. The Chorus
+ sing and crown Persephone with flowers.</i
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 1px;">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="4" style='text-align:center'>DRAMATIS PERSONÆ</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <i>HADES.</i><br>
+ <i>DEMETER.</i>
+ </td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; font-size: 150%">}</td>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;<i>ARTEMIS.</i><br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;<i>HERMES.</i>
+ </td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; font-size: 150%">}</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <i>PERSEPHONE.</i><br>
+ <i>ATHENA.</i>
+ </td>
+ <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td style='text-align:center'>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;<i
+ >Chorus of<br>
+ OCEANIDES.</i
+ >
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_051"></a><span class="pagenumb">{51}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="DEMETER"></a>DEMETER</h2>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>HADES.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ I am the King of Hell, nor prone to vex<br>
+ Eternal destiny with weak complaint;<br>
+ Nor when I took my kingdom did I mourn<br>
+ My lot, from heav'n expell'd, deny'd to enjoy<br>
+ Its radiant revelry and ambrosial feast,<br>
+ Nor blamed our mighty Sisters, that not one<br>
+ Would share my empire in the shades of night.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But when a younger race of gods arose,</span
+ ><br>
+ And Zeus set many sons on heav'nly seats,<br>
+ And many daughters dower'd with new domain, <span class="linenum">10</span
+ ><br>
+ And year by year were multiply'd on earth<br>
+ Their temples and their statu'd sanctities,<br>
+ Mirrors of man's ideas that grow apace,<br>
+ Yea, since man's mind was one with my desire<br>
+ That Hell should have a queen,&mdash;for heav'n hath queens<br>
+ Many, nor on all earth reigns any king<br>
+ In unkind isolation like to me,&mdash;<br>
+ I claimed from Zeus that of the fair immortals<br>
+ One should be given to me to grace my throne.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Willing he was, and quick to praise my rule,
+ <span class="linenum">20</span></span
+ ><br>
+ And of mere justice there had granted me<br>
+ Whome'er I chose: but 'Brother mine,' he said,<br>
+ 'Great as my power among the gods, this thing<br>
+ I cannot compass, that a child of mine,<br>
+ Who once hath tasted of celestial life,<br>
+ Should all forgo, and destitute of bliss<br>
+ Descend into the shades, albeit to sit<br>
+ An equal on thy throne. Take whom thou wilt;<a
+ id="page_052"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{52}</span><br>
+ But by triumphant force persuade, as erst<br>
+ I conquer'd heav'n.' Said I 'My heart is set:
+ <span class="linenum">30</span><br>
+ I take Demeter's child Persephone;<br>
+ Dost thou consent?' Whereto he gave his nod.<br>
+ And I am come to-day with hidden powers,<br>
+ Ev'n unto Enna's fair Sicilian field,<br>
+ To rob her from the earth. 'Tis here she wanders<br>
+ With all her train: nor is this flow'ry vale<br>
+ Fairer among the fairest vales of earth,<br>
+ Nor any flower within this flow'ry vale<br>
+ Fair above other flowers, as she is fairest<br>
+ Among immortal goddesses, the daughter <span class="linenum">40</span
+ ><br>
+ Of gentle-eyed Demeter; and her passion<br>
+ Is for the flowers, and every tenderness<br>
+ That I have long'd for in my fierce abodes.<br>
+ But she hath always in attendant guard<br>
+ The dancing nymphs of Ocean, and to-day<br>
+ The wise Athena and chaste Artemis<br>
+ Indulge her girlish fancy, gathering flowers<br>
+ To deck the banner of my golden brother,<br>
+ Whose thought they guess not, tho' their presence here<br>
+ Affront his will and mine. If once alone <span class="linenum">50</span
+ ><br>
+ I spy her, I can snatch her swiftly down:<br>
+ And after shall find favour for my fault,<br>
+ When I by gentle means have won her love.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >I hear their music now. Hither they come:</span
+ ><br>
+ I'll to my ambush in the rocky cave. [<i>Exit.</i><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_053"></a><span class="pagenumb">{53}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><a id="ACT_I"></a>ACT I</p>
+
+ <p class="c"><i>Enter Chorus of Oceanides, with baskets.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>OCEANIDES.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Gay and lovely is earth, man's decorate dwelling;</span
+ ><br>
+ With fresh beauty ever varying hour to hour.<br>
+ As now bathed in azure joy she awakeneth<br>
+ With bright morn to the sun's life-giving effluence,<br>
+ Or sunk into solemn darkness aneath the stars
+ <span class="linenum">60</span><br>
+ In mysterious awe slumbereth out the night,<br>
+ Then from darkness again plunging again to day;<br>
+ Like dolphins in a swift herd that accompany<br>
+ Poseidon's chariot when he rebukes the waves.<br>
+ But no country to me 'neath the enarching air<br>
+ Is fair as Sicily's flowery fruitful isle:<br>
+ Always lovely, whether winter adorn the hills<br>
+ With his silvery snow, or generous summer<br>
+ Outpour her heavy gold on the river-valleys.<br>
+ Her rare beauty giveth gaiety unto man, <span class="linenum">70</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">A delite dear to immortals.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">2</p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ And one season of all chiefly deliteth us,<br>
+ When fair Spring is afield. O happy is the Spring!<br>
+ Now birds early arouse their pretty minstreling;<br>
+ Now down its rocky hill murmureth ev'ry rill;<br>
+ Now all bursteth anew, wantoning in the dew<br>
+ Their bells of bonny blue, their chalices honey'd.<br>
+ Unkind frost is away; now sunny is the day;<br>
+ Now man thinketh aright, Life it is all delite.<br>
+ Now maids playfully dance o'er enamel'd meadows,
+ <span class="linenum">80</span><br>
+ And with goldy blossom deck forehead and bosom;<br>
+ While old Pan rollicketh thro' the budding shadows,<br>
+ Voicing his merry reed, laughing aloud to lead<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The echoes madly rejoicing.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_054"></a><span class="pagenumb">{54}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">3</p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ We be Oceanids, Persephone's lovers,<br>
+ Who all came hurrying joyfully from the sea<br>
+ Ere daybreak to obey her belovëd summons.<br>
+ At her fancy to pluck these violets, lilies,<br>
+ Windflow'rs and daffodils, all for a festival<br>
+ Whereat shé will adorn Zeuses honour'd banner.
+ <span class="linenum">90</span><br>
+ And with Persephone there cometh Artemis<br>
+ And grave Pallas ... Hilloo! Already they approach!<br>
+ Haste, haste! Stoop to gather! Seem busy ev'ryone!<br>
+ Crowd all your wicker arcs with the meadow-lilies;<br>
+ Lest our disreverenc'd deity should rebuke<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The divine children of Ocean.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ [<i>Enter</i> <span class="smcap">Athena</span>,
+ <span class="smcap">Persephone</span>, <i>and</i>
+ <span class="smcap">Artemis</span>.
+ <i>Persephone has a basket half fill'd with gather'd flowers.</i>]
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>ATHENA.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ These then are Enna's flowery fields, and here<br>
+ In midmost isle the garden of thy choice?<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>PERSEPHONE.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ Is not all as I promist? Feel ye not<br>
+ Your earthborn ecstasy concenter'd here? <span class="linenum">100</span
+ ><br>
+ Tell me, Athena, of thy wisdom, whénce<br>
+ Cometh this joy of earth, this penetrant<br>
+ Palpitant exultation so unlike<br>
+ The balanc't calm of high Olympian state?<br>
+ Is't in the air, the tinted atmosphere<br>
+ Whose gauzy veil, thrown on the hills, will paint<br>
+ Their features, changing with the gradual day,<br>
+ Rosy or azure, clouded now, and now<br>
+ Again afire? Or is it that the sun's<br>
+ Electric beams&mdash;which shot in circling fans
+ <span class="linenum">110</span><br>
+ Whirl all things with them&mdash;as they strike the earth<br>
+ Excite her yearning heart, till stir'd beneath<a
+ id="page_055"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{55}</span><br>
+ The rocks and silent plains, she cannot hold<br>
+ Her fond desires, but sends them bursting forth<br>
+ In scents and colour'd blossoms of the spring?&mdash;<br>
+ Breathes it not in the flowers?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ath.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Fair are the flowers,</span><br>
+ Dear child; and yet to me far lovelier<br>
+ Than all their beauty is thy love for them.<br>
+ Whate'er I love, I contemplate my love<br>
+ More than the object, and am so rejoic'd. <span class="linenum">120</span
+ ><br>
+ For life is one, and like a level sea<br>
+ Life's flood of joy. Thou wond'rest at the flowers,<br>
+ But I would teach thee wonder of thy wonder;<br>
+ Would shew thee beauty in the desert-sand,<br>
+ The worth of things unreckt of, and the truth<br>
+ That thy desire and love may spring of evil<br>
+ And ugliness, and that Earth's ecstasy<br>
+ May dwell in darkness also, in sorrow and tears.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> I'd not believe it: why then should we
+ pluck<br>
+ The flowers and not the stalks without the flowers?
+ <span class="linenum">130</span><br>
+ Or do thy stones breathe scent? Would not men laugh<br>
+ To see the banner of almighty Zeus<br>
+ Adorn'd with ragged roots and straws?&mdash;Dear Artemis,<br>
+ How lovest thou the flowers?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>ARTEMIS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 14.5em">I'll love them better</span><br>
+ Ever for thy sake, Cora; but for me<br>
+ The joy of Earth is in the breath of life<br>
+ And animal motions: nor are flowery sweets<br>
+ Dear as the scent of life. His petal'd cup,<br>
+ What is it by the wild fawn's liquid eye<br>
+ Eloquent as love-music 'neath the moon? <span class="linenum">140</span
+ ><br>
+ Nay, not a flower in all thy garden here,<br>
+ Nor wer't a thousand-thousand-fold enhanc't<br>
+ In every charm, but thou wouldst turn from it<br>
+ To view the antler'd stag, that in the glade<a
+ id="page_056"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{56}</span><br>
+ With the coy gaze of his majestic fear<br>
+ Faced thee a moment ere he turn'd to fly.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> But why, then, hunt and kill what thou so
+ lovest?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Dost thou not pluck thy flowers?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">'Tis not the same.</span><br>
+ Thy victims fly for life: they pant, they scream.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Were they not mortal, sweet, I coud not
+ kill them.<br>
+ They kill each other in their lust for life;
+ <span class="linenum">151</span><br>
+ Nay, cruelly persecute their blemisht kin:<br>
+ And they that thus are exiled from the herd<br>
+ Slink heart-brok'n to sepulchral solitudes,<br>
+ Defenceless and dishonour'd; there to fall<br>
+ Prey to the hungry glutton of the cave,<br>
+ Or stand in mute pain lingering, till they drop<br>
+ In their last lair upon the ancestral bones.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> What is it that offends me?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ath.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"> 'Tis Pity, child,</span><br>
+ The mortal thought that clouds the brow of man
+ <span class="linenum">160</span><br>
+ With dark reserve, or poisoning all delite<br>
+ Drives him upon his knees in tearful prayer<br>
+ To avert his momentary qualms: till Zeus<br>
+ At his reiterated plaint grows wrath,<br>
+ And burdens with fresh curse the curse of care.<br>
+ And they that haunt with men are apt to take<br>
+ Infection of his mind: thy mighty mother<br>
+ Leans to his tenderness.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">How should man, dwelling</span><br>
+ On earth that is so gay, himself be sad?<br>
+ Is not earth gay? Look on the sea, the sky,
+ <span class="linenum">170</span><br>
+ The flowers!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ath.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%"
+ >'Tis sad to him because 'tis gay.&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ For whether he consider how the flowers,<br>
+ &mdash;Thy miracles of beauty above praise,&mdash;<br>
+ Are wither'd in the moment of their glory,<br>
+ So that of all the mounting summer's wealth<br>
+ The show is chang'd each day, and each day dies,<a
+ id="page_057"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{57}</span><br>
+ Of no more count in Nature's estimate<br>
+ Than crowded bubbles of the fighting foam:<br>
+ Or whether 'tis the sea, whose azure waves<br>
+ Play'd in the same infinity of motion <span class="linenum">180</span
+ ><br>
+ Ages ere he beheld it, and will play<br>
+ For ages after him;&mdash;alike 'tis sad<br>
+ To read how beauty dies and he must die.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Were I a man, I would not worship thee,<br>
+ Thou cold essential wisdom. If, as thou say'st,<br>
+ Thought makes men sorrowful, why help his thought<br>
+ To quench enjoyment, who might else as I<br>
+ Revel among bright things, and feast his sense<br>
+ With beauty well-discern'd? Nay, why came ye<br>
+ To share my pastime? Ye love not the flowers.
+ <span class="linenum">190</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ath.</span> Indeed I love thee, child; and love thy
+ flowers,&mdash;<br>
+ Nor less for loving wisely. All emotions,<br>
+ Whether of gods or men, all loves and passions,<br>
+ Are of two kinds; they are either inform'd by wisdom,<br>
+ To reason obedient,&mdash;or they are unconducted,<br>
+ Flames of the burning life. The brutes of earth<br>
+ And Pan their master know these last; the first<br>
+ Are seen in me: betwixt the extremes there lie<br>
+ Innumerable alloys and all of evil.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Nay, and I guess your purpose with me
+ well: <span class="linenum">200</span><br>
+ I am a child, and ye would nurse me up<br>
+ A pupil in your school. I know ye twain<br>
+ Of all the immortals are at one in this;<br>
+ Ye wage of cold disdain a bitter feud<br>
+ With Aphrodite, and ye fear for me,<br>
+ Lest she should draw me to her wanton way.<br>
+ Fear not: my party is taken. Hark! I'll tell<br>
+ What I have chosen, what mankind shall hold<br>
+ Devote and consecrate to me on earth:<br>
+ It is the flowers: but only among the flowers
+ <span class="linenum">210</span><br>
+ Those that men love for beauty, scent, or hue,<br>
+ Having no other uses: I have found<a id="page_058"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{58}</span><br>
+ Demeter, my good mother, heeds them not.&mdash;<br>
+ She loves vines, olives, orchards, 'the rich leas<br>
+ Of wheat, rye, barley, vetches, oats, and peas,[1]<br>
+ But for the idle flowers she hath little care:<br>
+ She will resign them willingly. And think not,<br>
+ Thou wise Athena, I shall go unhonour'd,<br>
+ Or rank a meaner goddess unto man.<br>
+ His spirit setteth beauty before wisdom, <span class="linenum">220</span
+ ><br>
+ Pleasures above necessities, and thus<br>
+ He ever adoreth flowers. Nor this I guess<br>
+ Where rich men only and superfluous kings<br>
+ Around their palaces reform the land<br>
+ To terraces and level lawns, whereon<br>
+ Appointed slaves are told, to tend and feed<br>
+ Lilies and roses and all rarest plants<br>
+ Fetch'd from all lands; that they&mdash;these lordly men&mdash;<br>
+ 'Twixt flaunting avenues and wafted odours<br>
+ May pace in indolence: this is their bliss;
+ <span class="linenum">230</span><br>
+ This first they do: and after, it may be,<br>
+ Within their garden set their academe:&mdash;<br>
+ But in the poorest villages, around<br>
+ The meanest cottage, where no other solace<br>
+ Comforts the eye, some simple gaiety<br>
+ Of flowers in tended garden is seen; some pinks,<br>
+ Tulips, or crocuses that edge the path;<br>
+ Where oft at eve the grateful labourer<br>
+ Sits in his jasmin'd porch, and takes the sun:<br>
+ And even the children, that half-naked go, <span class="linenum">240</span
+ ><br>
+ Have posies in their hands, and of themselves<br>
+ Will choose a queen in whom to honour Spring,<br>
+ Dancing before her garlanded with may.<br>
+ The cowslip makes them truant, they forget<br>
+ The hour of hunger and their homely feast<br>
+ So they may cull the delicate primrose,<br>
+ Sealing their birthright with the touch of beauty;<br>
+ With unconsider'd hecatombs assuring<a id="page_059"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{59}</span><br>
+ Their dim sense of immortal mystery.&mdash;<br>
+ Yea, rich and poor, from cradle unto grave <span class="linenum">250</span
+ ><br>
+ All men shall love me, shall adore my name,<br>
+ And heap my everlasting shrine with flowers.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ath.</span> Thou sayest rightly thou art a child. May
+ Zeus<br>
+ Give thee a better province than thy thought.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Music heard.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Listen! The nymphs are dancing. Let us
+ go!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>They move off.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ Come, Cora; wilt thou learn a hunting dance?<br>
+ I'll teach thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">Can I learn thy hunter-step</span><br>
+ Without thy bare legs and well-buskin'd feet?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ar.</span> Give me thy hand.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">Stay! stay! I have left my flowers.</span
+ ><br>
+ I follow.
+ </p>
+ <p class="r">[<i>Exeunt Athena and Artemis.</i><br></p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Persephone returning to right slowly.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ They understand not&mdash;Now, praise be to Zeus,
+ <span class="linenum">261</span><br>
+ That, tho' I sprang not from his head, I know<br>
+ Something that Pallas knows not.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ [<i
+ >She has come to where her basket lies. In stooping towards it she
+ kneels to pluck a flower: and then comes to sit on a bank with the
+ basket in hand on her knees, facing the audience.</i
+ >]
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Thou tiny flower!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Art thou not wise?</span><br>
+ Who taught thee else, thou frail anemone,<br>
+ Thy starry notion, thy wind-wavering motion,<br>
+ Thy complex of chaste beauty, unimagin'd<br>
+ Till thou art seen?&mdash;And how so wisely, thou,<br>
+ Indifferent to the number of thy rays, <span class="linenum">270</span
+ ><br>
+ While others are so strict? This six-leaved tulip,<br>
+ &mdash;He would not risk a seventh for all his worth,&mdash;<br>
+ He thought to attain unique magnificence<br>
+ By sheer simplicity&mdash;a pointed oval<br>
+ Bare on a stalk erect: and yet, grown old<br>
+ He will his young idea quite abandon,<a id="page_060"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{60}</span><br>
+ In his dishevel'd fury wantoning<br>
+ Beyond belief.... Some are four-leaved: this poppy<br>
+ Will have but four. He, like a hurried thief,<br>
+ Stuffs his rich silks into too small a bag&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">280</span><br>
+ I think he watch'd a summer-butterfly<br>
+ Creep out all crumpled from his winter-case,<br>
+ Trusting the sun to smooth his tender tissue<br>
+ And sleek the velvet of his painted wings:&mdash;<br>
+ And so doth he.&mdash;Between such different schemes,<br>
+ Such widely varied loveliness, how choose?<br>
+ Yet loving all, one should be most belov'd,<br>
+ Most intimately mine; to mortal men<br>
+ My emblem: tho' I never find in one<br>
+ The sum of all distinctions.&mdash;Rose were best:
+ <span class="linenum">290</span><br>
+ But she is passion's darling, and unkind<br>
+ To handle&mdash;set her by.&mdash;Choosing for odour,<br>
+ The violet were mine&mdash;men call her modest,<br>
+ Because she hides, and when in company<br>
+ Lacks manner and the assertive style of worth:&mdash;<br>
+ While this narcissus here scorns modesty,<br>
+ Will stand up what she is, tho' something prim:<br>
+ Her scent, a saturation of one tone,<br>
+ Like her plain symmetry, leaves nought to fancy:&mdash;<br>
+ Whereas this iris,&mdash;she outvieth man's
+ <span class="linenum">300</span><br>
+ Excellent artistry; elaboration<br>
+ Confounded with simplicity, till none<br>
+ Can tell which sprang of which. Coud I but find<br>
+ A scented iris, I should be content:<br>
+ Yet men would call me proud: Iris is Pride.&mdash;<br>
+ To-day I'll favour thee, sweet violet;<br>
+ Thou canst live in my bosom. I'll not wrong thee<br>
+ Wearing thee in Olympus.&mdash;Help! help! Ay me!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ [<i
+ >Persephone rises to her feet, and amidst a contrivance of confused
+ darkness Hades is seen rushing from behind. He seizes her and drags her
+ backward. Her basket is thrown up and the flowers scattered.</i
+ >]
+ </p>
+
+ <p><a id="page_061"></a></p>
+
+ <h2><a id="ACT_II"></a>ACT II</h2>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>CHORUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">I (&#945;)</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Bright day succeedeth unto day&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Night to pensive night&mdash; <span class="linenum">310</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With his towering ray</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of all-fathering light&mdash;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With the solemn trance</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of her starry dance.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Nought is new or strange</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">In the eternal change.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">As the light clouds fly</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">O'er the tree-tops high,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">So the days go by.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Ripples that arrive <span class="linenum">320</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">On the sunny shore,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Dying to their live</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Music evermore.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Like pearls on a thread,&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Like notes of a song,&mdash;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Like the measur'd tread</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of a dancing throng.&mdash;</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">(&#946;)</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ocëanides are we,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Nereids of the foam,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >But we left the sea <span class="linenum">330</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">On the earth to roam</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With the fairest Queen</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >That the world hath seen.&mdash;<a id="page_062"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{62}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Why amidst our play</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Was she sped away?&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Over hill and plain</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">We have sought in vain;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">She comes not again.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Not the Naiads knew</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >On their dewy lawns:&mdash; <span class="linenum">340</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Not the laughing crew</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of the leaping Fauns.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Now, since she is gone,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">All our dance is slow,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">All our joy is done,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And our song is woe.&mdash;</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">II</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Saw ye the mighty Mother, where she went</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Searching the land?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Nor night nor day resting from her lament,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >With smoky torch in hand. <span class="linenum">350</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Her godhead in the passion of a sorrow spent<br>
+ Which not her mind coud suffer, nor heart withstand?&mdash;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Enlanguor'd like a fasting lioness,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">That prowls around</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Robb'd of her whelps, in fury comfortless</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Until her lost be found:</span><br>
+ Implacable and terrible in her wild distress;<br>
+ And thro' the affrighted country her roars resound.&mdash;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But lo! what form is there? Thine eyes awaken!</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >See! see! O say, <span class="linenum">360</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Is not that she, the furious, the forsaken?</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">She cometh, lo! this way;</span><br>
+ Her golden-rippling hair upon her shoulders shaken,<br>
+ And all her visage troubled with deep dismay.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_063"></a><span class="pagenumb">{63}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>DEMETER</i> (<i>entering</i>).</p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Here is the hateful spot, the hollow rock</span
+ ><br>
+ Whence the fierce ravisher sprang forth&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 16em">(<i>seeing the nymphs</i>) Ah! Ye!</span
+ ><br>
+ I know you well: ye are the nymphs of Ocean.<br>
+ Ye, graceful as your watery names<br>
+ And idle as the mimic flames<br>
+ That skip upon his briny floor, <span class="linenum">370</span><br>
+ When the hot sun smiteth thereo'er;<br>
+ Why did ye leave your native waves?<br>
+ Did false Poseidon, to my hurt<br>
+ Leagued with my foe, bid you desert<br>
+ Your opalescent pearly caves,<br>
+ Your dances on the shelly strand?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Poseidon gave us no command,<br>
+ Lady; it was thy child Persephone,<br>
+ Whose beauty drew us from the sea.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Ill company ye lent, ill-fated guards!
+ <span class="linenum">380</span><br>
+ How was she stolen from your distracted eyes?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> There, where thou standest now, stood she
+ companion'd<br>
+ By wise Athena and bright Artemis.<br>
+ We in flower-gathering dance and idle song<br>
+ Were wander'd off apart; we fear'd no wrong.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> In heav'n I heard her cry: ye nothing
+ heard?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> We heard no cry&mdash;How coudst thou hear
+ in heaven?<br>
+ Ask us not óf her:&mdash;we have nought to tell.&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I seek not knowledge óf you, for I
+ know.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Thou knowest? Ah, mighty Queen, deign then
+ to tell<br>
+ If thou hast found her. Tell us&mdash;tell us&mdash;tell!
+ <span class="linenum">391</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Oh, there are calls that love can hear,<br>
+ That strike not on the outward ear.<br>
+ None heard save I: but with a dart<br>
+ Of lightning-pain it pierc'd my heart,<a id="page_064"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{64}</span><br>
+ That call for aid, that cry of fear.<br>
+ It echo'd from the mountain-steeps<br>
+ Down to the dark of Ocean-deeps;<br>
+ O'er all the isle, from ev'ry hill<br>
+ It pierc'd my heart and echoes still, <span class="linenum">400</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Ay me! Ay me!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Where is she, O mighty Queen?&mdash;Tell
+ us&mdash;O tell!&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Swift unto earth, in frenzy led<br>
+ By Cora's cry, from heav'n I sped.<br>
+ Immortal terror froze my mind:<br>
+ I fear'd, ev'n as I yearn'd to find<br>
+ My child, my joy, faln from my care<br>
+ Wrong'd or distresst, I knew not where,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Cora, my Cora!</span><br>
+ Nor thought I whither first to fly, <span class="linenum">410</span><br>
+ Answ'ring the appeal of that wild cry:<br>
+ But still it drew me till I came<br>
+ To Enna, calling still her name,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Cora, my Cora!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> If thou hast found her, tell us, Queen, O
+ tell!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Nine days I wander'd o'er the land.<br>
+ From Enna to the eastern strand<br>
+ I sought, and when the first night came<br>
+ I lit my torch in Etna's flame.<br>
+ But neither 'mid the chestnut woods <span class="linenum">420</span><br>
+ That rustle o'er his stony floods;<br>
+ Nor yet at daybreak on the meads<br>
+ Where bountiful Symaethus leads<br>
+ His chaunting boatmen to the main;<br>
+ Nor where the road on Hybla's plain<br>
+ Is skirted by the spacious corn;<br>
+ Nor where embattled Syracuse<br>
+ With lustrous temple fronts the morn;<br>
+ Nor yet by dolphin'd Arethuse;<br>
+ Nor when I crossed Anapus wide, <span class="linenum">430</span><br>
+ Where Cyane, his reedy bride,<a id="page_065"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{65}</span><br>
+ Uprushing from her crystal well,<br>
+ Doth not his cold embrace repel;<br>
+ Nor yet by western Eryx, where<br>
+ Gay Aphrodite high in air<br>
+ Beams gladness from her marble chair;<br>
+ Nor 'mong the mountains that enfold<br>
+ Panormos in her shell of gold,<br>
+ Found I my Cora: no reply<br>
+ Came to my call, my helpless cry, <span class="linenum">440</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Cora, my Cora!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Hast thou not found her, then? Tell
+ us&mdash;O tell!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What wonder that I never found<br>
+ Her whom I sought on mortal ground,<br>
+ When she&mdash;(now will ye understand?)&mdash;<br>
+ Dwelt in the land that is no land,<br>
+ The fruitless and unseason'd plain<br>
+ Where all lost things are found again;<br>
+ Where man's distract imaginings<br>
+ Head-downward hang on bat-like wings, <span class="linenum">450</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Mid mummied hopes, sleep-walking cares,<br>
+ Crest-faln illusions and despairs,<br>
+ The tortur'd memories of crime,<br>
+ The outcasts of forgotten time?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Where is she,
+ Queen?&mdash;where?&mdash;where?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"> Nor had I known,</span><br>
+ Had not himself high Helios seen and told me.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Alas! Alas! We cannot understand&mdash;<br>
+ We pray, dear Queen, may great Zeus comfort thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Yea, pray to Zeus; but pray ye for
+ yourselves,<br>
+ That he have pity on you, for there is need.
+ <span class="linenum">460</span><br>
+ Or let Zeus hear a strange, unwonted prayer<br>
+ That in his peril he will aid himself;<br>
+ For I have said, nor coud his Stygian oath<br>
+ Add any sanction to a mother's word,<br>
+ That, if he give not back my daughter to me,<br>
+ Him will I slay, and lock his pining ghost<a
+ id="page_066"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{66}</span><br>
+ In sleepy prisons of unhallowing hell.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> (<i>aside</i>). Alas! alas! she is
+ distraught with grief.&mdash;<br>
+ What comfort can we make?&mdash; How reason with her?&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">469</span><br>
+ (<i>to</i> D.) This coud not be, great Queen. How coud it be<br>
+ That Zeus should be destroy'd, or thou destroy him?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Yea, and you too: so make your prayer
+ betimes.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> We pray thee, Lady, sit thou on this
+ bank<br>
+ And we will bring thee food; or if thou thirst,<br>
+ Water. We know too in what cooling caves<br>
+ The sly Fauns have bestow'd their skins of wine.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Ye simple creatures, I need not these
+ things,<br>
+ And stand above your pity. Think ye me<br>
+ A woman of the earth derang'd with grief?<br>
+ Nay, nay: but I have pity on your pity, <span class="linenum">480</span
+ ><br>
+ And for your kindness I will ease the trouble<br>
+ Wherewith it wounds your gentleness: attend!<br>
+ Ye see this jewel here, that from my neck<br>
+ Hangs by this golden chain.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>They crowd near to see.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Look, 'tis a picture,</span><br>
+ 'Tis of Persephone.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> How?&mdash;Is that she?&mdash;<br>
+ A crown she weareth.&mdash;She was never wont<br>
+ Thus ...&mdash;nor her robe thus&mdash;and her countenance<br>
+ Hath not the smile which drew us from the sea.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Daedalus cut it, in the year he made<br>
+ The Zibian Aphrodite, and Hephaestus <span class="linenum">490</span
+ ><br>
+ O'erlookt and praised the work. I treasure it<br>
+ Beyond all other jewels that I have,<br>
+ And on this chain I guard it. Say now: think ye<br>
+ It cannot fall loose until every link<br>
+ Of all the chain be broken, or if one<br>
+ Break, will it fall?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">Surely if one break, Lady,</span><br>
+ The chain is broken and the jewel falls.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> 'Tis so. Now hearken diligently. All
+ life<br>
+ Is as this chain, and Zeus is as the jewel.<a
+ id="page_067"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{67}</span><br>
+ The universal life dwells first in the Earth,
+ <span class="linenum">500</span><br>
+ The stones and soil; therefrom the plants and trees<br>
+ Exhale their being; and on them the brutes<br>
+ Feeding elaborate their sentient life,<br>
+ And from these twain mankind; and in mankind<br>
+ A spirit lastly is form'd of subtler sort<br>
+ Whereon the high gods live, sustain'd thereby,<br>
+ And feeding on it, as plants on the soil,<br>
+ Or animals on plants. Now see! I hold,<br>
+ As well ye know, one whole link of this chain:<br>
+ If I should kill the plants, must not man perish?
+ <span class="linenum">510</span><br>
+ And if he perish, then the gods must die.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> If this were so, thou wouldst destroy
+ thyself.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> And therefore Zeus will not believe my
+ word.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Nor we believe thee, Lady: it cannot be<br>
+ That thou shouldst seek to mend a private fortune<br>
+ By universal ruin, and restore<br>
+ Thy daughter by destruction of thyself.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Ye are not mothers, or ye would not
+ wonder.<br>
+ In me, who hold from great all-mother Rhea<br>
+ Heritage of essential motherhood, <span class="linenum">520</span><br>
+ Ye would look rather for unbounded passion.<br>
+ Coud I, the tenderness of Nature's heart,<br>
+ Exist, were I unheedful to protect<br>
+ From wrong and ill the being that I gave,<br>
+ The unweeting passions that I fondly nurtured<br>
+ To hopes of glory, the young confidence<br>
+ In growing happiness? Shall I throw by<br>
+ As self-delusion the supreme ambition,<br>
+ Which I encourag'd till parental fondness<br>
+ Bore the prophetic blessing, on whose truth
+ <span class="linenum">530</span><br>
+ My spirit throve? Oh never! nay, nay, nay!<br>
+ That were the one disaster, and if aid<br>
+ I cannot, I can mightily avenge.<br>
+ On irremediable wrong I shrink not<br>
+ To pile immortal ruin, there to lie<a id="page_068"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{68}</span><br>
+ As trophies on a carven tomb: nor less<br>
+ For that no memory of my deed survive,<br>
+ Nor any eye to see, nor tongue to tell.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> So vast injustice, Lady, were not good.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> To you I seem unjust involving man.
+ <span class="linenum">540</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Why should man suffer in thy feud with
+ Zeus?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Let Zeus relent. There is no other way.<br>
+ I will destroy the seeds of plant and tree:<br>
+ Vineyard and orchard, oliveyard and cornland<br>
+ Shall all withhold their fruits, and in their stead<br>
+ Shall flourish the gay blooms that Cora loved.<br>
+ There shall be dearth, and yet so gay the dearth<br>
+ That all the land shall look in holiday<br>
+ With mockery of foison; every field<br>
+ With splendour aflame. For wheat the useless poppy
+ <span class="linenum">550</span><br>
+ In sheeted scarlet; and for barley and oats<br>
+ The blue and yellow weeds that mock men's toil,<br>
+ Centaury and marigold in chequer'd plots:<br>
+ Where seed is sown, or none, shall dandelions<br>
+ And wretched ragwort vie, orchis and iris<br>
+ And garish daisy, and for every flower<br>
+ That in this vale she pluckt, shall spring a thousand.<br>
+ Where'er she slept anemones shall crowd,<br>
+ And the sweet violet. These things shall ye see.<br>
+ &mdash;But I behold him whom I came to meet,
+ <span class="linenum">560</span><br>
+ Hermes:&mdash;he, be he laden howsoe'er,<br>
+ Will heavier-laden to his lord return.<br>&nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>HERMES</i> (<i>entering</i>).</p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ Mighty Demeter, Mother of the seasons,<br>
+ Bountiful all-sustainer, fairest daughter<br>
+ Of arch-ancestral Rhea,&mdash;to thee Zeus sendeth<br>
+ Kindly message. He grieves seeing thy godhead<br>
+ Offended wrongly at eternal justice,<br>
+ 'Gainst destiny ordain'd idly revolting.<a
+ id="page_069"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{69}</span><br>
+ Ever will he, thy brother, honour thee<br>
+ And willingly aid thee: but since now thy daughter
+ <span class="linenum">570</span><br>
+ Is raised to a place on the tripartite throne,<br>
+ He finds thee honour'd duly and not injur'd.<br>
+ Wherefore he bids thee now lament no more,<br>
+ But with thy presence grace the courts of heav'n.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Bright Hermes, Argus-slayer, born of
+ Maia,<br>
+ Who bearest empty words, the mask of war,<br>
+ To Zeus make thine own words, that thou hast found me<br>
+ Offended,&mdash;that I still lament my daughter,<br>
+ Nor heed his summons to the courts of heav'n.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Her.</span> Giv'st thou me nought but these relentless
+ words?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I send not words, nor dost thou carry
+ deeds. <span class="linenum">581</span><br>
+ But know, since heav'n denies my claim, I take<br>
+ Earth for my battle-field. Curse and defiance<br>
+ Shall shake his throne, and, readier then for justice,<br>
+ Zeus will enquire my terms: thou, on that day,<br>
+ Remember them; that he shall bid thee lead<br>
+ Persephone from Hades by the hand,<br>
+ And on this spot, whence she was stol'n, restore her<br>
+ Into mine arms. Execute that; and praise<br>
+ Shall rise from earth and peace return to heav'n.
+ <span class="linenum">590</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Her.</span> How dare I carry unto Zeus thy threats?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Approach him with a gift: this little
+ wallet.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Giving a little bag of seeds.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ I will not see thee again until the day<br>
+ Thou lead my daughter hither thro' the gates of Hell.
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">[<i>Going.</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Her.</span> Ah! mighty Queen, the lightness of thy
+ gift<br>
+ Is greater burden than thy weighty words.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>Exeunt severally r. and l.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>CHORUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">(1) Sisters! what have we heard!</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Our fair Persephone, the flower of the earth,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >By Hades stolen away, his queen to be.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(<i>others</i>) Alas!&mdash;alas!&mdash;ay me!&nbsp; &nbsp; 600<a
+ id="page_070"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{70}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >(2) And great Demeter's bold relentless word</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To Hermes given,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Threatening mankind with dearth.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(<i>others</i>) Ay me! alas! alas!&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(3 <i>or</i> 1) She in her sorrow strong</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Fears not to impeach the King of Heaven,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And combat wrong with wrong.&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(<i>others confusedly</i>) What can we do?&mdash;Alas!&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Back to our ocean-haunts return</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >To weep and mourn.&mdash; <span class="linenum">610</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">What use to mourn?&mdash;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Nay, nay!&mdash;Away with sorrow:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Let us forget to-day</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And look for joy to-morrow:&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">[(1) Nay, nay! hearken to me!]</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Nay, how forget that on us too,&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Yea, on us all</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The curse will fall.&mdash;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">[(1) Hearken! I say!]</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >What can we do? Alas! alas! <span class="linenum">620</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">(1) Hearken! There's nought so light,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Nothing of weight so small,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">But that in even balance 'twill avail</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Wholly to turn the scale.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Let us our feeble force unite,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And giving voice to tears,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Assail Poseidon's ears;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Rob pleasure from his days,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Darken with sorrow all his ways,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Until his shifty mind <span class="linenum">630</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Become to pity inclined,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And 'gainst his brother turn.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(<i>others</i>) 'Tis well, thou sayest well.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">(2) Yea; for if Zeus should learn</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">That earth and sea were both combined</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Against his cruel intent,<a id="page_071"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{71}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Sooner will he relent.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(<i>others</i>) 'Tis well&mdash;we do it&mdash;'tis well.&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(1) Come let us vow. Vow all with one accord</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >To harden every heart <span class="linenum">640</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Till we have won Poseidon to our part.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(<i>all</i>) We vow&mdash;we do it&mdash;we vow.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >(1) Till we have conquer'd heav'n's almighty lord</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And seen Persephone restored.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">(<i>all</i>) We vow&mdash;we vow.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">(1) Come then all; and, as ye go,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Begin the song of woe.</span><br>
+ <br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>Song.</i></span
+ ><br><br>
+
+ Close up, bright flow'rs, and hang the head,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ye beauties of the plain,</span><br>
+ The Queen of Spring is with the dead, <span class="linenum">650</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ye deck the earth in vain.</span><br>
+ From your deserted vale we fly,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And where the salt waves mourn</span><br>
+ Our song shall swell their burd'ning sigh<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Until sweet joy return.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="ACT_III"></a>ACT III</h2>
+
+ <p class="head"><i>CHORUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>Song.</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+ Lo where the virgin veilëd in airy beams,<br>
+ All-holy Morn, in splendor awakening,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Heav'n's gate hath unbarrèd, the golden</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Aerial lattices set open.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ With music endeth night's prisoning terror,
+ <span class="linenum">660</span><br>
+ With flow'ry incense: Haste to salute the sun,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >That for the day's chase, like a huntsman,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >With flashing arms cometh o'er the mountain.<a
+ id="page_072"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{72}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <i>Inter se.</i> That were a song for Artemis&mdash;I have heard<br>
+ Men thus salute the rising sun in spring&mdash;<br>
+ &mdash;See, we have wreaths enough and garlands plenty<br>
+ To hide our lov'd Persephone from sight<br>
+ If she should come.&mdash;But think you she will come?&mdash;<br>
+ If one might trust the heavens, it is a morn<br>
+ Promising happiness&mdash;'Tis like the day
+ <span class="linenum">670</span><br>
+ That brought us all our grief a year ago.&mdash;<br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>ODE.</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;
+
+ <br>
+ O that the earth, or only this fair isle wer' ours<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Amid the ocean's blue billows,</span><br>
+ With flow'ry woodland, stately mountain and valley,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Cascading and lilied river;</span><br>
+ Nor ever a mortal envious, laborious,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">By anguish or dull care opprest,</span
+ ><br>
+ Should come polluting with remorseful countenance<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Our haunt of easy gaiety.</span><br>
+ For us the grassy slopes, the country's airiness,
+ <span class="linenum">680</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The lofty whispering forest,</span><br>
+ Where rapturously Philomel invoketh the night<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And million eager throats the morn;</span
+ ><br>
+ With doves at evening softly cooing, and mellow<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Cadences of the dewy thrush.</span><br>
+ We love the gentle deer, the nimble antelope;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Mice love we and springing squirrels;</span
+ ><br>
+ To watch the gaudy flies visit the blooms, to hear<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">On ev'ry mead the grasshopper.</span><br>
+ All thro' the spring-tide, thro' the indolent summer,
+ <span class="linenum">690</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">(If only this fair isle wer' ours)</span
+ ><br>
+ Here might we dwell, forgetful of the weedy caves<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Beneath the ocean's blue billows.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>Enter Demeter.</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;
+
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Hail, mighty Mother!&mdash;Welcome, great
+ Demeter!&mdash;<br>
+ (1) This day bring joy to thee, and peace to man!<a
+ id="page_073"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{73}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I welcome you, my loving true allies,<br>
+ And thank you, who for me your gentle tempers<br>
+ Have stiffen'd in rebellion, and so long<br>
+ Harass'd the foe. Here on this field of flowers<br>
+ I have bid you share my victory or defeat. <span class="linenum">700</span
+ ><br>
+ For Hermes hath this day command from Zeus<br>
+ To lead our lost Persephone from Hell,<br>
+ Hither whence she was stolen.&mdash;And yet, alas!<br>
+ Tho' Zeus is won, some secret power thwarts me;<br>
+ All is not won: a cloud is o'er my spirit.<br>
+ Wherefore not yet I boast, nor will rejoice<br>
+ Till mine eyes see her, and my arms enfold her,<br>
+ And breast to breast we meet in fond embrace.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Well hast thou fought, great goddess, so to
+ wrest<br>
+ Zeus from his word. We thank thee, call'd to share
+ <span class="linenum">710</span><br>
+ Thy triumph, and rejoice. Yet O, we pray,<br>
+ Make thou this day a day of peace for man!<br>
+ Even if Persephone be not restored,<br>
+ Whether Aidoneus hold her or release,<br>
+ Relent thou.&mdash;Stay thine anger, mighty goddess;<br>
+ Nor with thy hateful famine slay mankind.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Say not that word 'relent' lest Hades
+ hear!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Consider rather if mankind should hear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Do ye love man?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">We have seen his sorrows, Lady ...</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> And what can ye have seen that I know
+ not?&mdash;<br>
+ His sorrow?&mdash;Ah my sorrow!&mdash;and ye bid
+ <span class="linenum">721</span><br>
+ Me to relent; whose deeds of fond compassion<br>
+ Have in this year of agony built up<br>
+ A story for all time that shall go wand'ring<br>
+ Further than I have wander'd;&mdash;whereto all ears<br>
+ Shall hearken ever, as ye will hearken now.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Happy are we, who first shall hear the
+ tale<br>
+ From thine own lips, and tell it to the sea.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Attend then while I tell.&mdash;<br>
+ &mdash;Parting from Hermes hence, anger'd at heart,
+ <span class="linenum">730</span><a id="page_074"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{74}</span><br>
+ Self-exiled from the heav'ns, forgone, alone,<br>
+ My anguish fasten'd on me, as I went<br>
+ Wandering an alien in the haunts of men.<br>
+ To screen my woe I put my godhead off,<br>
+ Taking the likeness of a worthy dame,<br>
+ A woman of the people well in years;<br>
+ Till going unobserv'd, it irked me soon<br>
+ To be unoccupy'd save by my grief,<br>
+ While men might find distraction for their sorrows<br>
+ In useful toil. Then, of my pity rather <span class="linenum">740</span
+ ><br>
+ Than hope to find their simple cure my own,<br>
+ I took resolve to share and serve their needs,<br>
+ And be as one of them.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Ah, mighty goddess,</span><br>
+ Coudst thou so put thy dignities away,<br>
+ And suffer the familiar brunt of men?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> In all things even as they.&mdash;And
+ sitting down<br>
+ One evening at Eleusis, by the well<br>
+ Under an olive-tree, likening myself<br>
+ Outwardly to some kindly-hearted matron,<br>
+ Whose wisdom and experience are of worth <span class="linenum">750</span
+ ><br>
+ Either where childhood clamorously speaks<br>
+ The engrossing charge of Aphrodite's gifts,<br>
+ Or merry maidens in wide-echoing halls<br>
+ Want sober governance;&mdash;to me, as there<br>
+ I sat, the daughters of King Keleos came,<br>
+ Tall noble damsels, as kings' daughters are,<br>
+ And, marking me a stranger, they drew from me<br>
+ A tale told so engagingly, that they<br>
+ Grew fain to find employment for my skill;<br>
+ &mdash;As men devise in mutual recompense, <span class="linenum">760</span
+ ><br>
+ Hoping the main advantage for themselves;&mdash;<br>
+ And so they bad me follow, and I enter'd<br>
+ The palace of King Keleos, and received<br>
+ There on my knees the youngest of the house,<br>
+ A babe, to nurse him as a mother would:<a
+ id="page_075"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{75}</span><br>
+ And in that menial service I was proud<br>
+ To outrun duty and trust: and there I liv'd<br>
+ Disguised among the maidens many months.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Often as have our guesses aim'd, dear
+ Lady,<br>
+ Where thou didst hide thyself, oft as we wonder'd
+ <span class="linenum">770</span><br>
+ What chosen work was thine, none ever thought<br>
+ That thou didst deign to tend a mortal babe.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What life I led shall be for men to
+ tell.<br>
+ But for this babe, the nursling of my sorrow,<br>
+ Whose peevish cry was my consoling care,<br>
+ How much I came to love him ye shall hear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> What was he named, Lady?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Demophoön.</span><br>
+ Yea, ye shall hear how much I came to love him.<br>
+ For in his small epitome I read<br>
+ The trouble of mankind; in him I saw <span class="linenum">780</span
+ ><br>
+ The hero's helplessness, the countless perils<br>
+ In ambush of life's promise, the desire<br>
+ Blind and instinctive, and the will perverse.<br>
+ His petty needs were man's necessities;<br>
+ In him I nurst all mortal natur', embrac'd<br>
+ With whole affection to my breast, and lull'd<br>
+ Wailing humanity upon my knee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> We see thou wilt not now destroy
+ mankind.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What I coud do to save man was my
+ thought.<br>
+ And, since my love was center'd in the boy,
+ <span class="linenum">790</span><br>
+ My thought was first for him, to rescue him;<br>
+ That, thro' my providence, he ne'er should know<br>
+ Suffering, nor disease, nor fear of death.<br>
+ Therefore I fed him on immortal food,<br>
+ And should have gain'd my wish, so well he throve,<br>
+ But by ill-chance it hapt, once, as I held him<br>
+ Bathed in the fire at midnight (as was my wont),&mdash;<br>
+ His mother stole upon us, and ascare<br>
+ At the strange sight, screaming in loud dismay<br>
+ Compel'd me to unmask, and leave for ever <span class="linenum">800</span
+ ><a id="page_076"></a><span class="pagenumb">{76}</span
+ ><br>
+ The halls of Keleos, and my work undone.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> 'Twas pity that she came!&mdash;Didst thou
+ not grieve to lose<br>
+ The small Demophoön?&mdash;Coudst thou not save him?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I had been blinded. Think ye for
+ yourselves ...<br>
+ What vantage were it to mankind at large<br>
+ That one should be immortal,&mdash;if all beside<br>
+ Must die and suffer misery as before?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Nay, truly. And great envy borne to one<br>
+ So favour'd might have more embitter'd all.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I had been foolish. My sojourn with men
+ <span class="linenum">810</span><br>
+ Had warpt my mind with mortal tenderness.<br>
+ So, questioning myself what real gift<br>
+ I might bestow on man to help his state,<br>
+ I saw that sorrow was his life-companion,<br>
+ To be embrac't bravely, not weakly shun'd:<br>
+ That as by toil man winneth happiness,<br>
+ Thro' tribulation he must come to peace.<br>
+ How to make sorrow his friend then,&mdash;this my task.<br>
+ Here was a mystery ... and how persuade<br>
+ This thorny truth?... Ye do not hearken me.
+ <span class="linenum">820</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Yea, honour'd goddess, yea, we hearken
+ still:<br>
+ Stint not thy tale.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">Ye might not understand.</span><br>
+ My tale to you must be a tale of deeds&mdash;<br>
+ How first I bade King Keleos build for me<br>
+ A temple in Eleusis, and ordain'd<br>
+ My worship, and the mysteries of my thought;<br>
+ Where in the sorrow that I underwent<br>
+ Man's state is pattern'd; and in picture shewn<br>
+ The way of his salvation.... Now with me<br>
+ &mdash;Here is a matter grateful to your ears&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">830</span><br>
+ Your lov'd Persephone hath equal honour,<br>
+ And in the spring her festival of flowers:<br>
+ And if she should return ...
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">[<i>Listening.</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 14.5em"
+ >Ah! hark! what hear I?<a id="page_077"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{77}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> We hear no sound.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Hush ye! Hermes: he comes.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> What hearest thou?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Hermes; and not alone.</span><br>
+ She is there. 'Tis she: I have won.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"> Where? where?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> (<i>aside</i>). Ah! can it be that out of
+ sorrow's night,<br>
+ From tears, from yearning pain, from long despair,<br>
+ Into joy's sunlight I shall come again?&mdash;<br>
+ Aside! stand ye aside! <span class="linenum">840</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"
+ ><i>Enter Hermes leading Persephone.</i></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Her.</span> Mighty Demeter, lo! I execute<br>
+ The will of Zeus and here restore thy daughter.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I have won.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Sweet Mother, thy embrace is as the
+ welcome<br>
+ Of all the earth, thy kiss the breath of life.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Ah! but to me, Cora! Thy voice again...<br>
+ My tongue is trammel'd with excess of joy.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Arise, my nymphs, my Oceanides!<br>
+ My Nereids all, arise! and welcome me!<br>
+ Put off your strange solemnity! arise! <span class="linenum">850</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Ch.</span> Welcome! all welcome, fair Persephone!<br>
+ (1) We came to welcome thee, but fell abash'd<br>
+ Seeing thy purple robe and crystal crown.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Arise and serve my pleasure as of yore.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> And thou too doff thy strange
+ solemnity,<br>
+ That all may see thee as thou art, my Cora,<br>
+ Restor'd and ever mine. Put off thy crown!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Awhile! dear Mother&mdash;what thou say'st
+ is true;<br>
+ I am restor'd to thee, and evermore<br>
+ Shall be restor'd. Yet am I none the less <span class="linenum">860</span
+ ><br>
+ Evermore Queen of Hades: and 'tis meet<br>
+ I wear the crown, the symbol of my reign.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What words are these, my Cora! Evermore<br>
+ Restor'd to me thou say'st ... 'tis well&mdash;but then<a
+ id="page_078"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{78}</span><br>
+ Evermore Queen of Hades ... what is this?<br>
+ I had a dark foreboding till I saw thee:<br>
+ Alas, alas! it lives again: destroy it!<br>
+ Solve me this riddle quickly, if thou mayest.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Let Hermes speak, nor fear thou. All is
+ well.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Her.</span> Divine Demeter, thou hast won thy will,
+ <span class="linenum">870</span><br>
+ And the command of Zeus have I obey'd.<br>
+ Thy daughter is restor'd, and evermore<br>
+ Shall be restor'd to thee as on this day.<br>
+ But Hades holding to his bride, the Fates<br>
+ Were kind also to him, that she should be<br>
+ His queen in Hades as thy child on earth.<br>
+ Yearly, as spring-tide cometh, she is thine<br>
+ While flowers bloom and all the land is gay;<br>
+ But when thy corn is gather'd, and the fields<br>
+ Are bare, and earth withdraws her budding life
+ <span class="linenum">880</span><br>
+ From the sharp bite of winter's angry fang,<br>
+ Yearly will she return and hold her throne<br>
+ With great Aidoneus and the living dead:<br>
+ And she hath eaten with him of such fruit<br>
+ As holds her his true bride for evermore.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Alas! alas!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Rejoice, dear Mother. Let not vain
+ lament<br>
+ Trouble our joy this day, nor idle tears.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Alas! from my own deed my trouble
+ comes:<br>
+ He gave thee of the fruit which I had curs'd:
+ <span class="linenum">890</span><br>
+ I made the poison that enchanted thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Repent not in thy triumph, but rejoice,<br>
+ Who hast thy will in all, as I have mine.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> I have but half my will, how hast thou
+ more?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> It was my childish fancy (thou
+ rememb'rest),<br>
+ I would be goddess of the flowers: I thought<br>
+ That men should innocently honour me<br>
+ With bloodless sacrifice and spring-tide joy.<br>
+ Now Fate, that look'd contrary, hath fulfill'd<br>
+ My project with mysterious efficacy: <span class="linenum">900</span
+ ><a id="page_079"></a><span class="pagenumb">{79}</span
+ ><br>
+ And as a plant that yearly dieth down<br>
+ When summer is o'er, and hideth in the earth,<br>
+ Nor showeth promise in its wither'd leaves<br>
+ That it shall reawaken and put forth<br>
+ Its blossoms any more to deck the spring;<br>
+ So I, the mutual symbol of my choice,<br>
+ Shall die with winter, and with spring revive.<br>
+ How without winter coud I have my spring?<br>
+ How come to resurrection without death?<br>
+ Lo thus our joyful meeting of to-day, <span class="linenum">910</span
+ ><br>
+ Born of our separation, shall renew<br>
+ Its annual ecstasy, by grief refresht:<br>
+ And no more pall than doth the joy of spring<br>
+ Yearly returning to the hearts of men.<br>
+ See then the accomplishment of all my hope:<br>
+ Rejoice, and think not to put off my crown.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What hast thou seen below to reconcile
+ thee<br>
+ To the dark moiety of thy strange fate?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Where have I been, mother? what have I
+ seen?<br>
+ The downward pathway to the gates of death:
+ <span class="linenum">920</span><br>
+ The skeleton of earthly being, stript<br>
+ Of all disguise: the sudden void of night:<br>
+ The spectral records of unwholesome fear:&mdash;<br>
+ Why was it given to me to see these things?<br>
+ The ruin'd godheads, disesteem'd, condemn'd<br>
+ To toil of deathless mockery: conquerors<br>
+ In the reverse of glory, doom'd to rule<br>
+ The multitudinous army of their crimes:<br>
+ The naked retribution of all wrong:&mdash;<br>
+ Why was it given to me to see such things? <span class="linenum">930</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Not without terror, as I think, thou
+ speakest,<br>
+ Nor as one reconcil'd to brook return.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> But since I have seen these things, with
+ salt and fire<br>
+ My spirit is purged, and by this crystal crown<br>
+ Terror is tamed within me. If my words<br>
+ Seem'd to be tinged with terror, 'twas because<a
+ id="page_080"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{80}</span><br>
+ I knew one hour of terror (on the day<br>
+ That took me hence) and with that memory<br>
+ Colour'd my speech, using the terms which paint<br>
+ The blindfold fears of men, who little reckon
+ <span class="linenum">940</span><br>
+ How they by holy innocence and love,<br>
+ By reverence and gentle lives may win<br>
+ A title to the fair Elysian fields,<br>
+ Where the good spirits dwell in ease and light<br>
+ And entertainment of those fair desires<br>
+ That made earth beautiful ... brave souls that spent<br>
+ Their lives for liberty and truth, grave seers<br>
+ Whose vision conquer'd darkness, pious poets<br>
+ Whose words have won Apollo's deathless praise,<br>
+ Who all escape Hell's mysteries, nor come nigh
+ <span class="linenum">950</span><br>
+ The Cave of Cacophysia.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Mysteries!</span><br>
+ What mysteries are these? and what the Cave?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> The mysteries of evil, and the cave<br>
+ Of blackness that obscures them. Even in hell<br>
+ The worst is hidden, and unfructuous night<br>
+ Stifles her essence in her truthless heart.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What is the arch-falsity? I seek to
+ know<br>
+ The mystery of evil. Hast thou seen it?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> I have seen it. Coud I truly rule my
+ kingdom<br>
+ Not having seen it?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Tell me what it is. </span>
+ <span class="linenum">960</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> 'Tis not that I forget it; tho' the
+ thought<br>
+ Is banisht from me. But 'tis like a dream<br>
+ Whose sense is an impression lacking words.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> If it would pain thee telling ...<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Nay, but surely</span><br>
+ The words of gods and men are names of things<br>
+ And thoughts accustom'd: but of things unknown<br>
+ And unimagin'd are no words at all.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> And yet will words sometimes outrun the
+ thought.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> What can be spoken is nothing: 'twere a
+ path<a id="page_081"></a><span class="pagenumb">{81}</span
+ ><br>
+ That leading t'ward some prospect ne'er arrived.
+ <span class="linenum">970</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> The more thou holdest back, the more I
+ long.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> The outward aspect only mocks my words.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Yet what is outward easy is to tell.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Something is possible. This cavern lies<br>
+ In very midmost of deep-hollow'd hell.<br>
+ O'er its torn mouth the black Plutonic rock<br>
+ Is split in sharp disorder'd pinnacles<br>
+ And broken ledges, whereon sit, like apes<br>
+ Upon a wither'd tree, the hideous sins<br>
+ Of all the world: once having seen within <span class="linenum">980</span
+ ><br>
+ The magnetism is heavy on them, and they crawl<br>
+ Palsied with filthy thought upon the peaks;<br>
+ Or, squatting thro' long ages, have become<br>
+ Rooted like plants into the griping clefts:<br>
+ And there they pullulate, and moan, and strew<br>
+ The rock with fragments of their mildew'd growth.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Cora, my child! and hast thou seen these
+ things!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Nay but the outward aspect, figur'd
+ thus<br>
+ In mere material loathsomeness, is nought<br>
+ Beside the mystery that is hid within. <span class="linenum">990</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Search thou for words, I pray, somewhat to
+ tell.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Are there not matters past the thought of
+ men<br>
+ Or gods to know?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">Thou meanest wherefore things</span><br>
+ Should be at all? Or, if they be, why thus,<br>
+ As hot, cold, hard and soft: and wherefore Zeus<br>
+ Had but two brothers; why the stars of heaven<br>
+ Are so innumerable, constellated<br>
+ Just as they are; or why this Sicily<br>
+ Should be three-corner'd? Yes, thou sayest well,<br>
+ Why things are as they are, nor gods nor men
+ <span class="linenum">1000</span><br>
+ Can know. We say that Fate appointed thus,<br>
+ And are content.&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> Suppose, dear Mother, there wer' a temple
+ in heaven,<a id="page_082"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{82}</span><br>
+ Which, dedicated to the unknown Cause<br>
+ And worship of the unseen, had power to draw<br>
+ All that was worthy and good within its gate:<br>
+ And that the spirits who enter'd there became<br>
+ Not only purified and comforted,<br>
+ But that the mysteries of the shrine were such,<br>
+ That the initiated bathed in light <span class="linenum">1010</span><br>
+ Of infinite intelligence, and saw<br>
+ The meaning and the reason of all things,<br>
+ All at a glance distinctly, and perceived<br>
+ The origin of all things to be good,<br>
+ And the énd good, and that what appears as evil<br>
+ Is as a film of dust, that faln thereon,<br>
+ May,&mdash;at one stroke of the hand,&mdash;<br>
+ Be brush'd away, and show the good beneath,<br>
+ Solid and fair and shining: If moreover<br>
+ This blessëd vision were of so great power
+ <span class="linenum">1020</span><br>
+ That none coud e'er forget it or relapse<br>
+ To doubtful ignorance:&mdash;I say, dear Mother,<br>
+ Suppose that there were such a temple in heaven.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> O child, my child! that were a temple
+ indeed.<br>
+ 'Tis such a temple as man needs on earth;<br>
+ A holy shrine that makes no pact with sin,<br>
+ A worthy shrine to draw the worthy and good,<br>
+ A shrine of wisdom trifling not with folly,<br>
+ A shrine of beauty, where the initiated<br>
+ Drank love and light.... Strange thou shouldst speak of it.<br>
+ I have inaugurated such a temple <span class="linenum">1031</span><br>
+ These last days in Eleusis, have ordain'd<br>
+ These very mysteries!&mdash;Strange thou speakest of it.<br>
+ But by what path return we to the Cave<br>
+ Of Cacophysia?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">By this path, dear Mother.</span><br>
+ The Cave of Cacophysia is in all things<br>
+ T'ward evil, as that temple were t'ward good.<br>
+ I enter'd in. Outside the darkness was<a id="page_083"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{83}</span><br>
+ But as accumulated sunlessness;<br>
+ Within 'twas positive as light itself, <span class="linenum">1040</span
+ ><br>
+ A blackness that extinguished: Yet I knew,<br>
+ For Hades told me, that I was to see;<br>
+ And so I waited, till a forking flash<br>
+ Of sudden lightning dazzlingly reveal'd<br>
+ All at a glance. As on a pitchy night<br>
+ The warder of some high acropolis<br>
+ Looks down into the dark, and suddenly<br>
+ Sees all the city with its roofs and streets,<br>
+ Houses and walls, clear as in summer noon,<br>
+ And ere he think of it, 'tis dark again,&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">1050</span><br>
+ So I saw all within the Cave, and held<br>
+ The vision, 'twas so burnt upon my sense.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> What saw'st thou, child? what saw'st
+ thou?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Nay, the things</span><br>
+ Not to be told, because there are no words<br>
+ Of gods or men to paint the inscrutable<br>
+ And full initiation of hell.&mdash;I saw<br>
+ The meaning and the reason of all things,<br>
+ All at a glance, and in that glance perceiv'd<br>
+ The origin of all things to be evil,<br>
+ And the énd evil: that what seems as good <span class="linenum">1060</span
+ ><br>
+ Is as a bloom of gold that spread thereo'er<br>
+ May, by one stroke of the hand,<br>
+ Be brush'd away, and leave the ill beneath<br>
+ Solid and foul and black....<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">Now tell me, child,</span><br>
+ If Hades love thee, that he sent thee thither.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> He said it coud not harm me: and I
+ think<br>
+ It hath not.
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"
+ >[<i>Going up to Demeter, who kisses her.</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">Nay it hath not, ... and I know</span><br>
+ The power of evil is no power at all<br>
+ Against eternal good. 'Tis fire on water,<br>
+ As darkness against sunlight, like a dream
+ <span class="linenum">1070</span><br>
+ To waken'd will. Foolish was I to fear<a id="page_084"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{84}</span><br>
+ That aught coud hurt thee, Cora. But to-day<br>
+ Speak we no more.... This mystery of Hell<br>
+ Will do me service: I'll not tell thee now:<br>
+ But sure it is that Fate o'erruleth all<br>
+ For good or ill: and we (no more than men)<br>
+ Have power to oppose, nor any will nor choice<br>
+ Beyond such wisdom as a fisher hath<br>
+ Who driven by sudden gale far out to sea<br>
+ Handles his fragile boat safe thro' the waves,
+ <span class="linenum">1080</span><br>
+ Making what harbour the wild storm allows.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To-day hard-featured and inscrutable Fate</span
+ ><br>
+ Stands to mine eyes reveal'd, nor frowns upon me.<br>
+ I thought to find thee as I knew thee, and fear'd<br>
+ Only to find thee sorrowful: I find thee<br>
+ Far other than thou wert, nor hurt by Hell.<br>
+ I thought I must console thee, but 'tis thou<br>
+ Playest the comforter: I thought to teach thee,<br>
+ And had prepared my lesson, word by word;<br>
+ But thou art still beyond me. One thing only
+ <span class="linenum">1090</span><br>
+ Of all my predetermin'd plan endures:<br>
+ My purpose was to bid thee to Eleusis<br>
+ For thy spring festival, which three days hence<br>
+ Inaugurates my temple. Thou wilt come?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> I come. And art thou reconcil'd, dear
+ Mother?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Dem.</span> Joy and surprise make tempest in my
+ mind;<br>
+ When their bright stir is o'er, there will be peace.<br>
+ But ere we leave this flowery field, the scene<br>
+ Of strange and beauteous memories evermore,<br>
+ I thank thee, Hermes, for thy willing service.
+ <span class="linenum">1100</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Per.</span> I thank thee, son of Maia, and bid
+ farewell.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap">Her.</span> Have thy joy now, great Mother; and have
+ thou joy,<br>
+ Fairest Persephone, Queen of the Spring.<a
+ id="page_085"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{85}</span><br>
+ </p>
+ <p class="head"><i>CHORUS.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ Fair Persephone, garlands we bring thee,<br>
+ Flow'rs and spring-tide welcome sing thee.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Hades held thee not,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Darkness quell'd thee not.</span><br>
+ Gay and joyful welcome!<br>
+ Welcome, Queen, evermore.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Earth shall own thee, <span class="linenum">1110</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Thy nymphs crown thee,</span><br>
+ Garland thee and crown thee,<br>
+ Crown thee Queen evermore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_086"></a><span class="pagenumb">{86}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_087"></a><span class="pagenumb">{87}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ Eros &amp; Psyche<br><br>
+ <span class="script"
+ ><i
+ >A narrative Poem<br>
+ in twelve measures</i
+ ></span
+ >
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_087a.png"
+ width="75"
+ height="28"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ <span class="smcap"
+ >The story done into english<br>
+ from the latin<br>
+ of<br>
+ apuleius</span
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_087b.png"
+ width="75"
+ height="29"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>L'anima semplicetta che sa nulla.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>O latest born, O loveliest vision far</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>Of all Olympus' faded hierarchy.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_088"></a><span class="pagenumb">{88}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>PREVIOUS EDITIONS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 1. <i>Chiswick Press for Bell &amp; Sons.</i> 1885.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>2. <i>Do. do. revised.</i> 1894.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>3. <i>Smith, Elder &amp; Co. Vol. I</i>. 1898.</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_089"></a><span class="pagenumb">{89}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="FIRST_QUARTER"></a>FIRST QUARTER</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">SPRING</p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ PSYCHE'S EARTHLY PARENTAGE · WORSHIPPED BY<br>
+ MEN · &amp; PERSECUTED BY APHRODITE · SHE IS<br>
+ LOVED &amp; CARRIED OFF BY EROS
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">MARCH</p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In midmost length of hundred-citied Crete,<br>
+ The land that cradl'd Zeus, of old renown,<br>
+ Where grave Demeter nurseried her wheat,<br>
+ And Minos fashion'd law, ere he went down<br>
+ To judge the quaking hordes of Hell's domain,<br>
+ There dwelt a King on the Omphalian plain<br>
+ Eastward of Ida, in a little town.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Three daughters had this King, of whom my tale<br>
+ Time hath preserved, that loveth to despise<br>
+ The wealth which men misdeem of much avail,<br>
+ Their glories for themselves that they devise;<br>
+ For clerkly is he, old hard-featured Time,<br>
+ And poets' fabl'd song and lovers' rhyme<br>
+ He storeth on his shelves to please his eyes.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_090"></a><span class="pagenumb">{90}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ These three princesses all were fairest fair;<br>
+ And of the elder twain 'tis truth to say<br>
+ That if they stood not high above compare,<br>
+ Yet in their prime they bore the palm away;<br>
+ Outwards of loveliness; but Nature's mood,<br>
+ Gracious to make, had grudgingly endued<br>
+ And marr'd by gifting ill the beauteous clay.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And being in honour they were well content<br>
+ To feed on lovers' looks and courtly smiles,<br>
+ To hang their necks with jewel'd ornament,<br>
+ And gold, that vanity in vain beguiles,<br>
+ And live in gaze, and take their praise for due,<br>
+ To be the fairest maidens then to view<br>
+ Within the shores of Greece and all her isles.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But of that youngest one, the third princess,</span
+ ><br>
+ There is no likeness; since she was as far<br>
+ From pictured beauty as is ugliness,<br>
+ Though on the side where heavenly wonders are,<br>
+ Ideals out of being and above,<br>
+ Which music worshippeth, but if love love,<br>
+ 'Tis, as the poet saith, to love a star.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Her vision rather drave from passion's heart<br>
+ What earthly soil it had afore possest;<br>
+ Since to man's purer unsubstantial part<br>
+ The brightness of her presence was addrest:<br>
+ And such as mock'd at God, when once they saw<br>
+ Her heavenly glance, were humbl'd, and in awe<br>
+ Of things unseen, return'd to praise the Best.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_091"></a><span class="pagenumb">{91}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And so before her, wheresoe'er she went,<br>
+ Hushing the crowd a thrilling whisper ran,<br>
+ And silent heads were reverently bent;<br>
+ Till from the people the belief began<br>
+ That Love's own mother had come down on earth,<br>
+ Sweet Cytherea, or of mortal birth<br>
+ A greater Goddess was vouchsaf't to man.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Aphrodite's statue in its place<br>
+ Stood without worshippers; if Cretans pray'd<br>
+ For beauty or for children, love or grace,<br>
+ The prayer and vow were offer'd to the maid;<br>
+ Unto the maid their hymns of praise were sung,<br>
+ Their victims bled for her, for her they hung<br>
+ Garland and golden gift, and none forbade.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And thence opinion spread beyond the shores,<br>
+ From isle to isle the wonder flew, it came<br>
+ Across the Ægæan on a thousand oars,<br>
+ Athens and Smyrna caught the virgin's fame;<br>
+ And East or West, where'er the tale had been,<br>
+ The adoration of the foam-born queen<br>
+ Fell to neglect, and men forgot her name.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ No longer to high Paphos now 'twas sail'd;<br>
+ The fragrant altar by the Graces served<br>
+ At Cnidus was forsaken; pilgrims fail'd<br>
+ The rocky island to her name reserved,<br>
+ Proud Ephyra, and Meropis renown'd;<br>
+ 'Twas all for Crete her votaries were bound,<br>
+ And to the Cretan maid her worship swerved.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_092"></a><span class="pagenumb">{92}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Which when in heaven great Aphrodite saw,</span
+ ><br>
+ Who is the breather of the year's bright morn,<br>
+ Fount of desire and beauty without flaw,<br>
+ Herself the life that doth the world adorn;<br>
+ Seeing that without her generative might<br>
+ Nothing can spring upon the shores of light,<br>
+ Nor any bud of joy or love be born;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She, when she saw the insult, did not hide<br>
+ Her indignation, that a mortal frail<br>
+ With her eterne divinity had vied,<br>
+ Her fair Hellenic empire to assail,<br>
+ For which she had fled the doom of Ninus old,<br>
+ And left her wanton images unsoul'd<br>
+ In Babylon and Zidon soon to fail.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Not long,' she cried, 'shall that poor girl of Crete<br>
+ God it in my despite; for I will bring<br>
+ Such mischief on the sickly counterfeit<br>
+ As soon shall cure her tribe of worshipping:<br>
+ Her beauty will I mock with loathèd lust,<br>
+ Bow down her dainty spirit to the dust,<br>
+ And leave her long alive to feel the sting.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With that she calls to her her comely boy,</span
+ ><br>
+ The limber scion of the God of War,<br>
+ The fruit adulterous, which for man's annoy<br>
+ To that fierce partner Cytherea bore,<br>
+ Eros, the ever young, who only grew<br>
+ In mischief, and was Cupid named anew<br>
+ In westering aftertime of latin lore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_093"></a><span class="pagenumb">{93}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ What the first dawn of manhood is, the hour<br>
+ When beauty, from its fleshy bud unpent,<br>
+ Flaunts like the corol of a summer flower,<br>
+ As if all life were for that ornament,<br>
+ Such Eros seemed in years, a trifler gay,<br>
+ The prodigal of an immortal day<br>
+ For ever spending, and yet never spent.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ His skin is brilliant with the nimble flood<br>
+ Of ichor, that comes dancing from his heart,<br>
+ Lively as fire, and redder than the blood,<br>
+ And maketh in his eyes small flashes dart,<br>
+ And curleth his hair golden, and distilleth<br>
+ Honey on his tongue, and all his body filleth<br>
+ With wanton lightsomeness in every part.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Naked he goeth, but with sprightly wings<br>
+ Red, iridescent, are his shoulders fledged.<br>
+ A bow his weapon, which he deftly strings,<br>
+ And little arrows barb'd and keenly edged;<br>
+ And these he shooteth true; but else the youth<br>
+ For all his seeming recketh naught of truth,<br>
+ But most deceiveth where he most is pledged.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Tis he that maketh in men's heart a strife<br>
+ Between remorseful reason and desire,<br>
+ Till with life lost they lose the love of life,<br>
+ And by their own hands wretchedly expire;<br>
+ Or slain in bloody rivalries they miss<br>
+ Even the short embracement of their bliss,<br>
+ His smile of fury and his kiss of fire.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_094"></a><span class="pagenumb">{94}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ He makes the strong man weak, the weak man wild;<br>
+ Ruins great business and purpose high;<br>
+ Brings down the wise to folly reconciled,<br>
+ And martial captains on their knees to sigh:<br>
+ He changeth dynasties, and on the head<br>
+ Of duteous heroes, who for honour bled,<br>
+ Smircheth the laurel that can never die.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Him then she call'd, and gravely kissing told<br>
+ The great dishonour to her godhead done;<br>
+ And how, if he from that in heaven would hold,<br>
+ On earth he must maintain it as her son;<br>
+ The rather that his weapons were most fit,<br>
+ As was his skill ordain'd to champion it;<br>
+ And flattering thus his ready zeal she won.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Whereon she quickly led him down on earth,<br>
+ And show'd him PSYCHE, thus the maid was named;<br>
+ Whom when she show'd, but coud not hide her worth,<br>
+ She grew with envy tenfold more enflamed.<br>
+ 'But if,' she cried, 'thou smite her as I bid,<br>
+ Soon shall our glory of this affront be rid,<br>
+ And she and all her likes for ever shamed.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Make her to love the loathliest, basest wretch,<br>
+ Deform'd in body, and of moonstruck mind,<br>
+ A hideous brute and vicious, born to fetch<br>
+ Anger from dogs and cursing from the blind.<br>
+ And let her passion for the monster be<br>
+ As shameless and detestable as he<br>
+ Is most extreme and vile of humankind.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_095"></a><span class="pagenumb">{95}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Which said, when he agreed, she spake no more,</span
+ ><br>
+ But left him to his task, and took her way<br>
+ Beside the ripples of the shell-strewn shore,<br>
+ The southward stretching margin of a bay,<br>
+ Whose sandy curves she pass'd, and taking stand<br>
+ Upon its taper horn of furthest land,<br>
+ Lookt left and right to rise and set of day.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Fair was the sight; for now, though full an hour<br>
+ The sun had sunk, she saw the evening light<br>
+ In shifting colour to the zenith tower,<br>
+ And grow more gorgeous ever and more bright.<br>
+ Bathed in the warm and comfortable glow,<br>
+ The fair delighted queen forgot her woe,<br>
+ And watch'd the unwonted pageant of the night.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Broad and low down, where late the sun had been<br>
+ A wealth of orange-gold was thickly shed,<br>
+ Fading above into a field of green,<br>
+ Like apples ere they ripen into red;<br>
+ Then to the height a variable hue<br>
+ Of rose and pink and crimson freak'd with blue,<br>
+ And olive-border'd clouds o'er lilac led.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ High in the opposèd west the wondering moon<br>
+ All silvery green in flying green was fleec't;<br>
+ And round the blazing South the splendour soon<br>
+ Caught all the heaven, and ran to North and East;<br>
+ And Aphrodite knew the thing was wrought<br>
+ By cunning of Poseidon, and she thought<br>
+ She would go see with whom he kept his feast.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_096"></a><span class="pagenumb">{96}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Swift to her wish came swimming on the waves<br>
+ His lovely ocean nymphs, her guides to be,<br>
+ The Nereids all, who live among the caves<br>
+ And valleys of the deep, Cymodocè,<br>
+ Agavè, blue-eyed Hallia and Nesæa,<br>
+ Speio, and Thoë, Glaucè and Actæa,<br>
+ Iaira, Melitè and Amphinomè,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Apseudès and Nemertès, Callianassa,<br>
+ Cymothoë, Thaleia, Limnorrhea,<br>
+ Clymenè, Ianeira and Ianassa,<br>
+ Doris and Panopè and Galatea,<br>
+ Dynamenè, Dexamenè and Maira,<br>
+ Ferusa, Doto, Proto, Callianeira,<br>
+ Amphithoë, Oreithuia and Amathea.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And after them sad Melicertes drave<br>
+ His chariot, that with swift unfellied wheel,<br>
+ By his two dolphins drawn along the wave,<br>
+ Flew as they plunged, yet did not dip nor reel,<br>
+ But like a plough that shears the heavy land<br>
+ Stood on the flood, and back on either hand<br>
+ O'erturn'd the briny furrow with its keel.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Behind came Tritons, that their conches blew,<br>
+ Greenbearded, tail'd like fish, all sleek and stark;<br>
+ And hippocampi tamed, a bristly crew,<br>
+ The browzers of old Proteus' weedy park,<br>
+ Whose chiefer Mermen brought a shell for boat,<br>
+ And balancing its hollow fan afloat,<br>
+ Push'd it to shore and bade the queen embark:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_097"></a><span class="pagenumb">{97}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And then the goddess stept upon the shell<br>
+ Which took her weight; and others threw a train<br>
+ Of soft silk o'er her, that unfurl'd to swell<br>
+ In sails, at breath of flying Zephyrs twain;<br>
+ And all her way with foam in laughter strewn,<br>
+ With stir of music and of conches blown,<br>
+ Was Aphrodite launch'd upon the main.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20; margin-left: 13%">APRIL</p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But fairest Psyche still in favour rose,<br>
+ Nor knew the jealous power against her sworn;<br>
+ And more her beauty now surpass't her foe's,<br>
+ Since 'twas transfigured by the spirit forlorn,<br>
+ That writeth, to the perfecting of grace,<br>
+ Immortal question in a mortal face,<br>
+ The vague desire whereunto man is born.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Already in good time her sisters both,<br>
+ Whose honest charms were never famed as hers,<br>
+ With princes of the isle had plighted troth,<br>
+ And gone to rule their foreign courtiers;<br>
+ But she, exalted evermore beyond<br>
+ Their loveliness, made yet no lover fond,<br>
+ And gain'd but number to her worshippers.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_098"></a><span class="pagenumb">{98}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ To joy in others' joy had been her lot,<br>
+ And now that that was gone she wept to see<br>
+ How her transcendent beauty overshot<br>
+ The common aim of all felicity.<br>
+ For love she sigh'd; and had some peasant rude<br>
+ For true love's sake in simple passion woo'd,<br>
+ Then Psyche had not scorn'd his wife to be.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >For what is Beauty, if it doth not fire</span
+ ><br>
+ The loving answer of an eager soul?<br>
+ Since 'tis the native food of man's desire,<br>
+ And doth to good our varying world control;<br>
+ Which, when it was not, was for Beauty's sake<br>
+ Desired and made by Love, who still doth make<br>
+ A beauteous path thereon to Beauty's goal.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Should all men by some hateful venom die,<br>
+ The pity were that o'er the unpeopl'd sphere<br>
+ The sun would still bedeck the evening sky<br>
+ And the unimaginable hues appear,<br>
+ With none to mark the rose and gold and green;<br>
+ That Spring should walk the earth, and nothing seen<br>
+ Of her fresh delicacy year by year.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And if some beauteous things,&mdash;whose heavenly worth<br>
+ And function overpass our mortal sense,&mdash;<br>
+ Lie waste and unregarded on the earth<br>
+ By reason of our gross intelligence,<br>
+ These are not vain, because in nature's scheme<br>
+ It lives that we shall grow from dream to dream<br>
+ In time to gather an enchantment thence.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_099"></a><span class="pagenumb">{99}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Even as we see the fairest works of men<br>
+ Awhile neglected, and the makers die;<br>
+ But Truth comes weeping to their graves, and then<br>
+ Their fames victoriously mounting high<br>
+ Do battle with the regnant names of eld,<br>
+ To win their seats; as when the Gods rebel'd<br>
+ Against their sires and drave them from the sky.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But to be praised for beauty and denied<br>
+ The meed of beauty, this was yet unknown:<br>
+ The best and bravest men have ever vied<br>
+ To win the fairest women for their own.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thus Psyche spake, or reason'd in her mind,</span
+ ><br>
+ Disconsolate; and with self-pity pined,<br>
+ In the deserted halls wandering alone.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And grievèd grew the King to see her woe:<br>
+ And blaming first the gods for her disease,<br>
+ He purposed to their oracle to go<br>
+ To question how he might their wrath appease,<br>
+ Or, if that might not be, the worst to hear,&mdash;<br>
+ Which is the last poor hope of them that fear.&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >So he took his ship upon the northern seas,</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And journeying to the shrine of Delphi went,<br>
+ The temple of Apollo Pythian,<br>
+ Where when the god he question'd if 'twas meant<br>
+ That Psyche should be wed, and to what man,<br>
+ The tripod shook, and o'er the vaporous well<br>
+ The chanting Pythoness gave oracle,<br>
+ And thus in priestly verse the sentence ran:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_100"></a><span class="pagenumb">{100}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <i
+ >High on the topmost rock with funeral feast<br>
+ Convey and leave the maid, nor look to find<br>
+ A mortal husband, but a savage beast,<br>
+ The viperous scourge of gods and humankind;<br>
+ Who shames and vexes all, and as he flies<br>
+ With sword and fire, Zeus trembles in the skies,<br>
+ And groans arise from souls to hell consigned.</i
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With which reply the King return'd full sad:</span
+ ><br>
+ For though he nothing more might understand,<br>
+ Yet in the bitter bidding that he had<br>
+ No man made question of the plain command,<br>
+ That he must sacrifice the tender flower<br>
+ Of his own blood to a demonian power,<br>
+ Upon the rocky mount with his own hand.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Some said that she to Talos was devote,</span
+ ><br>
+ The metal giant, who with mile-long stride<br>
+ Cover'd the isle, walking around by rote<br>
+ Thrice every day at his appointed tide;<br>
+ Who shepherded the sea-goats on the coast,<br>
+ And, as he past, caught up and live would roast,<br>
+ Pressing them to his burning ribs and side:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Whose head was made of fine gold-beaten work<br>
+ Of silver pure his arms and gleaming chest,<br>
+ Thence of green-bloomèd bronze far as the fork,<br>
+ Of iron weather-rusted all the rest.<br>
+ One single vein he had, which running down<br>
+ From head to foot was open in his crown,<br>
+ And closèd by a nail; such was this pest.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_101"></a><span class="pagenumb">{101}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A little while they spent in sad delay,</span
+ ><br>
+ Then order'd, as the oracle had said,<br>
+ The cold feast and funereal display<br>
+ Wherewith the fated bridal should be sped:<br>
+ And their black pageantry and vain despairing<br>
+ When Psyche saw, and for herself preparing<br>
+ The hopeless ceremonial of the dead,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then spake she to the King and said 'O Sire,<br>
+ Why wilt thou veil those venerable eyes<br>
+ With piteous tears, which must of me require<br>
+ More tears again than for myself arise?<br>
+ Then, on the day my beauty first o'erstept<br>
+ Its mortal place it had been well to have wept;<br>
+ But now the fault beyond our ruing lies.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'As to be worship'd was my whole undoing,<br>
+ So my submission must the forfeit pay:<br>
+ And welcome were the morning of my wooing,<br>
+ Tho' after it should dawn no other day.<br>
+ Up to the mountain! for I hear the voice<br>
+ Of my belovèd on the winds,
+ <i
+ >Rejoice,<br>
+ Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away</i
+ >!'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With such distemper'd speech, that little cheer'd</span
+ ><br>
+ Her mourning house, she went to choose with care<br>
+ The raiment for her day of wedlock weird,<br>
+ Her body as for burial to prepare;<br>
+ But laved with bridal water, from the stream<br>
+ Where Hera bathed; for still her fate supreme<br>
+ Was doubtful, whether Love or Death it were:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_102"></a><span class="pagenumb">{102}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Love that is made of joy, and Death of fear:<br>
+ Nay, but not these held Psyche in suspense;<br>
+ Hers was the hope that following by the bier<br>
+ Boweth its head beneath the dark immense:<br>
+ Her fear the dread of life that turns to hide<br>
+ Its tragic tears, what hour the happy bride<br>
+ Ventures for love her maiden innocence.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">They set on high upon the bridal wain</span
+ ><br>
+ Her bed for bier, and yet no corpse thereon;<br>
+ But like as when unto a warrior slain<br>
+ And not brought home the ceremonies done<br>
+ Are empty, for afar his body brave<br>
+ Lies lost, deep buried by the wandering wave<br>
+ Or 'neath the foes his fury fell upon,&mdash;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So was her hearse: and with it went afore,<br>
+ Singing the solemn dirge that moves to tears,<br>
+ The singers; and behind, clad as for war,<br>
+ The King uncrown'd among his mournful peers,<br>
+ All 'neath their armour robed in linen white;<br>
+ And in their left were shields, and in their right<br>
+ Torches they bore aloft instead of spears.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And next the virgin tribe in white forth sail'd,<br>
+ With wreaths of dittany; and 'midst them there<br>
+ Went Psyche, all in lily-whiteness veil'd,<br>
+ The white Quince-blossom chapleting her hair:<br>
+ And last the common folk, a weeping crowd,<br>
+ Far as the city-gates with wailings loud<br>
+ Follow'd the sad procession in despair.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_103"></a><span class="pagenumb">{103}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus forth and up the mount they went, until<br>
+ The funeral chariot must be left behind,<br>
+ Since road was none for steepness of the hill;<br>
+ And slowly by the narrow path they wind:<br>
+ All afternoon their white and scatter'd file<br>
+ Toil'd on distinct, ascending many a mile<br>
+ Over the long brown slopes and crags unkind.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But ere unto the snowy peak they came<br>
+ Of that stormshapen pyramid so high,<br>
+ 'Twas evening, and with footsteps slow and lame<br>
+ They gather'd up their lagging company:<br>
+ And then her sire, even as Apollo bade,<br>
+ Set on the topmost rock the hapless maid,<br>
+ With trembling hands and melancholy cry.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And now the sun was sunk; only the peak<br>
+ Flash'd like a jewel in the deepening blue:<br>
+ And from the shade beneath none dared to speak,<br>
+ But all look'd up, where glorified anew<br>
+ Psyche sat islanded in living day.<br>
+ Breathless they watcht her, till the last red ray<br>
+ Fled from her lifted arm that waved adieu.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There left they her, turning with sad farewells<br>
+ To haste their homeward course, as best they might:<br>
+ But night was crowding up the barren fells,<br>
+ And hid full soon their rocky path from sight;<br>
+ And each unto his stumbling foot to hold<br>
+ His torch was fain, for o'er the moon was roll'd<br>
+ A mighty cloud from heaven, to blot her light.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_104"></a><span class="pagenumb">{104}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And thro' the darkness for long while was seen<br>
+ That armour'd train with waving fires to thread<br>
+ Downwards, by pass, defile, and black ravine,<br>
+ Each leading on the way that he was led.<br>
+ Slowly they gain'd the plain, and one by one<br>
+ Into the shadows of the woods were gone,<br>
+ Or in the clinging mists were quench'd and fled.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But unto Psyche, pondering o'er her doom</span
+ ><br>
+ In tearful silence on her stony chair,<br>
+ A Zephyr straying out of heaven's wide room<br>
+ Rush'd down, and gathering round her unaware<br>
+ Fill'd with his breath her vesture and her veil;<br>
+ And like a ship, that crowding all her sail<br>
+ Leans to accompany the tranquil air,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She yielded, and was borne with swimming brain<br>
+ And airy joy, along the mountain side,<br>
+ Till, hid from earth by ridging summits twain,<br>
+ They came upon a valley deep and wide;<br>
+ Where the strong Zephyr with his burden sank,<br>
+ And laid her down upon a grassy bank,<br>
+ 'Mong thyme and violets and daisies pied.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And straight upon the touch of that sweet bed<br>
+ Both woe and wonder melted fast away:<br>
+ And sleep with gentle stress her sense o'erspread,<br>
+ Gathering as darkness doth on drooping day:<br>
+ And nestling to the ground, she slowly drew<br>
+ Her wearied limbs together, and, ere she knew,<br>
+ Wrapt in forgetfulness and slumber lay.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_105"></a><span class="pagenumb">{105}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">MAY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ After long sleep when Psyche first awoke<br>
+ Among the grasses 'neath the open skies,<br>
+ And heard the mounting larks, whose carol spoke<br>
+ Delighted invitation to arise,<br>
+ She lay as one who after many a league<br>
+ Hath slept off memory with his long fatigue,<br>
+ And waking knows not in what place he lies:<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Anon her quickening thought took up its task,<br>
+ And all came back as it had happ'd o'ernight;<br>
+ The sad procession of the wedding mask,<br>
+ The melancholy toiling up the height,<br>
+ The solitary rock where she was left;<br>
+ And thence in dark and airy waftage reft,<br>
+ How on the flowers she had been disburden'd light.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thereafter she would rise and see what place<br>
+ That voyage had its haven in, and found<br>
+ She stood upon a little hill, whose base<br>
+ Shelved off into the valley all around;<br>
+ And all round that the steep cliffs rose away,<br>
+ Save on one side where to the break of day<br>
+ The widening dale withdrew in falling ground.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_106"></a><span class="pagenumb">{106}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There, out from over sea, and scarce so high<br>
+ As she, the sun above his watery blaze<br>
+ Upbroke the grey dome of the morning sky,<br>
+ And struck the island with his level rays;<br>
+ Sifting his gold thro' lazy mists, that still<br>
+ Climb'd on the shadowy roots of every hill,<br>
+ And in the tree-tops breathed their silvery haze.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ At hand on either side there was a wood;<br>
+ And on the upward lawn, that sloped between,<br>
+ Not many paces back a temple stood,<br>
+ By even steps ascending from the green;<br>
+ With shaft and pediment of marble made,<br>
+ It fill'd the passage of the rising glade,<br>
+ And there withstay'd the sun in dazzling sheen.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Too fair for human art, so Psyche thought,<br>
+ It might the fancy of some god rejoice;<br>
+ Like to those halls which lame Hephæstos wrought,<br>
+ Original, for each god to his choice,<br>
+ In high Olympus; where his matchless lyre<br>
+ Apollo wakes, and the responsive choir<br>
+ Of Muses sing alternate with sweet voice.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Wondering she drew anigh, and in a while<br>
+ Went up the steps as she would entrance win,<br>
+ And faced her shadow 'neath the peristyle<br>
+ Upon the golden gate, whose flanges twin&mdash;<br>
+ As there she stood, irresolute at heart<br>
+ To try&mdash;swung to her of themselves apart;<br>
+ Whereat she past between and stood within.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_107"></a><span class="pagenumb">{107}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A foursquare court it was with marble floor'd,</span
+ ><br>
+ Embay'd about with pillar'd porticoes,<br>
+ That echo'd in a somnolent accord<br>
+ The music of a fountain, which arose<br>
+ Sparkling in air, and splashing in its tank;<br>
+ Whose wanton babble, as it swell'd or sank,<br>
+ Gave idle voice to silence and repose.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thro' doors beneath the further colonnade,<br>
+ Like a deep cup's reflected glooms of gold,<br>
+ The inner rooms glow'd with inviting shade:<br>
+ And, standing in the court, she might behold<br>
+ Cedar, and silk, and silver; and that all<br>
+ The pargeting of ceiling and of wall<br>
+ Was fresco'd o'er with figures manifold.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then making bold to go within, she heard<br>
+ Murmur of gentle welcome in her ear;<br>
+ And seeing none that coud have spoken word,<br>
+ She waited: when again
+ <span class="english"
+ >Lady, draw near;<br>
+ Enter!</span
+ >
+ was cried; and now more voices came<br>
+ From all the air around calling her name,<br>
+ And bidding her rejoice and have no fear.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And one, if she would rest, would show her bed,<br>
+ Pillow'd for sleep, with fragrant linen fine;<br>
+ One, were she hungry, had a table spread<br>
+ Like as the high gods have it when they dine:<br>
+ Or, would she bathe, were those would heat the bath;<br>
+ The joyous cries contending in her path,<br>
+ <span class="english">Psyche</span>, they said,
+ <span class="english">What wilt thou? all is thine</span
+ >.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_108"></a><span class="pagenumb">{108}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Psyche would have thank'd their service true,<br>
+ But that she fear'd her echoing words might scare<br>
+ Those sightless tongues; and well by dream she knew<br>
+ The voices of the messengers of prayer,<br>
+ Which fly upon the gods' commandment, when<br>
+ They answer the supreme desires of men,<br>
+ Or for a while in pity hush their care.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Twas fancy's consummation, and because<br>
+ She would do joy no curious despite,<br>
+ She made no wonder how the wonder was;<br>
+ Only concern'd to take her full delight.<br>
+ So to the bath,&mdash;what luxury could be<br>
+ Better enhanced by eyeless ministry?&mdash;<br>
+ She follows with the voices that invite.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There being deliciously refresht, from soil<br>
+ Of earth made pure by water, fire, and air,<br>
+ They clad her in soft robes of Asian toil,<br>
+ Scented, that in her queenly wardrobe were;<br>
+ And led her forth to dine, and all around<br>
+ Sang as they served, the while a choral sound<br>
+ Of strings unseen and reeds the burden bare.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ P athetic strains and passionate they wove,<br>
+ U rgent in ecstasies of heavenly sense;<br>
+ R esponsive rivalries, that, while they strove<br>
+ C ombined in full harmonious suspense,<br>
+ E ntrancing wild desire, then fell at last<br>
+ L ull'd in soft closes, and with gay contrast<br>
+ L aunch'd forth their fresh unwearied excellence.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_109"></a><span class="pagenumb">{109}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Now Psyche, when her twofold feast was o'er,</span
+ ><br>
+ Would feed her eye; and choosing for her guide<br>
+ A low-voiced singer, bade her come explore<br>
+ The wondrous house; until on every side<br>
+ As surfeited with beauty, and seeing nought<br>
+ But what was rich and fair beyond her thought,<br>
+ And all her own, thus to the voice she cried:<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Am I indeed a goddess, or is this<br>
+ But to be dead: and through the gates of death<br>
+ Passing unwittingly doth man not miss<br>
+ Body nor memory nor living breath;<br>
+ Nor by demerits of his deeds is cast,<br>
+ But, paid with the desire he holdeth fast,<br>
+ Is holp with all his heart imagineth?'<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But her for all reply the wandering tongue<br>
+ Call'd to the chamber where her bed was laid<br>
+ With flower'd broideries of linen hung:<br>
+ And round the walls in painting were portray'd<br>
+ Love's victories over the gods renown'd.<br>
+ Ares and Aphrodite here lay bound<br>
+ In the fine net that dark Hephæstus made:<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Here Zeus, in likeness of a tawny bull,<br>
+ Stoop'd on the Cretan shore his mighty knee,<br>
+ While off his back Europa beautiful<br>
+ Stept pale against the blue Carpathian sea;<br>
+ And here Apollo, as he caught amazed<br>
+ Daphne, for lo! her hands shot forth upraised<br>
+ In leaves, her feet were rooted like a tree:<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_110"></a><span class="pagenumb">{110}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Here Dionysos, springing from his car<br>
+ At sight of Ariadne; here uplept<br>
+ Adonis to the chase, breaking the bar<br>
+ Of Aphrodite's arm for love who wept:<br>
+ He spear in hand, with leashèd dogs at strain;<br>
+ A marvellous work. But Psyche soon grown fain<br>
+ Of rest, betook her to her bed and slept.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Nor long had slept, when at a sudden stir<br>
+ She woke; and one, that thro' the dark made way,<br>
+ Drew near, and stood beside; and over her<br>
+ The curtain rustl'd. Trembling now she lay,<br>
+ Fainting with terror: till upon her face<br>
+ A kiss, and with two gentle arms' embrace,<br>
+ A voice that call'd her name in loving play.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Though for the darkness she coud nothing see,<br>
+ She wish'd not then for what the night denied:<br>
+ This was the lover she had lack'd, and she,<br>
+ Loving his loving, was his willing bride.<br>
+ O'erjoy'd she slept again, o'erjoy'd awoke<br>
+ At break of morn upon her love to look;<br>
+ When lo! his empty place lay by her side.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So all that day she spent in company<br>
+ Of the soft voices; and <span class="english">Of right</span>, they
+ said,<br>
+ <span class="english"
+ >Art thou our Lady now. Be happily<br>
+ Thy bridal morrow by thy servants sped.</span
+ ><br>
+ But she but long'd for night, if that might bring<br>
+ Her lover back; and he on secret wing<br>
+ Came with the dark, and in the darkness fled.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_111"></a><span class="pagenumb">{111}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And this was all her life; for every night</span
+ ><br>
+ He came, and though his name she never learn'd,<br>
+ Nor was his image yielded to her sight<br>
+ At morn or eve, she neither look'd nor yearn'd<br>
+ Beyond her happiness: and custom brought<br>
+ An ease to pleasure; nor would Psyche's thought<br>
+ Have ever to her earthly home return'd,<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But that one night he said 'Psyche, my soul,<br>
+ Sad danger threatens us: thy sisters twain<br>
+ Come to the mountain top, whence I thee stole,<br>
+ And thou wilt hear their voices thence complain.<br>
+ Answer them not: for it must end our love<br>
+ If they should hear or spy thee from above.'<br>
+ And Psyche said 'Their cry shall be in vain.'<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But being again alone, she thought 'twas hard<br>
+ On her own blood; and blamed her joy as thief<br>
+ Of theirs, her comfort which their comfort barr'd;<br>
+ When she their care might be their care's relief.<br>
+ All day she brooded on her father's woe,<br>
+ And when at night her lover kisst her, lo!<br>
+ Her tender face was wet with tears of grief.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then question'd why she wept, she all confest;<br>
+ And begg'd of him she might but once go nigh<br>
+ To set her sire's and sisters' fears at rest;<br>
+ Till he for pity coud not but comply:<br>
+ 'Only if they should ask thee of thy love<br>
+ Discover nothing to their ears above.'<br>
+ And Psyche said 'In vain shall be their cry.'<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_112"></a><span class="pagenumb">{112}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And yet with day no sooner was alone,<br>
+ Than she for loneliness her promise rued:<br>
+ That having so much pleasure for her own,<br>
+ 'Twas all unshared and spent in solitude.<br>
+ And when at night her love flew to his place,<br>
+ More than afore she shamed his fond embrace,<br>
+ And piteously with tears her plaint renew'd.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The more he now denied, the more she wept;<br>
+ Nor would in anywise be comforted,<br>
+ Unless her sisters, on the Zephyr swept,<br>
+ Should in those halls be one day bathed and fed,<br>
+ And see themselves the palace where she reign'd.<br>
+ And he, by force of tears at last constrain'd,<br>
+ Granted her wish unwillingly, and said:<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Much to our peril hast thou won thy will;<br>
+ Thy sisters' love, seeing thee honour'd so,<br>
+ Will sour to envy, and with jealous skill<br>
+ Will pry to learn the thing that none may know.<br>
+ Answer not, nor inquire; for know that I<br>
+ The day thou seest my face far hence shall fly,<br>
+ And thou anew to bitterest fate must go.'<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But Psyche said, 'Thy love is more than life;<br>
+ To have thee leaveth nothing to be won:<br>
+ For should the noonday prove me to be wife<br>
+ Even of the beauteous Eros, who is son<br>
+ Of Cypris, I coud never love thee more.'<br>
+ Whereat he fondly kisst her o'er and o'er,<br>
+ And peace was 'twixt them till the night was done.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_113"></a><span class="pagenumb">{113}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="SECOND_QUARTER"></a>SECOND QUARTER</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">SUMMER</p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ PSYCHE'S SISTERS · SNARING HER TO DESTRUCTION ·<br>
+ ARE THEMSELVES DESTROYED<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">JUNE</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And truly need there was to the old King<br>
+ For consolation: since the mournful day<br>
+ Of Psyche's fate he took no comforting,<br>
+ But only for a speedy death would pray;<br>
+ And on his head his hair grew silver-white.<br>
+ &mdash;Such on life's topmost bough is sorrow's blight,<br>
+ When the stout heart is cankering to decay.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Which when his daughters learnt, they both were quick<br>
+ Comfort and solace to their sire to lend.<br>
+ But as not seldom they who nurse the sick<br>
+ Will take the malady from them they tend,<br>
+ So happ'd it now; for they who fail'd to cheer<br>
+ Grew sad themselves, and in that palace drear<br>
+ Increased the evil that they came to mend.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_114"></a><span class="pagenumb">{114}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And them the unhappy father sent to seek<br>
+ Where Psyche had been left, if they might find<br>
+ What monster held her on the savage peak;<br>
+ Or if she there had died of hunger pined,<br>
+ And, by wild eagles stript, her scatter'd bones<br>
+ Might still be gather'd from the barren stones;<br>
+ Or if her fate had left no trace behind.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >So just upon this time her sisters both</span
+ ><br>
+ Climb'd on the cliff that hung o'er Psyche's vale;<br>
+ And finding there no sign, to leave were loth<br>
+ Ere well assured she lurk'd not within hail.<br>
+ So calling loud her name, 'Psyche!' they cried,<br>
+ 'Psyche, O Psyche!' and when none replied<br>
+ They sank upon the rocks to weep and wail.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But Psyche heard their voices where she sat,<br>
+ And summoning the Zephyr bade him fleet<br>
+ Those mourners down unto the grassy plat<br>
+ 'Midst of her garden, where she had her seat.<br>
+ Then from the dizzy steep the wondering pair<br>
+ Came swiftly sinking on his buoyant air,<br>
+ And stood upon the terrace at her feet.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Upsprang she then, and kiss'd them and embraced,<br>
+ And said 'Lo, here am I, I whom ye mourn.<br>
+ I am not dead, nor tortured, nor disgraced,<br>
+ But blest above all days since I was born:<br>
+ Wherefore be glad. Enter my home and see<br>
+ How little cause has been to grieve for me,<br>
+ And my desertion on the rocks forlorn.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_115"></a><span class="pagenumb">{115}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So entering by the golden gate, or e'er<br>
+ The marvel of their hither flight had waned,<br>
+ Fresh wonder took them now, for everywhere<br>
+ Their eyes that lit on beauty were enchain'd;<br>
+ And Psyche's airy service, as she bade,<br>
+ Perform'd its magic office, and display'd<br>
+ The riches of the palace where she reign'd.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And through the perfumed chambers they were led,<br>
+ And bathed therein; and after, set to sup,<br>
+ Were upon dreamlike delicacies fed,<br>
+ And wine more precious than its golden cup.<br>
+ Till seeing nothing lack'd and naught was theirs,<br>
+ Their happiness fell from them unawares,<br>
+ And bitter envy in their hearts sprang up.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ At last one said 'Psyche, since not alone<br>
+ Thou livest here in joy, as well we wot,<br>
+ Who is the man who should these wonders own,<br>
+ Or god, I say, and still appeareth not?<br>
+ What is his name? What rank and guise hath he,<br>
+ Whom winds and spirits serve, who honoureth thee<br>
+ Above all others in thy blissful lot?'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But Psyche when that wistful speech she heard<br>
+ Was ware of all her spouse had warn'd her of:<br>
+ And uttering a disingenuous word,<br>
+ Said 'A youth yet unbearded is my love;<br>
+ He goeth hunting on the plains to-day,<br>
+ And with his dogs hath wander'd far away;<br>
+ And not till eve can he return above.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_116"></a><span class="pagenumb">{116}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then fearing to be nearer plied, she rose<br>
+ And brought her richest jewels one by one,<br>
+ Bidding them choose and take whate'er they chose;<br>
+ And beckoning the Zephyr spake anon<br>
+ That he should waft her sisters to the peak;<br>
+ The which he did, and, ere they more coud speak,<br>
+ They rose on high, and in the wind were gone.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Nor till again they came upon the road,</span
+ ><br>
+ Which from the mountain shoulder o'er the plain<br>
+ Led to the city of their sire's abode,<br>
+ Found they their tongues, though full of high disdain<br>
+ Their hearts were, but kept silence, till the strength<br>
+ Of pride and envious hatred burst at length<br>
+ In voice, and thus the elder gan complain:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Cruel and unjust fortune! that of three<br>
+ Sisters, whose being from one fountain well'd,<br>
+ Exalts the last so high from her degree,<br>
+ And leaves the first to be so far excel'd.<br>
+ My husband is a poor and niggard churl<br>
+ To him, whoe'er he be, that loves the girl.<br>
+ Oh! in what godlike state her house is held!'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Ay,' said the other, 'to a gouty loon<br>
+ Am I not wedded? Lo! thy hurt is mine:<br>
+ But never call me woman more, if soon<br>
+ I cannot lure her from her height divine.<br>
+ Nay, she shall need her cunning wit to save<br>
+ The wealth of which so grudgingly she gave;<br>
+ Wherefore thy hand and heart with me combine.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_117"></a><span class="pagenumb">{117}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'She but received us out of pride, to show<br>
+ Her state, well deeming that her happiness<br>
+ Was little worth while there was none to know;<br>
+ So is our lot uninjured if none guess.<br>
+ Reveal we nothing therefore, but the while<br>
+ Together scheme this wanton to beguile,<br>
+ And bring her boasting godhead to distress.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So fresh disordering their dress and hair,<br>
+ With loud lament they to their sire return,<br>
+ Telling they found not Psyche anywhere,<br>
+ And of her sure mischance could nothing learn:<br>
+ And with that lie the wounded man they slew,<br>
+ Hiding the saving truth which well they knew;<br>
+ Nor did his piteous grief their heart concern.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Meanwhile her unknown lover did not cease</span
+ ><br>
+ To warn poor Psyche how her sisters plan'd<br>
+ To undermine her love and joy and peace;<br>
+ And urged how well she might their wiles withstand,<br>
+ By keeping them from her delight aloof:<br>
+ For better is security than proof,<br>
+ And malice held afar than near at hand.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'And, dearest wife,' he said, 'since 'tis not long<br>
+ Ere one will come to share thy secrecy,<br>
+ And be thy babe and mine; let nothing wrong<br>
+ The happy months of thy maternity.<br>
+ If thou keep trust, then shalt thou see thy child<br>
+ A god; but if to pry thou be beguiled,<br>
+ The lot of both is death and misery.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_118"></a><span class="pagenumb">{118}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Psyche's simple heart was fill'd with joy,<br>
+ And counting to herself the months and days,<br>
+ Look'd for the time, when she should bear a boy<br>
+ To be her growing stay and godlike praise.<br>
+ And 'O be sure,' she said, 'be sure, my pride<br>
+ Having so rich a promise cannot slide,<br>
+ Even if my love coud fail which thee obeys.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And so most happily her life went by,</span
+ ><br>
+ In thoughts of love dear to her new estate;<br>
+ Until at length the evil day drew nigh,<br>
+ When now her sisters, joined in jealous hate,<br>
+ Set forth again, and plotted by the way<br>
+ How they might best allure her to betray<br>
+ Her secret; with what he their angle bait.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ That night her husband spake to her, and said<br>
+ 'Psyche, thy sisters come: and when they climb<br>
+ The peak they will not tarry to be sped<br>
+ Down by the Zephyr, as that other time,<br>
+ But winging to the wind will cast themselves<br>
+ Out in the air, and on the rocky shelves<br>
+ Be dasht, and pay the penalty of crime.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'So let it be, and so shall we be saved.'<br>
+ Which meditated vengeance of his fear<br>
+ When Psyche heard, now for their life she craved,<br>
+ Whose mere distress erewhile had toucht her near.<br>
+ Around her lover's neck her arms she threw,<br>
+ And pleaded for them by her faith so true,<br>
+ Although they went on doom in judgment clear.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_119"></a><span class="pagenumb">{119}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In terror of bloodguiltiness she now<br>
+ Forgot all other danger; she adjured,<br>
+ Or using playfulness deep sobs would plow<br>
+ Her soft entreaties, not to be endured:<br>
+ Till he at last was fain once more to grant<br>
+ The service of the Zephyr, to enchant<br>
+ That wicked couple from their fate assured.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So ere 'twas noon were noises at the door<br>
+ Of knocking loud and voices high in glee;<br>
+ Such as within that vale never before<br>
+ Had been, and now seem'd most unmeet to be.<br>
+ And Psyche blush'd, though being alone, and rose<br>
+ To meet her sisters and herself unclose<br>
+ The gate that made them of her palace free.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Fondly she kiss'd them, and with kindly cheer<br>
+ Sought to amuse; and they with outward smile<br>
+ O'ermask'd their hate, and called her sweet and dear,<br>
+ Finding affection easy to beguile:<br>
+ And all was smooth, until at last one said<br>
+ 'Tell us, I pray, to whom 'tis thou art wed;<br>
+ 'Mong gods or men, what is his rank and style?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Thou canst not think to hide the truth from us,<br>
+ Who knew thy peevish sorrows when a maid,<br>
+ And see thee now so glad and rapturous,<br>
+ As changed from what thou wert as light from shade;<br>
+ Thy jewels, too, the palace of a king,<br>
+ Nor least the serviceable spiriting,<br>
+ By everything thy secret is betray'd:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_120"></a><span class="pagenumb">{120}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'And yet thou talkest of thy wondrous man<br>
+ No more than if his face thou didst not know.'<br>
+ At which incontinently she began,<br>
+ Forgetful of her word a month ago,<br>
+ Answering 'A merchant rich, of middle age,<br>
+ My husband is; and o'er his features sage<br>
+ His temples are already touch'd with snow.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'But 'gainst his wish since hither ye were brought<br>
+ 'Twere best depart.' Then her accustom'd spell<br>
+ Sped them upon the summit quick as thought;<br>
+ And being alone her doing pleased her well:<br>
+ So was she vext to find her love at night<br>
+ More sad than ever, of her sisters' spite<br>
+ Speaking as one that coud the end foretell.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'And ere long,' said he, 'they will spy again:<br>
+ Let them be dash'd upon the rocks and die;<br>
+ 'Tis they must come to death or thou to pain,<br>
+ To separation, Psyche, thou and I;<br>
+ Nay, and our babe to ill. I therefore crave<br>
+ Thou wilt not even once more these vipers save,<br>
+ Nor to thy love his only boon deny.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But Psyche would not think her sisters' crime<br>
+ So gross and strange, nor coud her danger see;<br>
+ Since 'twere so easy, if at any time<br>
+ They show'd the venom of their hearts, that she<br>
+ Should fan them off upon the willing gust.<br>
+ So she refused, and claiming truer trust,<br>
+ Would in no wise unto their death agree.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_121"></a><span class="pagenumb">{121}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">JULY</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'What think you, sister:' thus one envious fiend<br>
+ To other spake upon their homeward route,<br>
+ 'What of the story that our wit hath glean'd<br>
+ Of this mysterious lover, who can shoot<br>
+ In thirty days from beardless youth to prime,<br>
+ With wisdom in his face before his time,<br>
+ And snowy locks upon his head to boot?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Ay,' said the other, 'true, she lied not well;<br>
+ And thence I gather knows no more than we:<br>
+ For surely 'tis a spirit insensible<br>
+ To whom she is wedded, one she cannot see.<br>
+ 'Tis that I fear; for if 'tis so, her child<br>
+ Will be a god, and she a goddess styled,<br>
+ Which, though I die to let it, shall not be.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Lament we thus no longer. Come, consult<br>
+ What may be done.' And home they came at night,<br>
+ Yet not to rest, but of their plots occult<br>
+ Sat whispering on their beds; and ere 'twas light<br>
+ Resolving on the deed coud not defer;<br>
+ But roused the sleeping house with sudden stir,<br>
+ And sallied forth alone to work their spite.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_122"></a><span class="pagenumb">{122}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And with the noon were climb'd upon the peak,<br>
+ And swam down on the Zephyr as before;<br>
+ But now with piercing cry and doleful shriek<br>
+ They force their entrance through the golden door,<br>
+ Feigning the urgency of bitter truth;<br>
+ Such as deforms a friendly face with ruth,<br>
+ When kindness may not hide ill tidings more.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Psyche when she heard their wailful din,<br>
+ And saw their countenances wan and worn<br>
+ With travel, vigil, and disfiguring sin,<br>
+ Their hair dishevel'd and their habits torn,<br>
+ For trembling scarce coud ask what ill had hapt;<br>
+ And they alert with joy to see her trapt,<br>
+ Launch'd forth amain, and on their drift were borne.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'O Psyche, happiest certainly and blest<br>
+ Up to this hour,' they said, 'thou surely wert,<br>
+ Being of thy fearful peril unpossest;<br>
+ Which now we would not tell but to avert.<br>
+ But we in solemn truth thy spouse have found<br>
+ To be the dragon of this mountain ground,<br>
+ Who holds thee here to work thy shame and hurt.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'As yesternight we rode upon the wind<br>
+ He issued to pursue us from the wood;<br>
+ We saw his back, that through the tree-tops finn'd,<br>
+ His fiery eyes glared from their wrinkl'd hood.<br>
+ Lo, now betimes the oracle, which said<br>
+ How to the savage beast thou shouldst be wed,<br>
+ Is plainly for thy safety understood.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_123"></a><span class="pagenumb">{123}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Long time hath he been known to all that dwell<br>
+ Upon the plain; but now his secret lair<br>
+ Have we discover'd, which none else coud tell:<br>
+ Though many women fallen in his snare<br>
+ Hath he enchanted; who, tradition saith,<br>
+ Taste love awhile, ere to their cruel death<br>
+ They pass in turn upon the summits bare.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Renounce the spells of this accursed vale.<br>
+ We come to save thee, but we dare not stay;<br>
+ Among these sightless spirits our senses quail.<br>
+ Fly with us, fly!' Then Psyche, for her soul<br>
+ Was soft and simple, lost her self-control,<br>
+ And, thinking only of the horrid tale,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Dear sisters,' said she, and her sobbing speech<br>
+ Was broken by her terror, 'it is true<br>
+ That much hath hapt to stablish what ye teach;<br>
+ For ne'er hath it been granted me to view<br>
+ My husband; and, for aught I know, he may<br>
+ Be even that cruel dragon, which ye say<br>
+ Peer'd at you from the forest to pursue.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ ''Tis sure that scarcely can I win his grace<br>
+ To see you here; and still he mischief vows<br>
+ If ever I should ask to see his face,<br>
+ Which, coming in the dark, he ne'er allows.<br>
+ Therefore, if ye can help, of pity show,<br>
+ Since doubt I must, how I may come to know<br>
+ What kind of spirit it is that is my spouse.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_124"></a><span class="pagenumb">{124}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then to her cue the younger was afore:<br>
+ 'Hide thou a razor,' cried she, 'near thy bed;<br>
+ And have a lamp prepared, but whelm thereo'er<br>
+ Some cover, that no light be from it shed.<br>
+ And when securely in first sleep he lies,<br>
+ Look on him well, and ere he can arise,<br>
+ Gashing his throat, cut off his hideous head.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Which both persuading, off they flew content,<br>
+ Divining that whate'er she was forbid<br>
+ Was by her lover for her safety meant,<br>
+ Which only coud be sure while he was hid.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But Psyche, to that miserable deed</span
+ ><br>
+ Being now already in her mind agreed,<br>
+ Wander'd alone, and knew not what she did.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Now she would trust her lover, now in turn<br>
+ Made question of his bidding as unjust;<br>
+ But thirsting curiosity to learn<br>
+ His secret overcame her simple trust,<br>
+ O'ercame her spoken troth, o'ercame her fear;<br>
+ And she prepared, as now the hour drew near,<br>
+ The mean contrivances, nor felt disgust.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She set the lamp beneath a chair, and cloked<br>
+ Thickly its rebel lustre from the eye:<br>
+ And laid the knife, to mortal keenness stroked,<br>
+ Within her reach, where she was wont to lie:<br>
+ And took her place full early; but her heart<br>
+ Beat fast, and stay'd her breath with sudden start,<br>
+ Feeling her lover's arm laid fond thereby.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_125"></a><span class="pagenumb">{125}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But when at last he slept, then she arose,<br>
+ All faint and tremulous: and though it be<br>
+ That wrong betrayeth innocence with shews<br>
+ Of novelty, its guilt from shame to free,<br>
+ Yet 'twas for shame her hand so strangely shook<br>
+ That held the steel, and from the cloke that took<br>
+ The lamp, and raised it o'er the bed to see.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She had some fear she might not well discern<br>
+ By that small flame a monster in the gloom;<br>
+ When lo! the air about her seem'd to burn,<br>
+ And bright celestial radiance fill'd the room.<br>
+ Too plainly O she saw, O fair to see!<br>
+ Eros, 'twas Eros' self, her lover, he,<br>
+ The God of love, reveal'd in deathless bloom.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Her fainting strength forsook her; on her knees<br>
+ Down by the bed she sank; the shameless knife<br>
+ Fell flashing, and her heart took thought to seize<br>
+ Its desperate haft, and end her wicked life.<br>
+ Yet coud she not her loving eyes withdraw<br>
+ From her fair sleeping lover, whom she saw<br>
+ Only to know she was no more his wife.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ O treasure of all treasures, late her own!<br>
+ O loss above all losses, lost for aye!<br>
+ Since there was no repentance coud atone<br>
+ For her dishonour, nor her fate withstay.<br>
+ But yet 'twas joy to have her love in sight;<br>
+ And, to the rapture yielding while she might,<br>
+ She gazed upon his body where he lay.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_126"></a><span class="pagenumb">{126}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Above all mortal beauty, as was hers,<br>
+ She saw a rival; but if passion's heart<br>
+ Be rightly read by subtle questioners,<br>
+ It owns a wanton and a gentler part.<br>
+ And Psyche wonder'd, noting every sign<br>
+ By which the immortal God, her spouse divine,<br>
+ Betray'd the image of our earthly art;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ His thickly curling hair, his ruddy cheeks,<br>
+ And pouting lips, his soft and dimpl'd chin,<br>
+ The full and cushion'd eye, that idly speaks<br>
+ Of self-content and vanity within,<br>
+ The forward, froward ear, and smooth to touch<br>
+ His body sleek, but rounded overmuch<br>
+ For dignity of mind and pride akin.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She noted that the small irradiant wings,<br>
+ That from his shoulders lay along at rest,<br>
+ Were yet disturb'd with airy quiverings,<br>
+ As if some wakeful spirit his blood possest;<br>
+ She feared he was awaking, but they kept<br>
+ Their sweet commotion still, and still he slept,<br>
+ And still she gazed with never-tiring zest.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And now the colour of her pride and joy<br>
+ Outflush'd the hue of Eros; she, so cold,<br>
+ To have fired the passion of the heartless boy,<br>
+ Whom none in heaven or earth were found to hold!<br>
+ Psyche, the earthborn, to be prized above<br>
+ The heavenly Graces by the God of love,<br>
+ And worshipt by his wantonness untold!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_127"></a><span class="pagenumb">{127}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Nay, for that very thing she loved him more,<br>
+ More than herself her sweet self's complement:<br>
+ Until the sight of him again upbore<br>
+ Her courage, and renew'd her vigour spent.<br>
+ And looking now around, she first espied<br>
+ Where at the bed's foot, cast in haste aside,<br>
+ Lay his full quiver, and his bow unbent.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ One of those darts, of which she had heard so oft,<br>
+ She took to try if 'twas so very keen;<br>
+ And held its point against her finger soft<br>
+ So gently, that to touch it scarce was seen;<br>
+ Yet was she sharply prickt, and felt the fire<br>
+ Run through her veins; and now a strange desire<br>
+ Troubl'd her heart, which ne'er before had been:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Straight sprang she to her lover on the bed,<br>
+ And kisst his cheek, and was not satisfied:<br>
+ When, O the lamp, held ill-balanced o'erhead,<br>
+ One drop of burning oil spill'd from its side<br>
+ On Eros' naked shoulder as he slept,<br>
+ Who waken'd by the sudden smart uplept<br>
+ Upon the floor, and all the mischief eyed.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ With nervous speed he seized his bow, and past<br>
+ Out of the guilty chamber at a bound;<br>
+ But Psyche, following his flight as fast,<br>
+ Caught him, and crying threw her arms around:<br>
+ Till coming to the court he rose in air;<br>
+ And she, close clinging in her last despair,<br>
+ Was dragg'd, and then lost hold and fell to ground.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_128"></a><span class="pagenumb">{128}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Wailing she fell; but he, upon the roof<br>
+ Staying his feet, awhile his flight delay'd:<br>
+ And turning to her as he stood aloof<br>
+ Beside a cypress, whose profoundest shade<br>
+ Drank the reflections of the dreamy night<br>
+ In its stiff pinnacle, the nimble light<br>
+ Of million stars upon his body play'd:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'O simple-hearted Psyche,' thus he spake,<br>
+ And she upraised her piteous eyes and hands,<br>
+ 'O simple-hearted Psyche, for thy sake<br>
+ I dared to break my mother's stern commands;<br>
+ And gave thee godlike marriage in the place<br>
+ Of vilest shame; and, not to hurt thy grace,<br>
+ Spared thee my arrows, which no heart withstands.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'But thou, for doubt I was some evil beast,<br>
+ Hast mock'd the warnings of my love, to spy<br>
+ Upon my secret, which concern'd thee least,<br>
+ Seeing that thy joy was never touch'd thereby.<br>
+ By faithless prying thou hast work'd thy fall,<br>
+ And, even as I foretold thee, losest all<br>
+ For looking on thy happiness too nigh:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Which loss may be thine ample punishment.<br>
+ But to those fiends, by whom thou wert misled,<br>
+ Go tell each one in turn that I have sent<br>
+ This message, that I love her in thy stead;<br>
+ And bid them by their love haste hither soon.'<br>
+ Whereat he fled; and Psyche in a swoon<br>
+ Fell back upon the marble floor as dead.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_129"></a><span class="pagenumb">{129}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">AUGUST</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When from the lowest ebbing of her blood<br>
+ The fluttering pulses thrill'd and swell'd again,<br>
+ Her stricken heart recovering force to flood<br>
+ With life the sunken conduits of her brain,<br>
+ Then Psyche, where she had fallen, numb and cold<br>
+ Arose, but scarce her quaking sense control'd,<br>
+ Seeing the couch where she that night had lain.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The level sunbeams search'd the grassy ground<br>
+ For diamond dewdrops. Ah! was this the place?<br>
+ Where was the court, her home? she look'd around<br>
+ And question'd with her memory for a space.<br>
+ There was the cypress, there the well-known wood,<br>
+ That wall'd the spot: 'twas here her palace stood,<br>
+ As surely as 'twas vanish'd without trace.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Was all a dream? To think that all was dreamt<br>
+ Were now the happier thought; but arguing o'er<br>
+ That dream it was, she fell from her attempt,<br>
+ Feeling the wifely burden that she bore.<br>
+ Nay, true, 'twas true. She had had all and lost;<br>
+ The joy, the reckless wrong, the heavy cost<br>
+ Were hers, the dead end now, and woe in store.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_130"></a><span class="pagenumb">{130}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ What to be done? Fainting and shelterless<br>
+ Upon the mountain it were death to bide:<br>
+ And harbour knew she none, where her distress<br>
+ Might comfort find, or love's dishonour hide;<br>
+ Nor felt she any dread like that of home:<br>
+ Yet forth she must, albeit to rove and roam<br>
+ An outcast o'er the country far and wide.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Anon she marvel'd noting from the vale<br>
+ A path lead downward to the plain below,<br>
+ Crossing the very site, whereon the pale<br>
+ Of all her joy had stood few hours ago;<br>
+ A run of mountain beasts, that keep their track<br>
+ Through generations, and for ages back<br>
+ Had trod the self-same footing to and fro.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ That would she try: so forth she took her way,<br>
+ Turning her face from the dishonour'd dell,<br>
+ Adown the broadening eastward lawns, which lay<br>
+ In gentle slant, till suddenly they fell<br>
+ In sheer cliff: whence the path that went around,<br>
+ Clomb by the bluffs, or e'er it downward wound<br>
+ Beneath that precipice impassable.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There once she turn'd, and gazing up the slope<br>
+ She bid the scene of all her joy adieu;<br>
+ 'Ay, and farewell,' she cried, 'farewell to hope,<br>
+ Since there is none will rescue me anew,<br>
+ Who have kill'd God's perfection with a doubt.'<br>
+ Which said, she took the path that led about,<br>
+ And hid the upland pleasance from her view.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_131"></a><span class="pagenumb">{131}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But soon it left her, entering 'neath the shade<br>
+ Of cedar old and russeted tall pine,<br>
+ Whose mighty tops, seen from the thorny glade,<br>
+ Belted the hills about; and now no sign<br>
+ Had she to guide her, save the slow descent.<br>
+ But swiftly o'er the springy floor she went,<br>
+ And drew the odorous air like draughts of wine.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then next she past a forest thick and dark<br>
+ With heavy ilexes and platanes high,<br>
+ And came to long lush grass; and now coud mark<br>
+ By many a token that the plain was nigh.<br>
+ When lo! a river: to whose brink at last<br>
+ Being come, upon the bank her limbs she cast,<br>
+ And through her sad tears watch'd the stream go by.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And now the thought came o'er her that in death<br>
+ There was a cure for sorrow, that before<br>
+ Her eyes ran Lethe, she might take one breath<br>
+ Of water and be freed for evermore.<br>
+ Leaning to look into her tomb, thereon<br>
+ She saw the horror of her image wan,<br>
+ And up she rose at height to leap from shore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >When suddenly a mighty voice, that fell</span
+ ><br>
+ With fury on her ears, their sense to scare,<br>
+ That bounding from the tree trunks like the yell<br>
+ Of hundred brazen trumpets, cried 'Forbear!<br>
+ Forbear, fond maid, that froward step to take,<br>
+ For life can cure the ills that love may make;<br>
+ But for the harm of death is no repair.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_132"></a><span class="pagenumb">{132}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then looking up she saw an uncouth form<br>
+ Perch'd on the further bank, whose parted lips<br>
+ Volley'd their friendly warning in a storm:<br>
+ A man he might have been, but for the tips<br>
+ Of horns appearing from his shaggy head,<br>
+ For o'er his matted beard his face was red,<br>
+ And all his shape was manlike to the hips.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In forehead low, keen eye, and nostril flat<br>
+ He bore the human grace in mean degree,<br>
+ But, set beneath his body squat and fat,<br>
+ Legs like a goat's, and from the hairy knee<br>
+ The shank fell spare; and, though crosswise he put<br>
+ His limbs in easeful posture, for the foot<br>
+ The beast's divided hoof was plain to see.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Him then she knew the mighty choric God,<br>
+ The great hill-haunting and tree-loving Pan;<br>
+ Whom Zeus had laught to see when first he trod<br>
+ Olympus, neither god nor beast nor man:<br>
+ Who every rocky peak and snowy crest<br>
+ Of the Aspran mountains for his own possest,<br>
+ And all their alps with bacchic rout o'erran:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Whom, when his pipe he plays on loud and sweet,<br>
+ And o'er the fitted reeds his moist lip flees,<br>
+ Around in measured step with nimble feet<br>
+ Water-nymphs dance and Hamadryades:<br>
+ And all the woodland's airy folk, who shun<br>
+ Man's presence, to his frolic pastime run<br>
+ From their perennial wells and sacred trees.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_133"></a><span class="pagenumb">{133}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Now on his knee his pipe laid by, he spoke<br>
+ With flippant tongue, wounding unwittingly<br>
+ The heart he sought to cheer with jest and joke.<br>
+ 'And what hast thou to do with misery,'<br>
+ He said, 'who hast such beauty as might gain<br>
+ The love of Eros? Cast away thy pain,<br>
+ And give thy soul to mirth and jollity.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Thy mortal life is but a brittle vase,<br>
+ But as thee list with wine or tears to fill;<br>
+ For all the drops therein are Ohs and Ahs<br>
+ Of joy or grief according to thy will;<br>
+ And wouldst thou learn of me my merry way,<br>
+ I'd teach thee change thy lover every day,<br>
+ And prize the cup that thou wert fain to spill.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Nay, if thou plunge thou shalt not drown nor sink,<br>
+ For I will to thee o'er the stream afloat,<br>
+ And bear thee safe; and O I know a drink<br>
+ For care, that makes sweet music in the throat.<br>
+ Come live with me, my love; I'll cure thy chance:<br>
+ For I can laugh and quaff, and pipe and dance,<br>
+ Swim like a fish, and caper like a goat.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Speaking, his brute divinity explored<br>
+ The secret of her silence; and old Pan<br>
+ Grew kind and told her of a shallow ford<br>
+ Where lower down the stream o'er pebbles ran,<br>
+ And one might pass at ease with ankles dry:<br>
+ Whither she went, and crossing o'er thereby,<br>
+ Her lonely wanderings through the isle began.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_134"></a><span class="pagenumb">{134}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But none coud tell, no, nor herself had told</span
+ ><br>
+ Where food she found, or shelter through the land<br>
+ By day or night; until by fate control'd<br>
+ She came by steep ways to the southern strand,<br>
+ Where, sacred to the Twins and Britomart,<br>
+ Pent in its rocky theatre apart,<br>
+ A little town stood on the level sand.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Twas where her younger sister's husband reign'd:<br>
+ And Psyche to the palace gate drew near,<br>
+ Helplessly still by Eros' hest constrain'd,<br>
+ And knocking begg'd to see her sister dear;<br>
+ But when in state stepp'd down that haughty queen,<br>
+ And saw the wan face spent with tears and teen,<br>
+ She smiled, and said 'Psyche, what dost thou here?'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Psyche told how, having well employ'd<br>
+ Their means, and done their bidding not amiss,<br>
+ Looking on him her hand would have destroy'd,<br>
+ 'Twas Eros; whom in love leaning to kiss,<br>
+ Even as she kisst, a drop of burning oil<br>
+ Fall'n from the lamp had served her scheme to foil,<br>
+ Discovering her in vision of her bliss;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Wherewith the god stung, like a startled bird<br>
+ Arose in air, and she fell back in swoon;<br>
+ 'But ere he parted,' said she, 'he confer'd<br>
+ On thee the irrecoverable boon<br>
+ By prying lost to me: <i>Go tell</i>, he said,<br>
+ <i
+ >Thy sister that I love her in thy stead,<br>
+ And bid her by her love haste hither soon</i
+ >.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_135"></a><span class="pagenumb">{135}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Which when that heart of malice heard, it took<br>
+ The jealous fancy of her silly lust:<br>
+ And pitilessly with triumphant look<br>
+ She drank the flattery, and gave full trust;<br>
+ And leaving Psyche ere she more coud tell,<br>
+ Ran off to bid her spouse for aye farewell,<br>
+ And in his ear this ready lie she thrust:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'My dearest sister Psyche, she whose fate<br>
+ We mourn'd, hath reappear'd alive and hale,<br>
+ But brings sad news; my father dies: full late<br>
+ These tidings come, but love may yet avail;<br>
+ Let me be gone.' And stealing blind consent,<br>
+ Forth on that well-remember'd road she went,<br>
+ And climb'd upon the peak above the dale.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There on the topmost rock, where Psyche first<br>
+ Had by her weeping sire been left to die,<br>
+ She stood a moment, in her hope accurst<br>
+ Being happy; and the cliffs took up her cry<br>
+ With chuckling mockery from her tongue above,<br>
+ <i>Zephyr, sweet Zephyr, waft me to my love</i>!<br>
+ When off she lept upon his wings to fly.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But as a dead stone, from a height let fall,<br>
+ Silent and straight is gather'd by the force<br>
+ Of earth's vast mass upon its weight so small,<br>
+ In speed increasing as it nears its source<br>
+ Of motion&mdash;by which law all things soe'er<br>
+ Are clutch'd and dragg'd and held&mdash;so fell she there,<br>
+ Like a dead stone, down in her headlong course.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_136"></a><span class="pagenumb">{136}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The disregardful silence heard her strike<br>
+ Upon the solid crags; her dismal shriek<br>
+ Rang on the rocks and died out laughter-like<br>
+ Along the vale in hurried trebles weak;<br>
+ And soon upon her, from their skiey haunt<br>
+ Fell to their feast the great birds bald and gaunt<br>
+ And gorged on her fair flesh with bloody beak.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But Psyche, when her sister was gone forth,</span
+ ><br>
+ Went out again her wandering way to take:<br>
+ And following a stream that led her north,<br>
+ After some days she pass'd the Corian Lake,<br>
+ Whereby Athena's temple stands, and he<br>
+ Who traverses the isle from sea to sea<br>
+ May by the plain his shortest journey make:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Till on the northern coast arrived she came<br>
+ Upon a city built about a port,<br>
+ The which she knew, soon as she heard the name,<br>
+ Was where her elder sister had her court;<br>
+ To whom, as Eros had commanded her,<br>
+ She now in turn became the messenger<br>
+ Of vengeful punishment, that fell not short:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ For she too hearing gan her heart exalt,<br>
+ Nor pity felt for Psyche's tears and moans,<br>
+ But, fellow'd with that other in her fault,<br>
+ Follow'd her to her fate upon the stones;<br>
+ And from the peak leaping like her below<br>
+ The self-same way unto the self-same woe,<br>
+ Lay dasht to death upon her sister's bones.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_137"></a><span class="pagenumb">{137}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="THIRD_QUARTER"></a>THIRD QUARTER</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">AUTUMN</p>
+
+ <p class="head">PSYCHE'S WANDERINGS<br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">SEPTEMBER</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ On the Hellenic board of Crete's fair isle,<br>
+ Westward of Drepanon, along a reach<br>
+ Which massy Cyamum for many a mile<br>
+ Jutting to sea delivers from the breach<br>
+ Of North and East,&mdash;returning to embay<br>
+ The favour'd shore&mdash;an ancient city lay,<br>
+ Aptera, which is <i>Wingless</i> in our speech.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And hence the name; that here in rocky cove,<br>
+ Thence called Museion, was the trial waged<br>
+ What day the Sirens with the Muses strove,<br>
+ By jealous Hera in that war engaged:<br>
+ Wherein the daughters of Mnemosynè<br>
+ O'ercame the chauntresses who vex'd the sea,<br>
+ Nor vengeance spared them by their pride enraged.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_138"></a><span class="pagenumb">{138}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ For those strange creatures, who with women's words<br>
+ And wiles made ravenous prey of passers-by,<br>
+ Were throated with the liquid pipe of birds:<br>
+ Of love they sang; and none, who sail'd anigh<br>
+ Through the grey hazes of the cyanine sea,<br>
+ Had wit the whirlpool of that song to flee,<br>
+ Nor fear'd the talon hook'd and feather'd thigh.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But them the singers of the gods o'ercame,<br>
+ And pluck'd them of their plumage, where in fright<br>
+ They vainly flutter'd off to hide their shame,<br>
+ Upon two rocks that lie within the bight,<br>
+ Under the headland, barren and alone;<br>
+ Which, being with the scatter'd feathers strewn,<br>
+ Were by the folk named Leukæ, which is <i>White</i>.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thereon about this time the snowy gull,</span
+ ><br>
+ Minion of Aphrodite, being come,<br>
+ Plumed himself, standing on the sea-wrack dull,<br>
+ That drifted from the foot of Cyamum;<br>
+ And 'twas his thought, that had the goddess learnt<br>
+ The tale of Psyche loved and Eros burnt,<br>
+ She ne'er so long had kept aloof and dumb.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Wherefore that duteous gossip of Love's queen<br>
+ Devised that he the messenger would be;<br>
+ And rising from the rock, he skim'd between<br>
+ The chasing waves&mdash;such grace have none but he;&mdash;<br>
+ Into the middle deep then down he dived,<br>
+ And rowing with his glistening wings arrived<br>
+ At Aphrodite's bower beneath the sea.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_139"></a><span class="pagenumb">{139}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The eddies from his silver pinions swirl'd<br>
+ The crimson, green, and yellow floss, that grew<br>
+ About the caves, and at his passing curl'd<br>
+ Its graceful silk, and gently waved anew:<br>
+ Till, oaring here and there, the queen he found<br>
+ Stray'd from her haunt unto a sandy ground,<br>
+ Dappl'd with eye-rings in the sunlight blue.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She, as he came upon her from above,</span
+ ><br>
+ With Hora play'd; Hora, her herald fair,<br>
+ That lays the soft necessity of Love<br>
+ On maidens' eyelids, and with tender care<br>
+ Marketh the hour, as in all works is fit:<br>
+ And happy they in love who time outwit,<br>
+ Fondly constrained in her season rare.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But he with garrulous and laughing tongue<br>
+ Broke up his news; how Eros, fallen sick,<br>
+ Lay tossing on his bed, to frenzy stung<br>
+ By such a burn as did but barely prick:<br>
+ A little bleb, no bigger than a pease,<br>
+ Upon his shoulder 'twas, that kill'd his ease,<br>
+ Fever'd his heart, and made his breathing thick.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'For which disaster hath he not been seen<br>
+ This many a day at all in any place:<br>
+ And thou, dear mistress,' piped he, 'hast not been<br>
+ Thyself amongst us now a dreary space:<br>
+ The pining mortals suffer from a dearth<br>
+ Of love; and for this sadness of the earth<br>
+ Thy family is darken'd with disgrace.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_140"></a><span class="pagenumb">{140}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Now on the secret paths of dale and wood,<br>
+ Where lovers walk'd are lovers none to find:<br>
+ And friends, besworn to equal brotherhood,<br>
+ Forget their faith, and part with words unkind:<br>
+ In the first moon thy honey-bond is loath'd:<br>
+ And I coud tell even of the new-betroth'd<br>
+ That fly o'ersea, and leave their loves behind.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Summer is over, but the merry pipe,<br>
+ That wont to cheer the harvesting, is mute:<br>
+ And in the vineyards, where the grape is ripe,<br>
+ No voice is heard of them that take the fruit.<br>
+ No workman singeth at eve nor maiden danceth:<br>
+ All joy is dead, and as the year advanceth<br>
+ The signs of woe increase on man and brute.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ ''Tis plain that if thy pleasure longer pause,<br>
+ Thy mighty rule on earth hath seen its day:<br>
+ The race must come to perish, and no cause<br>
+ But that thou sittest with thy nymphs at play,<br>
+ While on a Cretan hill thy truant boy<br>
+ Hath with his pretty mistress turn'd to toy,<br>
+ And less for pain than love pineth away.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Ha! Mistress!' cried she; 'Hath my beardless son<br>
+ Been hunting for himself his lovely game?<br>
+ Some young Orestiad hath his fancy won?<br>
+ Some Naiad? say; or is a Grace his flame?<br>
+ Or maybe Muse, and then 'tis Erato,<br>
+ The trifling wanton. Tell me, if thou know,<br>
+ Woman or goddess is she? and her name.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_141"></a><span class="pagenumb">{141}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then said the snowy gull, 'O heavenly queen,<br>
+ What is my knowledge, who am but a bird?<br>
+ Yet is she only mortal, as I ween,<br>
+ And namèd Psyche, if I rightly heard.'&mdash;<br>
+ But Aphrodite's look daunted his cheer,<br>
+ Ascare he fled away, screaming in fear,<br>
+ To see what wrath his simple tale had stirr'd.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ He flasht his pens, and sweeping widely round<br>
+ Tower'd to air; so swift in all his way,<br>
+ That whence he dived he there again was found<br>
+ As soon as if he had but dipt for prey:<br>
+ And now, or e'er he join'd his wailful flock,<br>
+ Once more he stood upon the Sirens' rock,<br>
+ And preen'd his ruffl'd quills for fresh display.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But as ill tidings will their truth assure</span
+ ><br>
+ Without more witness than their fatal sense,<br>
+ So, since was nothing bitterer to endure,<br>
+ The injured goddess guess'd the full offence:<br>
+ And doubted only whether first to smite<br>
+ Or Psyche for her new presumptuous flight,<br>
+ Or Eros for his disobedience.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But full of anger to her son she went,<br>
+ And found him in his golden chamber laid;<br>
+ And with him sweet Euphrosynè, attent<br>
+ Upon his murmur'd wants, aye as he bade<br>
+ Shifted the pillows with each fretful whim;<br>
+ But scornfully his mother look'd at him,<br>
+ And reckless of his pain gan thus upbraid:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_142"></a><span class="pagenumb">{142}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'O worthy deeds, I say, and true to blood,<br>
+ The crown and pledge of promise! thou that wast<br>
+ In estimation my perpetual bud,<br>
+ Now fruiting thus untimely to my cost;<br>
+ Backsliding from commandment, ay, and worse,<br>
+ With bliss to favour one I bade thee curse,<br>
+ And save the life I left with thee for lost!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Thou too to burn with love, and love of her<br>
+ Whom I did hate; and to thy bed to take<br>
+ My rival, that my trusted officer<br>
+ Might of mine enemy my daughter make!<br>
+ Dost thou then think my love for thee so fond,<br>
+ And miserably doting, that the bond<br>
+ By such dishonour strainèd will not break?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Or that I cannot bear another son<br>
+ As good as thou; or, if I choose not bear,<br>
+ Not beg as good a lusty boy of one<br>
+ Of all my nymphs,&mdash;and some have boys to spare,&mdash;<br>
+ Whom I might train, to whom thine arms made o'er<br>
+ Should do me kinder service than before,<br>
+ To smite my foes and keep my honour fair?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'For thou hast ever mockt me, and beguiled<br>
+ In amours strange my God, thy valiant sire:<br>
+ And having smirch'd our fame while yet a child<br>
+ Wilt further foul it now with earthly fire.<br>
+ But I&mdash;do as thou may&mdash;have vow'd to kill<br>
+ Thy fancied girl, whether thou love her still,<br>
+ Or of her silly charms already tire.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_143"></a><span class="pagenumb">{143}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Tell me but where she hides.' And Eros now,<br>
+ Proud in his woe, boasted his happy theft:<br>
+ Confessing he had loved her well, and how<br>
+ By her own doing she was lost and left;<br>
+ And homeless in such sorrow as outwent<br>
+ The utmost pain of other punishment,<br>
+ Was wandering of his love and favour reft.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ By which was Cypris gladden'd, not appeased,<br>
+ But hid her joy and spake no more her threat:<br>
+ And left with face like one that much displeased<br>
+ Hath yet betray'd that he can wrong forget.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >When lo! as swiftly she came stepping down</span
+ ><br>
+ From her fair house into the heavenly town<br>
+ The Kronian sisters on the way she met;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Hera, the Wife of Zeus, her placid front<br>
+ Dark with the shadow of his troubl'd reign,<br>
+ And tall Demeter, who with men once wont,<br>
+ Holding the high Olympians in disdain<br>
+ For Persephassa's rape; which now forgiven,<br>
+ She had return'd unto the courts of Heaven,<br>
+ And 'mong the immortals liv'd at peace again:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Whose smile told Aphrodite that they knew<br>
+ The meaning of her visit; and a flush<br>
+ Of anger answer'd them, while hot she grew.<br>
+ But Hera laugh'd outright: 'Why thou dost blush!<br>
+ Now see we modest manners on my life!<br>
+ And all thy little son has got a wife<br>
+ Can make the crimson to thy forehead rush.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_144"></a><span class="pagenumb">{144}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Didst think he, whom thou madest passion's prince,<br>
+ No privy dart then for himself would poise?<br>
+ Nay, by the cuckoo on my sceptre, since<br>
+ 'Twas love that made thee mother of his joys,<br>
+ Art thou the foremost to his favour bound;<br>
+ As thou shouldst be the last to think to sound<br>
+ The heart, and least of all thy wanton boy's.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But her Demeter, on whose stalwart arm<br>
+ She lean'd, took up: 'If thou wilt hark to me,<br>
+ This Psyche,' said she, 'hath the heavenly charm,<br>
+ And will become immortal. And maybe<br>
+ To marry with a woman is as well<br>
+ As wed a god and live below in Hell:<br>
+ As 'twas my lot in child of mine to see.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Which things they both said, fearing in their hearts<br>
+ That savage Eros, if they mockt his case,<br>
+ Would kill their peace with his revengeful darts,<br>
+ And bring them haply to a worse disgrace:<br>
+ But Aphrodite, saying 'Good! my dames;<br>
+ Behind this smoke I see the spite that flames,'<br>
+ Left them, and on her journey went apace.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ For having purposed she would hold no truce<br>
+ With Psyche or her son, 'twas in her mind<br>
+ To go forthwith unto the throne of Zeus,<br>
+ And beg that Hermes might be sent to find<br>
+ The wanderer; and secure that in such quest<br>
+ He would not fail, she ponder'd but how best<br>
+ She might inflict her vengeance long-design'd.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_145"></a><span class="pagenumb">{145}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">OCTOBER</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Heavy meanwhile at heart, with bruisèd feet<br>
+ Was Psyche wandering many nights and days<br>
+ Upon the paths of hundred-citied Crete,<br>
+ And chose to step the most deserted ways;<br>
+ Being least unhappy when she went unseen;<br>
+ Since else her secret sorrow had no screen<br>
+ From the plain question of men's idle gaze.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Yet wheresoe'er she went one hope she had;<br>
+ Like mortal mourners, who 'gainst reason strong<br>
+ Hope to be unexpectedly made glad<br>
+ With sight of their dead friends, so much they long;<br>
+ So she for him, whom loss a thousandfold<br>
+ Endear'd and made desired; nor coud she hold<br>
+ He would not turn and quite forgive her wrong.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Wherefore her eager eyes in every place<br>
+ Lookt for her lover; and 'twixt hope and fear<br>
+ She follow'd oft afar some form of grace,<br>
+ In pain alike to lose or venture near.<br>
+ And still this thought cheer'd her fatigue, that he,<br>
+ Or on some hill, or by some brook or tree,<br>
+ But waited for her coming to appear.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_146"></a><span class="pagenumb">{146}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And then for comfort many an old love-crost<br>
+ And doleful ditty would she gently sing,<br>
+ Writ by sad poets of a lover lost,<br>
+ Now sounding sweeter for her sorrowing:<br>
+ <i
+ >Echo, sweet Echo, watching up on high,<br>
+ Say hast thou seen to-day my love go by,<br>
+ Or where thou sittest by thy mossy spring?</i
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <i
+ >Or say ye nymphs, that from the crystal rills,<br>
+ When ye have bathed your limbs from morn till eve,<br>
+ Flying at midnight to the bare-topt hills,<br>
+ Beneath the stars your mazy dances weave,<br>
+ Say, my deserter whom ye well may know<br>
+ By his small wings, his quiver, and his bow,<br>
+ Say, have ye seen my love, whose loss I grieve?</i
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Till climb'd one evening on a rocky steep</span
+ ><br>
+ Above the plain of Cisamos, that lay,<br>
+ Robb'd of its golden harvest, in the deep<br>
+ Mountainous shadows of the dying day,<br>
+ She saw a temple, whose tall columns fair<br>
+ Recall'd her home; and 'O if thou be there,<br>
+ My love,' she cried, 'fly not again away.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Swiftly she ran, and entering by the door<br>
+ She stood alone within an empty fane<br>
+ Of great Demeter: and, behold, the floor<br>
+ Was litter'd with thank-offerings of grain,<br>
+ With wheat and barley-sheaves together heapt<br>
+ In holy harvest-home of them that reapt<br>
+ The goddess plenteous gifts upon the plain;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_147"></a><span class="pagenumb">{147}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And on the tithe the tackle of the tithe<br>
+ Thrown by in such confusion, as are laid<br>
+ Upon the swath sickle, and hook, and scythe,<br>
+ When midday drives the reapers to the shade.<br>
+ And Psyche, since had come no priestess there<br>
+ To trim the temple, in her pious care<br>
+ Forgat herself, and lent her duteous aid.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She drew the offerings from the midst aside,<br>
+ And piled the sheaves at every pillar's base;<br>
+ And sweeping therebetween a passage wide,<br>
+ Made clear of corn and chaff the temple space:<br>
+ As countrymen who bring their wheat to mart,<br>
+ Set out their show along the walls apart<br>
+ By their allotted stations, each in place;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus she, and felt no weariness,&mdash;such strength<br>
+ Hath duty to support our feeble frame,&mdash;<br>
+ Till all was set in order, and at length<br>
+ Up to the threshold of the shrine she came:<br>
+ When lo! before her face with friendly smile,<br>
+ Tall as a pillar of the peristyle,<br>
+ The goddess stood reveal'd, and call'd her name.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Unhappy Psyche,' said she, 'know'st thou not<br>
+ How Aphrodite to thy hurt is sworn?<br>
+ And thou, thy peril and her wrath forgot,<br>
+ Spendest thy thought my temple to adorn.<br>
+ Take better heed!'&mdash;And Psyche, at the voice<br>
+ Even of so little comfort, gan rejoice,<br>
+ And at her feet pour'd out this prayer forlorn.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_148"></a><span class="pagenumb">{148}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'O Gracious giver of the golden grain,<br>
+ Hide me, I pray thee, from her wrath unkind:<br>
+ For who can pity as canst thou my pain,<br>
+ Who wert thyself a wanderer, vex'd in mind<br>
+ For loss of thy dear Corè once, whenas,<br>
+ Ravisht to hell by fierce Agesilas,<br>
+ Thou soughtest her on earth and coudst not find.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'How coud thy feet bear thee to western night,<br>
+ And where swart Libyans watch the sacred tree,<br>
+ And thrice to ford o'er Achelous bright,<br>
+ And all the streams of beauteous Sicily?<br>
+ And thrice to Enna cam'st thou, thrice, they tell,<br>
+ Satest athirst by Callichorus' well,<br>
+ Nor tookest of the spring to comfort thee.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'By that remember'd anguish of thine heart,<br>
+ Lady, have pity even on me, and show<br>
+ Where I may find my love; and take my part<br>
+ For peace, I pray, against my cruel foe:<br>
+ Or if thou canst not from her anger shield,<br>
+ Here let me lie among the sheaves conceal'd<br>
+ Such time till forth I may in safety go.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Demeter answer'd, 'Nay, though thou constrain<br>
+ My favour with thy plea, my help must still<br>
+ Be hidden, else I work for thee in vain<br>
+ To thwart my mighty sister in her will.<br>
+ Thou must fly hence: Yet though I not oppose,<br>
+ Less will I aid her; and if now I close<br>
+ My temple doors to thee, take it not ill.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_149"></a><span class="pagenumb">{149}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then Psyche's hope founder'd; as when a ship,</span
+ ><br>
+ The morrow of the gale can hardly ride<br>
+ The swollen seas, fetching a deeper dip<br>
+ At every wave, and through her gaping side<br>
+ And o'er her shattered bulwark ever drinks,<br>
+ Till plunging in the watery wild she sinks,<br>
+ To scoop her grave beneath the crushing tide:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So with each word her broken spirit drank<br>
+ Its doom; and overwhelm'd with deep despair<br>
+ She turn'd away, and coming forth she sank<br>
+ Silently weeping on the temple stair,<br>
+ In midmost night, forspent with long turmoil:<br>
+ But sleep, the gracious pursuivant of toil,<br>
+ Came swiftly down, and nursed away her care.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And when the sun awaked her with his beams<br>
+ She found new hope, that still her sorrow's cure<br>
+ Lay with the gods, who in her morning dreams<br>
+ Had sent her comfort in a vision sure;<br>
+ Wherein the Cretan-born, almightiest god,<br>
+ Cloud-gathering Zeus himself had seem'd to nod,<br>
+ And bid her with good heart her woes endure.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">So coming that same day unto a shrine</span
+ ><br>
+ Of Hera, she took courage and went in:<br>
+ And like to one that to the cell divine<br>
+ For favour ventures or a suit to win,<br>
+ She drew anigh the altar, from her face<br>
+ Wiping the tears, ere to the heavenly grace,<br>
+ As thus she pray'd, she would her prayer begin.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_150"></a><span class="pagenumb">{150}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Most honour'd Lady, who from ancient doom<br>
+ Wert made heaven's wife, and art on earth besought<br>
+ With gracious happiness of all to whom<br>
+ Thy holy wedlock hath my burden brought,<br>
+ Save me from Aphrodite's fell pursuit,<br>
+ And guard unto the birth Love's hapless fruit,<br>
+ Which she for cruel spite would bring to nought.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'As once from her thou wert not shamed to take<br>
+ Her beauty's zone, thy beauty to enhance;<br>
+ For which again Zeus loved thee, to forsake<br>
+ His warlike ire in faithful dalliance;<br>
+ Show me what means may win my Love to me,<br>
+ Or how that I may come, if so may be,<br>
+ Within the favour of his countenance.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'If there be any place for tears or prayer,<br>
+ If there be need for succour in distress,<br>
+ Now is the very hour of all despair,<br>
+ Here is the heart of grief and bitterness.<br>
+ Motherly pity, bend thy face and grant<br>
+ One beam of ruth to thy poor suppliant,<br>
+ Nor turn me from thine altar comfortless.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Even as she pray'd a cloud spread through the cell,<br>
+ And 'mid the wreathings of the vapour dim<br>
+ The goddess grew in glory visible,<br>
+ Like some barbaric queen in festal trim;<br>
+ Such the attire and ornaments she wore,<br>
+ When o'er the forgèd threshold of the floor<br>
+ Of Zeus's house she stept to visit him.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_151"></a><span class="pagenumb">{151}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ From either ear, ring'd to its piercèd lobe<br>
+ A triple jewel hung, with gold enchas't;<br>
+ And o'er her breasts her wide ambrosial robe<br>
+ With many a shining golden clasp was brac't;<br>
+ The flowering on its smooth embroider'd lawn<br>
+ Gather'd to colour where the zone was drawn<br>
+ In fringe of golden tassels at her waist.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Her curling hair with plaited braid and brail,<br>
+ Pendant or loop'd about her head divine,<br>
+ Lay hidden half beneath a golden veil,<br>
+ Bright as the rippling ocean in sunshine:<br>
+ And on the ground, flashing whene'er she stept,<br>
+ Beneath her feet the dazzling lightnings lept<br>
+ From the gold network of her sandals fine.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus Hera stood in royal guise bedeckt<br>
+ Before poor Psyche on the stair that knelt,<br>
+ Whose new-nursed hope at that display was checkt<br>
+ And all her happier thoughts gan fade and melt.<br>
+ She saw no kindness in such haughty mien,<br>
+ And venturing not to look upon the queen,<br>
+ Bow'd down in woe to hear her sentence dealt.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And thus the goddess spake, 'In vain thou suest,<br>
+ Most miserable Psyche; though my heart<br>
+ Be full of hate for her whose hate thou ruest,<br>
+ And pride and pity move me to thy part:<br>
+ Yet not till Zeus make known his will, coud I,<br>
+ Least of the blameless gods that dwell on high,<br>
+ Assist thee, wert thou worthier than thou art.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_152"></a><span class="pagenumb">{152}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'But know if Eros love thee, that thy hopes<br>
+ Should rest on him; and I would bid thee go<br>
+ Where in his mother's house apart he mopes<br>
+ Grieving for loss of thee in secret woe:<br>
+ For should he take thee back, there is no power<br>
+ In earth or heaven will hurt thee from that hour,<br>
+ Nay, not if Zeus himself should prove thy foe.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thus saying she was gone, and Psyche now</span
+ ><br>
+ Surprised by comfort rose and went her way,<br>
+ Resolved in heart, and only wondering how<br>
+ 'Twas possible to come where Eros lay;<br>
+ Since that her feet, however she might roam,<br>
+ Coud never travel to the heavenly home<br>
+ Of Love, beyond the bounds of mortal day:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Yet must she come to him. And now 'twas proved<br>
+ How that to Lovers, as is told in song,<br>
+ Seeking the way no place is far removed;<br>
+ Nor is there any obstacle so strong,<br>
+ Nor bar so fix'd that it can hinder them:<br>
+ And how to reach heaven's gate by stratagem<br>
+ Vex'd not the venturous heart of Psyche long.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ To face her enemy might well avail:<br>
+ Wherefore to Cypris' shrine her steps she bent,<br>
+ Hoping the goddess in her hate might hale<br>
+ Her body to the skies for punishment,<br>
+ Whate'er to be; yet now her fiercest wrath<br>
+ Seem'd happiest fortune, seeing 'twas the path<br>
+ Whereby alone unto her love she went.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_153"></a><span class="pagenumb">{153}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">NOVEMBER</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But Aphrodite to the house of Zeus<br>
+ Being bound, bade beckon out her milkwhite steeds,<br>
+ Four doves, that ready to her royal use<br>
+ In golden cages stood and peck'd the seeds:<br>
+ Best of the nimble air's high-sailing folk<br>
+ That wore with pride the marking of her yoke,<br>
+ And cooed in envy of her gentle needs.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ These drew in turn her chariot, when in state<br>
+ Along the heaven with all her train she fared;<br>
+ And oft in journeying to the skiey gate<br>
+ Of Zeus's palace high their flight had dared,<br>
+ Which darkest vapour and thick glooms enshroud<br>
+ Above all else in the perpetual cloud,<br>
+ Wherethro' to mount again they stood prepared,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Sleeking their feathers, by her shining car;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The same Hephæstos wrought for her, when he,</span
+ ><br>
+ Bruised in his hideous fall from heaven afar,<br>
+ Was nursed by Thetis, and Eurynomè,<br>
+ The daughter of the ever-refluent main;<br>
+ With whom he dwelt till he grew sound again,<br>
+ Down in a hollow cave beside the sea:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_154"></a><span class="pagenumb">{154}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And them for kindness done was prompt to serve,<br>
+ Forging them brooches rich in make and mode,<br>
+ Earrings, and supple chains of jointed curve,<br>
+ And other trinkets, while he there abode:<br>
+ And none of gods or men knew of his home,<br>
+ But they two only; and the salt sea-foam<br>
+ To and fro past his cavern ever flow'd.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Twas then he wrought this work within the cave,<br>
+ Emboss'd with rich design, a moonèd car;<br>
+ And when return'd to heaven to Venus gave,<br>
+ In form imagined like her crescent star;<br>
+ Which circling nearest earth, maketh at night<br>
+ To wakeful mortal men shadow and light<br>
+ Alone of all the stars in heaven that are.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Two slender wheels it had, with fretted tires<br>
+ Of biting adamant, to take firm hold<br>
+ Of cloud or ether; and their whirling fires<br>
+ Threw off the air in halo where they roll'd:<br>
+ And either nave that round the axle turn'd<br>
+ A ruby was, whose steady crimson burn'd<br>
+ Betwixt the twin speed-mingling fans of gold.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thereon the naked goddess mounting, shook</span
+ ><br>
+ The reins; whereat the doves their wings outspread,<br>
+ And rising high their flight to heaven they took:<br>
+ And all the birds, that in those courts were bred,<br>
+ Of her broad eaves the nested families,<br>
+ Sparrows and swallows, join'd their companies<br>
+ Awhile and twitter'd to her overhead.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_155"></a><span class="pagenumb">{155}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But onward she with fading tracks of flame<br>
+ Sped swiftly, till she reacht her journey's end:<br>
+ And when within the house of Zeus she came,<br>
+ She pray'd the Sire of Heaven that he would lend<br>
+ Hermes, the Argus-slayer, for her hest;<br>
+ And he being granted her at her request,<br>
+ She went forthwith to seek him and to send.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Who happ'd within the palace then to wait</span
+ ><br>
+ Upon the almighty pleasure; and her tale<br>
+ Was quickly told, and he made answer straight<br>
+ That he would find the truant without fail;<br>
+ Asking the goddess by what signs her slave<br>
+ Might best be known, and what the price she gave<br>
+ For capture, or admitted for the bail.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ All which he took his silver stile to write<br>
+ In letters large upon a waxed board;<br>
+ Her age and name, her colour, face and height,<br>
+ Her home, and parentage, and the reward:<br>
+ And then read o'er as 'twas to be proclaim'd.<br>
+ And she took oath to give the price she named,<br>
+ Without demur, when Psyche was restored.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then on his head he closely set his cap<br>
+ With earèd wings erect, and o'er his knee<br>
+ He cross'd each foot in turn to prove the strap<br>
+ That bound his wingèd sandals, and shook free<br>
+ His chlamys, and gat up, and in his hand<br>
+ Taking his fair white-ribbon'd herald's wand,<br>
+ Lept forth on air, accoutred cap-a-pè.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_156"></a><span class="pagenumb">{156}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And piloting along the mid-day sky,<br>
+ Held southward, till the narrow map of Crete<br>
+ Lay like a fleck in azure 'neath his eye;<br>
+ When down he came, and as an eagle fleet<br>
+ Drops in some combe, then checks his headlong stoop<br>
+ With wide-flung wing, wheeling in level swoop<br>
+ To strike the bleating quarry with his feet,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus he alighted; and in every town<br>
+ In all the isle before the close of day<br>
+ Had cried the message, which he carried down,<br>
+ Of Psyche, Aphrodite's runaway;<br>
+ That whosoever found the same and caught,<br>
+ And by such time unto her temple brought,<br>
+ To him the goddess would this guerdon pay:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span class="smcap"
+ >Six honied kisses from her rosy mouth<br>
+ Would Cytherea give, and one beside<br>
+ To quench at heart for aye love's mortal drouth:<br>
+ But unto him that hid her, Woe betide!</span
+ ><br>
+ Which now was on all tongues, and Psyche's name<br>
+ Herself o'erheard, or ever nigh she came<br>
+ To Aphrodite's temple where she hied.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When since she found her way to heaven was safe,<br>
+ She only wisht to make it soon and sure;<br>
+ Nor fear'd to meet the goddess in her chafe,<br>
+ So she her self-surrender might secure,<br>
+ And not be given of other for the price;<br>
+ Nor was there need of any artifice<br>
+ Her once resplendent beauty to obscure.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_157"></a><span class="pagenumb">{157}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ For now so changed she was by heavy woe,<br>
+ That for the little likeness that she bore<br>
+ To her description she was fear'd to go<br>
+ Within the fane; and when she stood before<br>
+ The priestess, scarce coud she with oath persuade<br>
+ That she was Psyche, the renownèd maid,<br>
+ Whom men had left the temple to adore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But when to Hermes she was shown and given,<br>
+ He took no doubt, but eager to be quit,<br>
+ And proud of speed, return'd with her to heaven,<br>
+ And left her with the proclamation writ,<br>
+ Hung at her neck, the board with letters large,<br>
+ At Aphrodite's gate with those in charge;<br>
+ And up whence first he came made haste to flit.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But hapless Psyche fell, for so it chanced,</span
+ ><br>
+ To moody <span class="smcap">Synethea's</span> care, the one<br>
+ Of Aphrodite's train whom she advanced<br>
+ To try the work abandon'd by her son.<br>
+ Who by perpetual presence made ill end<br>
+ Of good or bad; though she coud both amend,<br>
+ And merit praise for work by her begun.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But she to better thought her heart had shut,<br>
+ And proved she had a spite beyond compare:<br>
+ Nor coud the keenest taunts her anger glut,<br>
+ Which she when sour'd was never wont to spare:<br>
+ And now she mock'd at Psyche's shame and grief,<br>
+ As only she might do, and to her chief<br>
+ Along the courtyard dragg'd her by the hair.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_158"></a><span class="pagenumb">{158}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor now was Aphrodite kinder grown:</span
+ ><br>
+ Having her hated rival in her power,<br>
+ She laught for joy, and in triumphant tone<br>
+ Bade her a merry welcome to her bower:<br>
+ ''Tis fit indeed daughters-in-law should wait<br>
+ Upon their mothers; but thou comest late,<br>
+ Psyche; I lookt for thee before this hour.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'And yet,' thus gave she rein to jeer and gibe,<br>
+ 'Forgive me if I held thee negligent,<br>
+ Or if accustom'd vanity ascribe<br>
+ An honour to myself that was not meant.<br>
+ Thy lover is it, who so dearly prized<br>
+ The pretty soul, then left her and despised?<br>
+ To him more like thy heavenward steps were bent:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Nor without reason: Zeus, I tell thee, swoon'd<br>
+ To hear the story of the drop of oil,<br>
+ The revelation and the ghastly wound:<br>
+ My merriment is but my fear's recoil.<br>
+ But if my son was unkind, thou shalt see<br>
+ How kind a goddess can his mother be<br>
+ To bring thy tainted honour clear of soil.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And so, to match her promise with her mirth,</span
+ ><br>
+ Two of her ministers she call'd in ken,<br>
+ That work the melancholy of the earth;<br>
+ <span class="smcap">Merimna</span> that with care perplexes, when<br>
+ The hearts of mortals have the gods forgot,<br>
+ And <span class="smcap">Lypè</span>, that her sorrow spares them not,<br>
+ When mortals have forgot their fellow men.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_159"></a><span class="pagenumb">{159}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ These, like twin sharks that in a fair ship's wake<br>
+ Swim constant, showing 'bove the water blue<br>
+ Their shearing fins, and hasty ravin make<br>
+ Of overthrow or offal, so these two<br>
+ On Aphrodite's passing follow hard;<br>
+ And now she offer'd to their glut's regard<br>
+ Sweet Psyche, with command their wont to do.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But in what secret chamber their foul task<br>
+ These soul-tormentors plied, or what their skill,<br>
+ Pity of tender nature may not ask,<br>
+ Nor poet stain his rhyme with such an ill.<br>
+ But they at last themselves turn'd from their rack,<br>
+ Weary of cruelty, and led her back,<br>
+ Saying that further torture were to kill.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then when the goddess saw her, more she mockt</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Art thou the woman of the earth,' she said,<br>
+ 'That hast in sorceries mine Eros lockt,<br>
+ And stood thyself for worship in my stead?<br>
+ Looking that I should pity thee, or care<br>
+ For what illicit offspring thou may'st bear;<br>
+ Or let thee to that god my son be wed?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'I know thy trick; and thou art one of them<br>
+ Who steal love's favour in the gentle way,<br>
+ Wearing submission for a diadem,<br>
+ Patience and suffering for thy rich array:<br>
+ Thou wilt be modest, kind, implicit, so<br>
+ To rest thy wily spirit out of show<br>
+ That it may leap the livelier into play:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_160"></a><span class="pagenumb">{160}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Devout at doing nothing, if so be<br>
+ The grace become thee well; but active yet<br>
+ Above all others be there none to see<br>
+ Thy business, and thine eager face asweat.<br>
+ Lo! I will prove thy talent: thou may'st live,<br>
+ And all that thou desirest will I give,<br>
+ If thou perform the task which I shall set.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She took her then aside, and bade her heed<br>
+ A heap of grains piled high upon the floor,<br>
+ Millet and mustard, hemp and poppy seed,<br>
+ And fern-bloom's undistinguishable spore,<br>
+ All kinds of pulse, of grasses, and of spice,<br>
+ Clover and linseed, rape, and corn, and rice,<br>
+ Dodder, and sesame, and many more.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Sort me these seeds' she said; 'it now is night,<br>
+ I will return at morning; if I find<br>
+ That thou hast separated all aright,<br>
+ Each grain from other grain after its kind,<br>
+ And set them in unmingl'd heaps apart,<br>
+ Then shall thy wish be granted to thine heart.<br>
+ Whereat she turn'd, and closed the door behind.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_161"></a><span class="pagenumb">{161}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="FOURTH_QUARTER"></a>FOURTH QUARTER</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">WINTER</p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ PSYCHE'S TRIALS AND RECEPTION<br>
+ INTO HEAVEN<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">DECEMBER</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A single lamp there stood beside the heap,<br>
+ And shed thereon its mocking golden light;<br>
+ Such as might tempt the weary eye to sleep<br>
+ Rather than prick the nerve of taskèd sight.<br>
+ Yet Psyche, not to fail for lack of zeal,<br>
+ With good will sat her down to her ordeal,<br>
+ Sorting the larger seeds as best she might.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When lo! upon the wall, a shadow past<br>
+ Of doubtful shape, across the chamber dim<br>
+ Moving with speed: and seeing nought that cast<br>
+ The shade, she bent her down the flame to trim;<br>
+ And there the beast itself, a little ant,<br>
+ Climb'd up in compass of the lustre scant,<br>
+ Upon the bowl of oil ran round the rim.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_162"></a><span class="pagenumb">{162}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Smiling to see the creature of her fear<br>
+ So dwarf'd by truth, she watcht him where he crept,<br>
+ For mere distraction telling in his ear<br>
+ What straits she then was in, and telling wept.<br>
+ Whereat he stood and trim'd his horns; but ere<br>
+ Her tale was done resumed his manner scare,<br>
+ Ran down, and on his way in darkness kept.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But she intent drew forth with dextrous hand<br>
+ The larger seeds, or push'd the smaller back,<br>
+ Or light from heavy with her breathing fan'd.<br>
+ When suddenly she saw the floor grow black,<br>
+ And troops of ants, flowing in noiseless train,<br>
+ Moved to the hill of seeds, as o'er a plain<br>
+ Armies approach a city for attack;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And gathering on the grain, began to strive<br>
+ With grappling horns: and each from out the heap<br>
+ His burden drew, and all their motion live<br>
+ Struggled and slid upon the surface steep.<br>
+ And Psyche wonder'd, watching them, to find<br>
+ The creatures separated kind from kind:<br>
+ Till dizzied with the sight she fell asleep.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And when she woke 'twas with the morning sound<br>
+ Of Aphrodite's anger at the door,<br>
+ Whom high amaze stay'd backward, as she found<br>
+ Her foe asleep with all her trouble o'er:<br>
+ And round the room beheld, in order due,<br>
+ The piles arranged distinct and sorted true,<br>
+ Grain with grain, seed with seed, and spore with spore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_163"></a><span class="pagenumb">{163}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She fiercely cried 'Thou shalt not thus escape;<br>
+ For to this marvel dar'st thou not pretend.<br>
+ There is but one that could this order shape,<br>
+ Demeter,&mdash;but I knew her not thy friend.<br>
+ Therefore another trial will I set,<br>
+ In which she cannot aid thee nor abet,<br>
+ But thou thyself must bring it fair to end.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thereon she sped her to the bounds of Thrace,<br>
+ And set her by a river deep and wide,<br>
+ And said 'To east beyond this stream, a race<br>
+ Of golden-fleecèd sheep at pasture bide.<br>
+ Go seek them out; and this thy task, to pull<br>
+ But one lock for me of their precious wool,<br>
+ And give it in my hands at eventide:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'This do and thou shalt have thy heart's desire.'<br>
+ Which said, she fled and left her by the stream:<br>
+ And Psyche then, with courage still entire,<br>
+ Had plunged therein; but now of great esteem<br>
+ Her life she rated, while it lent a spell<br>
+ Wherein she yet might hope to quit her well,<br>
+ And in one winning all her woes redeem.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There as she stood in doubt, a fluting voice<br>
+ Rose from the flood, 'Psyche, be not afraid<br>
+ To hear a reed give tongue, for 'twas of choice<br>
+ That I from mortal flesh a plant was made.<br>
+ My name is Syrinx; once from mighty Pan<br>
+ Into the drowning river as I ran,<br>
+ A fearful prayer my steps for ever stay'd.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_164"></a><span class="pagenumb">{164}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'But by that change in many climes I live;<br>
+ And Pan, my lover, who to me alone<br>
+ Is true and does me honour, I forgive&mdash;<br>
+ Nor if I speak in sorrow is't my own:<br>
+ Rather for thee my voice I now uplift<br>
+ To warn thee plunge not in the river swift,<br>
+ Nor seek the golden sheep to men unknown.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'If thou should cross the stream, which may not be,<br>
+ Thou coudst not climb upon the hanging rocks,<br>
+ Nor ever, as the goddess bade thee, see<br>
+ The pasture of the yellow-fleecèd flocks:<br>
+ Or if thou coud, their herded horns would gore<br>
+ And slay thee on the crags, or thrust thee o'er<br>
+ Ere thou coudst rob them of their golden locks.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'The goddess means thy death. But I can show<br>
+ How thy obedience yet may thwart her will.<br>
+ At noon the golden flocks descend below,<br>
+ Leaving the scented herbage of the hill,<br>
+ And where the shelving banks to shallows fall,<br>
+ Drink at the rippling water one and all,<br>
+ Nor back return till they have drawn their fill.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'I will command a thornbush, that it stoop<br>
+ Over some ram that steppeth by in peace,<br>
+ And him in all its prickles firmly coop,<br>
+ Making thee seizure of his golden fleece;<br>
+ So without peril of his angry horns<br>
+ Shalt thou be quit: for he upon the thorns<br>
+ Must leave his ransom ere he win release.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_165"></a><span class="pagenumb">{165}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Psyche thankt her for her kind befriending,<br>
+ And hid among the rushes looking east;<br>
+ And when noon came she saw the flock descending<br>
+ Out of the hills; and lo! one golden beast<br>
+ Caught in a thornbush; and the mighty brute<br>
+ Struggl'd and tore it from its twisted root<br>
+ Into the stream, or e'er he was releas't.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And when they water'd were and gone, the breeze<br>
+ Floated the freighted thorn where Psyche lay:<br>
+ Whence she unhook'd the golden wool at ease,<br>
+ And back to heaven for passage swift gan pray.<br>
+ And Hermes, who was sent to be her guide<br>
+ Ifso she lived, came down at eventide,<br>
+ And bore her thither ere the close of day.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But when the goddess saw the locks of gold<br>
+ Held to her hands, her heart with wrath o'erran:<br>
+ 'Most desperate thou, and by abetting bold,<br>
+ That dost outwit me, prove thee as I can.<br>
+ Yet this work is not thine: there is but one<br>
+ Of all the gods who coud the thing have done.<br>
+ Hast thou a friend too in the lusty Pan?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'I'll give thee trial where he cannot aid.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Which said, she led her to a torrid land,</span
+ ><br>
+ Level and black, but not with flood or shade,<br>
+ For nothing coud the mighty heat withstand,<br>
+ Which aye from morn till eve the naked sun<br>
+ Pour'd on that plain, where never foot had run,<br>
+ Nor any herb sprung on its molten sand.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_166"></a><span class="pagenumb">{166}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Far off a gloomy mountain rose alone:<br>
+ And Aphrodite, thither pointing, said<br>
+ 'There lies thy task. Out of the topmost stone<br>
+ Of yonder hill upwells a fountain head.<br>
+ Take thou this goblet; brimming must thou bring<br>
+ Its cup with water from that sacred spring,<br>
+ If ever to my son thou wouldst be wed.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Saying, she gave into her hands a bowl<br>
+ Cut of one crystal, open, broad and fair;<br>
+ And bade her at all hazard keep it whole,<br>
+ For heaven held nought beside so fine or rare.<br>
+ Then was she gone; and Psyche on the plain<br>
+ Now doubted if she ever should regain<br>
+ The love of Eros, strove she howsoe'er.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Yet as a helmsman, at the word to tack,<br>
+ Swiftly without a thought puts down his helm,<br>
+ So Psyche turn'd to tread that desert black,<br>
+ Since was no fear that coud her heart o'erwhelm;<br>
+ Nor knew she that she went the fount to seek<br>
+ Of cold Cocytus, springing to the peak,<br>
+ Secretly from his source in Pluto's realm.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ All night and day she journey'd, and at last<br>
+ Come to the rock gazed up in vain around:<br>
+ Nothing she saw but precipices vast<br>
+ O'er ruined scarps, with rugged ridges crown'd:<br>
+ And creeping to a cleft to rest in shade,<br>
+ Or e'er the desperate venture she assay'd,<br>
+ She fell asleep upon the stony ground.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_167"></a><span class="pagenumb">{167}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A dream came to her, thus: she stood alone<br>
+ Within her palace in the high ravine;<br>
+ Where nought but she was changed, but she to stone.<br>
+ Worshippers throng'd the court, and still were seen<br>
+ Folk flying from the peak, who, ever more<br>
+ Flying and flying, lighted on the floor,<br>
+ <i>Hail!</i> cried they, <i>wife of Eros, adorèd queen</i>!<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A hurtling of the battl'd air disturb'd<br>
+ Her sunken sense, and waked her eyes to meet<br>
+ The kingly bird of Zeus, himself that curb'd<br>
+ His swooping course, alighting at her feet;<br>
+ With motion gentle, his far-darting eye<br>
+ In kindness dim'd upon her, he drew nigh,<br>
+ And thus in words unveil'd her foe's deceit:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'In vain, poor Psyche, hast thou hither striven<br>
+ Across the fiery plain toiling so well;<br>
+ Cruelly to destruction art thou driven<br>
+ By her, whose hate thou canst not quit nor quell.<br>
+ No mortal foot may scale this horrid mount,<br>
+ And those black waters of its topmost fount<br>
+ Are guarded by the hornèd snakes of hell.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Its little rill is an upleaping jet<br>
+ Of cold Cocytus, which for ever licks<br>
+ Earth's base, and when with Acheron 'tis met,<br>
+ Its waters with that other cannot mix,<br>
+ Which holds the elemental air dissolved;<br>
+ But with it in its ceaseless course revolved<br>
+ Issues unmingl'd in the lake of Styx.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_168"></a><span class="pagenumb">{168}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'The souls of murderers, in guise of fish,<br>
+ Scream as they swim therein and wail for cold,<br>
+ Their times of woe determined by the wish<br>
+ Of them they murder'd on the earth of old:<br>
+ Whom each five years they see, whene'er they make<br>
+ Their passage to the Acherusian lake,<br>
+ And there release may win from pains condoled.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'For if the pitying ear of them they slew<br>
+ Be haply piercèd by their voices spare,<br>
+ Then are they freed from pain; as are some few,<br>
+ But, for the most, again they forward fare<br>
+ To Tartarus obscene, and outcast thence<br>
+ Are hurried back into the cold intense,<br>
+ And with new company their torments share.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Its biting lymph may not be touch'd of man<br>
+ Or god, unless the Fates have so ordain'd;<br>
+ Nor coud I in thy favour break the ban,<br>
+ Nor pass the dragons that thereby are chain'd,<br>
+ Didst thou not bear the sacred cup of Zeus;<br>
+ Which, for thy peril lent, shall turn to use,<br>
+ And truly do the service which it feign'd.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus as he spake, his talons made he ring<br>
+ Around the crystal bowl, and soaring high<br>
+ Descended as from heaven upon the spring:<br>
+ Nor dared the hornèd snakes of hell deny<br>
+ The minister of Zeus, that bore his cup,<br>
+ To fill it with their trusted water up,<br>
+ Thence to the King of heaven therewith to fly.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_169"></a><span class="pagenumb">{169}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But he to Psyche bent his gracious speed,<br>
+ And bidding her to mount his feather'd back<br>
+ Bore her aloft as once young Ganymede;<br>
+ Nor ever made his steady flight to slack,<br>
+ Ere that he set her down beside her goal,<br>
+ And gave into her hands the crystal bowl<br>
+ Unspill'd, o'erbrimming with the water black.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">JANUARY</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But Eros now recover'd from his hurt,<br>
+ Felt other pangs; for who would not relent<br>
+ Weighing the small crime and unmatch'd desert<br>
+ Of Psyche with her cruel punishment?<br>
+ And shamed he grew to be so near allied<br>
+ To her, who by her taunts awoke his pride,<br>
+ As his compassion by her spite unspent.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Which Aphrodite seeing, wax'd more firm<br>
+ That he should never meet with Psyche more;<br>
+ And had in thought already set the term<br>
+ To their communion with that trial sore,<br>
+ Which sent her forth upon a quest accurst,<br>
+ And not to be accomplisht, that of thirst<br>
+ She there might perish on hell's torrid shore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_170"></a><span class="pagenumb">{170}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And now it chanced that she had called her son</span
+ ><br>
+ Into her presence-chamber, to unfold<br>
+ Psyche's destruction, that her fate might stun<br>
+ What love remained by duty uncontrol'd;<br>
+ And he to hide his tears' rebellious storm<br>
+ Was fled; when in his place another form<br>
+ Rose 'neath the golden lintel; and behold<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Psyche herself, in slow and balanced strain,<br>
+ Poising the crystal bowl with fearful heed,<br>
+ Her eyes at watch upon the steadied plane,<br>
+ And whole soul gather'd in the single deed.<br>
+ Onward she came, and stooping to the floor<br>
+ Set down the cup unspill'd and brimming o'er<br>
+ At Aphrodite's feet, and rose up freed.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Surprise o'ercame the goddess, and she too</span
+ ><br>
+ Stood like a statue, but with passion pale:<br>
+ Till, when her victim nothing spake, she threw<br>
+ Some kindness in her voice, and bade her hail;<br>
+ But in the smiling judge 'twas plain to see&mdash;<br>
+ Saying 'What water bringst thou here to me?'&mdash;<br>
+ That justice over hate should not prevail.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Psyche said 'This is the biting flood<br>
+ Of black Cocytus, silver'd with the gleam<br>
+ Of souls, that guilty of another's blood<br>
+ Are pent therein, and as they swim they scream.<br>
+ The hornèd snakes of hell, upon the mount<br>
+ Enchain'd, for ever guard the livid fount:<br>
+ And but the Fates can grant to touch the stream.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_171"></a><span class="pagenumb">{171}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Wherefore,' the goddess cried, ''tis plain that none<br>
+ But one I wot of coud this thing have wrought.<br>
+ That which another doth may well be done,<br>
+ Nor thou the nearer to my promise brought.<br>
+ Thou buildest on a hope to be destroy'd,<br>
+ If thou accept conditions, and avoid<br>
+ Thy parcel, nor thyself accomplish aught.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Was it not kindness in me, being averse<br>
+ To all thy wish, to yield me thus to grant<br>
+ Thy heart's desire,&mdash;and nothing loathe I worse,&mdash;<br>
+ If thou wouldst only work as well as want?<br>
+ See, now I will not yet be all denial,<br>
+ But offer thee one last determining trial;<br>
+ And let it be a mutual covenant:<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'This box,' and in her hands she took a pyx</span
+ ><br>
+ Square-cut, of dark obsidian's rarest green,<br>
+ 'Take; and therewith beyond Tartarean Styx<br>
+ Go thou, and entering Hades' house obscene,<br>
+ Say to Persephonè,
+ <i
+ >If 'tis thy will<br>
+ To shew me so much favour, prithee fill<br>
+ This little vase with beauty for Love's queen</i
+ >.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ '<i
+ >She begs but what shall well o'erlast a day;<br>
+ For of her own was much of late outspent<br>
+ In nursing of her son, in bed who lay<br>
+ Wounded by me, who for the gift am sent.</i
+ ><br>
+ Then bring me what she gives, and with all speed;<br>
+ For truth to say I stand, thou seest, in need<br>
+ Of some such charm in my disparagement.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_172"></a><span class="pagenumb">{172}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'If thou return to me with that acquist,<br>
+ Having thyself the journey made, I swear<br>
+ That day to give thee whatsoe'er thou list,<br>
+ An be it my son. Now, Psyche, wilt thou dare?'<br>
+ And Psyche said 'If this thou truly mean,<br>
+ I will go down to Tartarus obscene,<br>
+ And beg of Hades' queen thy beauty there.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Show me the way.' But Aphrodite said,<br>
+ 'That may'st thou find. Yet I will place thee whence<br>
+ A way there is: mortals have on it sped;<br>
+ Ay, and return'd thereby: so let us hence.'<br>
+ Then swift to earth her willing prey she bore,<br>
+ And left her on the wide Laconian shore,<br>
+ Alone, at midnight, in the darkness dense.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Twas winter; and as shivering Psyche sat</span
+ ><br>
+ Waiting for morn, she question'd in her mind<br>
+ What place the goddess meant, arrived whereat<br>
+ She might descend to hell, or how should find<br>
+ The way which Gods to living men deny.<br>
+ 'No Orpheus, nay, nor Hercules am I,'<br>
+ Said she, 'to loosen where the great Gods bind.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And when at length the long-delaying dawn<br>
+ Broke on the peaks of huge Taÿgetus,<br>
+ And Psyche through the skirts of dark withdrawn<br>
+ Look'd on that promontory mountainous,<br>
+ And saw high-crested Taleton in snow,<br>
+ Her heart sank, and she wept with head bent low<br>
+ The malice of her foe dispiteous.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_173"></a><span class="pagenumb">{173}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And seeing near at hand an ancient tower,<br>
+ Deserted now, but once a hold of men,<br>
+ She came thereto, and, though 'twas all her power,<br>
+ Mounted its steep unbroken stair again.<br>
+ 'Surely,' she said, for now a second time<br>
+ She thought to die&mdash;'this little height I climb<br>
+ Will prove my shortest road to Pluto's den.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Hence must I come to Tartarus; once there<br>
+ Turn as I may,' and straight to death had sprung;<br>
+ When in the mossy tower the imprison'd air<br>
+ Was shaken, and the hoary stones gave tongue,<br>
+ 'Stand firm! Stand firm!' that rugged voice outcried;<br>
+ 'Of such as choose despondency for guide<br>
+ Hast thou not heard what bitterest fate is sung?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Hearken; for I the road and means can teach<br>
+ How thou may'st come to hell and yet escape.<br>
+ And first must thou, that upper gate to reach,<br>
+ Along these seagirt hills thy journey shape,<br>
+ To where the land in sea dips furthest South<br>
+ At Tænarus and Hades' earthly mouth,<br>
+ Hard by Poseidon's temple at the cape.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Thereby may one descend: but they that make<br>
+ That passage down must go provided well.<br>
+ So take in either hand a honey-cake<br>
+ Of pearlèd barley mix'd with hydromel;<br>
+ And in thy mouth two doits, first having bound<br>
+ The pyx beneath thy robe enwrap'd around:<br>
+ Thus set thou forth; and mark what more I tell.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_174"></a><span class="pagenumb">{174}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'When thou hast gone alone some half thy road<br>
+ Thou wilt o'ertake a lame outwearied ass;<br>
+ And one that beats him, tottering 'neath his load<br>
+ Of loosely bundl'd wood, will cry
+ <i
+ >Alas;<br>
+ Help me, kind friend, my faggots to adjust</i
+ >!<br>
+ But thou that silly cripple's words mistrust;<br>
+ 'Tis planted for thy death. Note it and pass.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'And when thy road the Stygian river joins,<br>
+ Where woolly Charon ferries o'er the dead,<br>
+ He will demand his fare: one of thy coins<br>
+ Force with thy tongue between thy teeth, thy head<br>
+ Offering instead of hand to give the doit.<br>
+ His fingers in this custom are adroit,<br>
+ And thine must not set down the barleybread.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Then in his crazy bark as, ferrying o'er<br>
+ The stream, thou sittest, one that seems to float<br>
+ Rather than swim, midway 'twixt shore and shore,<br>
+ Will stretch his fleshless hand upon the boat,<br>
+ And beg thee of thy pity take him in.<br>
+ Shut thy soft ear unto his clamour thin,<br>
+ Nor for a phantom deed thyself devote.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Next, on the further bank when thou art stept,<br>
+ Three wizen'd women weaving at the woof<br>
+ Will stop, and pray thee in their art adept<br>
+ To free their tangl'd threads. Hold thou aloof;<br>
+ For this and other traps thy foe hath plan'd<br>
+ To make thee drop the cakes out of thy hand,<br>
+ Putting thy prudence to perpetual proof.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_175"></a><span class="pagenumb">{175}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'For by one cake thou comest into Hell,<br>
+ And by one cake departest; since the hound<br>
+ That guards the gate is ever pleasèd well<br>
+ To taste man's meal, or sweeten'd grain unground.<br>
+ Cast him a cake; for that thou may'st go free<br>
+ Even to the mansion of Persephonè,<br>
+ Withouten stay or peril, safe and sound.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'She will receive thee kindly; thou decline<br>
+ Her courtesies, and make the floor thy seat;<br>
+ Refusing what is offer'd, food or wine;<br>
+ Save only beg a crust of bread to eat.<br>
+ Then tell thy mission, and her present take;<br>
+ Which when thou hast, set forth with pyx and cake,<br>
+ One in each hand, while yet thou may'st retreat.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Giving thy second cake to Cerberus,<br>
+ The coin to Charon, and that way whereby<br>
+ Thou camest following, thou comest thus<br>
+ To see again the starry choir on high.<br>
+ But guard thou well the pyx, nor once uplift<br>
+ The lid to look on Persephassa's gift;<br>
+ Else 'tis in vain I bid thee now not die.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then Psyche thank'd the tower, and stoopt her mouth</span
+ ><br>
+ To kiss the stones upon his rampart hoary;<br>
+ And coming down his stair went hasting south,<br>
+ Along the steep Tænarian promontory;<br>
+ And found the cave and temple by the cape,<br>
+ And took the cakes and coins, and made escape<br>
+ Beneath the earth, according to his story.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_176"></a><span class="pagenumb">{176}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And overtook the ass, but lent no aid;<br>
+ And offer'd Charon with her teeth his fee;<br>
+ And pass'd the floating ghost, in vain who pray'd;<br>
+ And turned her back upon the weavers three;<br>
+ And threw the honey-cake to that hell-hound<br>
+ Three-headed Cerberus; and safe and sound,<br>
+ Came to the mansion of Persephonè.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Kindly received, she courtesy declined:<br>
+ Sat on the ground; ate not, save where she lay,<br>
+ A crust of bread; reveal'd the goddess' mind;<br>
+ The gift took; and return'd upon her way:<br>
+ Gave Cerberus his cake, Charon his fare,<br>
+ And saw through Hell's mouth to the purple air<br>
+ And one by one the keen stars melt in day.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Awhile from so long journeying in the shades<br>
+ Resting at Tænarus she came to know<br>
+ How, up the eastern coast some forty stades,<br>
+ There stood a temple of her goddess foe.<br>
+ There would she make her offering, there reclaim<br>
+ The prize, which now 'twas happiness to name,<br>
+ The joy that should redeem all passèd woe.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And wending by the sunny shore at noon,<br>
+ She with her pyx, and wondering what it hid,<br>
+ Of what kind, what the fashion of the boon<br>
+ Coud be, that she to look on was forbid,&mdash;<br>
+ Alas for Innocence so hard to teach!&mdash;<br>
+ At fancy's prick she sat her on the beach,<br>
+ And to content desire lifted the lid.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_177"></a><span class="pagenumb">{177}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ She saw within nothing: But o'er her sight<br>
+ That looked on nothing gan a darkness creep.<br>
+ A cloudy poison, mix'd of Stygian night,<br>
+ Rapt her to deadly and infernal sleep.<br>
+ Backward she fell, like one when all is o'er,<br>
+ And lay outstretch'd, as lies upon the shore<br>
+ A drown'd corpse cast up by the murmuring deep.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">FEBRUARY</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ While Eros in his chamber hid his tears,<br>
+ Mourning the loss of Psyche and her fate,<br>
+ The rumour of her safety reacht his ears<br>
+ And how she came to Aphrodite's gate:<br>
+ Whereat with hope return'd his hardihood,<br>
+ And secretly he purposed while he coud<br>
+ Himself to save her from the goddess' hate.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then learning what he might and guessing more,<br>
+ His ready wit came soon to understand<br>
+ The journey to the far Laconian shore;<br>
+ Whither to fly and seek his love he plan'd:<br>
+ And making good escape in dark of night,<br>
+ Ere the sun crost his true meridian flight<br>
+ He by Teuthronè struck the southern strand.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_178"></a><span class="pagenumb">{178}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There as it chanct he found that snowy bird<br>
+ Of Crete, that late made mischief with his queen,<br>
+ And now along the cliffs with wings unstir'd<br>
+ Sail'd, and that morn had cross'd the sea between:<br>
+ Whom as he past he hail'd, and question'd thus,<br>
+ 'O snowy gull, if thou from Tænarus<br>
+ Be come, say, hast thou there my Psyche seen?'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The gull replied 'Thy Psyche have I seen;<br>
+ Walking beside the sea she joy'th to bear<br>
+ A pyx of dark obsidian's rarest green,<br>
+ Wherein she gazeth on her features fair.<br>
+ She is not hence by now six miles at most.'<br>
+ Then Eros bade him speed, and down the coast<br>
+ Held on his passage through the buoyant air.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ With eager eye he search'd the salty marge,<br>
+ Boding all mischief from his mother's glee;<br>
+ And wondering of her wiles, and what the charge<br>
+ Shut in the dark obsidian pyx might be.<br>
+ And lo! at last, outstretch'd beside the rocks,<br>
+ Psyche as lifeless; and the open box<br>
+ Laid with the weedy refuse of the sea.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ He guess'd all, flew down, and beside her knelt,<br>
+ With both his hands stroking her temples wan;<br>
+ And for the poison with his fingers felt,<br>
+ And drew it gently from her; and anon<br>
+ She slowly from those Stygian fumes was freed;<br>
+ Which he with magic handling and good heed<br>
+ Replaced in pyx, and shut the lid thereon.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_179"></a><span class="pagenumb">{179}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'O Psyche,' thus, and kissing her he cried,<br>
+ 'O simple-hearted Psyche, once again<br>
+ Hast thou thy foolish longing gratified,<br>
+ A second time hath prying been thy bane.<br>
+ But lo! I, love, am come, for I am thine:<br>
+ Nor ever more shall any fate malign,<br>
+ Or spite of goddess smite our love in twain.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Let now that I have saved thee twice outweigh<br>
+ The once that I deserted thee: and thou<br>
+ Hast much obey'd for once to disobey,<br>
+ And wilt no more my bidding disallow.<br>
+ Take up thy pyx; to Aphrodite go,<br>
+ And claim the promise of thy mighty foe;<br>
+ Maybe that she will grant it to thee now.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'If she should yet refuse, despair not yet!'<br>
+ Then Psyche, when she felt his arms restore<br>
+ Their old embrace, and as their bodies met,<br>
+ Knew the great joy that grief is pardon'd for;<br>
+ And how it doth first ecstasy excel,<br>
+ When love well-known, long-lost, and mournèd well<br>
+ In long days of no hope, comes home once more.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But Eros leaping up with purpose keen</span
+ ><br>
+ Into the air, as only love can fly,<br>
+ Bore her to heaven, and setting her unseen<br>
+ At Aphrodite's golden gate,&mdash;whereby<br>
+ They came as night was close on twilight dim,&mdash;<br>
+ There left, and bidding her say nought of him<br>
+ Went onward to the house of Zeus most high.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_180"></a><span class="pagenumb">{180}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Where winning audience of the heavenly sire,<br>
+ Who well disposed to him was used to be,<br>
+ He told the story of his strong desire;<br>
+ And boldly begg'd that Zeus would grant his plea<br>
+ That he might have sweet Psyche for his wife,<br>
+ And she be dower'd with immortal life,<br>
+ Since she was worthy, by his firm decree.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And great Zeus smiled; and at the smile of Zeus<br>
+ All heaven was glad, and on the earth below<br>
+ Was calm and peace awhile and sorrow's truce:<br>
+ The sun shone forth and smote the winter snow,<br>
+ The flowërs sprang, the birds gan sing and pair,<br>
+ And mortals, as they drew the brighten'd air,<br>
+ Marvel'd, and quite forgot their common woe.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Yet gave the Thunderer not his full consent<br>
+ Without some words: 'At length is come the day,'<br>
+ Thus spake he, 'when for all thy youth misspent,<br>
+ Thy mischief-making and thy wanton play<br>
+ Thou art upgrown to taste the sweet and sour:<br>
+ Good shall it work upon thee: from this hour<br>
+ Look we for better things. And this I say,<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'That since thy birth, which all we took for bliss,<br>
+ Thou hast but mock'd us; and no less on me<br>
+ Hast brought disfavour and contempt, ywiss,<br>
+ Than others that have had to do with thee:<br>
+ Till only such as vow'd themselves aloof<br>
+ From thee and thine were held in good approof;<br>
+ And few there were, who thus of shame went free.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_181"></a><span class="pagenumb">{181}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'That punishment is shapen as reward<br>
+ Is like thy fortune: but our good estate<br>
+ We honour, while we sit to be adored:<br>
+ And thus 'twas written in the book of Fate.<br>
+ Not for thy pleasure, but the general weal<br>
+ Grant I the grace for which thou here dost kneel;<br>
+ And that which I determine shall not wait.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So wingèd Hermes through the heaven he sped,<br>
+ To warn the high celestials to his hall,<br>
+ Where they should Psyche see with Eros wed,<br>
+ And keep the day with feast ambrosial.<br>
+ And Hermes, flying through the skiey ways<br>
+ Of high Olympus, spread sweet Psyche's praise,<br>
+ And bade the mighty gods obey his call.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then all the Kronian gods and goddesses</span
+ ><br>
+ Assembl'd at his cry,&mdash;and now 'twas known<br>
+ Why Zeus had smiled,&mdash;the lesser majesties<br>
+ Attending them before his royal throne.<br>
+ Athena, mistress good of them that know,<br>
+ Came, and Apollo, warder off of woe,<br>
+ Who had to Psyche's sire her fate foreshown;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Demeter, giver of the golden corn,<br>
+ Fair Hebe, honour'd at her Attic shrine,<br>
+ And Artemis with hunting spear and horn,<br>
+ And Dionysos, planter of the vine,<br>
+ With old Poseidon from the barren sea,<br>
+ And Leto, and the lame Hephæstos, he<br>
+ Himself who built those halls with skill divine.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_182"></a><span class="pagenumb">{182}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And ruddy Pan with many a quip and quirk<br>
+ Air'd 'mong those lofty gods his mirth illbred,<br>
+ Bearing a mighty bowl of cretan work:<br>
+ Stern Arês, with his crisp hair helmeted,<br>
+ Came, and retirèd Hestia, and the god<br>
+ Hermes, with wingèd cap and ribbon'd rod,<br>
+ By whom the company was heralded.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And Hera sat by Zeus, and all around<br>
+ The Muses, that of learning make their choice;<br>
+ Who, when Apollo struck his strings to sound,<br>
+ Sang in alternate music with sweet voice:<br>
+ And righteous Themis, and the Graces three<br>
+ Ushering the anger'd Aphrodite; she<br>
+ Alone of all were there might not rejoice<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ But ere they sat to feast, Zeus bade them fill<br>
+ The cup ambrosial of immortal life,<br>
+ And said 'If Psyche drink,&mdash;and 'tis my will,&mdash;<br>
+ There is an end of this unhappy strife.<br>
+ Nor can the goddess, whose mislike had birth<br>
+ From too great honour paid the bride on earth,<br>
+ Forbid her any more for Eros' wife.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Then Aphrodite said 'So let it be.'<br>
+ And Psyche was brought in, with such a flush<br>
+ Of joy upon her face, as there to see<br>
+ Was fairer to love's eye than beauty's blush.<br>
+ And then she drank the eternal wine, whose draught<br>
+ Can Terror cease: which flesh hath never quafft,<br>
+ Nor doth it flow from grape that mortals crush.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_183"></a><span class="pagenumb">{183}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And next stood Eros forth, and took her hand,<br>
+ And kisst her happy face before them all:<br>
+ And Zeus proclaim'd them married, and outban'd<br>
+ From heaven whoever should that word miscall.<br>
+ And then all sat to feast, and one by one<br>
+ Pledged Psyche ere they drank and cried <i>Well done!</i><br>
+ And merry laughter rang throughout the hall.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">So thus was Eros unto Psyche wed,</span
+ ><br>
+ The heavenly bridegroom to his earthly bride,<br>
+ Who won his love, in simple maidenhead:<br>
+ And by her love herself she glorified,<br>
+ And him from wanton wildness disinclined;<br>
+ Since in his love for her he came to find<br>
+ A joy unknown through all Olympus wide.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And Psyche for her fall was quite forgiven,<br>
+ Since 'gainst herself when tempted to rebel,<br>
+ By others' malice on her ruin driven,<br>
+ Only of sweet simplicity she fell:&mdash;<br>
+ Wherein who fall may fall unto the skies;&mdash;<br>
+ And being foolish she was yet most wise,<br>
+ And took her trials patiently and well.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ And Aphrodite since her full defeat<br>
+ Is kinder and less jealous than before,<br>
+ And smiling on them both, calls Psyche sweet;<br>
+ But thinks her son less manly than of yore:<br>
+ Though still she holds his arm of some renown,<br>
+ When he goes smiting mortals up and down,<br>
+ Piercing their marrow with his weapons sore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_184"></a><span class="pagenumb">{184}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <i>So now in steadfast love and happy state</i><br>
+ They hold for aye their mansion in the sky,<br>
+ And send down heavenly peace on those who mate,<br>
+ In virgin love, to find their joy thereby:<br>
+ Whom gently Eros shooteth, and apart<br>
+ Keepeth for them from all his sheaf that dart<br>
+ Which Psyche in his chamber pickt to try.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Now in that same month Psyche bare a child,</span
+ ><br>
+ Who straight in heaven was named Hedonè<br>
+ In mortal tongues by other letters styled;<br>
+ Whom all to love, however named, agree:<br>
+ Whom in our noble English JOY we call,<br>
+ And honour them among us most of all,<br>
+ Whose happy children are as fair as she.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>ENVOY</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <small
+ >IT IS MY PRAYER THAT SHE MAY SMILE ON ALL<br>
+ WHO READ MY TALE AS SHE HATH SMILED ON ME.</small
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_185"></a><span class="pagenumb">{185}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ <a id="The_Growth_of_Love"></a
+ ><span class="smcap">The Growth of Love</span>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_185.png"
+ width="30"
+ height="50"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_186"></a><span class="pagenumb">{186}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>PREVIOUS EDITIONS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>1. <i>XXIV Sonnets. Ed. Bumpus, 1876.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>2. <i>LXXIX Sonnets. Daniel Press, 1889.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>This edition was copied in America.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>3. <i>Do. do. Black letter. 1890.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 4. <i>LXIX Sonnets. Smith, Elder &amp; Co. Vol. I, 1898.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_187"></a><span class="pagenumb">{187}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ <a id="THE_GROWTH"></a>THE GROWTH<br>
+ OF LOVE
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ They that in play can do the thing they would,<br>
+ Having an instinct throned in reason's place,<br>
+ &mdash;And every perfect action hath the grace<br>
+ Of indolence or thoughtless hardihood&mdash;<br>
+ These are the best: yet be there workmen good<br>
+ Who lose in earnestness control of face,<br>
+ Or reckon means, and rapt in effort base<br>
+ Reach to their end by steps well understood.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Me whom thou sawest of late strive with the pains</span
+ ><br>
+ Of one who spends his strength to rule his nerve,<br>
+ &mdash;Even as a painter breathlessly who strains<br>
+ His scarcely moving hand lest it should swerve&mdash;<br>
+ Behold me, now that I have cast my chains,<br>
+ Master of the art which for thy sake I serve.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_188"></a><span class="pagenumb">{188}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ For thou art mine: and now I am ashamed<br>
+ To have usèd means to win so pure acquist,<br>
+ And of my trembling fear that might have misst<br>
+ Thro' very care the gold at which I aim'd;<br>
+ And am as happy but to hear thee named,<br>
+ As are those gentle souls by angels kisst<br>
+ In pictures seen leaving their marble cist<br>
+ To go before the throne of grace unblamed.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Nor surer am I water hath the skill</span
+ ><br>
+ To quench my thirst, or that my strength is freed<br>
+ In delicate ordination as I will,<br>
+ Than that to be myself is all I need<br>
+ For thee to be most mine: so I stand still,<br>
+ And save to taste my joy no more take heed.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The whole world now is but the minister<br>
+ Of thee to me: I see no other scheme<br>
+ But universal love, from timeless dream<br>
+ Waking to thee his joy's interpreter.<br>
+ I walk around and in the fields confer<br>
+ Of love at large with tree and flower and stream,<br>
+ And list the lark descant upon my theme,<br>
+ Heaven's musical accepted worshipper.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Thy smile outfaceth ill: and that old feud</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Twixt things and me is quash'd in our new truce;<br>
+ And nature now dearly with thee endued<br>
+ No more in shame ponders her old excuse,<br>
+ But quite forgets her frowns and antics rude,<br>
+ So kindly hath she grown to her new use.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_189"></a><span class="pagenumb">{189}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The very names of things belov'd are dear,<br>
+ And sounds will gather beauty from their sense,<br>
+ As many a face thro' love's long residence<br>
+ Groweth to fair instead of plain and sere:<br>
+ But when I say thy name it hath no peer,<br>
+ And I suppose fortune determined thence<br>
+ Her dower, that such beauty's excellence<br>
+ Should have a perfect title for the ear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Thus may I think the adopting Muses chose</span
+ ><br>
+ Their sons by name, knowing none would be heard<br>
+ Or writ so oft in all the world as those,&mdash;<br>
+ Dan Chaucer, mighty Shakespeare, then for third<br>
+ The classic Milton, and to us arose<br>
+ Shelley with liquid music in the word.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The poets were good teachers, for they taught<br>
+ Earth had this joy; but that 'twould ever be<br>
+ That fortune should be perfected in me,<br>
+ My heart of hope dared not engage the thought.<br>
+ So I stood low, and now but to be caught<br>
+ By any self-styled lords of the age with thee<br>
+ Vexes my modesty, lest they should see<br>
+ I hold them owls and peacocks, things of nought.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And when we sit alone, and as I please</span
+ ><br>
+ I taste thy love's full smile, and can enstate<br>
+ The pleasure of my kingly heart at ease,<br>
+ My thought swims like a ship, that with the weight<br>
+ Of her rich burden sleeps on the infinite seas<br>
+ Becalm'd, and cannot stir her golden freight.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_190"></a><span class="pagenumb">{190}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ While yet we wait for spring, and from the dry<br>
+ And blackening east that so embitters March,<br>
+ Well-housed must watch grey fields and meadows parch,<br>
+ And driven dust and withering snowflake fly:<br>
+ Already in glimpses of the tarnish'd sky<br>
+ The sun is warm and beckons to the larch,<br>
+ And where the covert hazels interarch<br>
+ Their tassell'd twigs, fair beds of primrose lie.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Beneath the crisp and wintry carpet hid</span
+ ><br>
+ A million buds but stay their blossoming;<br>
+ And trustful birds have built their nests amid<br>
+ The shuddering boughs, and only wait to sing<br>
+ Till one soft shower from the south shall bid,<br>
+ And hither tempt the pilgrim steps of spring.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In thee my spring of life hath bid the while<br>
+ A rose unfold beyond the summer's best,<br>
+ The mystery of joy made manifest<br>
+ In love's self-answering and awakening smile,<br>
+ Whereby the lips in wonder reconcile<br>
+ Passion with peace, and show desire at rest,&mdash;<br>
+ A grace of silence by the Greek unguesst,<br>
+ That bloom'd to immortalize the Tuscan style:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >When first the angel-song that faith hath ken'd</span
+ ><br>
+ Fancy pourtray'd, above recorded oath<br>
+ Of Israel's God, or light of poem pen'd;<br>
+ The very countenance of plighted troth<br>
+ 'Twixt heaven and earth, where in one moment blend<br>
+ The hope of one and happiness of both.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_191"></a><span class="pagenumb">{191}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ For beauty being the best of all we know<br>
+ Sums up the unsearchable and secret aims<br>
+ Of nature, and on joys whose earthly names<br>
+ Were never told can form and sense bestow;<br>
+ And man hath sped his instinct to outgo<br>
+ The step of science; and against her shames<br>
+ Imagination stakes out heavenly claims,<br>
+ Building a tower above the head of woe.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Nor is there fairer work for beauty found</span
+ ><br>
+ Than that she win in nature her release<br>
+ From all the woes that in the world abound:<br>
+ Nay with his sorrow may his love increase,<br>
+ If from man's greater need beauty redound,<br>
+ And claim his tears for homage of his peace.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus to thy beauty doth my fond heart look,<br>
+ That late dismay'd her faithless faith forbore;<br>
+ And wins again her love lost in the lore<br>
+ Of schools and script of many a learned book:<br>
+ For thou what ruthless death untimely took<br>
+ Shalt now in better brotherhood restore,<br>
+ And save my batter'd ship that far from shore<br>
+ High on the dismal deep in tempest shook.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >So in despite of sorrow lately learn'd</span
+ ><br>
+ I still hold true to truth since thou art true,<br>
+ Nor wail the woe which thou to joy hast turn'd:<br>
+ Nor come the heavenly sun and bathing blue<br>
+ To my life's need more splendid and unearn'd<br>
+ Than hath thy gift outmatch'd desire and due.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_192"></a><span class="pagenumb">{192}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Winter was not unkind because uncouth;<br>
+ His prison'd time made me a closer guest,<br>
+ And gave thy graciousness a warmer zest,<br>
+ Biting all else with keen and angry tooth:<br>
+ And bravelier the triumphant blood of youth<br>
+ Mantling thy cheek its happy home possest,<br>
+ And sterner sport by day put strength to test,<br>
+ And custom's feast at night gave tongue to truth.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or say hath flaunting summer a device</span
+ ><br>
+ To match our midnight revelry, that rang<br>
+ With steel and flame along the snow-girt ice?<br>
+ Or when we hark't to nightingales that sang<br>
+ On dewy eves in spring, did they entice<br>
+ To gentler love than winter's icy fang?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ There's many a would-be poet at this hour,<br>
+ Rhymes of a love that he hath never woo'd,<br>
+ And o'er his lamplit desk in solitude<br>
+ Deems that he sitteth in the Muses' bower:<br>
+ And some the flames of earthly love devour,<br>
+ Who have taken no kiss of Nature, nor renew'd<br>
+ In the world's wilderness with heavenly food<br>
+ The sickly body of their perishing power.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">So none of all our company, I boast,</span
+ ><br>
+ But now would mock my penning, coud they see<br>
+ How down the right it maps a jagged coast;<br>
+ Seeing they hold the manlier praise to be<br>
+ Strong hand and will, and the heart best when most<br>
+ 'Tis sober, simple, true, and fancy-free.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_193"></a><span class="pagenumb">{193}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ How coud I quarrel or blame you, most dear,<br>
+ Who all thy virtues gavest and kept back none;<br>
+ Kindness and gentleness, truth without peer,<br>
+ And beauty that my fancy fed upon?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Now not my life's contrition for my fault</span
+ ><br>
+ Can blot that day, nor work me recompence,<br>
+ Tho' I might worthily thy worth exalt,<br>
+ Making thee long amends for short offence.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >For surely nowhere, love, if not in thee</span
+ ><br>
+ Are grace and truth and beauty to be found;<br>
+ And all my praise of these can only be<br>
+ A praise of thee, howe'er by thee disown'd:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >While still thou must be mine tho' far removed,</span
+ ><br>
+ And I for one offence no more beloved.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Now since to me altho' by thee refused<br>
+ The world is left, I shall find pleasure still;<br>
+ The art that most I have loved but little used<br>
+ Will yield a world of fancies at my will:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And tho' where'er thou goest it is from me,</span
+ ><br>
+ I where I go thee in my heart must bear;<br>
+ And what thou wert that wilt thou ever be,<br>
+ My choice, my best, my loved, and only fair.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Farewell, yet think not such farewell a change</span
+ ><br>
+ From tenderness, tho' once to meet or part<br>
+ But on short absence so coud sense derange<br>
+ That tears have graced the greeting of my heart;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >They were proud drops and had my leave to fall,</span
+ ><br>
+ Not on thy pity for my pain to call.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_194"></a><span class="pagenumb">{194}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When sometimes in an ancient house where state<br>
+ From noble ancestry is handed on,<br>
+ We see but desolation thro' the gate,<br>
+ And richest heirlooms all to ruin gone;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Because maybe some fancied shame or fear,</span
+ ><br>
+ Bred of disease or melancholy fate,<br>
+ Hath driven the owner from his rightful sphere<br>
+ To wander nameless save to pity or hate:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >What is the wreck of all he hath in fief,</span
+ ><br>
+ When he that hath is wrecking? nought is fine<br>
+ Unto the sick, nor doth it burden grief<br>
+ That the house perish when the soul doth pine.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Thus I my state despise, slain by a sting</span
+ ><br>
+ So slight 'twould not have hurt a meaner thing.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Who builds a ship must first lay down the keel<br>
+ Of health, whereto the ribs of mirth are wed:<br>
+ And knit, with beams and knees of strength, a bed<br>
+ For decks of purity, her floor and ceil.<br>
+ Upon her masts, Adventure, Pride, and Zeal,<br>
+ To fortune's wind the sails of purpose spread:<br>
+ And at the prow make figured maidenhead<br>
+ O'erride the seas and answer to the wheel.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And let him deep in memory's hold have stor'd</span
+ ><br>
+ Water of Helicon: and let him fit<br>
+ The needle that doth true with heaven accord:<br>
+ Then bid her crew, love, diligence and wit<br>
+ With justice, courage, temperance come aboard,<br>
+ And at her helm the master reason sit.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_195"></a><span class="pagenumb">{195}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ This world is unto God a work of art,<br>
+ Of which the unaccomplish'd heavenly plan<br>
+ Is hid in life within the creature's heart,<br>
+ And for perfection looketh unto man.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Ah me! those thousand ages: with what slow</span
+ ><br>
+ Pains and persistence were his idols made,<br>
+ Destroy'd and made, ere ever he coud know<br>
+ The mighty mother must be so obey'd.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >For lack of knowledge and thro' little skill</span
+ ><br>
+ His childish mimicry outwent his aim;<br>
+ His effort shaped the genius of his will;<br>
+ Till thro' distinction and revolt he came,<br>
+ True to his simple terms of good and ill,<br>
+ Seeking the face of Beauty without blame.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Say who be these light-bearded, sunburnt faces<br>
+ In negligent and travel-stain'd array,<br>
+ That in the city of Dante come to-day,<br>
+ Haughtily visiting her holy places?<br>
+ O these be noble men that hide their graces,<br>
+ True England's blood, her ancient glory's stay,<br>
+ By tales of fame diverted on their way<br>
+ Home from the rule of oriental races.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Life-trifling lions these, of gentle eyes</span
+ ><br>
+ And motion delicate, but swift to fire<br>
+ For honour, passionate where duty lies,<br>
+ Most loved and loving: and they quickly tire<br>
+ Of Florence, that she one day more denies<br>
+ The embrace of wife and son, of sister or sire.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_196"></a><span class="pagenumb">{196}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Where San Miniato's convent from the sun<br>
+ At forenoon overlooks the city of flowers<br>
+ I sat, and gazing on her domes and towers<br>
+ Call'd up her famous children one by one:<br>
+ And three who all the rest had far outdone,<br>
+ Mild Giotto first, who stole the morning hours,<br>
+ I saw, and god-like Buonarroti's powers,<br>
+ And Dante, gravest poet, her much-wrong'd son.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Is all this glory, I said, another's praise?</span
+ ><br>
+ Are these heroic triumphs things of old,<br>
+ And do I dead upon the living gaze?<br>
+ Or rather doth the mind, that can behold<br>
+ The wondrous beauty of the works and days,<br>
+ Create the image that her thoughts enfold?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Rejoice, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell,<br>
+ Rejoice that yet on earth your fame is bright;<br>
+ And that your names, remember'd day and night,<br>
+ Live on the lips of those that love you well.<br>
+ 'Tis ye that conquer'd have the powers of hell,<br>
+ Each with the special grace of your delight:<br>
+ Ye are the world's creators, and thro' might<br>
+ Of everlasting love ye did excel.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Now ye are starry names, above the storm</span
+ ><br>
+ And war of Time and nature's endless wrong<br>
+ Ye flit, in pictured truth and peaceful form,<br>
+ Wing'd with bright music and melodious song,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >The flaming flowers of heaven, making May-dance</span
+ ><br>
+ In dear Imagination's rich pleasance.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_197"></a><span class="pagenumb">{197}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ T<small>HE</small> world still goeth about to shew and hide,<br>
+ Befool'd of all opinion, fond of fame:<br>
+ But he that can do well taketh no pride,<br>
+ And see'th his error, undisturb'd by shame:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >So poor's the best that longest life can do,</span
+ ><br>
+ The most so little, diligently done;<br>
+ So mighty is the beauty that doth woo,<br>
+ So vast the joy that love from love hath won.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >God's love to win is easy, for He loveth</span
+ ><br>
+ Desire's fair attitude, nor strictly weighs<br>
+ The broken thing, but all alike approveth<br>
+ Which love hath aim'd at Him: that is heaven's praise:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And if we look for any praise on earth,</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Tis in man's love: all else is nothing worth.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ O F<small>LESH</small> and blood, comrade to tragic pain<br>
+ And clownish merriment; whose sense could wake<br>
+ Sermons in stones, and count death but an ache,<br>
+ All things as vanity, yet nothing vain:<br>
+ The world, set in thy heart, thy passionate strain<br>
+ Reveal'd anew; but thou for man didst make<br>
+ Nature twice natural, only to shake<br>
+ Her kingdom with the creatures of thy brain.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Lo, Shakespeare, since thy time nature is loth</span
+ ><br>
+ To yield to art her fair supremacy;<br>
+ In conquering one thou hast so enrichèd both.<br>
+ What shall I say? for God&mdash;whose wise decree<br>
+ Confirmeth all He did by all He doth&mdash;<br>
+ Doubled His whole creation making thee.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_198"></a><span class="pagenumb">{198}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I would be a bird, and straight on wings I arise,<br>
+ And carry purpose up to the ends of the air:<br>
+ In calm and storm my sails I feather, and where<br>
+ By freezing cliffs the unransom'd wreckage lies:<br>
+ Or, strutting on hot meridian banks, surprise<br>
+ The silence: over plains in the moonlight bare<br>
+ I chase my shadow, and perch where no bird dare<br>
+ In treetops torn by fiercest winds of the skies.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Poor simple birds, foolish birds! then I cry,</span
+ ><br>
+ Ye pretty pictures of delight, unstir'd<br>
+ By the only joy of knowing that ye fly;<br>
+ Ye are nót what ye are, but rather, sum'd in a word,<br>
+ The alphabet of a god's idea, and I<br>
+ Who master it, I am the only bird.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ O weary pilgrims, chanting of your woe,<br>
+ That turn your eyes to all the peaks that shine,<br>
+ Hailing in each the citadel divine<br>
+ The which ye thought to have enter'd long ago;<br>
+ Until at length your feeble steps and slow<br>
+ Falter upon the threshold of the shrine,<br>
+ And your hearts overburden'd doubt in fine<br>
+ Whether it be Jerusalem or no:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Dishearten'd pilgrims, I am one of you;</span
+ ><br>
+ For, having worshipp'd many a barren face,<br>
+ I scarce now greet the goal I journey'd to:<br>
+ I stand a pagan in the holy place;<br>
+ Beneath the lamp of truth I am found untrue,<br>
+ And question with the God that I embrace.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_199"></a><span class="pagenumb">{199}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Spring hath her own bright days of calm and peace;<br>
+ Her melting air, at every breath we draw,<br>
+ Floods heart with love to praise God's gracious law:<br>
+ But suddenly&mdash;so short is pleasure's lease&mdash;<br>
+ The cold returns, the buds from growing cease,<br>
+ And nature's conquer'd face is full of awe;<br>
+ As now the trait'rous north with icy flaw<br>
+ Freezes the dew upon the sick lamb's fleece,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And 'neath the mock sun searching everywhere</span
+ ><br>
+ Rattles the crispèd leaves with shivering din:<br>
+ So that the birds are silent with despair<br>
+ Within the thickets; nor their armour thin<br>
+ Will gaudy flies adventure in the air,<br>
+ Nor any lizard sun his spotted skin.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Nothing is joy without thee: I can find<br>
+ No rapture in the first relays of spring,<br>
+ In songs of birds, in young buds opening,<br>
+ Nothing inspiriting and nothing kind;<br>
+ For lack of thee, who once wert throned behind<br>
+ All beauty, like a strength where graces cling,&mdash;<br>
+ The jewel and heart of light, which everything<br>
+ Wrestled in rivalry to hold enshrined.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Ah! since thou'rt fled, and I in each fair sight</span
+ ><br>
+ The sweet occasion of my joy deplore,<br>
+ Where shall I seek thee best, or whom invite<br>
+ Within thy sacred temples and adore?<br>
+ Who shall fill thought and truth with old delight,<br>
+ And lead my soul in life as heretofore?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_200"></a><span class="pagenumb">{200}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The work is done, and from the fingers fall<br>
+ The bloodwarm tools that brought the labour thro':<br>
+ The tasking eye that overrunneth all<br>
+ Rests, and affirms there is no more to do.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Now the third joy of making, the sweet flower</span
+ ><br>
+ Of blessed work, bloometh in godlike spirit;<br>
+ Which whoso plucketh holdeth for an hour<br>
+ The shrivelling vanity of mortal merit.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And thou, my perfect work, thou'rt of to-day;</span
+ ><br>
+ To-morrow a poor and alien thing wilt be,<br>
+ True only should the swift life stand at stay:<br>
+ Therefore farewell, nor look to bide with me.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Go find thy friends, if there be one to love thee:</span
+ ><br>
+ Casting thee forth, my child, I rise above thee.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The fabled sea-snake, old Leviathan,<br>
+ Or else what grisly beast of scaly chine<br>
+ That champ'd the ocean-wrack and swash'd the brine,<br>
+ Before the new and milder days of man,<br>
+ Had never rib nor bray nor swindging fan<br>
+ Like his iron swimmer of the Clyde or Tyne,<br>
+ Late-born of golden seed to breed a line<br>
+ Of offspring swifter and more huge of plan.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Straight is her going, for upon the sun</span
+ ><br>
+ When once she hath look'd, her path and place are plain;<br>
+ With tireless speed she smiteth one by one<br>
+ The shuddering seas and foams along the main;<br>
+ And her eased breath, when her wild race is run,<br>
+ Roars thro' her nostrils like a hurricane.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_201"></a><span class="pagenumb">{201}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A thousand times hath in my heart's behoof<br>
+ My tongue been set his passion to impart;<br>
+ A thousand times hath my too coward heart<br>
+ My mouth reclosed and fix'd it to the roof;<br>
+ Then with such cunning hath it held aloof,<br>
+ A thousand times kept silence with such art<br>
+ That words coud do no more: yet on thy part<br>
+ Hath silence given a thousand times reproof.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I should be bolder, seeing I commend</span
+ ><br>
+ Love, that my dilatory purpose primes,<br>
+ But fear lest with my fears my hope should end:<br>
+ Nay, I would truth deny and burn my rhymes,<br>
+ Renew my sorrows rather than offend,<br>
+ A thousand times, and yet a thousand times.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I travel to thee with the sun's first rays,<br>
+ That lift the dark west and unwrap the night;<br>
+ I dwell beside thee when he walks the height,<br>
+ And fondly toward thee at his setting gaze.<br>
+ I wait upon thy coming, but always&mdash;<br>
+ Dancing to meet my thoughts if they invite&mdash;<br>
+ Thou hast outrun their longing with delight,<br>
+ And in my solitude dost mock my praise.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Now doth my drop of time transcend the whole:</span
+ ><br>
+ I see no fame in Khufu's pyramid,<br>
+ No history where loveless Nile doth roll.<br>
+ &mdash;This is eternal life, which doth forbid<br>
+ Mortal detraction to the exalted soul,<br>
+ And from her inward eye all fate hath hid.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_202"></a><span class="pagenumb">{202}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ My lady pleases me and I please her;<br>
+ This know we both, and I besides know well<br>
+ Wherefore I love her, and I love to tell<br>
+ My love, as all my loving songs aver.<br>
+ But what on her part could the passion stir,<br>
+ Tho' 'tis more difficult for love to spell,<br>
+ Yet can I dare divine how this befel,<br>
+ Nor will her lips deny it if I err.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >She loves me first because I love her, then</span
+ ><br>
+ Loves me for knowing why she should be loved.<br>
+ And that I love to praise her, loves again.<br>
+ So from her beauty both our loves are moved,<br>
+ And by her beauty are sustain'd; nor when<br>
+ The earth falls from the sun is this disproved.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">31</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In all things beautiful, I cannot see<br>
+ Her sit or stand, but love is stir'd anew:<br>
+ 'Tis joy to watch the folds fall as they do,<br>
+ And all that comes is past expectancy.<br>
+ If she be silent, silence let it be;<br>
+ He who would bid her speak might sit and sue<br>
+ The deep-brow'd Phidian Jove to be untrue<br>
+ To his two thousand years' solemnity.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Ah, but her launchèd passion, when she sings,</span
+ ><br>
+ Wins on the hearing like a shapen prow<br>
+ Borne by the mastery of its urgent wings:<br>
+ Or if she deign her wisdom, she doth show<br>
+ She hath the intelligence of heavenly things,<br>
+ Unsullied by man's mortal overthrow.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_203"></a><span class="pagenumb">{203}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">32</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Thus to be humbled: 'tis that ranging pride<br>
+ No refuge hath; that in his castle strong<br>
+ Brave reason sits beleaguer'd, who so long<br>
+ Kept field, but now must starve where he doth hide;<br>
+ That industry, who once the foe defied,<br>
+ Lies slaughter'd in the trenches; that the throng<br>
+ Of idle fancies pipe their foolish song,<br>
+ Where late the puissant captains fought and died.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Thus to be humbled: 'tis to be undone;</span
+ ><br>
+ A forest fell'd; a city razed to ground;<br>
+ A cloak unsewn, unwoven and unspun<br>
+ Till not a thread remains that can be wound.<br>
+ And yet, O lover, thee, the ruin'd one,<br>
+ Love who hath humbled thus hath also crown'd.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">33</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I care not if I live, tho' life and breath<br>
+ Have never been to me so dear and sweet.<br>
+ I care not if I die, for I coud meet&mdash;<br>
+ Being so happy&mdash;happily my death.<br>
+ I care not if I love; to-day she saith<br>
+ She loveth, and love's history is complete.<br>
+ Nor care I if she love me; at her feet<br>
+ My spirit bows entranced and worshippeth.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >I have no care for what was most my care,</span
+ ><br>
+ But all around me see fresh beauty born,<br>
+ And common sights grown lovelier than they were:<br>
+ I dream of love, and in the light of morn<br>
+ Tremble, beholding all things very fair<br>
+ And strong with strength that puts my strength to scorn.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_204"></a><span class="pagenumb">{204}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">34</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <i>O my goddess divine</i> sometimes I say:&mdash;<br>
+ Now let this word for ever and all suffice;<br>
+ Thou art insatiable, and yet not twice<br>
+ Can even thy lover give his soul away:<br>
+ And for my acts, that at thy feet I lay;<br>
+ For never any other, by device<br>
+ Of wisdom, love or beauty, could entice<br>
+ My homage to the measure of this day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >I have no more to give thee: lo, I have sold</span
+ ><br>
+ My life, have emptied out my heart, and spent<br>
+ Whate'er I had; till like a beggar, bold<br>
+ With nought to lose, I laugh and am content.<br>
+ A beggar kisses thee; nay, love, behold,<br>
+ I fear not: thou too art in beggarment.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">35</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ All earthly beauty hath one cause and proof,<br>
+ To lead the pilgrim soul to beauty above:<br>
+ Yet lieth the greater bliss so far aloof,<br>
+ That few there be are wean'd from earthly love.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Joy's ladder it is, reaching from home to home,</span
+ ><br>
+ The best of all the work that all was good;<br>
+ Whereof 'twas writ the angels aye upclomb,<br>
+ Down sped, and at the top the Lord God stood.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">But I my time abuse, my eyes by day</span
+ ><br>
+ Center'd on thee, by night my heart on fire&mdash;<br>
+ Letting my number'd moments run away&mdash;<br>
+ Nor e'en 'twixt night and day to heaven aspire:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >So true it is that what the eye seeth not</span
+ ><br>
+ But slow is loved, and loved is soon forgot.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_205"></a><span class="pagenumb">{205}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">36</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ O my life's mischief, once my love's delight,<br>
+ That drew'st a mortgage on my heart's estate,<br>
+ Whose baneful clause is never out of date,<br>
+ Nor can avenging time restore my right:<br>
+ Whom first to lose sounded that note of spite,<br>
+ Whereto my doleful days were tuned by fate:<br>
+ That art the well-loved cause of all my hate,<br>
+ The sun whose wandering makes my hopeless night:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Thou being in all my lacking all I lack,</span
+ ><br>
+ It is thy goodness turns my grace to crime,<br>
+ Thy fleetness from my goal which holds me back;<br>
+ Wherefore my feet go out of step with time,<br>
+ My very grasp of life is old and slack,<br>
+ And even my passion falters in my rhyme.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">37</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ At times with hurried hoofs and scattering dust<br>
+ I race by field or highway, and my horse<br>
+ Spare not, but urge direct in headlong course<br>
+ Unto some fair far hill that gain I must:<br>
+ But near arrived the vision soon mistrust,<br>
+ Rein in, and stand as one who sees the source<br>
+ Of strong illusion, shaming thought to force<br>
+ From off his mind the soil of passion's gust.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >My brow I bare then, and with slacken'd speed</span
+ ><br>
+ Can view the country pleasant on all sides,<br>
+ And to kind salutation give good heed:<br>
+ I ride as one who for his pleasure rides,<br>
+ And stroke the neck of my delighted steed,<br>
+ And seek what cheer the village inn provides.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_206"></a><span class="pagenumb">{206}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">38</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ An idle June day on the sunny Thames,<br>
+ Floating or rowing as our fancy led,<br>
+ Now in the high beams basking as we sped,<br>
+ Now in green shade gliding by mirror'd stems;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >By lock and weir and isle, and many a spot</span
+ ><br>
+ Of memoried pleasure, glad with strength and skill,<br>
+ Friendship, good wine, and mirth, that serve not ill<br>
+ The heavenly Muse, tho' she requite them not:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >I would have life&mdash;thou saidst&mdash;all as this day,</span
+ ><br>
+ Simple enjoyment calm in its excess,<br>
+ With not a grief to cloud, and not a ray<br>
+ Of passion overhot my peace to oppress;<br>
+ With no ambition to reproach delay,<br>
+ Nor rapture to disturb its happiness.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">39</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A man that sees by chance his picture, made<br>
+ As once a child he was, handling some toy,<br>
+ Will gaze to find his spirit within the boy,<br>
+ Yet hath no secret with the soul pourtray'd:<br>
+ He cannot think the simple thought which play'd<br>
+ Upon those features then so frank and coy;<br>
+ 'Tis his, yet oh! not his: and o'er the joy<br>
+ His fatherly pity bends in tears dismay'd.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Proud of his prime maybe he stand at best,</span
+ ><br>
+ And lightly wear his strength, or aim it high,<br>
+ In knowledge, skill and courage self-possest:&mdash;<br>
+ Yet in the pictured face a charm doth lie,<br>
+ The one thing lost more worth than all the rest,<br>
+ Which seeing, he fears to say <i>This child was I</i>.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_207"></a><span class="pagenumb">{207}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">40</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Tears of love, tears of joy and tears of care,<br>
+ Comforting tears that fell uncomforted,<br>
+ Tears o'er the new-born, tears beside the dead,<br>
+ Tears of hope, pride and pity, trust and prayer,<br>
+ Tears of contrition; all tears whatsoe'er<br>
+ Of tenderness or kindness had she shed<br>
+ Who here is pictured, ere upon her head<br>
+ The fine gold might be turn'd to silver there.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >The smile that charm'd the father hath given place</span
+ ><br>
+ Unto the furrow'd care wrought by the son;<br>
+ But virtue hath transform'd all change to grace:<br>
+ So that I praise the artist, who hath done<br>
+ A portrait, for my worship, of the face<br>
+ Won by the heart my father's heart that won.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">41</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ If I coud but forget and not recall<br>
+ So well my time of pleasure and of play,<br>
+ When ancient nature was all new and gay,<br>
+ Light as the fashion that doth last enthrall,&mdash;<br>
+ Ah mighty nature, when my heart was small,<br>
+ Nor dream'd what fearful searchings underlay<br>
+ The flowers and leafy ecstasy of May,<br>
+ The breathing summer sloth, the scented fall:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Coud I forget, then were the fight not hard,</span
+ ><br>
+ Press'd in the mêlée of accursed things,<br>
+ Having such help in love and such reward:<br>
+ But that 'tis I who once&mdash;'tis this that stings&mdash;<br>
+ Once dwelt within the gate that angels guard,<br>
+ Where yet I'd be had I but heavenly wings.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_208"></a><span class="pagenumb">{208}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">42</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When I see childhood on the threshold seize<br>
+ The prize of life from age and likelihood,<br>
+ I mourn time's change that will not be withstood,<br>
+ Thinking how Christ said <i>Be like one of these</i>.<br>
+ For in the forest among many trees<br>
+ Scarce one in all is found that hath made good<br>
+ The virgin pattern of its slender wood,<br>
+ That courtesied in joy to every breeze;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >But scath'd, but knotted trunks that raise on high</span
+ ><br>
+ Their arms in stiff contortion, strain'd and bare;<br>
+ Whose patriarchal crowns in sorrow sigh.<br>
+ So, little children, ye&mdash;nay nay, ye ne'er<br>
+ From me shall learn how sure the change and nigh,<br>
+ When ye shall share our strength and mourn to share.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">43</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When parch'd with thirst, astray on sultry sand<br>
+ The traveller faints, upon his closing ear<br>
+ Steals a fantastic music: he may hear<br>
+ The babbling fountain of his native land.<br>
+ Before his eyes the vision seems to stand,<br>
+ Where at its terraced brink the maids appear,<br>
+ Who fill their deep urns at its waters clear,<br>
+ And not refuse the help of lover's hand.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >O cruel jest&mdash;he cries, as some one flings</span
+ ><br>
+ The sparkling drops in sport or shew of ire&mdash;<br>
+ O shameless, O contempt of holy things.<br>
+ But never of their wanton play they tire,<br>
+ As not athirst they sit beside the springs,<br>
+ While he must quench in death his lost desire.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_209"></a><span class="pagenumb">{209}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">44</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The image of thy love, rising on dark<br>
+ And desperate days over my sullen sea,<br>
+ Wakens again fresh hope and peace in me,<br>
+ Gleaming above upon my groaning bark.<br>
+ Whate'er my sorrow be, I then may hark<br>
+ A loving voice: whate'er my terror be,<br>
+ This heavenly comfort still I win from thee,<br>
+ To shine my lodestar that wert once my mark.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Prodigal nature makes us but to taste</span
+ ><br>
+ One perfect joy, which given she niggard grows;<br>
+ And lest her precious gift should run to waste,<br>
+ Adds to its loss a thousand lesser woes:<br>
+ So to the memory of the gift that graced<br>
+ Her hand, her graceless hand more grace bestows.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">45</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In this neglected, ruin'd edifice<br>
+ Of works unperfected and broken schemes,<br>
+ Where is the promise of my early dreams,<br>
+ The smile of beauty and the pearl of price?<br>
+ No charm is left now that could once entice<br>
+ Wind-wavering fortune from her golden streams,<br>
+ And full in flight decrepit purpose seems,<br>
+ Trailing the banner of his old device.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Within the house a frore and numbing air</span
+ ><br>
+ Has chill'd endeavour: sickly memories reign<br>
+ In every room, and ghosts are on the stair:<br>
+ And hope behind the dusty window-pane<br>
+ Watches the days go by, and bow'd with care<br>
+ Forecasts her last reproach and mortal stain.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_210"></a><span class="pagenumb">{210}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">46</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Once I would say, before thy vision came,<br>
+ <i>My joy</i>, <i>my life</i>, <i>my love</i>, and with some kind<br>
+ Of knowledge speak, and think I knew my mind<br>
+ Of heaven and hope, and each word hit its aim.<br>
+ Whate'er their sounds be, now all mean the same,<br>
+ Denoting each the fair that none can find;<br>
+ Or if I say them, 'tis as one long blind<br>
+ Forgets the sights that he was used to name.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Now if men speak of love, 'tis not my love;</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor are their hopes nor joys mine, nor their life<br>
+ Of praise the life that I think honour of:<br>
+ Nay tho' they turn from house and child and wife<br>
+ And self, and in the thought of heaven above<br>
+ Hold, as do I, all mortal things at strife.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">47</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Since then 'tis only pity looking back,<br>
+ Fear looking forward, and the busy mind<br>
+ Will in one woeful moment more upwind<br>
+ Than lifelong years unroll of bitter or black;<br>
+ What is man's privilege, his hoarding knack<br>
+ Of memory with foreboding so combined,<br>
+ Whereby he comes to dream he hath of kind<br>
+ The perpetuity which all things lack?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Which but to hope is doubtful joy, to have</span
+ ><br>
+ Being a continuance of what, alas,<br>
+ We mourn, and scarcely bear with to the grave;<br>
+ Or something so unknown that it o'erpass<br>
+ The thought of comfort, and the sense that gave<br>
+ Cannot consider it thro' any glass.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_211"></a><span class="pagenumb">{211}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">48</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Come gentle sleep, I woo thee: come and take<br>
+ Not now the child into thine arms, from fright<br>
+ Composed by drowsy tune and shaded light,<br>
+ Whom ignorant of thee thou didst nurse and make;<br>
+ Nor now the boy, who scorn'd thee for the sake<br>
+ Of growing knowledge or mysterious night,<br>
+ Tho' with fatigue thou didst his limbs invite,<br>
+ And heavily weigh the eyes that would not wake;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >No, nor the man severe, who from his best</span
+ ><br>
+ Failing, alert fled to thee, that his breath,<br>
+ Blood, force and fire should come at morn redrest;<br>
+ But me, from whom thy comfort tarrieth,<br>
+ For all my wakeful prayer sent without rest<br>
+ To thee, O shew and shadow of my death.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">49</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The spirit's eager sense for sad or gay<br>
+ Filleth with what he will our vessel full:<br>
+ Be joy his bent, he waiteth not joy's day<br>
+ But like a child at any toy will pull:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >If sorrow, he will weep for fancy's sake,</span
+ ><br>
+ And spoil heaven's plenty with forbidden care.<br>
+ What fortune most denies we slave to take;<br>
+ Nor can fate load us more than we can bear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Since pleasure with the having disappeareth,</span
+ ><br>
+ He who hath least in hand hath most at heart,<br>
+ While he keep hope: as he who alway feareth<br>
+ A grief that never comes hath yet the smart;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And heavier far is our self-wrought distress,</span
+ ><br>
+ For when God sendeth sorrow, it doth bless.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_212"></a><span class="pagenumb">{212}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">50</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The world comes not to an end: her city-hives<br>
+ Swarm with the tokens of a changeless trade,<br>
+ With rolling wheel, driver and flagging jade,<br>
+ Rich men and beggars, children, priests and wives.<br>
+ New homes on old are set, as lives on lives;<br>
+ Invention with invention overlaid:<br>
+ But still or tool or toy or book or blade<br>
+ Shaped for the hand, that holds and toils and strives.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >The men to-day toil as their fathers taught,</span
+ ><br>
+ With little better'd means; for works depend<br>
+ On works and overlap, and thought on thought:<br>
+ And thro' all change the smiles of hope amend<br>
+ The weariest face, the same love changed in nought:<br>
+ In this thing too the world comes not to an end.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">51</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ O my uncared-for songs, what are ye worth,<br>
+ That in my secret book with so much care<br>
+ I write you, this one here and that one there,<br>
+ Marking the time and order of your birth?<br>
+ How, with a fancy so unkind to mirth,<br>
+ A sense so hard, a style so worn and bare,<br>
+ Look ye for any welcome anywhere<br>
+ From any shelf or heart-home on the earth?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Should others ask you this, say then I yearn'd</span
+ ><br>
+ To write you such as once, when I was young,<br>
+ Finding I should have loved and thereto turn'd.<br>
+ 'Twere something yet to live again among<br>
+ The gentle youth beloved, and where I learn'd<br>
+ My art, be there remember'd for my song.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_213"></a><span class="pagenumb">{213}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">52</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Who takes the census of the living dead,<br>
+ Ere the day come when memory shall o'ercrowd<br>
+ The kingdom of their fame, and for that proud<br>
+ And airy people find no room nor stead?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Ere hoarding Time, that ever thrusteth back</span
+ ><br>
+ The fairest treasures of his ancient store,<br>
+ Better with best confound, so he may pack<br>
+ His greedy gatherings closer, more and more?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Let the true Muse rewrite her sullied page,</span
+ ><br>
+ And purge her story of the men of hate,<br>
+ That they go dirgeless down to Satan's rage<br>
+ With all else foul, deform'd and miscreate:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >She hath full toil to keep the names of love</span
+ ><br>
+ Honour'd on earth, as they are bright above.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">53</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I heard great Hector sounding war's alarms,<br>
+ Where thro' the listless ghosts chiding he strode,<br>
+ As tho' the Greeks besieged his last abode,<br>
+ And he his Troy's hope still, her king-at-arms.<br>
+ But on those gentle meads, which Lethe charms<br>
+ With weary oblivion, his passion glow'd<br>
+ Like the cold night-worm's candle, and only show'd<br>
+ Such mimic flame as neither heats nor harms.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >'Twas plain to read, even by those shadows quaint,</span
+ ><br>
+ How rude catastrophe had dim'd his day,<br>
+ And blighted all his cheer with stern complaint:<br>
+ <i>To arms! to arms!</i> what more the voice would say<br>
+ Was swallow'd in the valleys, and grew faint<br>
+ Upon the thin air, as he pass'd away.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_214"></a><span class="pagenumb">{214}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">54</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Since not the enamour'd sun with glance more fond<br>
+ Kisses the foliage of his sacred tree,<br>
+ Than doth my waking thought arise on thee,<br>
+ Loving none near thee, like thee nor beyond;<br>
+ Nay, since I am sworn thy slave, and in the bond<br>
+ Is writ my promise of eternity;<br>
+ Since to such high hope thou'st encouraged me,<br>
+ That if thou look but from me I despond;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Since thou'rt my all in all, O think of this:</span
+ ><br>
+ Think of the dedication of my youth:<br>
+ Think of my loyalty, my joy, my bliss:<br>
+ Think of my sorrow, my despair and ruth,<br>
+ My sheer annihilation if I miss:<br>
+ Think&mdash;if thou shouldst be false&mdash;think of thy truth.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">55</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ These meagre rhymes, which a returning mood<br>
+ Sometimes o'errateth, I as oft despise;<br>
+ And knowing them illnatured, stiff and rude,<br>
+ See them as others with contemptuous eyes.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Nay, and I wonder less at God's respect</span
+ ><br>
+ For man, a minim jot in time and space,<br>
+ Than at the soaring faith of His elect,<br>
+ That gift of gifts, the comfort of His grace.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >O truth unsearchable, O heavenly love,</span
+ ><br>
+ Most infinitely tender, so to touch<br>
+ The work that we can meanly reckon of:<br>
+ Surely&mdash;I say&mdash;we are favour'd overmuch.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >But of this wonder, what doth most amaze</span
+ ><br>
+ Is that we know our love is held for praise.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_215"></a><span class="pagenumb">{215}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">56</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Beauty sat with me all the summer day,<br>
+ Awaiting the sure triumph of her eye;<br>
+ Nor mark'd I till we parted, how, hard by,<br>
+ Love in her train stood ready for his prey.<br>
+ She, as too proud to join herself the fray,<br>
+ Trusting too much to her divine ally,<br>
+ When she saw victory tarry, chid him&mdash;'Why<br>
+ Dost thou not at one stroke this rebel slay?'<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Then generous Love, who holds my heart in fee,</span
+ ><br>
+ Told of our ancient truce: so from the fight<br>
+ We straight withdrew our forces, all the three.<br>
+ Baffled but not dishearten'd she took flight<br>
+ Scheming new tactics: Love came home with me,<br>
+ And prompts my measured verses as I write.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">57</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ In autumn moonlight, when the white air wan<br>
+ Is fragrant in the wake of summer hence,<br>
+ 'Tis sweet to sit entranced, and muse thereon<br>
+ In melancholy and godlike indolence:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >When the proud spirit, lull'd by mortal prime</span
+ ><br>
+ To fond pretence of immortality,<br>
+ Vieweth all moments from the birth of time,<br>
+ All things whate'er have been or yet shall be.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And like the garden, where the year is spent,</span
+ ><br>
+ The ruin of old life is full of yearning,<br>
+ Mingling poetic rapture of lament<br>
+ With flowers and sunshine of spring's sure returning;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Only in visions of the white air wan</span
+ ><br>
+ By godlike fancy seized and dwelt upon.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_216"></a><span class="pagenumb">{216}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">58</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When first I saw thee, dearest, if I say<br>
+ The spells that conjure back the hour and place,<br>
+ And evermore I look upon thy face,<br>
+ As in the spring of years long pass'd away;<br>
+ No fading of thy beauty's rich array,<br>
+ No detriment of age on thee I trace,<br>
+ But time's defeat written in spoils of grace,<br>
+ From rivals robb'd, whom thou didst pity and slay.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >So hath thy growth been, thus thy faith is true,</span
+ ><br>
+ Unchanged in change, still to my growing sense,<br>
+ To life's desire the same, and nothing new:<br>
+ But as thou wert in dream and prescience<br>
+ At love's arising, now thou stand'st to view<br>
+ In the broad noon of his magnificence.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">59</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ 'Twas on the very day winter took leave<br>
+ Of those fair fields I love, when to the skies<br>
+ The fragrant Earth was smiling in surprise<br>
+ At that her heaven-descended, quick reprieve,<br>
+ I wander'd forth my sorrow to relieve;<br>
+ Yet walk'd amid sweet pleasure in such wise<br>
+ As Adam went alone in Paradise,<br>
+ Before God of His pity fashion'd Eve.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And out of tune with all the joy around</span
+ ><br>
+ I laid me down beneath a flowering tree,<br>
+ And o'er my senses crept a sleep profound;<br>
+ In which it seem'd that thou wert given to me,<br>
+ Rending my body, where with hurried sound<br>
+ I feel my heart beat, when I think of thee.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_217"></a><span class="pagenumb">{217}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">60</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Love that I know, love I am wise in, love,<br>
+ My strength, my pride, my grace, my skill untaught,<br>
+ My faith here upon earth, my hope above,<br>
+ My contemplation and perpetual thought:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >The pleasure of my fancy, my heart's fire,</span
+ ><br>
+ My joy, my peace, my praise, my happy theme,<br>
+ The aim of all my doing, my desire<br>
+ Of being, my life by day, by night my dream:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Love, my sweet melancholy, my distress,</span
+ ><br>
+ My pain, my doubt, my trouble, my despair,<br>
+ My only folly and unhappiness,<br>
+ And in my careless moments still my care:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >O love, sweet love, earthly love, love divine,</span
+ ><br>
+ Say'st thou to-day, O love, that thou art mine?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">61</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The dark and serious angel, who so long<br>
+ Vex'd his immortal strength in charge of me,<br>
+ Hath smiled for joy and fled in liberty<br>
+ To take his pastime with the peerless throng.<br>
+ Oft had I done his noble keeping wrong,<br>
+ Wounding his heart to wonder what might be<br>
+ God's purpose in a soul of such degree;<br>
+ And there he had left me but for mandate strong.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >But seeing thee with me now, his task at close</span
+ ><br>
+ He knoweth, and wherefore he was bid to stay,<br>
+ And work confusion of so many foes:<br>
+ The thanks that he doth look for, here I pay,<br>
+ Yet fear some heavenly envy, as he goes<br>
+ Unto what great reward I cannot say.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_218"></a><span class="pagenumb">{218}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">62</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I will be what God made me, nor protest<br>
+ Against the bent of genius in my time,<br>
+ That science of my friends robs all the best,<br>
+ While I love beauty, and was born to rhyme.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Be they our mighty men, and let me dwell</span
+ ><br>
+ In shadow among the mighty shades of old,<br>
+ With love's forsaken palace for my cell;<br>
+ Whence I look forth and all the world behold,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And say, These better days, in best things worse,</span
+ ><br>
+ This bastardy of time's magnificence,<br>
+ Will mend in fashion and throw off the curse,<br>
+ To crown new love with higher excellence.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Curs'd tho' I be to live my life alone,</span
+ ><br>
+ My toil is for man's joy, his joy my own.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">63</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I live on hope and that I think do all<br>
+ Who come into this world, and since I see<br>
+ Myself in swim with such good company,<br>
+ I take my comfort whatsoe'er befall.<br>
+ I abide and abide, as if more stout and tall<br>
+ My spirit would grow by waiting like a tree;<br>
+ And, clear of others' toil, it pleaseth me<br>
+ In dreams their quick ambition to forestall.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And if thro' careless eagerness I slide</span
+ ><br>
+ To some accomplishment, I give my voice<br>
+ Still to desire, and in desire abide.<br>
+ I have no stake abroad; if I rejoice<br>
+ In what is done or doing, I confide<br>
+ Neither to friend nor foe my secret choice.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_219"></a><span class="pagenumb">{219}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">64</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Ye blessed saints, that now in heaven enjoy<br>
+ The purchase of those tears, the world's disdain,<br>
+ Doth Love still with his war your peace annoy,<br>
+ Or hath Death freed you from his ancient pain?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Have ye no springtide, and no burst of May</span
+ ><br>
+ In flowers and leafy trees, when solemn night<br>
+ Pants with love-music, and the holy day<br>
+ Breaks on the ear with songs of heavenly light?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >What make ye and what strive for? keep ye thought</span
+ ><br>
+ Of us, or in new excellence divine<br>
+ Is old forgot? or do ye count for nought<br>
+ What the Greek did and what the Florentine?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >We keep your memories well: O in your store</span
+ ><br>
+ Live not our best joys treasured evermore?<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">65</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Ah heavenly joy! But who hath ever heard,<br>
+ Who hath seen joy, or who shall ever find<br>
+ Joy's language? There is neither speech nor word;<br>
+ Nought but itself to teach it to mankind.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Scarce in our twenty thousand painful days</span
+ ><br>
+ We may touch something: but there lives&mdash;beyond<br>
+ The best of art, or nature's kindest phase&mdash;<br>
+ The hope whereof our spirit is fain and fond:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >The cause of beauty given to man's desires</span
+ ><br>
+ Writ in the expectancy of starry skies,<br>
+ The faith which gloweth in our fleeting fires,<br>
+ The aim of all the good that here we prize;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Which but to love, pursue and pray for well</span
+ ><br>
+ Maketh earth heaven, and to forget it, hell.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_220"></a><span class="pagenumb">{220}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">66</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ My wearied heart, whenever, after all,<br>
+ Its loves and yearnings shall be told complete,<br>
+ When gentle death shall bid it cease to beat,<br>
+ And from all dear illusions disenthrall:<br>
+ However then thou shalt appear to call<br>
+ My fearful heart, since down at others' feet<br>
+ It bade me kneel so oft, I'll not retreat<br>
+ From thee, nor fear before thy feet to fall.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And I shall say, 'Receive this loving heart</span
+ ><br>
+ Which err'd in sorrow only; and in sin<br>
+ Took no delight; but being forced apart<br>
+ From thee, without thee hoping thee to win,<br>
+ Most prized what most thou madest as thou art<br>
+ On earth, till heaven were open to enter in.'<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">67</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Dreary was winter, wet with changeful sting<br>
+ Of clinging snowfall and fast-flying frost;<br>
+ And bitterer northwinds then withheld the spring,<br>
+ That dallied with her promise till 'twas lost.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >A sunless and half-hearted summer drown'd</span
+ ><br>
+ The flowers in needful and unwelcom'd rain;<br>
+ And Autumn with a sad smile fled uncrown'd<br>
+ From fruitless orchards and unripen'd grain.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >But coud the skies of this most desolate year</span
+ ><br>
+ In its last month learn with our love to glow,<br>
+ Men yet should rank its cloudless atmosphere<br>
+ Above the sunsets of five years ago:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Of my great praise too part should be its own,</span
+ ><br>
+ Now reckon'd peerless for thy love alone.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_221"></a><span class="pagenumb">{221}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">68</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Away now, lovely Muse, roam and be free:<br>
+ Our commerce ends for aye, thy task is done:<br>
+ Tho' to win thee I left all else unwon,<br>
+ Thou, whom I most have won, art not for me.<br>
+ My first desire, thou too forgone must be,<br>
+ Thou too, O much lamented now, tho' none<br>
+ Will turn to pity thy forsaken son,<br>
+ Nor thy divine sisters will weep for thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >None will weep for thee: thou return, O Muse,</span
+ ><br>
+ To thy Sicilian fields: I once have been<br>
+ On thy loved hills, and where thou first didst use<br>
+ Thy sweetly balanced rhyme, O thankless queen,<br>
+ Have pluck'd and wreath'd thy flowers; but do thou choose<br>
+ Some happier brow to wear thy garlands green.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">69</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Eternal Father, who didst all create,<br>
+ In whom we live, and to whose bosom move,<br>
+ To all men be Thy name known, which is Love,<br>
+ Till its loud praises sound at heaven's high gate.<br>
+ Perfect Thy kingdom in our passing state,<br>
+ That here on earth Thou may'st as well approve<br>
+ Our service, as Thou ownest theirs above,<br>
+ Whose joy we echo and in pain await.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Grant body and soul each day their daily bread:</span
+ ><br>
+ And should in spite of grace fresh woe begin,<br>
+ Even as our anger soon is past and dead<br>
+ Be Thy remembrance mortal of our sin:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >By Thee in paths of peace Thy sheep be led,</span
+ ><br>
+ And in the vale of terror comforted.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_222"></a><span class="pagenumb">{222}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <a href="images/ill_bridges_222_lg.jpg">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_bridges_222_sml.jpg"
+ width="381"
+ height="550"
+ alt="Robert Bridges"
+ title="Robert Bridges"
+ ></a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_223"></a><span class="pagenumb">{223}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ <a id="SHORTER_POEMS"></a>SHORTER POEMS<br>
+ <span class="script">in Five Books</span>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_224"></a><span class="pagenumb">{224}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>PREVIOUS EDITIONS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 1. <i>Bks. I-IV. Clarendon Press. Geo. Bell &amp; Sons, Oct. 1890.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em"
+ ><i>Reprinted, Nov. 1890, 1891, 1894.</i></span
+ >
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 2. <i>Bks. I-V. Private Press of H. Daniel. Oxford, 1894.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 3. <i>Do. do. Clarendon Press. George Bell &amp; Sons, 1896.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>4. <i>Cheap issue of 3. 1899. Reprinted, 1899.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 5.
+ <i>Poetical works of R. B. Smith, Elder &amp; Co., 1899, vol. II.</i>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ <i
+ >An account of earlier issues of first four books is given in
+ notes</i
+ >
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'><i>at end of 5.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_225"></a><span class="pagenumb">{225}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>SHORTER POEMS</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ <a id="BOOK_I"></a>BOOK I<br><br>
+ <span class="smcap">dedicated to H. E. W.</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">ELEGY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Clear and gentle stream!<br>
+ Known and loved so long,<br>
+ That hast heard the song<br>
+ And the idle dream<br>
+ Of my boyish day;<br>
+ While I once again<br>
+ Down thy margin stray,<br>
+ In the selfsame strain<br>
+ Still my voice is spent,<br>
+ With my old lament<br>
+ And my idle dream,<br>
+ Clear and gentle stream!<br>
+ <br>
+ Where my old seat was<br>
+ Here again I sit,<br>
+ Where the long boughs knit<br>
+ Over stream and grass<br>
+ A translucent eaves:<a id="page_226"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{226}</span><br>
+ Where back eddies play<br>
+ Shipwreck with the leaves,<br>
+ And the proud swans stray,<br>
+ Sailing one by one<br>
+ Out of stream and sun,<br>
+ And the fish lie cool<br>
+ In their chosen pool.<br>
+ <br>
+ Many an afternoon<br>
+ Of the summer day<br>
+ Dreaming here I lay;<br>
+ And I know how soon,<br>
+ Idly at its hour,<br>
+ First the deep bell hums<br>
+ From the minster tower,<br>
+ And then evening comes,<br>
+ Creeping up the glade,<br>
+ With her lengthening shade,<br>
+ And the tardy boon<br>
+ Of her brightening moon.<br>
+ <br>
+ Clear and gentle stream!<br>
+ Ere again I go<br>
+ Where thou dost not flow,<br>
+ Well does it beseem<br>
+ Thee to hear again<br>
+ Once my youthful song,<br>
+ That familiar strain<br>
+ Silent now so long:<br>
+ Be as I content<br>
+ With my old lament<br>
+ And my idle dream,<br>
+ Clear and gentle stream.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_227"></a><span class="pagenumb">{227}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">ELEGY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The wood is bare: a river-mist is steeping<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The trees that winter's chill of life bereaves:</span
+ ><br>
+ Only their stiffened boughs break silence, weeping<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Over their fallen leaves;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ That lie upon the dank earth brown and rotten,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Miry and matted in the soaking wet:</span
+ ><br>
+ Forgotten with the spring, that is forgotten<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">By them that can forget.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet it was here we walked when ferns were springing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And through the mossy bank shot bud and blade:-</span
+ ><br>
+ Here found in summer, when the birds were singing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">A green and pleasant shade.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Twas here we loved in sunnier days and greener;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And now, in this disconsolate decay,</span
+ ><br>
+ I come to see her where I most have seen her,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">And touch the happier day.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ For on this path, at every turn and corner,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The fancy of her figure on me falls;</span
+ ><br>
+ Yet walks she with the slow step of a mourner,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Nor hears my voice that calls.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ So through my heart there winds a track of feeling,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A path of memory, that is all her own:</span
+ ><br>
+ Whereto her phantom beauty ever stealing<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Haunts the sad spot alone.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ About her steps the trunks are bare, the branches<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Drip heavy tears upon her downcast head;</span
+ ><br>
+ And bleed from unseen wounds that no sun stanches,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em"
+ >For the year's sun is dead.<a id="page_228"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{228}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And dead leaves wrap the fruits that summer planted:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And birds that love the South have taken wing.</span
+ ><br>
+ The wanderer, loitering o'er the scene enchanted,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Weeps, and despairs of spring.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Poor withered rose and dry,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Skeleton of a rose,</span><br>
+ Risen to testify<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To love's sad close:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Treasured for love's sweet sake,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That of joy past</span><br>
+ Thou might'st again awake<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Memory at last.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet is thy perfume sweet;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thy petals red</span><br>
+ Yet tell of summer heat,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And the gay bed:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet, yet recall the glow<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of the gazing sun,</span><br>
+ When at thy bush we two<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Joined hands in one.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But, rose, thou hast not seen,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thou hast not wept</span><br>
+ The change that passed between,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Whilst thou hast slept.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ To me thou seemest yet<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The dead dream's thrall:</span><br>
+ While I live and forget<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Dream, truth and all.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Thou art more fresh than I,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Rose, sweet and red:</span><br>
+ Salt on my pale cheeks lie<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The tears I shed.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_229"></a><span class="pagenumb">{229}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">THE CLIFF-TOP</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The cliff-top has a carpet<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of lilac, gold and green:</span><br>
+ The blue sky bounds the ocean,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The white clouds scud between.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ A flock of gulls are wheeling<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And wailing round my seat;</span><br>
+ Above my head the heaven,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The sea beneath my feet.</span><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">THE OCEAN.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Were I a cloud I'd gather<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My skirts up in the air,</span><br>
+ And fly I well know whither,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And rest I well know where.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ As pointed the star surely,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The legend tells of old,</span><br>
+ Where the wise kings might offer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Myrrh, frankincense, and gold;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Above the house I'd hover<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Where dwells my love, and wait</span><br>
+ Till haply I might spy her<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Throw back the garden-gate.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ There in the summer evening<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I would bedeck the moon;</span><br>
+ I would float down and screen her<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">From the sun's rays at noon;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And if her flowers should languish,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Or wither in the drought</span><br>
+ Upon her tall white lilies<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >I'd pour my heart's blood out:<a id="page_230"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{230}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ So if she wore one only,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And shook not out the rain,</span><br>
+ Were I a cloud, O cloudlet,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I had not lived in vain.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="r">[<i>A cloud speaks.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">A CLOUD.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ But were I thou, O ocean,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I would not chafe and fret</span><br>
+ As thou, because a limit<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To thy desires is set.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I would be blue, and gentle,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Patient, and calm, and see</span><br>
+ If my smiles might not tempt her,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My love, to come to me.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I'd make my depths transparent,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And still, that she should lean</span
+ ><br>
+ O'er the boat's edge to ponder<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The sights that swam between.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I would command strange creatures,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of bright hue and quick fin,</span><br>
+ To stir the water near her,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And tempt her bare arm in.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I'd teach her spend the summer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With me: and I can tell,</span><br>
+ That, were I thou, O ocean,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My love should love me well.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">*</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">*</span>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">*</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But on the mad cloud scudded,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The breeze it blew so stiff;</span><br>
+ And the sad ocean bellowed,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And pounded at the cliff.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_231"></a><span class="pagenumb">{231}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I heard a linnet courting<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His lady in the spring:</span><br>
+ His mates were idly sporting,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor stayed to hear him sing</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">His song of love.&mdash;</span><br>
+ I fear my speech distorting<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">His tender love.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The phrases of his pleading<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Were full of young delight;</span><br>
+ And she that gave him heeding<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Interpreted aright</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">His gay, sweet notes,&mdash;</span><br>
+ So sadly marred in the reading,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">His tender notes.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And when he ceased, the hearer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Awaited the refrain,</span><br>
+ Till swiftly perching nearer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He sang his song again,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">His pretty song:&mdash;</span><br>
+ Would that my verse spake clearer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">His tender song!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Ye happy, airy creatures!<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That in the merry spring</span><br>
+ Think not of what misfeatures<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Or cares the year may bring;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">But unto love</span><br>
+ Resign your simple natures,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">To tender love.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_232"></a><span class="pagenumb">{232}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Dear lady, when thou frownest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And my true love despisest,</span><br>
+ And all thy vows disownest<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That sealed my venture wisest;</span><br>
+ I think thy pride's displeasure<br>
+ Neglects a matchless treasure<br>
+ Exceeding price and measure.<br>
+ <br>
+ But when again thou smilest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And love for love returnest,</span><br>
+ And fear with joy beguilest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And takest truth in earnest;</span><br>
+ Then, though I sheer adore thee,<br>
+ The sum of my love for thee<br>
+ Seems poor, scant, and unworthy.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ Ends all our month-long love in this?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Can it be summed up so,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Quit in a single kiss?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ If thy words' breath could scare thy deeds,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">As the soft south can blow</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And toss the feathered seeds,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Then might I let thee go.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ Had not the great sun seen, I might;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or were he reckoned slow</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To bring the false to light,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Then might I let thee go.<a id="page_233"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{233}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ The stars that crowd the summer skies<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Have watched us so below</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With all their million eyes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I dare not let thee go.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ Have we not chid the changeful moon,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Now rising late, and now</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Because she set too soon,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And shall I let thee go?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ Have not the young flowers been content,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Plucked ere their buds could blow,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To seal our sacrament?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I cannot let thee go.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ I hold thee by too many bands:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Thou sayest farewell, and lo!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I have thee by the hands,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And will not let thee go.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I found to-day out walking<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The flower my love loves best.</span><br>
+ What, when I stooped to pluck it,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Could dare my hand arrest?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Was it a snake lay curling<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">About the root's thick crown?</span><br>
+ Or did some hidden bramble<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Tear my hand reaching down?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ There was no snake uncurling,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And no thorn wounded me;</span><br>
+ 'Twas my heart checked me, sighing<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She is beyond the sea.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_234"></a><span class="pagenumb">{234}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A poppy grows upon the shore,<br>
+ Bursts her twin cup in summer late:<br>
+ Her leaves are glaucous-green and hoar,<br>
+ Her petals yellow, delicate.<br>
+ <br>
+ Oft to her cousins turns her thought,<br>
+ In wonder if they care that she<br>
+ Is fed with spray for dew, and caught<br>
+ By every gale that sweeps the sea.<br>
+ <br>
+ She has no lovers like the red,<br>
+ That dances with the noble corn:<br>
+ Her blossoms on the waves are shed,<br>
+ Where she stands shivering and forlorn.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Sometimes when my lady sits by me<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My rapture's so great, that I tear</span
+ ><br>
+ My mind from the thought that she's nigh me,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And strive to forget that she's there.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And sometimes when she is away</span><br>
+ Her absence so sorely does try me,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That I shut to my eyes, and assay</span
+ ><br>
+ To think she is there sitting by me.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_235"></a><span class="pagenumb">{235}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Long are the hours the sun is above,<br>
+ But when evening comes I go home to my love.<br>
+ <br>
+ I'm away the daylight hours and more,<br>
+ Yet she comes not down to open the door.<br>
+ <br>
+ She does not meet me upon the stair,&mdash;<br>
+ She sits in my chamber and waits for me there.<br>
+ <br>
+ As I enter the room she does not move:<br>
+ I always walk straight up to my love;<br>
+ <br>
+ And she lets me take my wonted place<br>
+ At her side, and gaze in her dear dear face.<br>
+ <br>
+ There as I sit, from her head thrown back<br>
+ Her hair falls straight in a shadow black.<br>
+ <br>
+ Aching and hot as my tired eyes be,<br>
+ She is all that I wish to see.<br>
+ <br>
+ And in my wearied and toil-dinned ear,<br>
+ She says all things that I wish to hear.<br>
+ <br>
+ Dusky and duskier grows the room,<br>
+ Yet I see her best in the darker gloom.<br>
+ <br>
+ When the winter eves are early and cold,<br>
+ The firelight hours are a dream of gold.<br>
+ <br>
+ And so I sit here night by night,<br>
+ In rest and enjoyment of love's delight.<br>
+ <br>
+ But a knock at the door, a step on the stair<br>
+ Will startle, alas, my love from her chair.<br>
+ <br>
+ If a stranger comes she will not stay:<br>
+ At the first alarm she is off and away.<br>
+ <br>
+ And he wonders, my guest, usurping her throne,<br>
+ That I sit so much by myself alone.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_236"></a><span class="pagenumb">{236}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Who has not walked upon the shore,<br>
+ And who does not the morning know,<br>
+ The day the angry gale is o'er,<br>
+ The hour the wind has ceased to blow?<br>
+ <br>
+ The horses of the strong south-west<br>
+ Are pastured round his tropic tent,<br>
+ Careless how long the ocean's breast<br>
+ Sob on and sigh for passion spent.<br>
+ <br>
+ The frightened birds, that fled inland<br>
+ To house in rock and tower and tree,<br>
+ Are gathering on the peaceful strand,<br>
+ To tempt again the sunny sea;<br>
+ <br>
+ Whereon the timid ships steal out<br>
+ And laugh to find their foe asleep,<br>
+ That lately scattered them about,<br>
+ And drave them to the fold like sheep.<br>
+ <br>
+ The snow-white clouds he northward chased<br>
+ Break into phalanx, line, and band:<br>
+ All one way to the south they haste,<br>
+ The south, their pleasant fatherland.<br>
+ <br>
+ From distant hills their shadows creep,<br>
+ Arrive in turn and mount the lea,<br>
+ And flit across the downs, and leap<br>
+ Sheer off the cliff upon the sea;<br>
+ <br>
+ And sail and sail far out of sight.<br>
+ But still I watch their fleecy trains,<br>
+ That piling all the south with light,<br>
+ Dapple in France the fertile plains.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_237"></a><span class="pagenumb">{237}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I made another song,<br>
+ In likeness of my love:<br>
+ And sang it all day long,<br>
+ Around, beneath, above;<br>
+ I told my secret out,<br>
+ That none might be in doubt.<br>
+ <br>
+ I sang it to the sky,<br>
+ That veiled his face to hear<br>
+ How far her azure eye<br>
+ Outdoes his splendid sphere;<br>
+ But at her eyelids' name<br>
+ His white clouds fled for shame.<br>
+ <br>
+ I told it to the trees,<br>
+ And to the flowers confest,<br>
+ And said not one of these<br>
+ Is like my lily drest;<br>
+ Nor spathe nor petal dared<br>
+ Vie with her body bared.<br>
+ <br>
+ I shouted to the sea,<br>
+ That set his waves a-prance;<br>
+ Her floating hair is free,<br>
+ Free are her feet to dance;<br>
+ And for thy wrath, I swear<br>
+ Her frown is more to fear.<br>
+ <br>
+ And as in happy mood<br>
+ I walked and sang alone,<br>
+ At eve beside the wood<br>
+ I met my love, my own:<br>
+ And sang to her the song<br>
+ I had sung all day long.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_238"></a><span class="pagenumb">{238}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">ELEGY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <small>ON A LADY WHOM GRIEF FOR THE DEATH OF HER</small><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%"><small>BETROTHED KILLED</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Assemble, all ye maidens, at the door,<br>
+ And all ye loves, assemble; far and wide<br>
+ Proclaim the bridal, that proclaimed before<br>
+ Has been deferred to this late eventide:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">For on this night the bride,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The days of her betrothal over,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Leaves the parental hearth for evermore;</span
+ ><br>
+ To-night the bride goes forth to meet her lover.<br>
+ <br>
+ Reach down the wedding vesture, that has lain<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Yet all unvisited, the silken gown:</span
+ ><br>
+ Bring out the bracelets, and the golden chain<br>
+ Her dearer friends provided: sere and brown<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Bring out the festal crown,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And set it on her forehead lightly:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Though it be withered, twine no wreath again;</span
+ ><br>
+ This only is the crown she can wear rightly.<br>
+ <br>
+ Cloke her in ermine, for the night is cold,<br>
+ And wrap her warmly, for the night is long,<br>
+ In pious hands the flaming torches hold,<br>
+ While her attendants, chosen from among<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Her faithful virgin throng,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">May lay her in her cedar litter,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Decking her coverlet with sprigs of gold,</span
+ ><br>
+ Roses, and lilies white that best befit her.<a
+ id="page_239"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{239}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Sound flute and tabor, that the bridal be<br>
+ Not without music, nor with these alone;<br>
+ But let the viol lead the melody,<br>
+ With lesser intervals, and plaintive moan<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Of sinking semitone;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And, all in choir, the virgin voices</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Rest not from singing in skilled harmony</span
+ ><br>
+ The song that aye the bridegroom's ear rejoices.<br>
+ <br>
+ Let the priests go before, arrayed in white,<br>
+ And let the dark-stoled minstrels follow slow,<br>
+ Next they that bear her, honoured on this night,<br>
+ And then the maidens, in a double row,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Each singing soft and low,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And each on high a torch upstaying:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Unto her lover lead her forth with light,</span
+ ><br>
+ With music, and with singing, and with praying.<br>
+ <br>
+ 'Twas at this sheltering hour he nightly came,<br>
+ And found her trusty window open wide,<br>
+ And knew the signal of the timorous flame,<br>
+ That long the restless curtain would not hide<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Her form that stood beside;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">As scarce she dared to be delighted,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Listening to that sweet tale, that is no shame</span
+ ><br>
+ To faithful lovers, that their hearts have plighted.<br>
+ <br>
+ But now for many days the dewy grass<br>
+ Has shown no markings of his feet at morn:<br>
+ And watching she has seen no shadow pass<br>
+ The moonlit walk, and heard no music borne<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Upon her ear forlorn.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >In vain has she looked out to greet him;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >He has not come, he will not come, alas!</span
+ ><br>
+ So let us bear her out where she must meet him.<a
+ id="page_240"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{240}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Now to the river bank the priests are come:<br>
+ The bark is ready to receive its freight:<br>
+ Let some prepare her place therein, and some<br>
+ Embark the litter with its slender weight:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">The rest stand by in state,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And sing her a safe passage over;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >While she is oared across to her new home,</span
+ ><br>
+ Into the arms of her expectant lover.<br>
+ <br>
+ And thou, O lover, that art on the watch,<br>
+ Where, on the banks of the forgetful streams,<br>
+ The pale indifferent ghosts wander, and snatch<br>
+ The sweeter moments of their broken dreams,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Thou, when the torchlight gleams,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >When thou shalt see the slow procession,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And when thine ears the fitful music catch,</span
+ ><br>
+ Rejoice, for thou art near to thy possession.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">RONDEAU</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ His poisoned shafts, that fresh he dips<br>
+ In juice of plants that no bee sips,<br>
+ He takes, and with his bow renown'd<br>
+ Goes out upon his hunting ground,<br>
+ Hanging his quiver at his hips.<br>
+ <br>
+ He draws them one by one, and clips<br>
+ Their heads between his finger-tips,<br>
+ And looses with a twanging sound<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">His poisoned shafts.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But if a maiden with her lips<br>
+ Suck from the wound the blood that drips,<br>
+ And drink the poison from the wound,<br>
+ The simple remedy is found<br>
+ That of their deadly terror strips<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">His poisoned shafts.</span><br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_241"></a><span class="pagenumb">{241}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">TRIOLET</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ When first we met we did not guess<br>
+ That Love would prove so hard a master;<br>
+ Of more than common friendliness<br>
+ When first we met we did not guess.<br>
+ Who could foretell this sore distress,<br>
+ This irretrievable disaster<br>
+ When first we met?&mdash;We did not guess<br>
+ That Love would prove so hard a master.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">TRIOLET</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ All women born are so perverse<br>
+ No man need boast their love possessing.<br>
+ If nought seem better, nothing's worse:<br>
+ All women born are so perverse.<br>
+ From Adam's wife, that proved a curse<br>
+ Though God had made her for a blessing,<br>
+ All women born are so perverse<br>
+ No man need boast their love possessing.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_242"></a><span class="pagenumb">{242}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="BOOK_II"></a>BOOK II</h2>
+
+ <p class="c">
+ TO<br>
+ THE MEMORY OF<br>
+ G. M. H.
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">MUSE.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Will Love again awake,<br>
+ That lies asleep so long?<br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">POET.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ O hush! ye tongues that shake<br>
+ The drowsy night with song.<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">MUSE.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">It is a lady fair</span><br>
+ Whom once he deigned to praise,<br>
+ That at the door doth dare<br>
+ Her sad complaint to raise.<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">POET.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She must be fair of face,</span><br>
+ As bold of heart she seems,<br>
+ If she would match her grace<br>
+ With the delight of dreams.<br>
+
+ <a id="page_243"></a><span class="pagenumb">{243}</span>
+
+ <br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">MUSE.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Her beauty would surprise</span><br>
+ Gazers on Autumn eves,<br>
+ Who watched the broad moon rise<br>
+ Upon the scattered sheaves.<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">POET.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O sweet must be the voice</span><br>
+ He shall descend to hear,<br>
+ Who doth in Heaven rejoice<br>
+ His most enchanted ear.<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">MUSE.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The smile, that rests to play</span><br>
+ Upon her lip, foretells<br>
+ What musical array<br>
+ Tricks her sweet syllables<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">POET.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And yet her smiles have danced</span><br>
+ In vain, if her discourse<br>
+ Win not the soul entranced<br>
+ In divine intercourse.<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">MUSE.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She will encounter all</span><br>
+ This trial without shame,<br>
+ Her eyes men Beauty call,<br>
+ And Wisdom is her name.<br>
+ &nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">POET.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Throw back the portals then,</span><br>
+ Ye guards, your watch that keep,<br>
+ Love will awake again<br>
+ That lay so long asleep.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_244"></a><span class="pagenumb">{244}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">A PASSER-BY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Whither, O splendid ship, thy white sails crowding,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Leaning across the bosom of the urgent West,</span
+ ><br>
+ That fearest nor sea rising, nor sky clouding,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Whither away, fair rover, and what thy quest?</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ah! soon, when Winter has all our vales opprest,</span
+ ><br>
+ When skies are cold and misty, and hail is hurling,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Wilt thóu glíde on the blue Pacific, or rest</span
+ ><br>
+ In a summer haven asleep, thy white sails furling.<br>
+ <br>
+ I there before thee, in the country that well thou knowest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Already arrived am inhaling the odorous air:</span
+ ><br>
+ I watch thee enter unerringly where thou goest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And anchor queen of the strange shipping there,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thy sails for awnings spread, thy masts bare;</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor is aught from the foaming reef to the snow-capped, grandest<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Peak, that is over the feathery palms more fair</span
+ ><br>
+ Than thou, so upright, so stately, and still thou standest.<br>
+ <br>
+ And yet, O splendid ship, unhailed and nameless,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >I know not if, aiming a fancy, I rightly divine</span
+ ><br>
+ That thou hast a purpose joyful, a courage blameless,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thy port assured in a happier land than mine.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But for all I have given thee, beauty enough is thine,</span
+ ><br>
+ As thou, aslant with trim tackle and shrouding,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >From the proud nostril curve of a prow's line</span
+ ><br>
+ In the offing scatterest foam, thy white sails crowding.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_245"></a><span class="pagenumb">{245}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">LATE SPRING EVENING</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ I saw the Virgin-mother clad in green,<br>
+ Walking the sprinkled meadows at sundown;<br>
+ While yet the moon's cold flame was hung between<br>
+ The day and night, above the dusky town:<br>
+ I saw her brighter than the Western gold,<br>
+ Whereto she faced in splendour to behold.<br>
+ <br>
+ Her dress was greener than the tenderest leaf<br>
+ That trembled in the sunset glare aglow:<br>
+ Herself more delicate than is the brief,<br>
+ Pink apple-blossom, that May showers lay low,<br>
+ And more delicious than 's the earliest streak<br>
+ The blushing rose shows of her crimson cheek.<br>
+ <br>
+ As if to match the sight that so did please,<br>
+ A music entered, making passion fain:<br>
+ Three nightingales sat singing in the trees,<br>
+ And praised the Goddess for the fallen rain;<br>
+ Which yet their unseen motions did arouse,<br>
+ Or parting Zephyrs shook out from the boughs.<br>
+ <br>
+ And o'er the treetops, scattered in mid air,<br>
+ The exhausted clouds laden with crimson light<br>
+ Floated, or seemed to sleep; and, highest there,<br>
+ One planet broke the lingering ranks of night;<br>
+ Daring day's company, so he might spy<br>
+ The Virgin-queen once with his watchful eye.<a
+ id="page_246"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{246}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And when I saw her, then I worshipped her,<br>
+ And said,&mdash;O bounteous Spring, O beauteous Spring,<br>
+ Mother of all my years, thou who dost stir<br>
+ My heart to adore thee and my tongue to sing,<br>
+ Flower of my fruit, of my heart's blood the fire,<br>
+ Of all my satisfaction the desire!<br>
+ <br>
+ How art thou every year more beautiful,<br>
+ Younger for all the winters thou hast cast:<br>
+ And I, for all my love grows, grow more dull,<br>
+ Decaying with each season overpast!<br>
+ In vain to teach him love must man employ thee,<br>
+ The more he learns the less he can enjoy thee.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">WOOING</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I know not how I came,</span><br>
+ New on my knightly journey,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To win the fairest dame</span><br>
+ That graced my maiden tourney.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Chivalry's lovely prize</span><br>
+ With all men's gaze upon her,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Why did she free her eyes</span><br>
+ On me, to do me honour?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ah! ne'er had I my mind</span><br>
+ With such high hope delighted,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Had she not first inclined,</span><br>
+ And with her eyes invited.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But never doubt I knew,</span><br>
+ Having their glance to cheer me,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Until the day joy grew</span><br>
+ Too great, too sure, too near me.<a id="page_247"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{247}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">When hope a fear became,</span><br>
+ And passion, grown too tender,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Now trembled at the shame</span><br>
+ Of a despised surrender;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And where my love at first</span><br>
+ Saw kindness in her smiling,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I read her pride, and cursed</span><br>
+ The arts of her beguiling.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Till winning less than won,</span><br>
+ And liker wooed than wooing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Too late I turned undone</span><br>
+ Away from my undoing;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And stood beside the door,</span><br>
+ Whereto she followed, making<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My hard leave-taking more</span><br>
+ Hard by her sweet leave-taking.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Her speech would have betrayed</span><br>
+ Her thought, had mine been colder:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Her eyes' distress had made</span><br>
+ A lesser lover bolder.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But no! Fond heart, distrust,</span><br>
+ Cried Wisdom, and consider:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Go free, since go thou must:&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ And so farewell I bid her.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And brisk upon my way</span><br>
+ I smote the stroke to sever,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And should have lost that day</span><br>
+ My life's delight for ever:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But when I saw her start</span><br>
+ And turn aside and tremble;&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ah! she was true, her heart</span><br>
+ I knew did not dissemble.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_248"></a><span class="pagenumb">{248}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >There is a hill beside the silver Thames,</span
+ ><br>
+ Shady with birch and beech and odorous pine:<br>
+ And brilliant underfoot with thousand gems<br>
+ Steeply the thickets to his floods decline.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Straight trees in every place</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Their thick tops interlace,</span><br>
+ And pendant branches trail their foliage fine<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Upon his watery face.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Swift from the sweltering pasturage he flows:<br>
+ His stream, alert to seek the pleasant shade,<br>
+ Pictures his gentle purpose, as he goes<br>
+ Straight to the caverned pool his toil has made.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">His winter floods lay bare</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The stout roots in the air:</span><br>
+ His summer streams are cool, when they have played<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Among their fibrous hair.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ A rushy island guards the sacred bower,<br>
+ And hides it from the meadow, where in peace<br>
+ The lazy cows wrench many a scented flower,<br>
+ Robbing the golden market of the bees:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And laden barges float</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">By banks of myosote;</span><br>
+ And scented flag and golden flower-de-lys<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Delay the loitering boat.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And on this side the island, where the pool<br>
+ Eddies away, are tangled mass on mass<br>
+ The water-weeds, that net the fishes cool,<br>
+ And scarce allow a narrow stream to pass;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Where spreading crowfoot mars</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The drowning nenuphars,</span><br>
+ Waving the tassels of her silken grass<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Below her silver stars.<a id="page_249"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{249}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ But in the purple pool there nothing grows,<br>
+ Not the white water-lily spoked with gold;<br>
+ Though best she loves the hollows, and well knows<br>
+ On quiet streams her broad shields to unfold:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Yet should her roots but try</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Within these deeps to lie,</span><br>
+ Not her long reaching stalk could ever hold<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Her waxen head so high.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Sometimes an angler comes, and drops his hook<br>
+ Within its hidden depths, and 'gainst a tree<br>
+ Leaning his rod, reads in some pleasant book,<br>
+ Forgetting soon his pride of fishery;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And dreams, or falls asleep,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">While curious fishes peep</span><br>
+ About his nibbled bait, or scornfully<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Dart off and rise and leap.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And sometimes a slow figure 'neath the trees,<br>
+ In ancient-fashioned smock, with tottering care<br>
+ Upon a staff propping his weary knees,<br>
+ May by the pathway of the forest fare:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">As from a buried day</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Across the mind will stray</span><br>
+ Some perishing mute shadow,&mdash;and unaware<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">He passeth on his way.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Else, he that wishes solitude is safe,<br>
+ Whether he bathe at morning in the stream:<br>
+ Or lead his love there when the hot hours chafe<br>
+ The meadows, busy with a blurring steam;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or watch, as fades the light,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The gibbous moon grow bright,</span><br>
+ Until her magic rays dance in a dream,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And glorify the night.<a id="page_250"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{250}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Where is this bower beside the silver Thames?<br>
+ O pool and flowery thickets, hear my vow!<br>
+ O trees of freshest foliage and straight stems,<br>
+ No sharer of my secret I allow:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Lest ere I come the while</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Strange feet your shades defile;</span
+ ><br>
+ Or lest the burly oarsman turn his prow<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Within your guardian isle.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11%">A WATER-PARTY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Let us, as by this verdant bank we float,<br>
+ Search down the marge to find some shady pool<br>
+ Where we may rest awhile and moor our boat,<br>
+ And bathe our tired limbs in the waters cool.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Beneath the noonday sun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Swiftly, O river, run!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Here is a mirror for Narcissus, see!<br>
+ I cannot sound it, plumbing with my oar.<br>
+ Lay the stern in beneath this bowering tree!<br>
+ Now, stepping on this stump, we are ashore.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Guard, Hamadryades,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Our clothes laid by your trees!</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ How the birds warble in the woods! I pick<br>
+ The waxen lilies, diving to the root.<br>
+ But swim not far in the stream, the weeds grow thick,<br>
+ And hot on the bare head the sunbeams shoot.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Until our sport be done,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">O merry birds, sing on!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ If but to-night the sky be clear, the moon<br>
+ Will serve us well, for she is near the full.<br>
+ We shall row safely home; only too soon,&mdash;<br>
+ So pleasant 'tis, whether we float or pull.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">To guide us through the night,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">O summer moon, shine bright!</span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_251"></a><span class="pagenumb">{251}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11%">THE DOWNS</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ O bold majestic downs, smooth, fair and lonely;<br>
+ O still solitude, only matched in the skies:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Perilous in steep places,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Soft in the level races,</span><br>
+ Where sweeping in phantom silence the cloudland flies;<br>
+ With lovely undulation of fall and rise;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Entrenched with thickets thorned,</span
+ ><br>
+ By delicate miniature dainty flowers adorned!<br>
+ <br>
+ I climb your crown, and lo! a sight surprising<br>
+ Of sea in front uprising, steep and wide:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And scattered ships ascending</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To heaven, lost in the blending</span
+ ><br>
+ Of distant blues, where water and sky divide,<br>
+ Urging their engines against wind and tide,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And all so small and slow</span><br>
+ They seem to be wearily pointing the way they would go.<br>
+ <br>
+ The accumulated murmur of soft plashing,<br>
+ Of waves on rocks dashing and searching the sands,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Takes my ear, in the veering</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Baffled wind, as rearing</span><br>
+ Upright at the cliff, to the gullies and rifts he stands;<br>
+ And his conquering surges scour out over the lands;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">While again at the foot of the downs</span
+ ><br>
+ He masses his strength to recover the topmost crowns.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_252"></a><span class="pagenumb">{252}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">SPRING</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%"><small>ODE I</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <small>INVITATION TO THE COUNTRY</small><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Again with pleasant green</span><br>
+ Has Spring renewed the wood,<br>
+ And where the bare trunks stood<br>
+ Are leafy arbours seen;<br>
+ And back on budding boughs<br>
+ Come birds, to court and pair,<br>
+ Whose rival amorous vows<br>
+ Amaze the scented air.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The freshets are unbound,</span><br>
+ And leaping from the hill,<br>
+ Their mossy banks refill<br>
+ With streams of light and sound:<br>
+ And scattered down the meads,<br>
+ From hour to hour unfold<br>
+ A thousand buds and beads<br>
+ In stars and cups of gold.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Now hear, and see, and note,</span><br>
+ The farms are all astir,<br>
+ And every labourer<br>
+ Has doffed his winter coat;<br>
+ And how with specks of white<br>
+ They dot the brown hillside,<br>
+ Or jaunt and sing outright<br>
+ As by their teams they stride.<a id="page_253"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{253}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">They sing to feel the Sun</span><br>
+ Regain his wanton strength;<br>
+ To know the year at length<br>
+ Rewards their labour done;<br>
+ To see the rootless stake<br>
+ They set bare in the ground,<br>
+ Burst into leaf, and shake<br>
+ Its grateful scent around.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ah now an evil lot</span><br>
+ Is his, who toils for gain,<br>
+ Where crowded chimneys stain<br>
+ The heavens his choice forgot;<br>
+ 'Tis on the blighted trees<br>
+ That deck his garden dim,<br>
+ And in the tainted breeze,<br>
+ That sweet Spring comes to him.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Far sooner I would choose</span><br>
+ The life of brutes that bask,<br>
+ Than set myself a task,<br>
+ Which inborn powers refuse:<br>
+ And rather far enjoy<br>
+ The body, than invent<br>
+ A duty, to destroy<br>
+ The ease which nature sent;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And country life I praise,</span><br>
+ And lead, because I find<br>
+ The philosophic mind<br>
+ Can take no middle ways;<br>
+ She will not leave her love<br>
+ To mix with men, her art<br>
+ Is all to strive above<br>
+ The crowd, or stand apart.<a id="page_254"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{254}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thrice happy he, the rare</span><br>
+ Prometheus, who can play<br>
+ With hidden things, and lay<br>
+ New realms of nature bare;<br>
+ Whose venturous step has trod<br>
+ Hell underfoot, and won<br>
+ A crown from man and God<br>
+ For all that he has done.&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That highest gift of all,</span><br>
+ Since crabbèd fate did flood<br>
+ My heart with sluggish blood,<br>
+ I look not mine to call;<br>
+ But, like a truant freed,<br>
+ Fly to the woods, and claim<br>
+ A pleasure for the deed<br>
+ Of my inglorious name:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And am content, denied</span><br>
+ The best, in choosing right;<br>
+ For Nature can delight<br>
+ Fancies unoccupied<br>
+ With ecstasies so sweet<br>
+ As none can even guess,<br>
+ Who walk not with the feet<br>
+ Of joy in idleness.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then leave your joyless ways,</span><br>
+ My friend, my joys to see.<br>
+ The day you come shall be<br>
+ The choice of chosen days:<br>
+ You shall be lost, and learn<br>
+ New being, and forget<br>
+ The world, till your return<br>
+ Shall bring your first regret.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_255"></a><span class="pagenumb">{255}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">SPRING</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%"><small>ODE II</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%"><small>REPLY</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Behold! the radiant Spring,</span><br>
+ In splendour decked anew,<br>
+ Down from her heaven of blue<br>
+ Returns on sunlit wing:<br>
+ The zephyrs of her train<br>
+ In fleecy clouds disport,<br>
+ And birds to greet her reign<br>
+ Summon their silvan court.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And here in street and square</span><br>
+ The prisoned trees contest<br>
+ Her favour with the best,<br>
+ To robe themselves full fair:<br>
+ And forth their buds provoke,<br>
+ Forgetting winter brown,<br>
+ And all the mire and smoke<br>
+ That wrapped the dingy town.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Now he that loves indeed</span><br>
+ His pleasure must awake,<br>
+ Lest any pleasure take<br>
+ Its flight, and he not heed;<br>
+ For of his few short years<br>
+ Another now invites<br>
+ His hungry soul, and cheers<br>
+ His life with new delights.<a id="page_256"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{256}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And who loves Nature more</span><br>
+ Than he, whose painful art<br>
+ Has taught and skilled his heart<br>
+ To read her skill and lore?<br>
+ Whose spirit leaps more high,<br>
+ Plucking the pale primrose,<br>
+ Than his whose feet must fly<br>
+ The pasture where it grows?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">One long in city pent</span><br>
+ Forgets, or must complain:<br>
+ But think not I can stain<br>
+ My heaven with discontent;<br>
+ Nor wallow with that sad,<br>
+ Backsliding herd, who cry<br>
+ That Truth must make man bad,<br>
+ And pleasure is a lie.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Rather while Reason lives</span><br>
+ To mark me from the beast,<br>
+ I'll teach her serve at least<br>
+ To heal the wound she gives:<br>
+ Nor need she strain her powers<br>
+ Beyond a common flight,<br>
+ To make the passing hours<br>
+ Happy from morn till night.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Since health our toil rewards,</span><br>
+ And strength is labour's prize,<br>
+ I hate not, nor despise<br>
+ The work my lot accords;<br>
+ Nor fret with fears unkind<br>
+ The tender joys, that bless<br>
+ My hard-won peace of mind,<br>
+ In hours of idleness.<a id="page_257"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{257}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then what charm company</span><br>
+ Can give, know I,&mdash;if wine<br>
+ Go round, or throats combine<br>
+ To set dumb music free.<br>
+ Or deep in wintertide<br>
+ When winds without make moan,<br>
+ I love my own fireside<br>
+ Not least when most alone.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then oft I turn the page</span><br>
+ In which our country's name,<br>
+ Spoiling the Greek of fame,<br>
+ Shall sound in every age:<br>
+ Or some Terentian play<br>
+ Renew, whose excellent<br>
+ Adjusted folds betray<br>
+ How once Menander went.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Or if grave study suit</span><br>
+ The yet unwearied brain,<br>
+ Plato can teach again,<br>
+ And Socrates dispute;<br>
+ Till fancy in a dream<br>
+ Confront their souls with mine,<br>
+ Crowning the mind supreme,<br>
+ And her delights divine.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">While pleasure yet can be</span><br>
+ Pleasant, and fancy sweet,<br>
+ I bid all care retreat<br>
+ From my philosophy;<br>
+ Which, when I come to try<br>
+ Your simpler life, will find,<br>
+ I doubt not, joys to vie<br>
+ With those I leave behind.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_258"></a><span class="pagenumb">{258}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">ELEGY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>AMONG THE TOMBS</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Sad, sombre place, beneath whose antique yews<br>
+ I come, unquiet sorrows to control;<br>
+ Amid thy silent mossgrown graves to muse<br>
+ With my neglected solitary soul;<br>
+ And to poetic sadness care confide,<br>
+ Trusting sweet Melancholy for my guide:<br>
+ <br>
+ They will not ask why in thy shades I stray,<br>
+ Among the tombs finding my rare delight,<br>
+ Beneath the sun at indolent noonday,<br>
+ Or in the windy moon-enchanted night,<br>
+ Who have once reined in their steeds at any shrine,<br>
+ And given them water from the well divine.&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The orchards are all ripened, and the sun</span
+ ><br>
+ Spots the deserted gleanings with decay;<br>
+ The seeds are perfected: his work is done,<br>
+ And Autumn lingers but to outsmile the May;<br>
+ Bidding his tinted leaves glide, bidding clear<br>
+ Unto clear skies the birds applaud the year.<br>
+ <br>
+ Lo, here I sit, and to the world I call,<br>
+ The world my solemn fancy leaves behind,<br>
+ Come! pass within the inviolable wall,<br>
+ Come pride, come pleasure, come distracted mind;<br>
+ Within the fated refuge, hither, turn,<br>
+ And learn your wisdom ere 'tis late to learn.<br>
+ <br>
+ Come with me now, and taste the fount of tears;<br>
+ For many eyes have sanctified this spot,<br>
+ Where grief's unbroken lineage endears<br>
+ The charm untimely Folly injures not,<br>
+ And slays the intruding thoughts, that overleap<br>
+ The simple fence its holiness doth keep.<br>
+ <br>
+ Read the worn names of the forgotten dead,<br>
+ Their pompous legends will no smile awake;<br>
+ Even the vainglorious title o'er the head<br>
+ Wins its pride pardon for its sorrow's sake;<br>
+ And carven Loves scorn not their dusty prize,<br>
+ Though fallen so far from tender sympathies.<br>
+ <br>
+ Here where a mother laid her only son,<br>
+ Here where a lover left his bride, below<br>
+ The treasured names their own are added on<br>
+ To those whom they have followed long ago:<br>
+ Sealing the record of the tears they shed,<br>
+ That 'where their treasure there their hearts are fled.'<br>
+ <br>
+ Grandfather, father, son, and then again<br>
+ Child, grandchild, and great-grandchild laid beneath<br>
+ Numbered in turn among the sons of men,<br>
+ And gathered each one in his turn to death:<br>
+ While he that occupies their house and name<br>
+ To-day,&mdash;to-morrow too their grave shall claim.<br>
+ <br>
+ And where are all the spirits? Ah! could we tell<br>
+ The manner of our being when we die,<br>
+ And see beyond the scene we know so well,<br>
+ The country that so much obscured doth lie!<br>
+ With brightest visions our fond hopes repair,<br>
+ Or crown our melancholy with despair;<br>
+ <br>
+ From death, still death, still would a comfort come:<br>
+ Since of this world the essential joy must fall<br>
+ In all distributed, in each thing some,<br>
+ In nothing all, and all complete in all;<br>
+ Till pleasure, ageing to her full increase,<br>
+ Puts on perfection, and is throned in peace.<a
+ id="page_259"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{259}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yea, sweetest peace, unsought-for, undesired,<br>
+ Loathed and misnamed, 'tis thee I worship here:<br>
+ Though in most black habiliments attired,<br>
+ Thou art sweet peace, and thee I cannot fear.<br>
+ Nay, were my last hope quenched, I here would sit<br>
+ And praise the annihilation of the pit.<br>
+ <br>
+ Nor quickly disenchanted will my feet<br>
+ Back to the busy town return, but yet<br>
+ Linger, ere I my loving friends would greet,<br>
+ Or touch their hands, or share without regret<br>
+ The warmth of that kind hearth, whose sacred ties<br>
+ Only shall dim with tears my dying eyes.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">DEJECTION</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Wherefore to-night so full of care,<br>
+ My soul, revolving hopeless strife,<br>
+ Pointing at hindrance, and the bare<br>
+ Painful escapes of fitful life?<br>
+ <br>
+ Shaping the doom that may befall<br>
+ By precedent of terror past:<br>
+ By love dishonoured, and the call<br>
+ Of friendship slighted at the last?<br>
+ <br>
+ By treasured names, the little store<br>
+ That memory out of wreck could save<br>
+ Of loving hearts, that gone before<br>
+ Call their old comrade to the grave?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O soul, be patient: thou shall find</span
+ ><br>
+ A little matter mend all this;<br>
+ Some strain of music to thy mind,<br>
+ Some praise for skill not spent amiss.<a id="page_260"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{260}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Again shall pleasure overflow<br>
+ Thy cup with sweetness, thou shalt taste<br>
+ Nothing but sweetness, and shalt grow<br>
+ Half sad for sweetness run to waste.<br>
+ <br>
+ O happy life! I hear thee sing,<br>
+ O rare delight of mortal stuff!<br>
+ I praise my days for all they bring,<br>
+ Yet are they only not enough.<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 9%">MORNING HYMN</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O golden Sun, whose ray</span><br>
+ My path illumineth:<br>
+ Light of the circling day,<br>
+ Whose night is birth and death:<br>
+ <br>
+ That dost not stint the prime<br>
+ Of wise and strong, nor stay<br>
+ The changeful ordering time,<br>
+ That brings their sure decay:<br>
+ <br>
+ Though thou, the central sphere,<br>
+ Dost seem to turn around<br>
+ Thy creature world, and near<br>
+ As father fond art found;<br>
+ <br>
+ Thereon, as from above<br>
+ To shine, and make rejoice<br>
+ With beauty, life, and love,<br>
+ The garden of thy choice,<a id="page_261"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{261}</span><br>
+ To dress the jocund Spring<br>
+ With bounteous promise gay<br>
+ Of hotter months, that bring<br>
+ The full perfected day;<br>
+ <br>
+ To touch with richest gold<br>
+ The ripe fruit, ere it fall;<br>
+ And smile through cloud and cold<br>
+ On Winter's funeral.<br>
+ <br>
+ Now with resplendent flood<br>
+ Gladden my waking eyes,<br>
+ And stir my slothful blood<br>
+ To joyous enterprise.<br>
+ <br>
+ Arise, arise, as when<br>
+ At first God said <span class="smcap">Light be</span>!<br>
+ That He might make us men<br>
+ With eyes His light to see.<br>
+ <br>
+ Scatter the clouds that hide<br>
+ The face of heaven, and show<br>
+ Where sweet Peace doth abide,<br>
+ Where Truth and Beauty grow.<br>
+ <br>
+ Awaken, cheer, adorn,<br>
+ Invite, inspire, assure<br>
+ The joys that praise thy morn,<br>
+ The toil thy noons mature:<br>
+ <br>
+ And soothe the eve of day,<br>
+ That darkens back to death;<br>
+ O golden Sun, whose ray<br>
+ Our path illumineth!<br>&nbsp; <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_263"></a><span class="pagenumb">{263}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ I have loved flowers that fade,<br>
+ Within whose magic tents<br>
+ Rich hues have marriage made<br>
+ With sweet unmemoried scents:<br>
+ A honeymoon delight,&mdash;<br>
+ A joy of love at sight,<br>
+ That ages in an hour:&mdash;<br>
+ My song be like a flower!<br>
+ <br>
+ I have loved airs, that die<br>
+ Before their charm is writ<br>
+ Along a liquid sky<br>
+ Trembling to welcome it.<br>
+ Notes, that with pulse of fire<br>
+ Proclaim the spirit's desire,<br>
+ Then die, and are nowhere:&mdash;<br>
+ My song be like an air!<br>
+ <br>
+ Die, song, die like a breath,<br>
+ And wither as a bloom:<br>
+ Fear not a flowery death,<br>
+ Dread not an airy tomb!<br>
+ Fly with delight, fly hence!<br>
+ 'Twas thine love's tender sense<br>
+ To feast; now on thy bier<br>
+ Beauty shall shed a tear.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_264"></a><span class="pagenumb">{264}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="BOOK_III"></a>BOOK III</h2>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">TO</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">R. W. D.</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">O my vague desires!</span><br>
+ Ye lambent flames of the soul, her offspring fires:<br>
+ That are my soul herself in pangs sublime<br>
+ Rising and flying to heaven before her time:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">What doth tempt you forth</span><br>
+ To drown in the south or shiver in the frosty north?<br>
+ What seek ye or find ye in your random flying,<br>
+ Ever soaring aloft, soaring and dying?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">Joy, the joy of flight!</span><br>
+ They hide in the sun, they flare and dance in the night;<br>
+ Gone up, gone out of sight: and ever again<br>
+ Follow fresh tongues of fire, fresh pangs of pain.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">Ah! they burn my soul,</span><br>
+ The fires, devour my soul that once was whole:<br>
+ She is scattered in fiery phantoms day by day,<br>
+ But whither, whither? ay whither? away, away!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">Could I but control</span><br>
+ These vague desires, these leaping flames of the soul:<br>
+ Could I but quench the fire: ah! could I stay<br>
+ My soul that flieth, alas, and dieth away!<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_265"></a><span class="pagenumb">{265}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">LONDON SNOW</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ When men were all asleep the snow came flying,<br>
+ In large white flakes falling on the city brown,<br>
+ Stealthily and perpetually settling and loosely lying,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hushing the latest traffic of the drowsy town;</span
+ ><br>
+ Deadening, muffling, stifling its murmurs failing;<br>
+ Lazily and incessantly floating down and down:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Silently sifting and veiling road, roof and railing;</span
+ ><br>
+ Hiding difference, making unevenness even,<br>
+ Into angles and crevices softly drifting and sailing.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >All night it fell, and when full inches seven</span
+ ><br>
+ It lay in the depth of its uncompacted lightness,<br>
+ The clouds blew off from a high and frosty heaven;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And all woke earlier for the unaccustomed brightness</span
+ ><br>
+ Of the winter dawning, the strange unheavenly glare:<br>
+ The eye marvelled&mdash;marvelled at the dazzling whiteness;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The ear hearkened to the stillness of the solemn air;</span
+ ><br>
+ No sound of wheel rumbling nor of foot falling,<br>
+ And the busy morning cries came thin and spare.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then boys I heard, as they went to school, calling,</span
+ ><br>
+ They gathered up the crystal manna to freeze<br>
+ Their tongues with tasting, their hands with snowballing;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Or rioted in a drift, plunging up to the knees;</span
+ ><br>
+ Or peering up from under the white-mossed wonder,<br>
+ 'O look at the trees!' they cried, 'O look at the trees!'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With lessened load a few carts creak and blunder,</span
+ ><br>
+ Following along the white deserted way,<br>
+ A country company long dispersed asunder:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >When now already the sun, in pale display</span
+ ><br>
+ Standing by Paul's high dome, spread forth below<br>
+ His sparkling beams, and awoke the stir of the day.<a
+ id="page_266"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{266}</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >For now doors open, and war is waged with the snow;</span
+ ><br>
+ And trains of sombre men, past tale of number,<br>
+ Tread long brown paths, as toward their toil they go:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But even for them awhile no cares encumber</span
+ ><br>
+ Their minds diverted; the daily word is unspoken,<br>
+ The daily thoughts of labour and sorrow slumber<br>
+ At the sight of the beauty that greets them, for the charm they have
+ broken.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 9%">THE VOICE OF NATURE</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ I stand on the cliff and watch the veiled sun paling<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A silver field afar in the mournful sea,</span
+ ><br>
+ The scourge of the surf, and plaintive gulls sailing<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >At ease on the gale that smites the shuddering lea:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Whose smile severe and chaste</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >June never hath stirred to vanity, nor age defaced.</span
+ ><br>
+ In lofty thought strive, O spirit, for ever:<br>
+ In courage and strength pursue thine own endeavour.<br>
+ <br>
+ Ah! if it were only for thee, thou restless ocean<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Of waves that follow and roar, the sweep of the tides;</span
+ ><br>
+ Wer't only for thee, impetuous wind, whose motion<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Precipitate all o'errides, and turns, nor abides:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">For you sad birds and fair,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Or only for thee, bleak cliff, erect in the air;</span
+ ><br>
+ Then well could I read wisdom in every feature,<br>
+ O well should I understand the voice of Nature.<br>
+ <br>
+ But far away, I think, in the Thames valley,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The silent river glides by flowery banks:</span
+ ><br>
+ And birds sing sweetly in branches that arch an alley<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Of cloistered trees, moss-grown in their ancient ranks:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Where if a light air stray,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Tis laden with hum of bees and scent of may.<a
+ id="page_267"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{267}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Love and peace be thine, O spirit, for ever:<br>
+ Serve thy sweet desire: despise endeavour.<br>
+ <br>
+ And if it were only for thee, entrancèd river,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >That scarce dost rock the lily on her airy stem,</span
+ ><br>
+ Or stir a wave to murmur, or a rush to quiver;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Wer't but for the woods, and summer asleep in them:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">For you my bowers green,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >My hedges of rose and woodbine, with walks between,</span
+ ><br>
+ Then well could I read wisdom in every feature,<br>
+ O well should I understand the voice of Nature.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 9%">ON A DEAD CHILD</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Perfect little body, without fault or stain on thee,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With promise of strength and manhood full and fair!</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Though cold and stark and bare,</span
+ ><br>
+ The bloom and the charm of life doth awhile remain on thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ Thy mother's treasure wert thou;&mdash;alas! no longer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To visit her heart with wondrous joy; to be</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Thy father's pride;&mdash;ah, he</span
+ ><br>
+ Must gather his faith together, and his strength make stronger.<br>
+ <br>
+ To me, as I move thee now in the last duty,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Dost thou with a turn or gesture anon respond;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Startling my fancy fond</span><br>
+ With a chance attitude of the head, a freak of beauty.<br>
+ <br>
+ Thy hand clasps, as 'twas wont, my finger, and holds it:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But the grasp is the clasp of Death, heartbreaking and stiff;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Yet feels to my hand as if</span><br>
+ 'Twas still thy will, thy pleasure and trust that enfolds it.<a
+ id="page_268"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{268}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ So I lay thee there, thy sunken eyelids closing,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Go lie thou there in thy coffin, thy last little bed!&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Propping thy wise, sad head,</span><br>
+ Thy firm, pale hands across thy chest disposing.<br>
+ <br>
+ So quiet! doth the change content thee?&mdash;Death, whither hath he taken
+ thee?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To a world, do I think, that rights the disaster of this?</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">The vision of which I miss,</span><br>
+ Who weep for the body, and wish but to warm thee and awaken thee?<br>
+ <br>
+ Ah! little at best can all our hopes avail us<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To lift this sorrow, or cheer us, when in the dark,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Unwilling, alone we embark,</span><br>
+ And the things we have seen and have known and have heard of, fail us.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: -2%">THE PHILOSOPHER TO HIS MISTRESS</span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Because thou canst not see,<br>
+ Because thou canst not know<br>
+ The black and hopeless woe<br>
+ That hath encompassed me:<br>
+ Because, should I confess<br>
+ The thought of my despair,<br>
+ My words would wound thee less<br>
+ Than swords can hurt the air:<br>
+ <br>
+ Because with thee I seem<br>
+ As one invited near<br>
+ To taste the faery cheer<br>
+ Of spirits in a dream;<br>
+ Of whom he knoweth nought<br>
+ Save that they vie to make<br>
+ All motion, voice and thought<br>
+ A pleasure for his sake:<a id="page_269"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{269}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Therefore more sweet and strange<br>
+ Has been the mystery<br>
+ Of thy long love to me,<br>
+ That doth not quit, nor change,<br>
+ Nor tax my solemn heart,<br>
+ That kisseth in a gloom,<br>
+ Knowing not who thou art<br>
+ That givest, nor to whom.<br>
+ <br>
+ Therefore the tender touch<br>
+ Is more; more dear the smile:<br>
+ And thy light words beguile<br>
+ My wisdom overmuch:<br>
+ And O with swiftness fly<br>
+ The fancies of my song<br>
+ To happy worlds, where I<br>
+ Still in thy love belong.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: -2%">THE PHILOSOPHER TO HIS MISTRESS</span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Haste on, my joys! your treasure lies<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">In swift, unceasing flight.</span><br>
+ O haste: for while your beauty flies<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I seize your full delight.</span><br>
+ Lo! I have seen the scented flower,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Whose tender stems I cull,</span><br>
+ For her brief date and meted hour<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Appear more beautiful.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ O youth, O strength, O most divine<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For that so short ye prove;</span><br>
+ Were but your rare gifts longer mine,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ye scarce would win my love.</span><br>
+ Nay, life itself the heart would spurn,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Did once the days restore</span><br>
+ The days, that once enjoyed return,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Return&mdash;ah! nevermore.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_270"></a><span class="pagenumb">{270}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">INDOLENCE</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ We left the city when the summer day<br>
+ Had verged already on its hot decline,<br>
+ And charmèd Indolence in languor lay<br>
+ In her gay gardens, 'neath her towers divine:<br>
+ 'Farewell,' we said, 'dear city of youth and dream!'<br>
+ And in our boat we stepped and took the stream.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >All through that idle afternoon we strayed</span
+ ><br>
+ Upon our proposed travel well begun,<br>
+ As loitering by the woodland's dreamy shade,<br>
+ Past shallow islets floating in the sun,<br>
+ Or searching down the banks for rarer flowers<br>
+ We lingered out the pleasurable hours.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Till when that loveliest came, which mowers home</span
+ ><br>
+ Turns from their longest labour, as we steered<br>
+ Along a straitened channel flecked with foam,<br>
+ We lost our landscape wide, and slowly neared<br>
+ An ancient bridge, that like a blind wall lay<br>
+ Low on its buried vaults to block the way.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then soon the narrow tunnels broader showed,</span
+ ><br>
+ Where with its arches three it sucked the mass<br>
+ Of water, that in swirl thereunder flowed,<br>
+ Or stood piled at the piers waiting to pass;<br>
+ And pulling for the middle span, we drew<br>
+ The tender blades aboard and floated through.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But past the bridge what change we found below!</span
+ ><br>
+ The stream, that all day long had laughed and played<br>
+ Betwixt the happy shires, ran dark and slow,<br>
+ And with its easy flood no murmur made:<br>
+ And weeds spread on its surface, and about<br>
+ The stagnant margin reared their stout heads out.<a
+ id="page_271"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{271}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Upon the left high elms, with giant wood</span
+ ><br>
+ Skirting the water-meadows, interwove<br>
+ Their slumbrous crowns, o'ershadowing where they stood<br>
+ The floor and heavy pillars of the grove:<br>
+ And in the shade, through reeds and sedges dank,<br>
+ A footpath led along the moated bank.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Across, all down the right, an old brick wall,</span
+ ><br>
+ Above and o'er the channel, red did lean;<br>
+ Here buttressed up, and bulging there to fall,<br>
+ Tufted with grass and plants and lichen green;<br>
+ And crumbling to the flood, which at its base<br>
+ Slid gently nor disturbed its mirrored face.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Sheer on the wall the houses rose, their backs</span
+ ><br>
+ All windowless, neglected and awry,<br>
+ With tottering coigns, and crooked chimney stacks;<br>
+ And here and there an unused door, set high<br>
+ Above the fragments of its mouldering stair,<br>
+ With rail and broken step led out on air.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Beyond, deserted wharfs and vacant sheds,</span
+ ><br>
+ With empty boats and barges moored along,<br>
+ And rafts half-sunken, fringed with weedy shreds,<br>
+ And sodden beams, once soaked to season strong.<br>
+ No sight of man, nor sight of life, no stroke,<br>
+ No voice the somnolence and silence broke.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then I who rowed leant on my oar, whose drip</span
+ ><br>
+ Fell without sparkle, and I rowed no more;<br>
+ And he that steered moved neither hand nor lip,<br>
+ But turned his wondering eye from shore to shore;<br>
+ And our trim boat let her swift motion die,<br>
+ Between the dim reflections floating by.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_272"></a><span class="pagenumb">{272}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">INDOLENCE</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I praise the tender flower,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That on a mournful day</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Bloomed in my garden bower</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And made the winter gay.</span><br>
+ Its loveliness contented<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">My heart tormented.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I praise the gentle maid</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Whose happy voice and smile</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To confidence betrayed</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My doleful heart awhile:</span><br>
+ And gave my spirit deploring<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Fresh wings for soaring.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The maid for very fear</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of love I durst not tell:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The rose could never hear,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Though I bespake her well:</span><br>
+ So in my song I bind them<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">For all to find them.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ A winter's night with the snow about:<br>
+ 'Twas silent within and cold without:<br>
+ Both father and mother to bed were gone:<br>
+ The son sat yet by the fire alone.<br>
+ <br>
+ He gazed on the fire, and dreamed again<br>
+ Of one that was now no more among men:<br>
+ As still he sat and never aware<br>
+ How close was the spirit beside his chair.<a
+ id="page_273"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{273}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Nay, sad were his thoughts, for he wept and said<br>
+ Ah, woe for the dead! ah, woe for the dead!<br>
+ How heavy the earth lies now on her breast,<br>
+ The lips that I kissed, and the hand I pressed.<br>
+ <br>
+ The spirit he saw not, he could not hear<br>
+ The comforting word she spake in his ear:<br>
+ His heart in the grave with her mouldering clay<br>
+ No welcome gave&mdash;and she fled away.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My bed and pillow are cold,</span><br>
+ My heart is faint with dread,<br>
+ The air hath an odour of mould,<br>
+ I dream I lie with the dead:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">I cannot move,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">O come to me, Love,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Or else I am dead.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The feet I hear on the floor<br>
+ Tread heavily overhead:<br>
+ O Love, come down to the door,<br>
+ Come, Love, come, ere I be dead:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Make shine thy light,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">O Love, in the night;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Or else I am dead.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ O thou unfaithful, still as ever dearest<br>
+ That in thy beauty to my eyes appearest<br>
+ In fancy rising now to re-awaken<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">My love unshaken;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ All thou'st forgotten, but no change can free thee,<br>
+ No hate unmake thee; as thou wert I see thee,<br>
+ And am contented, eye from fond eye meeting<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em"
+ >Its ample greeting.<a id="page_274"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{274}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ O thou my star of stars, among things wholly<br>
+ Devoted, sacred, dim and melancholy,<br>
+ The only joy of all the joys I cherished<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">That hast not perished,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Why now on others squand'rest thou the treasure,<br>
+ That to be jealous of is still my pleasure:<br>
+ As still I dream 'tis me whom thou invitest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Me thou delightest?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But day by day my joy hath feebler being,<br>
+ The fading picture tires my painful seeing,<br>
+ And faery fancy leaves her habitation<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">To desolation.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Of two things open left for lovers parted<br>
+ 'Twas thine to scorn the past and go lighthearted:<br>
+ But I would ever dream I still possess it,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">And thus caress it.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Thou didst delight my eyes:<br>
+ Yet who am I? nor first<br>
+ Nor last nor best, that durst<br>
+ Once dream of thee for prize;<br>
+ Nor this the only time<br>
+ Thou shalt set love to rhyme.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thou didst delight my ear:</span><br>
+ Ah! little praise; thy voice<br>
+ Makes other hearts rejoice,<br>
+ Makes all ears glad that hear;<br>
+ And short my joy: but yet,<br>
+ O song, do not forget.<a id="page_275"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{275}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For what wert thou to me?</span><br>
+ How shall I say? The moon,<br>
+ That poured her midnight noon<br>
+ Upon his wrecking sea;&mdash;<br>
+ A sail, that for a day<br>
+ Has cheered the castaway.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Joy, sweetest lifeborn joy, where dost thou dwell?<br>
+ Upon the formless moments of our being<br>
+ Flitting, to mock the ear that heareth well,<br>
+ To escape the trainèd eye that strains in seeing,<br>
+ Dost thou fly with us whither we are fleeing;<br>
+ Or home in our creations, to withstand<br>
+ Black-wingèd death, that slays the making hand?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The making mind, that must untimely perish</span
+ ><br>
+ Amidst its work which time may not destroy,<br>
+ The beauteous forms which man shall love to cherish,<br>
+ The glorious songs that combat earth's annoy?<br>
+ Thou dost dwell here, I know, divinest Joy:<br>
+ But they who build thy towers fair and strong,<br>
+ Of all that toil, feel most of care and wrong.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Sense is so tender, O and hope so high,</span
+ ><br>
+ That common pleasures mock their hope and sense;<br>
+ And swifter than doth lightning from the sky<br>
+ The ecstasy they pine for flashes hence,<br>
+ Leaving the darkness and the woe immense,<br>
+ Wherewith it seems no thread of life was woven,<br>
+ Nor doth the track remain where once 'twas cloven.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And heaven and all the stable elements</span
+ ><br>
+ That guard God's purpose mock us, though the mind<br>
+ Be spent in searching: for his old intents<br>
+ We see were never for our joy designed:<br>
+ They shine as doth the bright sun on the blind,<a
+ id="page_276"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{276}</span><br>
+ Or like his pensioned stars, that hymn above<br>
+ His praise, but not toward us, that God is Love.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >For who so well hath wooed the maiden hours</span
+ ><br>
+ As quite to have won the worth of their rich show,<br>
+ To rob the night of mystery, or the flowers<br>
+ Of their sweet delicacy ere they go?<br>
+ Nay, even the dear occasion when we know,<br>
+ We miss the joy, and on the gliding day<br>
+ The special glories float and pass away.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Only life's common plod: still to repair</span
+ ><br>
+ The body and the thing which perisheth:<br>
+ The soil, the smutch, the toil and ache and wear,<br>
+ The grinding enginry of blood and breath,<br>
+ Pain's random darts, the heartless spade of death;<br>
+ All is but grief, and heavily we call<br>
+ On the last terror for the end of all.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then comes the happy moment: not a stir</span
+ ><br>
+ In any tree, no portent in the sky:<br>
+ The morn doth neither hasten nor defer,<br>
+ The morrow hath no name to call it by,<br>
+ But life and joy are one,&mdash;we know not why,&mdash;<br>
+ As though our very blood long breathless lain<br>
+ Had tasted of the breath of God again.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And having tasted it I speak of it,</span
+ ><br>
+ And praise him thinking how I trembled then<br>
+ When his touch strengthened me, as now I sit<br>
+ In wonder, reaching out beyond my ken,<br>
+ Reaching to turn the day back, and my pen<br>
+ Urging to tell a tale which told would seem<br>
+ The witless phantasy of them that dream.<a
+ id="page_277"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{277}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But O most blessèd truth, for truth thou art,</span
+ ><br>
+ Abide thou with me till my life shall end.<br>
+ Divinity hath surely touched my heart;<br>
+ I have possessed more joy than earth can lend:<br>
+ I may attain what time shall never spend.<br>
+ Only let not my duller days destroy<br>
+ The memory of thy witness and my joy.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The full moon from her cloudless skies<br>
+ Turneth her face, I think, on me;<br>
+ And from the hour when she doth rise<br>
+ Till when she sets, none else will see.<br>
+ <br>
+ One only other ray she hath,<br>
+ That makes an angle close with mine,<br>
+ And glancing down its happy path<br>
+ Upon another spot doth shine.<br>
+ <br>
+ But that ray too is sent to me,<br>
+ For where it lights there dwells my heart:<br>
+ And if I were where I would be,<br>
+ Both rays would shine, love, where thou art.<br>
+ <br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Awake, my heart, to be loved, awake, awake!<br>
+ The darkness silvers away, the morn doth break,<br>
+ It leaps in the sky: unrisen lustres slake<br>
+ The o'ertaken moon. Awake, O heart, awake!<br>
+ <br>
+ She too that loveth awaketh and hopes for thee;<br>
+ Her eyes already have sped the shades that flee,<br>
+ Already they watch the path thy feet shall take:<br>
+ Awake, O heart, to be loved, awake, awake!<br>
+ <br>
+ And if thou tarry from her,&mdash;if this could be,&mdash;<br>
+ She cometh herself, O heart, to be loved, to thee;<br>
+ For thee would unashamèd herself forsake:<br>
+ Awake to be loved, my heart, awake, awake!<a
+ id="page_278"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{278}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Awake, the land is scattered with light, and see,<br>
+ Uncanopied sleep is flying from field and tree:<br>
+ And blossoming boughs of April in laughter shake;<br>
+ Awake, O heart, to be loved, awake, awake!<br>
+ <br>
+ Lo all things wake and tarry and look for thee:<br>
+ She looketh and saith, 'O sun, now bring him to me.<br>
+ Come more adored, O adored, for his coming's sake,<br>
+ And awake my heart to be loved: awake, awake!'<br>
+ <br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">SONG</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ I love my lady's eyes<br>
+ Above the beauties rare<br>
+ She most is wont to prize,<br>
+ Above her sunny hair,<br>
+ And all that face to face<br>
+ Her glass repeats of grace.<br>
+ <br>
+ For those are still the same<br>
+ To her and all that see:<br>
+ But oh! her eyes will flame<br>
+ When they do look on me:<br>
+ And so above the rest<br>
+ I love her eyes the best.<br>
+ <br>
+ Now say, [<i>Say, O say! saith the music</i>]<br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; who likes my song?&mdash;<br>
+ I knew you by your eyes,<br>
+ That rest on nothing long,<br>
+ And have forgot surprise;<br>
+ And stray [<i>Stray, O stray! saith the music</i>]<br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; as mine will stray,<br>
+ The while my love's away.<br>
+ <br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_279"></a><span class="pagenumb">{279}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Since thou, O fondest and truest,<br>
+ Hast loved me best and longest,<br>
+ And now with trust the strongest<br>
+ The joy of my heart renewest;<br>
+ <br>
+ Since thou art dearer and dearer<br>
+ While other hearts grow colder<br>
+ And ever, as love is older,<br>
+ More lovingly drawest nearer:<br>
+ <br>
+ Since now I see in the measure<br>
+ Of all my giving and taking,<br>
+ Thou wert my hand in the making,<br>
+ The sense and soul of my pleasure;<br>
+ <br>
+ The good I have ne'er repaid thee<br>
+ In heaven I pray be recorded,<br>
+ And all thy love rewarded<br>
+ By God, thy master that made thee.<br>
+ <br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The evening darkens over<br>
+ After a day so bright<br>
+ The windcapt waves discover<br>
+ That wild will be the night.<br>
+ There's sound of distant thunder.<br>
+ <br>
+ The latest sea-birds hover<br>
+ Along the cliff's sheer height;<br>
+ As in the memory wander<br>
+ Last flutterings of delight,<br>
+ White wings lost on the white.<a id="page_280"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{280}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ There's not a ship in sight;<br>
+ And as the sun goes under<br>
+ Thick clouds conspire to cover<br>
+ The moon that should rise yonder.<br>
+ Thou art alone, fond lover.<br><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ O youth whose hope is high,<br>
+ Who dost to Truth aspire,<br>
+ Whether thou live or die,<br>
+ O look not back nor tire.<br>
+ <br>
+ Thou that art bold to fly<br>
+ Through tempest, flood and fire,<br>
+ Nor dost not shrink to try<br>
+ Thy heart in torments dire:<br>
+ <br>
+ If thou canst Death defy,<br>
+ If thy Faith is entire,<br>
+ Press onward, for thine eye<br>
+ Shall see thy heart's desire.<br>
+ <br>
+ Beauty and love are nigh,<br>
+ And with their deathless quire<br>
+ Soon shall thine eager cry<br>
+ Be numbered and expire.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_281"></a><span class="pagenumb">{281}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="BOOK_IV"></a>BOOK IV</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ TO<br>
+ L. B. C. L. M.
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ I love all beauteous things,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I seek and adore them;</span><br>
+ God hath no better praise,<br>
+ And man in his hasty days<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Is honoured for them.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I too will something make<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And joy in the making;</span><br>
+ Altho' to-morrow it seem<br>
+ Like the empty words of a dream<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Remembered on waking.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ My spirit sang all day<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my joy.</span><br>
+ Nothing my tongue could say,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Only My joy!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ My heart an echo caught&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my joy&mdash;</span><br>
+ And spake, Tell me thy thought,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hide not thy joy.<a id="page_282"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{282}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ My eyes gan peer around,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my joy&mdash;</span><br>
+ What beauty hast thou found?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Shew us thy joy.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ My jealous ears grew whist;&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my joy&mdash;</span><br>
+ Music from heaven is't,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Sent for our joy?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ She also came and heard;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my joy,</span><br>
+ What, said she, is this word?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">What is thy joy?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And I replied, O see,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my joy,</span><br>
+ 'Tis thee, I cried, 'tis thee:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thou art my joy.</span><br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The upper skies are palest blue<br>
+ Mottled with pearl and fretted snow:<br>
+ With tattered fleece of inky hue<br>
+ Close overhead the storm-clouds go.<br>
+ <br>
+ Their shadows fly along the hill<br>
+ And o'er the crest mount one by one:<br>
+ The whitened planking of the mill<br>
+ Is now in shade and now in sun.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_283"></a><span class="pagenumb">{283}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The clouds have left the sky,<br>
+ The wind hath left the sea,<br>
+ The half-moon up on high<br>
+ Shrinketh her face of dree<br>
+ <br>
+ She lightens on the comb<br>
+ Of leaden waves, that roar<br>
+ And thrust their hurried foam<br>
+ Up on the dusky shore.<br>
+ <br>
+ Behind the western bars<br>
+ The shrouded day retreats,<br>
+ And unperceived the stars<br>
+ Steal to their sovran seats.<br>
+ <br>
+ And whiter grows the foam,<br>
+ The small moon lightens more;<br>
+ And as I turn me home,<br>
+ My shadow walks before.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ LAST WEEK OF FEBRUARY, 1890<br>
+
+ Hark to the merry birds, hark how they sing!<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Although 'tis not yet spring</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And keen the air;</span><br>
+ Hale Winter, half resigning ere he go,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Doth to his heiress shew</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">His kingdom fair.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ In patient russet is his forest spread,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">All bright with bramble red,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With beechen moss</span><br>
+ And holly sheen: the oak silver and stark<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Sunneth his aged bark</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >And wrinkled boss.<a id="page_284"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{284}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ But neath the ruin of the withered brake<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Primroses now awake</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">From nursing shades:</span><br>
+ The crumpled carpet of the dry leaves brown<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Avails not to keep down</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The hyacinth blades.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The hazel hath put forth his tassels ruffed;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The willow's flossy tuft</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Hath slipped him free:</span><br>
+ The rose amid her ransacked orange hips<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Braggeth the tender tips</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of bowers to be.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ A black rook stirs the branches here and there,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Foraging to repair</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">His broken home:</span><br>
+ And hark, on the ash-boughs! Never thrush did sing<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Louder in praise of spring,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">When spring is come.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">APRIL, 1885</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Wanton with long delay the gay spring leaping cometh;<br>
+ The blackthorn starreth now his bough on the eve of May:<br>
+ All day in the sweet box-tree the bee for pleasure hummeth:<br>
+ The cuckoo sends afloat his note on the air all day.<br>
+ <br>
+ Now dewy nights again and rain in gentle shower<br>
+ At root of tree and flower have quenched the winter's drouth:<br>
+ On high the hot sun smiles, and banks of cloud uptower<br>
+ In bulging heads that crowd for miles the dazzling south.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_285"></a><span class="pagenumb">{285}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Gáy Róbin is seen no more:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He is gone with the snow,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For winter is o'er</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And Robin will go.</span><br>
+ In need he was fed, and now he is fled<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Away to his secret nest.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">No more will he stand</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Begging for crumbs,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">No longer he comes</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Beseeching our hand</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And showing his breast</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">At window and door:&mdash;</span><br>
+ Gay Robin is seen no more.<br>
+ <br>
+ Blithe Robin is heard no more:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He gave us his song</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">When summer was o'er</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And winter was long:</span><br>
+ He sang for his bread and now he is fled<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Away to his secret nest.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And there in the green</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Early and late</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Alone to his mate</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He pipeth unseen</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And swelleth his breast;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For us it is o'er:&mdash;</span><br>
+ Blithe Robin is heard no more.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_286"></a><span class="pagenumb">{286}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Spring goeth all in white,<br>
+ Crowned with milk-white may:<br>
+ In fleecy flocks of light<br>
+ O'er heaven the white clouds stray:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">White butterflies in the air;</span><br>
+ White daisies prank the ground:<br>
+ The cherry and hoary pear<br>
+ Scatter their snow around.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My eyes for beauty pine,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My soul for Goddës grace:</span><br>
+ No other care nor hope is mine;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To heaven I turn my face.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">One splendour thence is shed</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">From all the stars above:</span><br>
+ 'Tis namèd when God's name is said,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">'Tis Love, 'tis heavenly Love.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And every gentle heart,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That burns with true desire,</span><br>
+ Is lit from eyes that mirror part<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of that celestial fire.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ O Love, my muse, how was't for me<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Among the best to dare,</span><br>
+ In thy high courts that bowed the knee<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >With sacrifice and prayer?<a id="page_287"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{287}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Their mighty offerings at thy shrine<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Shamed me, who nothing bore</span><br>
+ Their suits were mockeries of mine,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">I sued for so much more.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Full many I met that crowned with bay<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">In triumph home returned,</span><br>
+ And many a master on the way<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Proud of the prize I scorned.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I wished no garland on my head<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Nor treasure in my hand;</span><br>
+ My gift the longing that me led,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">My prayer thy high command,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ My love, my muse; and when I spake<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Thou mad'st me thine that day,</span><br>
+ And more than hundred hearts could take<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Gav'st me to bear away.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Love on my heart from heaven fell,<br>
+ Soft as the dew on flowers of spring,<br>
+ Sweet as the hidden drops that swell<br>
+ Their honey-throated chalicing.<br>
+ <br>
+ Now never from him do I part,<br>
+ Hosanna evermore I cry:<br>
+ I taste his savour in my heart,<br>
+ And bid all praise him as do I.<br>
+ <br>
+ Without him noughtsoever is,<br>
+ Nor was afore, nor e'er shall be:<br>
+ Nor any other joy than his<br>
+ Wish I for mine to comfort me.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_288"></a><span class="pagenumb">{288}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The hill pines were sighing,<br>
+ O'ercast and chill was the day:<br>
+ A mist in the valley lying<br>
+ Blotted the pleasant May.<br>
+ <br>
+ But deep in the glen's bosom<br>
+ Summer slept in the fire<br>
+ Of the odorous gorse-blossom<br>
+ And the hot scent of the brier.<br>
+ <br>
+ A ribald cuckoo clamoured,<br>
+ And out of the copse the stroke<br>
+ Of the iron axe that hammered<br>
+ The iron heart of the oak.<br>
+ <br>
+ Anon a sound appalling,<br>
+ As a hundred years of pride<br>
+ Crashed, in the silence falling:<br>
+ And the shadowy pine-trees sighed.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">THE WINDMILL</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The green corn waving in the dale,<br>
+ The ripe grass waving on the hill:<br>
+ I lean across the paddock pale<br>
+ And gaze upon the giddy mill.<br>
+ <br>
+ Its hurtling sails a mighty sweep<br>
+ Cut thro' the air: with rushing sound<br>
+ Each strikes in fury down the steep,<br>
+ Rattles, and whirls in chase around.<a id="page_289"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{289}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Beside his sacks the miller stands<br>
+ On high within the open door:<br>
+ A book and pencil in his hands,<br>
+ His grist and meal he reckoneth o'er.<br>
+ <br>
+ His tireless merry slave the wind<br>
+ Is busy with his work to-day:<br>
+ From whencesoe'er, he comes to grind;<br>
+ He hath a will and knows the way.<br>
+ <br>
+ He gives the creaking sails a spin,<br>
+ The circling millstones faster flee,<br>
+ The shuddering timbers groan within,<br>
+ And down the shoot the meal runs free.<br>
+ <br>
+ The miller giveth him no thanks,<br>
+ And doth not much his work o'erlook:<br>
+ He stands beside the sacks, and ranks<br>
+ The figures in his dusty book.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When June is come, then all the day<br>
+ I'll sit with my love in the scented hay:<br>
+ And watch the sunshot palaces high,<br>
+ That the white clouds build in the breezy sky.<br>
+ <br>
+ She singeth, and I do make her a song,<br>
+ And read sweet poems the whole day long:<br>
+ Unseen as we lie in our haybuilt home.<br>
+ O life is delight when June is come.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The pinks along my garden walks<br>
+ Have all shot forth their summer stalks,<br>
+ Thronging their buds 'mong tulips hot,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >And blue forget-me-not.<a id="page_290"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{290}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Their dazzling snows forth-bursting soon<br>
+ Will lade the idle breath of June:<br>
+ And waken thro' the fragrant night<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">To steal the pale moonlight.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The nightingale at end of May<br>
+ Lingers each year for their display;<br>
+ Till when he sees their blossoms blown,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">He knows the spring is flown.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ June's birth they greet, and when their bloom<br>
+ Dislustres, withering on his tomb,<br>
+ Then summer hath a shortening day;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">And steps slow to decay.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Fire of heaven, whose starry arrow</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Pierces the veil of timeless night:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Molten spheres, whose tempests narrow</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Their floods to a beam of gentle light,</span
+ ><br>
+ To charm with a moon-ray quenched from fire<br>
+ The land of delight, the land of desire!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Smile of love, a flower planted,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Sprung in the garden of joy that art:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Eyes that shine with a glow enchanted,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Whose spreading fires encircle my heart,</span
+ ><br>
+ And warm with a noon-ray drenched in fire<br>
+ My land of delight, my land of desire!<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The idle life I lead<br>
+ Is like a pleasant sleep,<br>
+ Wherein I rest and heed<br>
+ The dreams that by me sweep.<a id="page_291"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{291}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And still of all my dreams<br>
+ In turn so swiftly past,<br>
+ Each in its fancy seems<br>
+ A nobler than the last.<br>
+ <br>
+ And every eve I say,<br>
+ Noting my step in bliss,<br>
+ That I have known no day<br>
+ In all my life like this.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Angel spirits of sleep,<br>
+ White-robed, with silver hair,<br>
+ In your meadows fair,<br>
+ Where the willows weep,<br>
+ And the sad moonbeam<br>
+ On the gliding stream<br>
+ Writes her scattered dream:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Angel spirits of sleep,</span><br>
+ Dancing to the weir<br>
+ In the hollow roar<br>
+ Of its waters deep;<br>
+ Know ye how men say<br>
+ That ye haunt no more<br>
+ Isle and grassy shore<br>
+ With your moonlit play;<br>
+ That ye dance not here,<br>
+ White-robed spirits of sleep,<br>
+ All the summer night<br>
+ Threading dances light?<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_292"></a><span class="pagenumb">{292}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">ANNIVERSARY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ What is sweeter than new-mown hay,<br>
+ Fresher than winds o'er-sea that blow,<br>
+ Innocent above children's play,<br>
+ Fairer and purer than winter snow,<br>
+ Frolic as are the morns of May?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >&mdash;If it should be what best I know!</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ What is richer than thoughts that stray<br>
+ From reading of poems that smoothly flow?<br>
+ What is solemn like the delay<br>
+ Of concords linked in a music slow<br>
+ Dying thro' vaulted aisles away?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >&mdash;If it should be what best I know!</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ What gives faith to me when I pray,<br>
+ Setteth my heart with joy aglow,<br>
+ Filleth my song with fancies gay,<br>
+ Maketh the heaven to which I go,<br>
+ The gladness of earth that lasteth for aye?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >&mdash;If it should be what best I know!</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ But tell me thou&mdash;'twas on this day<br>
+ That first we loved five years ago&mdash;<br>
+ If 'tis a thing that I can say,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Though it must be what best we know.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The summer trees are tempest-torn,<br>
+ The hills are wrapped in a mantle wide<br>
+ Of folding rain by the mad wind borne<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Across the country side.<a id="page_293"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{293}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ His scourge of fury is lashing down<br>
+ The delicate-rankèd golden corn,<br>
+ That never more shall rear its crown<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And curtsey to the morn.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ There shews no care in heaven to save<br>
+ Man's pitiful patience, or provide<br>
+ A season for the season's slave,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Whose trust hath toiled and died.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ So my proud spirit in me is sad,<br>
+ A wreck of fairer fields to mourn,<br>
+ The ruin of golden hopes she had,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">My delicate-rankèd corn.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The birds that sing on autumn eves<br>
+ Among the golden-tinted leaves,<br>
+ Are but the few that true remain<br>
+ Of budding May's rejoicing train.<br>
+ <br>
+ Like autumn flowers that brave the frost,<br>
+ And make their show when hope is lost,<br>
+ These 'mong the fruits and mellow scent<br>
+ Mourn not the high-sunned summer spent.<br>
+ <br>
+ Their notes thro' all the jocund spring<br>
+ Were mixed in merry musicking:<br>
+ They sang for love the whole day long,<br>
+ But now their love is all for song.<br>
+ <br>
+ Now each hath perfected his lay<br>
+ To praise the year that hastes away:<br>
+ They sit on boughs apart, and vie<br>
+ In single songs and rich reply:<br>
+ <br>
+ And oft as in the copse I hear<br>
+ These anthems of the dying year,<br>
+ The passions, once her peace that stole,<br>
+ With flattering love my heart console.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_294"></a><span class="pagenumb">{294}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When my love was away,<br>
+ Full three days were not sped,<br>
+ I caught my fancy astray<br>
+ Thinking if she were dead,<br>
+ <br>
+ And I alone, alone:<br>
+ It seemed in my misery<br>
+ In all the world was none<br>
+ Ever so lone as I.<br>
+ <br>
+ I wept; but it did not shame<br>
+ Nor comfort my heart: away<br>
+ I rode as I might, and came<br>
+ To my love at close of day.<br>
+ <br>
+ The sight of her stilled my fears,<br>
+ My fairest-hearted love:<br>
+ And yet in her eyes were tears:<br>
+ Which when I questioned of,<br>
+ <br>
+ O now thou art come, she cried,<br>
+ 'Tis fled: but I thought to-day<br>
+ I never could here abide,<br>
+ If thou wert longer away.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The storm is over, the land hushes to rest:<br>
+ The tyrannous wind, its strength fordone,<br>
+ Is fallen back in the west<br>
+ To couch with the sinking sun.<br>
+ The last clouds fare<br>
+ With fainting speed, and their thin streamers fly<br>
+ In melting drifts of the sky.<br>
+ Already the birds in the air<a id="page_295"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{295}</span><br>
+ Appear again; the rooks return to their haunt,<br>
+ And one by one,<br>
+ Proclaiming aloud their care,<br>
+ Renew their peaceful chant.<br>
+ <br>
+ Torn and shattered the trees their branches again reset,<br>
+ They trim afresh the fair<br>
+ Few green and golden leaves withheld from the storm,<br>
+ And awhile will be handsome yet.<br>
+ To-morrow's sun shall caress<br>
+ Their remnant of loveliness:<br>
+ In quiet days for a time<br>
+ Sad Autumn lingering warm<br>
+ Shall humour their faded prime.<br>
+ <br>
+ But ah! the leaves of summer that lie on the ground!<br>
+ What havoc! The laughing timbrels of June,<br>
+ That curtained the birds' cradles, and screened their song,<br>
+ That sheltered the cooing doves at noon,<br>
+ Of airy fans the delicate throng,&mdash;<br>
+ Torn and scattered around:<br>
+ Far out afield they lie,<br>
+ In the watery furrows die,<br>
+ In grassy pools of the flood they sink and drown,<br>
+ Green-golden, orange, vermilion, golden and brown,<br>
+ The high year's flaunting crown<br>
+ Shattered and trampled down.<br>
+ <br>
+ The day is done: the tired land looks for night:<br>
+ She prays to the night to keep<br>
+ In peace her nerves of delight:<br>
+ While silver mist upstealeth silently,<br>
+ And the broad cloud driving moon in the clear sky<br>
+ Lifts o'er the firs her shining shield,<br>
+ And in her tranquil light<br>
+ Sleep falls on forest and field.<br>
+ Sée! sléep hath fallen: the trees are asleep:<br>
+ The night is come. The land is wrapt in sleep.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_296"></a><span class="pagenumb">{296}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Ye thrilled me once, ye mournful strains,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ye anthems of plaintive woe,</span><br>
+ My spirit was sad when I was young;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ah sorrowful long-ago!</span><br>
+ But since I have found the beauty of joy<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I have done with proud dismay:</span><br>
+ For howsoe'er man hug his care<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The best of his art is gay.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And yet if voices of fancy's choir<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Again in mine ear awake</span><br>
+ Your old lament, 'tis dear to me still,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor all for memory's sake:</span><br>
+ 'Tis like the dirge of sorrow dead,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Whose tears are wiped away;</span><br>
+ Or drops of the shower when rain is o'er,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That jewel the brightened day.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Say who is this with silvered hair,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">So pale and worn and thin,</span><br>
+ Who passeth here, and passeth there,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And looketh out and in?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ That useth not our garb nor tongue<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And knoweth things untold:</span><br>
+ Who teacheth pleasure to the young,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And wisdom to the old?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ No toil he maketh his by day,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">No home his own by night;</span><br>
+ But wheresoe'er he take his way,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >He killeth our delight.<a id="page_297"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{297}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Since he is come there's nothing wise<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor fair in man or child,</span><br>
+ Unless his deep divining eyes<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Have looked on it and smiled.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Whence came he hither all alone<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Among our folk to spy?</span><br>
+ There's nought that we can call our own,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Till he shall hap to die.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And I would dig his grave full deep<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Beneath the churchyard yew,</span><br>
+ Lest thence his wizard eyes might peep<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To mark the things we do.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Crown Winter with green,<br>
+ And give him good drink<br>
+ To physic his spleen<br>
+ Or ever he think.<br>
+ <br>
+ His mouth to the bowl,<br>
+ His feet to the fire;<br>
+ And let him, good soul,<br>
+ No comfort desire.<br>
+ <br>
+ So merry he be,<br>
+ I bid him abide:<br>
+ And merry be we<br>
+ This good Yuletide.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_298"></a><span class="pagenumb">{298}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The snow lies sprinkled on the beach,<br>
+ And whitens all the marshy lea:<br>
+ The sad gulls wail adown the gale,<br>
+ The day is dark and black the sea.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Shorn of their crests the blighted waves</span
+ ><br>
+ With driven foam the offing fleck:<br>
+ The ebb is low and barely laves<br>
+ The red rust of the giant wreck.<br>
+ <br>
+ On such a stony, breaking beach<br>
+ My childhood chanced and chose to be:<br>
+ 'Twas here I played, and musing made<br>
+ My friend the melancholy sea.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He from his dim enchanted caves</span
+ ><br>
+ With shuddering roar and onrush wild<br>
+ Fell down in sacrificial waves<br>
+ At feet of his exulting child.<br>
+ <br>
+ Unto a spirit too light for fear<br>
+ His wrath was mirth, his wail was glee:&mdash;<br>
+ My heart is now too fixed to bow<br>
+ Tho' all his tempests howl at me:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For to the gain life's summer saves,</span
+ ><br>
+ My solemn joy's increasing store,<br>
+ The tossing of his mournful waves<br>
+ Makes sweetest music evermore.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ My spirit kisseth thine,<br>
+ My spirit embraceth thee:<br>
+ I feel thy being twine<br>
+ Her graces over me,<a id="page_299"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{299}</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">In the life-kindling fold</span><br>
+ Of God's breath; where on high,<br>
+ In furthest space untold<br>
+ Like a lost world I lie:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And o'er my dreaming plains</span><br>
+ Lightens, most pale and fair,<br>
+ A moon that never wanes;<br>
+ Or more, if I compare,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Like what the shepherd sees</span><br>
+ On late mid-winter dawns,<br>
+ When thro' the branchèd trees,<br>
+ O'er the white-frosted lawns,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The huge unclouded sun,</span><br>
+ Surprising the world whist,<br>
+ Is all uprisen thereon,<br>
+ Golden with melting mist.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">29</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Ariel, O,&mdash;my angel, my own,&mdash;<br>
+ Whither away then art thou flown<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Beyond my spirit's dominion?</span><br>
+ That makest my heart run over with rhyme,<br>
+ Renewing at will my youth for a time,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My servant, my pretty minion.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Now indeed I have cause to mourn,<br>
+ Now thou returnest scorn for scorn:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Leave me not to my folly:</span><br>
+ For when thou art with me is none so gay<br>
+ As I, and none when thou'rt away<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Was ever so melancholy.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_300"></a><span class="pagenumb">{300}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">30</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">LAUS DEO</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Let praise devote thy work, and skill employ<br>
+ Thy whole mind, and thy heart be lost in joy.<br>
+ Well-doing bringeth pride, this constant thought<br>
+ Humility, that thy best done is nought.<br>
+ Man doeth nothing well, be it great or small,<br>
+ Save to praise God; but that hath savèd all:<br>
+ For God requires no more than thou hast done,<br>
+ And takes thy work to bless it for his own.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_301"></a><span class="pagenumb">{301}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2><a id="BOOK_V"></a>BOOK V</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">DEDICATED TO M. G. K.</p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">I</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">THE WINNOWERS</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Betwixt two billows of the downs<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The little hamlet lies,</span><br>
+ And nothing sees but the bald crowns<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of the hills, and the blue skies.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Clustering beneath the long descent<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And grey slopes of the wold,</span><br>
+ The red roofs nestle, oversprent<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With lichen yellow as gold.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ We found it in the mid-day sun<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Basking, what time of year</span><br>
+ The thrush his singing has begun,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ere the first leaves appear.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ High from his load a woodman pitched<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His faggots on the stack:</span><br>
+ Knee-deep in straw the cattle twitched<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Sweet hay from crib and rack:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And from the barn hard by was borne<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">A steady muffled din,</span><br>
+ By which we knew that threshèd corn<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Was winnowing, and went in.<a id="page_302"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{302}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The sunbeams on the motey air<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Streamed through the open door,</span
+ ><br>
+ And on the brown arms moving bare,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And the grain upon the floor.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ One turns the crank, one stoops to feed<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The hopper, lest it lack,</span><br>
+ One in the bushel scoops the seed,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">One stands to hold the sack.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ We watched the good grain rattle down,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And the awns fly in the draught;</span
+ ><br>
+ To see us both so pensive grown<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The honest labourers laughed:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Merry they were, because the wheat<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Was clean and plump and good,</span><br>
+ Pleasant to hand and eye, and meet<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For market and for food.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ It chanced we from the city were,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And had not gat us free</span><br>
+ In spirit from the store and stir<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of its immensity:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But here we found ourselves again.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Where humble harvests bring</span><br>
+ After much toil but little grain,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">'Tis merry winnowing.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: -1%">THE AFFLICTION OF RICHARD</span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Love not too much. But how,</span><br>
+ When thou hast made me such,<br>
+ And dost thy gifts bestow,<br>
+ How can I love too much?<a id="page_303"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{303}</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Though I must fear to lose,</span><br>
+ And drown my joy in care,<br>
+ With all its thorns I choose<br>
+ The path of love and prayer.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Though thou, I know not why,</span><br>
+ Didst kill my childish trust,<br>
+ That breach with toil did I<br>
+ Repair, because I must:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And spite of frighting schemes,</span
+ ><br>
+ With which the fiends of Hell<br>
+ Blaspheme thee in my dreams,<br>
+ So far I have hoped well.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But what the heavenly key,</span><br>
+ What marvel in me wrought<br>
+ Shall quite exculpate thee,<br>
+ I have no shadow of thought.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">What am I that complain?</span><br>
+ The love, from which began<br>
+ My question sad and vain,<br>
+ Justifies thee to man.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Since to be loved endures,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To love is wise:</span><br>
+ Earth hath no good but yours,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Brave, joyful eyes:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Earth hath no sin but thine,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Dull eye of scorn:</span><br>
+ O'er thee the sun doth pine<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And angels mourn.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_304"></a><span class="pagenumb">{304}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1%">THE GARDEN IN SEPTEMBER</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Now thin mists temper the slow-ripening beams</span
+ ><br>
+ Of the September sun: his golden gleams<br>
+ On gaudy flowers shine, that prank the rows<br>
+ Of high-grown hollyhocks, and all tall shows<br>
+ That Autumn flaunteth in his bushy bowers;<br>
+ Where tomtits, hanging from the drooping heads<br>
+ Of giant sunflowers, peck the nutty seeds;<br>
+ And in the feathery aster bees on wing<br>
+ Seize and set free the honied flowers,<br>
+ Till thousand stars leap with their visiting:<br>
+ While ever across the path mazily flit,<br>
+ Unpiloted in the sun,<br>
+ The dreamy butterflies<br>
+ With dazzling colours powdered and soft glooms,<br>
+ White, black and crimson stripes, and peacock eyes,<br>
+ Or on chance flowers sit,<br>
+ With idle effort plundering one by one<br>
+ The nectaries of deepest-throated blooms.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With gentle flaws the western breeze</span
+ ><br>
+ Into the garden saileth,<br>
+ Scarce here and there stirring the single trees,<br>
+ For his sharpness he vaileth:<br>
+ So long a comrade of the bearded corn,<br>
+ Now from the stubbles whence the shocks are borne,<br>
+ O'er dewy lawns he turns to stray,<br>
+ As mindful of the kisses and soft play<br>
+ Wherewith he enamoured the light-hearted May,<br>
+ Ere he deserted her;<br>
+ Lover of fragrance, and too late repents;<br>
+ Nor more of heavy hyacinth now may drink,<br>
+ Nor spicy pink,<a id="page_305"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{305}</span><br>
+ Nor summer's rose, nor garnered lavender,<br>
+ But the few lingering scents<br>
+ Of streakèd pea, and gillyflower, and stocks<br>
+ Of courtly purple, and aromatic phlox.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And at all times to hear are drowsy tones</span
+ ><br>
+ Of dizzy flies, and humming drones,<br>
+ With sudden flap of pigeon wings in the sky,<br>
+ Or the wild cry<br>
+ Of thirsty rooks, that scour ascare<br>
+ The distant blue, to watering as they fare<br>
+ With creaking pinions, or&mdash;on business bent,<br>
+ If aught their ancient polity displease,&mdash;<br>
+ Come gathering to their colony, and there<br>
+ Settling in ragged parliament,<br>
+ Some stormy council hold in the high trees.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ So sweet love seemed that April morn,<br>
+ When first we kissed beside the thorn,<br>
+ So strangely sweet, it was not strange<br>
+ We thought that love could never change.<br>
+ <br>
+ But I can tell&mdash;let truth be told&mdash;<br>
+ That love will change in growing old;<br>
+ Though day by day is nought to see,<br>
+ So delicate his motions be.<br>
+ <br>
+ And in the end 'twill come to pass<br>
+ Quite to forget what once he was,<br>
+ Nor even in fancy to recall<br>
+ The pleasure that was all in all.<br>
+ <br>
+ His little spring, that sweet we found,<br>
+ So deep in summer floods is drowned,<br>
+ I wonder, bathed in joy complete,<br>
+ How love so young could be so sweet.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_306"></a><span class="pagenumb">{306}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">LARKS</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">What voice of gladness, hark!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">In heaven is ringing?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">From the sad fields the lark</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">Is upward winging.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ High through the mournful mist that blots our day<br>
+ Their songs betray them soaring in the grey.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">See them! Nay, they</span><br>
+ In sunlight swim; above the furthest stain<br>
+ Of cloud attain; their hearts in music rain<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 6em">Upon the plain.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Sweet birds, far out of sight</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">Your songs of pleasure</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Dome us with joy as bright</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">As heaven's best azure.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">THE PALM WILLOW</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ See, whirling snow sprinkles the starvèd fields,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The birds have stayed to sing;</span><br>
+ No covert yet their fairy harbour yields.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">When cometh Spring?</span><br>
+ Ah! in their tiny throats what songs unborn<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Are quenched each morn.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The lenten lilies, through the frost that push,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Their yellow heads withhold:</span><br>
+ The woodland willow stands a lonely bush<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Of nebulous gold;</span><br>
+ There the Spring-goddess cowers in faint attire<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Of frightened fire.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_307"></a><span class="pagenumb">{307}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">ASIAN BIRDS</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ In this May-month, by grace<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">of heaven, things shoot apace.</span><br>
+ The waiting multitude<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">of fair boughs in the wood,</span><br>
+ How few days have arrayed<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">their beauty in green shade.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ What have I seen or heard?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">it was the yellow bird</span><br>
+ Sang in the tree: he flew<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">a flame against the blue;</span><br>
+ Upward he flashed. Again,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">hark! 'tis his heavenly strain.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Another! Hush! Behold,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">many, like boats of gold,</span><br>
+ From waving branch to branch<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">their airy bodies launch.</span><br>
+ What music is like this,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">where each note is a kiss?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The golden willows lift<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">their boughs the sun to sift:</span><br>
+ Their sprays they droop to screen<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">the sky with veils of green,</span><br>
+ A floating cage of song,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">where feathered lovers throng.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ How the delicious notes<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">come bubbling from their throats!</span
+ ><br>
+ Full and sweet how they are shed<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">like round pearls from a thread!</span
+ ><br>
+ The motions of their flight<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >are wishes of delight.<a id="page_308"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{308}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Hearing their song I trace<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">the secret of their grace.</span><br>
+ Ah, could I this fair time<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">so fashion into rhyme,</span><br>
+ The poem that I sing<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">would be the voice of spring.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">JANUARY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Cold is the winter day, misty and dark:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The sunless sky with faded gleams is rent:</span
+ ><br>
+ And patches of thin snow outlying, mark<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The landscape with a drear disfigurement.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The trees their mournful branches lift aloft:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The oak with knotty twigs is full of trust,</span
+ ><br>
+ With bud-thronged bough the cherry in the croft;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The chestnut holds her gluey knops upthrust.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ No birds sing, but the starling chaps his bill<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And chatters mockingly; the newborn lambs</span
+ ><br>
+ Within their strawbuilt fold beneath the hill<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Answer with plaintive cry their bleating dams.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Their voices melt in welcome dreams of spring,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Green grass and leafy trees and sunny skies:</span
+ ><br>
+ My fancy decks the woods, the thrushes sing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Meadows are gay, bees hum and scents arise.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And God the Maker doth my heart grow bold<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To praise for wintry works not understood,</span
+ ><br>
+ Who all the worlds and ages doth behold,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Evil and good as one, and all as good.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_309"></a><span class="pagenumb">{309}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">A ROBIN</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Flame-throated robin on the topmost bough<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Of the leafless oak, what singest thou?</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Hark! he telleth how&mdash;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Spring is coming now; Spring is coming now.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Now ruddy are the elm-tops against the blue sky,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The pale larch donneth her jewelry;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Red fir and black fir sigh,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And I am lamenting the year gone by.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The bushes where I nested are all cut down,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >They are felling the tall trees one by one,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">And my mate is dead and gone,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In the winter she died and left me lone.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ She lay in the thicket where I fear to go;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >For when the March-winds after the snow</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">The leaves away did blow,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >She was not there, and my heart is woe:</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And sad is my song, when I begin to sing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >As I sit in the sunshine this merry spring:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Like a withered leaf I cling</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To the white oak-bough, while the wood doth ring.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Spring is coming now, the sun again is gay;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Each day like a last spring's happy day.'&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Thus sang he; then from his spray</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He saw me listening and flew away.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ I never shall love the snow again<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Since Maurice died:</span><br>
+ With corniced drift it blocked the lane<br>
+ And sheeted in a desolate plain<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >The country side.<a id="page_310"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{310}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The trees with silvery rime bedight<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Their branches bare.</span><br>
+ By day no sun appeared; by night<br>
+ The hidden moon shed thievish light<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">In the misty air.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ We fed the birds that flew around<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">In flocks to be fed:</span><br>
+ No shelter in holly or brake they found.<br>
+ The speckled thrush on the frozen ground<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Lay frozen and dead.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ We skated on stream and pond; we cut<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">The crinching snow</span><br>
+ To Doric temple or Arctic hut;<br>
+ We laughed and sang at nightfall, shut<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">By the fireside glow.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet grudged we our keen delights before<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Maurice should come.</span><br>
+ We said, In-door or out-of-door<br>
+ We shall love life for a month or more,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">When he is home.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ They brought him home; 'twas two days late<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">For Christmas day:</span><br>
+ Wrapped in white, in solemn state,<br>
+ A flower in his hand, all still and straight<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Our Maurice lay.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And two days ere the year outgave<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">We laid him low.</span><br>
+ The best of us truly were not brave,<br>
+ When we laid Maurice down in his grave<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Under the snow.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_311"></a><span class="pagenumb">{311}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">NIGHTINGALES</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Beautiful must be the mountains whence ye come,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And bright in the fruitful valleys the streams, wherefrom</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">Ye learn your song:</span><br>
+ Where are those starry woods? O might I wander there,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Among the flowers, which in that heavenly air</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">Bloom the year long!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Nay, barren are those mountains and spent the streams:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Our song is the voice of desire, that haunts our dreams,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">A throe of the heart,</span><br>
+ Whose pining visions dim, forbidden hopes profound,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >No dying cadence nor long sigh can sound,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">For all our art.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Alone, aloud in the raptured ear of men</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >We pour our dark nocturnal secret; and then,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">As night is withdrawn</span><br>
+ From these sweet-springing meads and bursting boughs of May,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Dream, while the innumerable choir of day</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">Welcome the dawn.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ A song of my heart, as the sun peered o'er the sea,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Was born at morning to me:</span><br>
+ And out of my treasure-house it chose<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">A melody, that arose</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Of all fair sounds that I love, remembered together<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">In one; and I knew not whether</span><br>
+ From waves of rustling wheat it was,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >Recoveringly that pass:<a id="page_312"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{312}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Or a hum of bees in the queenly robes of the lime:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Or a descant in pairing time</span><br>
+ Of warbling birds: or watery bells<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Of rivulets in the hills:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Or whether on blazing downs a high lark's hymn<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Alone in the azure dim:</span><br>
+ Or a sough of pines, when the midnight wold<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Is solitary and cold:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Or a lapping river-ripple all day chiding<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">The bow of my wherry gliding</span><br>
+ Down Thames, between his flowery shores<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Re-echoing to the oars:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Or anthem notes, wherever in archèd quires<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">The unheeded music twires,</span><br>
+ And, centuries by, to the stony shade<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Flies following and to fade:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Or a homely prattle of children's voices gay<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">'Mong garden joys at play:</span><br>
+ Or a sundown chaunting of solemn rooks:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Or memory of my books,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Which hold the words that poets in many a tongue<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">To the irksome world have sung:</span
+ ><br>
+ Or the voice, my happy lover, of thee<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Now separated from me.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ A ruby of fire in the burning sleep of my brain<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Long hid my thought had lain,</span><br>
+ Forgotten dreams of a thousand days<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Ingathering to its rays,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The light of life in darkness tempering long;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Till now a perfect song,</span><br>
+ A jewel of jewels it leapt above<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">To the coronal of my love.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_313"></a><span class="pagenumb">{313}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ FOUNDER'S DAY. A SECULAR ODE<br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;ON THE NINTH JUBILEE OF<br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; ETON COLLEGE&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Christ and his Mother, heavenly maid,<br>
+ Mary, in whose fair name was laid<br>
+ Eton's corner, bless our youth<br>
+ With truth, and purity, mother of truth!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">O ye, 'neath breezy skies of June,</span
+ ><br>
+ By silver Thames's lulling tune,<br>
+ In shade of willow or oak, who try<br>
+ The golden gates of poesy;<br>
+ <br>
+ Or on the tabled sward all day<br>
+ Match your strength in England's play,<br>
+ Scholars of Henry, giving grace<br>
+ To toil and force in game or race;<br>
+ <br>
+ Exceed the prayer and keep the fame<br>
+ Of him, the sorrowful king, who came<br>
+ Here in his realm a realm to found,<br>
+ Where he might stand for ever crowned.<br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or whether with naked bodies flashing</span
+ ><br>
+ Ye plunge in the lashing weir; or dashing<br>
+ The oars of cedar skiffs, ye strain<br>
+ Round the rushes and home again;&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ Or what pursuit soe'er it be<br>
+ That makes your mingled presence free,<br>
+ When by the schoolgate 'neath the limes<br>
+ Ye muster waiting the lazy chimes;<a id="page_314"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{314}</span><br>
+ May Peace, that conquereth sin and death,<br>
+ Temper for you her sword of faith;<br>
+ Crown with honour the loving eyes,<br>
+ And touch with mirth the mouth of the wise.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Here is eternal spring: for you</span
+ ><br>
+ The very stars of heaven are new;<br>
+ And aged Fame again is born,<br>
+ Fresh as a peeping flower of morn.<br>
+ <br>
+ For you shall Shakespeare's scene unroll,<br>
+ Mozart shall steal your ravished soul,<br>
+ Homer his bardic hymn rehearse,<br>
+ Virgil recite his maiden verse.<br>
+ <br>
+ Now learn, love, have, do, be the best;<br>
+ Each in one thing excel the rest:<br>
+ Strive; and hold fast this truth of heaven&mdash;<br>
+ To him that hath shall more be given.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Slow on your dial the shadows creep,</span
+ ><br>
+ So many hours for food and sleep,<br>
+ So many hours till study tire,<br>
+ So many hours for heart's desire.<br>
+ <br>
+ These suns and moons shall memory save,<br>
+ Mirrors bright for her magic cave;<br>
+ Wherein may steadfast eyes behold<br>
+ A self that groweth never old.<br>
+ <br>
+ O in such prime enjoy your lot,<br>
+ And when ye leave regret it not;<br>
+ With wishing gifts in festal state<br>
+ Pass ye the angel-sworded gate.<a id="page_315"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{315}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Then to the world let shine your light,</span
+ ><br>
+ Children in play be lions in fight,<br>
+ And match with red immortal deeds<br>
+ The victory that made ring the meads:<br>
+ <br>
+ Or by firm wisdom save your land<br>
+ From giddy head and grasping hand:<br>
+ <span class="smcap">Improve the best</span>; so shall your sons<br>
+ Better what ye have bettered once.<br>
+ <br>
+ Send them here to the court of grace<br>
+ Bearing your name to fill your place:<br>
+ Ye in their time shall live again<br>
+ The happy dream of Henry's reign:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And on his day your steps be bent</span
+ ><br>
+ Where, saint and king, crowned with content,<br>
+ He biddeth a prayer to bless his youth<br>
+ With truth, and purity, mother of truth.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The north wind came up yesternight<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With the new year's full moon,</span><br>
+ And rising as she gained her height,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Grew to a tempest soon.</span><br>
+ Yet found he not on heaven's face<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">A task of cloud to clear;</span><br>
+ There was no speck that he might chase<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Off the blue hemisphere,</span><br>
+ Nor vapour from the land to drive:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The frost-bound country held</span><br>
+ Nought motionable or alive,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That 'gainst his wrath rebelled.</span
+ ><br>
+ There scarce was hanging in the wood<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A shrivelled leaf to reave;<a id="page_316"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{316}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ No bud had burst its swathing hood<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That he could rend or grieve:</span><br>
+ Only the tall tree-skeletons,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Where they were shadowed all,</span><br>
+ Wavered a little on the stones,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And on the white church-wall.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ &mdash;Like as an artist in his mood,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Who reckons all as nought,</span><br>
+ So he may quickly paint his nude,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Unutterable thought:</span><br>
+ So Nature in a frenzied hour<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">By day or night will show</span><br>
+ Dim indications of the power<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That doometh man to woe.</span><br>
+ Ah, many have my visions been,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And some I know full well:</span><br>
+ I would that all that I have seen<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Were fit for speech to tell.&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And by the churchyard as I came,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">It seemed my spirit passed</span><br>
+ Into a land that hath no name,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Grey, melancholy and vast;</span><br>
+ Where nothing comes: but Memory,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The widowed queen of Death,</span><br>
+ Reigns, and with fixed, sepulchral eye<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">All slumber banisheth.</span><br>
+ Each grain of writhen dust, that drapes<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That sickly, staring shore,</span><br>
+ Its old chaotic change of shapes<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Remembers evermore.</span><br>
+ And ghosts of cities long decayed<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And ruined shrines of Fate</span><br>
+ Gather the paths, that Time hath made<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Foolish and desolate.<a id="page_317"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{317}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Nor winter there hath hope of spring,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor the pale night of day,</span><br>
+ Since the old king with scorpion sting<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Hath done himself away.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The morn was calm; the wind's last breath<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Had fal'n: in solemn hush</span><br>
+ The golden moon went down beneath<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The dawning's crimson flush.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%">NORTH WIND IN OCTOBER</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ In the golden glade the chestnuts are fallen all;<br>
+ From the sered boughs of the oak the acorns fall:<br>
+ The beech scatters her ruddy fire;<br>
+ The lime hath stripped to the cold,<br>
+ And standeth naked above her yellow attire:<br>
+ The larch thinneth her spire<br>
+ To lay the ways of the wood with cloth of gold.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Out of the golden-green and white</span
+ ><br>
+ Of the brake the fir-trees stand upright<br>
+ In the forest of flame, and wave aloft<br>
+ To the blue of heaven their blue-green tuftings soft.<br>
+ <br>
+ But swiftly in shuddering gloom the splendours fail,<br>
+ As the harrying North-wind beareth<br>
+ A cloud of skirmishing hail<br>
+ The grievèd woodland to smite:<br>
+ In a hurricane through the trees he teareth,<br>
+ Raking the boughs and the leaves rending,<br>
+ And whistleth to the descending<br>
+ Blows of his icy flail.<br>
+ Gold and snow he mixeth in spite,<br>
+ And whirleth afar; as away on his winnowing flight<br>
+ He passeth, and all again for awhile is bright.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_318"></a><span class="pagenumb">{318}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%">FIRST SPRING MORNING</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>A CHILD'S POEM.</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Look! Look! the spring is come:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">O feel the gentle air,</span><br>
+ That wanders thro' the boughs to burst<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The thick buds everywhere!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The birds are glad to see</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The high unclouded sun:</span><br>
+ Winter is fled away, they sing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The gay time is begun.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Adown the meadows green</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Let us go dance and play,</span><br>
+ And look for violets in the lane,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And ramble far away</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To gather primroses,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">That in the woodland grow,</span><br>
+ And hunt for oxlips, or if yet<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The blades of bluebells show:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">There the old woodman gruff</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Hath half the coppice cut,</span><br>
+ And weaves the hurdles all day long<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Beside his willow hut.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">We'll steal on him, and then</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Startle him, all with glee</span><br>
+ Singing our song of winter fled<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And summer soon to be.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_319"></a><span class="pagenumb">{319}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">A VILLAGER</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ There was no lad handsomer than Willie was<br>
+ The day that he came to father's house:<br>
+ There was none had an eye as soft an' blue<br>
+ As Willie's was, when he came to woo.<br>
+ <br>
+ To a labouring life though bound thee be,<br>
+ An' I on my father's ground live free,<br>
+ I'll take thee, I said, for thy manly grace,<br>
+ Thy gentle voice an' thy loving face.<br>
+ <br>
+ 'Tis forty years now since we were wed:<br>
+ We are ailing an' grey needs not to be said:<br>
+ But Willie's eye is as blue an' soft<br>
+ As the day when he wooed me in father's croft.<br>
+ <br>
+ Yet changed am I in body an' mind,<br>
+ For Willie to me has ne'er been kind:<br>
+ Merrily drinking an' singing with the men<br>
+ He 'ud come home late six nights o' the se'n.<br>
+ <br>
+ An' since the children be grown an' gone<br>
+ He 'as shunned the house an' left me lone:<br>
+ An' less an' less he brings me in<br>
+ Of the little he now has strength to win.<br>
+ <br>
+ The roof lets through the wind an' the wet,<br>
+ An' master won't mend it with us in 's debt:<br>
+ An' all looks every day more worn,<br>
+ An' the best of my gowns be shabby an' torn.<br>
+ <br>
+ No wonder if words hav' a-grown to blows;<br>
+ That matters not while nobody knows:<br>
+ For love him I shall to the end of life,<br>
+ An' be, as I swore, his own true wife.<a id="page_320"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{320}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ An' when I am gone, he'll turn, an' see<br>
+ His folly an' wrong, an' be sorry for me:<br>
+ An' come to me there in the land o' bliss<br>
+ To give me the love I looked for in this.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Weep not to-day: why should this sadness be?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Learn in present fears</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">To o'ermaster those tears</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">That unhindered conquer thee.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Think on thy past valour, thy future praise:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Up, sad heart, nor faint</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">In ungracious complaint,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Or a prayer for better days.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Daily thy life shortens, the grave's dark peace<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Draweth surely nigh,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">When good-night is good-bye;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">For the sleeping shall not cease.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Fight, to be found fighting: nor far away<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Deem, nor strange thy doom.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Like this sorrow 'twill come,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">And the day will be to-day.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_321"></a><span class="pagenumb">{321}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ <a id="New_Poems"></a
+ ><span class="smcap">New Poems</span>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_185.png"
+ width="30"
+ height="50"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_322"></a><span class="pagenumb">{322}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>PREVIOUS EDITION</i><br>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'>
+ <i
+ >Collected for the first time in 1899. Smith, Elder &amp; Co. Vol.
+ II.</i
+ >
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'><i>See notes at end of that volume.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_323"></a><span class="pagenumb">{323}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>NEW POEMS</h2>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ ECLOGUE I<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ THE MONTHS
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 11%"><i>BASIL AND EDWARD</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Man hath with man on earth no holier bond<br>
+ Than that the Muse weaves with her dreamy thread:<br>
+ Nor e'er was such transcendent love more fond<br>
+ Than that which Edward unto Basil led,<br>
+ Wandering alone across the woody shires<br>
+ To hear the living voice of that wide heart,<br>
+ To see the eyes that read the world's desires,<br>
+ And touch the hand that wrote the roving rhyme.<br>
+ Diverse their lots as distant were their homes,<br>
+ And since that early meeting, jealous Time<br>
+ Knitting their loves had held their lives apart.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But now again were these fine lovers met</span
+ ><br>
+ And sat together on a rocky hill<br>
+ Looking upon the vales of Somerset,<br>
+ Where the far sea gleam'd o'er the bosky combes,<br>
+ Satisfying their spirits the livelong day<br>
+ With various mirth and revelation due<br>
+ And delicate intimacy of delight,<br>
+ As there in happy indolence they lay<br>
+ And drank the sun, while round the breezy height<br>
+ Beneath their feet rabbit and listless ewe<br>
+ Nibbled the scented herb and grass at will.<a
+ id="page_324"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{324}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Much talked they at their ease; and at the last</span
+ ><br>
+ Spoke Edward thus, ''Twas on this very hill<br>
+ This time of the year,&mdash;but now twelve years are past,&mdash;<br>
+ That you provoked in verse my younger skill<br>
+ To praise the months against your rival song;<br>
+ And ere the sun had westered ten degrees<br>
+ Our rhyme had brought him thro' the Zodiac.<br>
+ Have you remembered?'&mdash;Basil answer'd back,<br>
+ 'Guest of my solace, how could I forget?<br>
+ Years fly as months that seem'd in youth so long.<br>
+ The precious life that, like indifferent gold,<br>
+ Is disregarded in its worth to hold<br>
+ Some jewel of love that God therein would set,<br>
+ It passeth and is gone.'&mdash;'And yet not all,'<br>
+ Edward replied: 'The passion as I please<br>
+ Of that past day I can to-day recall;<br>
+ And if but you, as I, remember yet<br>
+ Your part thereof, and will again rehearse,<br>
+ For half an hour we may old Time outwit.'<br>
+ And Basil said, 'Alas for my poor verse!<br>
+ What happy memory of it still endures<br>
+ Will thank your love: I have forgotten it.<br>
+ Speak you my stanzas, I will ransom yours.<br>
+ Begin you then as I that day began,<br>
+ And I will follow as your answers ran.'<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>JANUARY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ed.</span> The moon that mounts the sun's deserted
+ way,<br>
+ Turns the long winter night to a silver day;<br>
+ But setteth golden in face of the solemn sight<br>
+ Of her lord arising upon a world of white.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>FEBRUARY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ba.</span> I have in my heart a vision of spring
+ begun<br>
+ In a sheltering wood, that feels the kiss of the sun:<br>
+ And a thrush adoreth the melting day that dies<br>
+ In clouds of purple afloat upon saffron skies.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <a id="page_325"></a><span class="pagenumb">{325}</span>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>MARCH</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ed.</span> Now carol the birds at dawn, and some new
+ lay<br>
+ Announceth a homecome voyager every day.<br>
+ Beneath the tufted sallows the streamlet thrills<br>
+ With the leaping trout and the gleam of the daffodils.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>APRIL</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ba.</span> Then laugheth the year; with flowers the
+ meads are bright;<br>
+ The bursting branches are tipped with flames of light:<br>
+ The landscape is light; the dark clouds flee above,<br>
+ And the shades of the land are a blue that is deep as love.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>MAY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ed.</span> But if you have seen a village all red and
+ old<br>
+ In cherry-orchards a-sprinkle with white and gold,<br>
+ By a hawthorn seated, or a witch-elm flowering high,<br>
+ A gay breeze making riot in the waving rye!<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>JUNE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ba.</span> Then night retires from heaven; the high
+ winds go<br>
+ A-sailing in cloud-pavilions of cavern'd snow.<br>
+ O June, sweet Philomel sang thy cradle-lay;<br>
+ In rosy revel thy spirit shall pass away.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>JULY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ed.</span> Heavy is the green of the fields, heavy the
+ trees<br>
+ With foliage hang, drowsy the hum of bees<br>
+ In the thund'rous air: the crowded scents lie low:<br>
+ Thro' tangle of weeds the river runneth slow.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>AUGUST</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ba.</span> A reaper with dusty shoon and hat of
+ straw<br>
+ On the yellow field, his scythe in his armës braw:<br>
+ Beneath the tall grey trees resting at noon<br>
+ From sweat and swink with scythe and dusty shoon.<br>
+ <a id="page_326"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{326}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>SEPTEMBER</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ed.</span> Earth's flaunting flower of passion fadeth
+ fair<br>
+ To ripening fruit in sunlit veils of the air,<br>
+ As the art of man makes wisdom to glorify<br>
+ The beauty and love of life born else to die.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>OCTOBER</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ba.</span> On frosty morns with the woods aflame,
+ down, down<br>
+ The golden spoils fall thick from the chestnut crown.<br>
+ May Autumn in tranquil glory her riches spend,<br>
+ With mellow apples her orchard-branches bend.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>NOVEMBER</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ed.</span> Sad mists have hid the sun, the land is
+ forlorn:<br>
+ The plough is afield, the hunter windeth his horn.<br>
+ Dame Prudence looketh well to her winter stores,<br>
+ And many a wise man finds his pleasure indoors.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>DECEMBER</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span class="smcap">Ba.</span> I pray thee don thy jerkin of olden
+ time,<br>
+ Bring us good ice, and silver the trees with rime;<br>
+ And I will good cheer, good music and wine bestow,<br>
+ When the Christmas guest comes galloping over the snow.<br>
+ <br>&nbsp;<br>
+ Thus they in verse alternate sang the year<br>
+ For rabbit shy and listless ewe to hear,<br>
+ Among the grey rocks on the mountain green<br>
+ Beneath the sky in fair and pastoral scene,<br>
+ Like those Sicilian swains, whose doric tongue<br>
+ After two thousand years is ever young,&mdash;<br>
+ <i>Sweet the pine's murmur, and, shepherd, sweet thy pipe,&mdash;</i
+ ><br>
+ Or that which gentle Virgil, yet unripe,<br>
+ Of Tityrus sang under the spreading beech<br>
+ And gave to rustic clowns immortal speech,<br>
+ By rocky fountain or on flowery mead<a id="page_327"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{327}</span><br>
+ Bidding their idle flocks at will to feed,<br>
+ While they, retreated to some bosky glade,<br>
+ Together told their loves, and as they played<br>
+ Sang what sweet thing soe'er the poet feigned:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But these were men when good Victoria reigned,</span
+ ><br>
+ Poets themselves, who without shepherd gear<br>
+ Each of his native fancy sang the year.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ ECLOGUE II<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ GIOVANNI DUPRÈ
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%"><i>LAWRENCE AND RICHARD</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Look down the river&mdash;against the western sky&mdash;<br>
+ The Ponte Santa Trinità&mdash;what throng<br>
+ Slowly trails o'er with waving banners high,<br>
+ With foot and horse! Surely they bear along<br>
+ The spoil of one whom Florence honoureth:<br>
+ And hark! the drum, the trumpeting dismay,<br>
+ The wail of the triumphal march of death.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ 'Twill be the funeral of Giovánn Duprè<br>
+ Wending to Santa Croce. Let us go<br>
+ And see what relic of old splendour cheers<br>
+ The dying ritual.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em">They esteem him well</span><br>
+ To lay his bones with Michael Angelo.<br>
+ Who might he be?<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8em">He too a sculptor, one</span><br>
+ Who left a work long to resist the years.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ You make me question further.<br>
+
+ <a id="page_328"></a><span class="pagenumb">{328}</span>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em">I can tell</span><br>
+ All as we walk. A poor woodcarver's son,<br>
+ Prenticed to cut his father's rude designs<br>
+ (We have it from himself), maker of shrines,<br>
+ In his mean workshop in Siena dreamed;<br>
+ And saw as gods the artists of the earth,<br>
+ And long'd to stand on their immortal shore,<br>
+ And be as they, who in his vision gleam'd,<br>
+ Dowering the world with grace for evermore.<br>
+ So, taxing rest and leisure to one aim,<br>
+ The boy of single will and inbred skill<br>
+ Rose step by step to academic fame.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Do I not know him then? His figures fill<br>
+ The tympana o'er Santa Croce's gate;<br>
+ In the museum too, his Cain, that stands<br>
+ A left-handed discobolos....<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 18em">So great</span><br>
+ His vogue, that elder art of classic worth<br>
+ Went to the wall to give his statues room;<br>
+ And last&mdash;his country's praise could do no more&mdash;<br>
+ He cut the stone that honoured good Cavour.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ I have seen the things.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 13em">He, finding in his hands</span><br>
+ His life-desire possest, fell not in gloom,<br>
+ Nor froth'd in vanity: his Sabbath earn'd<br>
+ He look'd to spend in meditative rest:<br>
+ So laying chisel by, he took a pen<br>
+ To tell his story to his countrymen,<br>
+ And prove (he did it) that the flower of all,<br>
+ Rarest to attain, is in the power of all.<br>
+
+ <a id="page_329"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{329}</span> &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Yet nought he ever made, that I have learn'd,<br>
+ In wood or stone deserved, nay not his best,<br>
+ The Greek or Tuscan name for beautiful.<br>
+ 'Twas level with its praise, had force to pull<br>
+ Favour from fashion.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11em">Yet he made one thing</span><br>
+ Worthy of the lily city in her spring;<br>
+ For while in vain the forms of beauty he aped,<br>
+ A perfect spirit in himself he shaped;<br>
+ And all his lifetime doing less than well<br>
+ Where he profess'd nor doubted to excel,<br>
+ Now, where he had no scholarship, but drew<br>
+ His art from love, 'twas better than he knew:<br>
+ And when he sat to write, lo! by him stood<br>
+ The heavenly Muse, who smiles on all things good;<br>
+ And for his truth's sake, for his stainless mind,<br>
+ His homely love and faith, she now grew kind,<br>
+ And changed the crown, that from the folk he got,<br>
+ For her green laurel, and he knew it not.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Ah! Love of Beauty! This man then mistook<br>
+ Ambition for her?<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em">In simplicity</span><br>
+ Erring he kept his truth; and in his book<br>
+ The statue of his grace is fair to see.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>LAWRENCE</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Then buried with their great he well may be.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ And number'd with the saints, not among them<br>
+ Who painted saints. Join we his requiem.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_330"></a><span class="pagenumb">{330}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="head">
+ ECLOGUE III<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ FOURTH OF JUNE AT ETON
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%"><i>RICHARD AND GODFREY</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Beneath the wattled bank the eddies swarm<br>
+ In wandering dimples o'er the shady pool:<br>
+ The same their chase as when I was at school;<br>
+ The same the music, where in shallows warm<br>
+ The current, sunder'd by the bushy isles,<br>
+ Returns to join the main, and struggles free<br>
+ Above the willows, gurgling thro' the piles:<br>
+ Nothing is changed, and yet how changed are we!<br>
+ &mdash;What can bring Godfrey to the Muses' bower?<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ What but brings you? The festal day of the year;<br>
+ To live in boyish memories for an hour;<br>
+ See and be seen: tho' you come seldom here.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Dread of the pang it was, fear to behold<br>
+ What once was all myself, that kept me away.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ You miss new pleasures coveting the old.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ They need have prudence, who in courage lack;<br>
+ 'Twas that I might go on I looked not back.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Of all our company he, who, we say,<br>
+ Fruited the laughing flower of liberty!<br>
+
+ <a id="page_331"></a><span class="pagenumb">{331}</span>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Ah! had I my desire, so should it be.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Nay, but I know this melancholy mood;<br>
+ 'Twas your poetic fancy when a boy.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ For Fancy cannot live on real food:<br>
+ In youth she will despise familiar joy<br>
+ To dwell in mournful shades; as they grow real,<br>
+ Then buildeth she of joy her far ideal.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ And so perverteth all. This stream to me<br>
+ Sings, and in sunny ripples lingeringly<br>
+ The water saith 'Ah me! where have I lept?<br>
+ Into what garden of life? what banks are these,<br>
+ What secret lawns, what ancient towers and trees?<br>
+ Where the young sons of heav'n, with shouts of play<br>
+ Or low delighted speech, welcome the day,<br>
+ As if the poetry of the earth had slept<br>
+ To wake in ecstasy. O stay me! alas!<br>
+ Stay me, ye happy isles, ere that I pass<br>
+ Without a memory on my sullen course<br>
+ By the black city to the tossing seas!'<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ So might this old oak say 'My heart is sere;<br>
+ With greater effort every year I force<br>
+ My stubborn leafage: soon my branch will crack,<br>
+ And I shall fall or perish in the wrack:<br>
+ And here another tree its crown will rear,<br>
+ And see for centuries the boys at play:<br>
+ And 'neath its boughs, on some fine holiday,<br>
+ Old men shall prate as these.' Come see the game.<br>
+
+ <a id="page_332"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{332}</span> &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Yes, if you will. 'Tis all one picture fair.<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Made in a mirror, and who looketh there<br>
+ Must see himself. Is not a dream the same?<br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>GODFREY</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <i>Life is a dream.</i><br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>RICHARD</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 7em">And you, who say it, seem</span><br>
+ Dreaming to speak to a phantom in a dream.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">ELEGY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%"
+ ><small>THE SUMMER-HOUSE ON THE MOUND</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ How well my eyes remember the dim path!<br>
+ My homing heart no happier playground hath.<br>
+ I need not close my lids but it appears<br>
+ Through the bewilderment of forty years<br>
+ To tempt my feet, my childish feet, between<br>
+ Its leafy walls, beneath its arching green;<br>
+ Fairer than dream of sleep, than Hope more fair<br>
+ Leading to dreamless sleep her sister Care.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >There grew two fellow limes, two rising trees,</span
+ ><br>
+ Shadowing the lawn, the summer haunt of bees,<br>
+ Whose stems, engraved with many a russet scar<br>
+ From the spear-hurlings of our mimic war,<br>
+ Pillar'd the portico to that wide walk,<br>
+ A mossy terrace of the native chalk<br>
+ Fashion'd, that led thro' the dark shades around<br>
+ Straight to the wooden temple on the mound.<br>
+ There live the memories of my early days,<br>
+ There still with childish heart my spirit plays;<a
+ id="page_333"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{333}</span><br>
+ Yea, terror-stricken by the fiend despair<br>
+ When she hath fled me, I have found her there;<br>
+ And there 'tis ever noon, and glad suns bring<br>
+ Alternate days of summer and of spring,<br>
+ With childish thought, and childish faces bright,<br>
+ And all unknown save but the hour's delight.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >High on the mound the ivied arbour stood,</span
+ ><br>
+ A dome of straw upheld on rustic wood:<br>
+ Hidden in fern the steps of the ascent,<br>
+ Whereby unto the southern front we went,<br>
+ And from the dark plantation climbing free,<br>
+ Over a valley look'd out on the sea.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >That sea is ever bright and blue, the sky</span
+ ><br>
+ Serene and blue, and ever white ships lie<br>
+ High on the horizon steadfast in full sail,<br>
+ Or nearer in the roads pass within hail,<br>
+ Of naked brigs and barques that windbound ride<br>
+ At their taut cables heading to the tide.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >There many an hour I have sat to watch; nay, now</span
+ ><br>
+ The brazen disk is cold against my brow,<br>
+ And in my sight a circle of the sea<br>
+ Enlarged to swiftness, where the salt waves flee,<br>
+ And ships in stately motion pass so near<br>
+ That what I see is speaking to my ear:<br>
+ I hear the waves dash and the tackle strain,<br>
+ The canvas flap, the rattle of the chain<br>
+ That runs out thro' the hawse, the clank of the winch<br>
+ Winding the rusty cable inch by inch,<br>
+ Till half I wonder if they have no care,<br>
+ Those sailors, that my glass is brought to bear<br>
+ On all their doings, if I vex them not<br>
+ On every petty task of their rough lot<br>
+ Prying and spying, searching every craft<br>
+ From painted truck to gunnel, fore and aft,&mdash;<a
+ id="page_334"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{334}</span><br>
+ Thro' idle Sundays as I have watch'd them lean<br>
+ Long hours upon the rail, or neath its screen<br>
+ Prone on the deck to lie outstretch'd at length,<br>
+ Sunk in renewal of their wearied strength.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But what a feast of joy to me, if some</span
+ ><br>
+ Fast-sailing frigate to the Channel come<br>
+ Back'd here her topsail, or brought gently up<br>
+ Let from her bow the splashing anchor drop,<br>
+ By faint contrary wind stay'd in her cruise,<br>
+ The <i>Phaethon</i> or dancing <i>Arethuse</i>,<br>
+ Or some immense three-decker of the line,<br>
+ Romantic as the tale of Troy divine;<br>
+ Ere yet our iron age had doom'd to fall<br>
+ The towering freeboard of the wooden wall,<br>
+ And for the engines of a mightier Mars<br>
+ Clipp'd their wide wings, and dock'd their soaring spars.<br>
+ The gale that in their tackle sang, the wave<br>
+ That neath their gilded galleries dasht so brave<br>
+ Lost then their merriment, nor look to play<br>
+ With the heavy-hearted monsters of to-day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >One noon in March upon that anchoring ground</span
+ ><br>
+ Came Napier's fleet unto the Baltic bound:<br>
+ Cloudless the sky and calm and blue the sea,<br>
+ As round Saint Margaret's cliff mysteriously,<br>
+ Those murderous queens walking in Sabbath sleep<br>
+ Glided in line upon the windless deep:<br>
+ For in those days was first seen low and black<br>
+ Beside the full-rigg'd mast the strange smoke-stack,<br>
+ And neath their stern revolv'd the twisted fan.<br>
+ Many I knew as soon as I might scan,<br>
+ The heavy <i>Royal George</i>, the <i>Acre</i> bright,<br>
+ The <i>Hogue</i> and <i>Ajax</i>, and could name aright<br>
+ Others that I remember now no more;<br>
+ But chief, her blue flag flying at the fore,<a
+ id="page_335"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{335}</span><br>
+ With fighting guns a hundred thirty and one,<br>
+ The Admiral ship <i>The Duke of Wellington</i>,<br>
+ Whereon sail'd George, who in her gig had flown<br>
+ The silken ensign by our sisters sewn.<br>
+ The iron Duke himself,&mdash;whose soldier fame<br>
+ To England's proudest ship had given her name,<br>
+ And whose white hairs in this my earliest scene<br>
+ Had scarce more honour'd than accustom'd been,&mdash;<br>
+ Was two years since to his last haven past:<br>
+ I had seen his castle-flag to fall half-mast<br>
+ One morn as I sat looking on the sea,<br>
+ When thus all England's grief came first to me,<br>
+ Who hold my childhood favour'd that I knew<br>
+ So well the face that won at Waterloo.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But now 'tis other wars, and other men;&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ The year that Napier sail'd, my years were ten&mdash;<br>
+ Yea, and new homes and loves my heart hath found:<br>
+ A priest has there usurped the ivied mound,<br>
+ The bell that call'd to horse calls now to prayers,<br>
+ And silent nuns tread the familiar stairs.<br>
+ Within the peach-clad walls that old outlaw,<br>
+ The Roman wolf, scratches with privy paw.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ O Love, I complain,<br>
+ Complain of thee often,<br>
+ Because thou dost soften<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My being to pain:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thou makest me fear</span><br>
+ The mind that createth,<br>
+ That loves not nor hateth<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In justice austere;<a id="page_336"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{336}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Who, ere he make one,</span><br>
+ With millions toyeth,<br>
+ And lightly destroyeth<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Whate'er is begun.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">An' wer't not for thee,</span><br>
+ My glorious passion,<br>
+ My heart I could fashion<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To sternness, as he.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But thee, Love, he made</span><br>
+ Lest man should defy him,<br>
+ Connive and outvie him,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And not be afraid:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nay, thee, Love, he gave</span><br>
+ His terrors to cover,<br>
+ And turn to a lover<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His insolent slave.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">THE SOUTH WIND</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The south wind rose at dusk of the winter day,</span
+ ><br>
+ The warm breath of the western sea<br>
+ Circling wrapp'd the isle with his cloke of cloud,<br>
+ And it now reach'd even to me, at dusk of the day,<br>
+ And moan'd in the branches aloud:<br>
+ While here and there, in patches of dark space,<br>
+ A star shone forth from its heavenly place,<br>
+ As a spark that is borne in the smoky chase;<br>
+ And, looking up, there fell on my face&mdash;<br>
+ Could it be drops of rain<br>
+ Soft as the wind, that fell on my face?<br>
+ Gossamers light as threads of the summer dawn,<a
+ id="page_337"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{337}</span><br>
+ Suck'd by the sun from midmost calms of the main,<br>
+ From groves of coral islands secretly drawn,<br>
+ O'er half the round of earth to be driven,<br>
+ Now to fall on my face<br>
+ In silky skeins spun from the mists of heaven.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Who art thou, in wind and darkness and soft rain</span
+ ><br>
+ Thyself that robest, that bendest in sighing pines<br>
+ To whisper thy truth? that usest for signs<br>
+ A hurried glimpse of the moon, the glance of a star<br>
+ In the rifted sky?<br>
+ Who art thou, that with thee I<br>
+ Woo and am wooed?<br>
+ That robing thyself in darkness and soft rain<br>
+ Choosest my chosen solitude,<br>
+ Coming so far<br>
+ To tell thy secret again,<br>
+ As a mother her child, in her folding arm<br>
+ Of a winter night by a flickering fire,<br>
+ Telleth the same tale o'er and o'er<br>
+ With gentle voice, and I never tire,<br>
+ So imperceptibly changeth the charm,<br>
+ As Love on buried ecstasy buildeth his tower,<br>
+ &mdash;Like as the stem that beareth the flower<br>
+ By trembling is knit to power;&mdash;<br>
+ Ah! long ago<br>
+ In thy first rapture I renounced my lot,<br>
+ The vanity, the despondency and the woe,<br>
+ And seeking thee to know<br>
+ Well was 't for me, and evermore<br>
+ I am thine, I know not what.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >For me thou seekest ever, me wondering a day</span
+ ><br>
+ In the eternal alternations, me<br>
+ Free for a stolen moment of chance<br>
+ To dream a beautiful dream<a id="page_338"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{338}</span><br>
+ In the everlasting dance<br>
+ Of speechless worlds, the unsearchable scheme,<br>
+ To me thou findest the way,<br>
+ Me and whomsoe'er<br>
+ I have found my dream to share<br>
+ Still with thy charm encircling; even to-night<br>
+ To me and my love in darkness and soft rain<br>
+ Under the sighing pines thou comest again,<br>
+ And staying our speech with mystery of delight,<br>
+ Of the kiss that I give a wonder thou makest,<br>
+ And the kiss that I take thou takest.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ I climb the mossy bank of the glade:<br>
+ My love awaiteth me in the shade.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >She holdeth a book that she never heedeth:</span
+ ><br>
+ In Goddës work her spirit readeth.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She is all to me, and I to her:</span
+ ><br>
+ When we embrace, the stars confer.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my love, from beyond the sky</span><br>
+ I am calling thy heart, and who but I?<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Fresh as love is the breeze of June,</span
+ ><br>
+ In the dappled shade of the summer noon.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Catullus, throwing his heart away,</span
+ ><br>
+ Gave fewer kisses every day.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Heracleitus, spending his youth</span
+ ><br>
+ In search of wisdom, had less of truth.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Flame of fire was the poet's desire:</span
+ ><br>
+ The thinker found that life was fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O my love! my song is done:</span><br>
+ My kiss hath both their fires in one.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_339"></a><span class="pagenumb">{339}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To my love I whisper, and say</span><br>
+ Knowest thou why I love thee?&mdash;Nay:<br>
+ Nay, she saith; O tell me again.&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ When in her ear the secret I tell,<br>
+ She smileth with joy incredible&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Ha! she is vain&mdash;O nay&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then tell us!&mdash;Nay, O nay.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But this is in my heart,</span><br>
+ That Love is Nature's perfect art,<br>
+ And man hath got his fancy hence,<br>
+ To clothe his thought in forms of sense.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Fair are thy works, O man, and fair</span
+ ><br>
+ Thy dreams of soul in garments rare,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Beautiful past compare,</span><br>
+ Yea, godlike when thou hast the skill<br>
+ To steal a stir of the heavenly thrill:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But O, have care, have care!</span><br>
+ 'Tis envious even to dare:<br>
+ And many a fiend is watching well<br>
+ To flush thy reed with the fire of hell.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ My delight and thy delight<br>
+ Walking, like two angels white,<br>
+ In the gardens of the night:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My desire and thy desire</span><br>
+ Twining to a tongue of fire,<br>
+ Leaping live, and laughing higher;<a id="page_340"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{340}</span><br>
+ Thro' the everlasting strife<br>
+ In the mystery of life.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Love, from whom the world begun,</span
+ ><br>
+ Hath the secret of the sun.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Love can tell, and love alone,</span><br>
+ Whence the million stars were strewn,<br>
+ Why each atom knows its own,<br>
+ How, in spite of woe and death,<br>
+ Gay is life, and sweet is breath:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">This he taught us, this we knew,</span
+ ><br>
+ Happy in his science true,<br>
+ Hand in hand as we stood<br>
+ Neath the shadows of the wood,<br>
+ Heart to heart as we lay<br>
+ In the dawning of the day.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">SEPTUAGESIMA</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Now all the windows with frost are blinded,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">As punctual day with greedy smile</span
+ ><br>
+ Lifts like a Cyclops evil-minded<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His ruddy eyeball over the isle.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ In an hour 'tis paled, in an hour ascended<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A dazzling light in the cloudless grey.</span
+ ><br>
+ Steel is the ice; the snow unblended<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Is trod to dust on the white highway.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The lambkins frisk; the shepherd is melting<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Drink for the ewes with a fire of straw:</span
+ ><br>
+ The red flames leap at the wild air pelting<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Bitterly thro' the leafless shaw.<a id="page_341"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{341}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Around, from many a village steeple<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The sabbath-bells hum over the snow:</span
+ ><br>
+ I give a blessing to parson and people<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Across the fields as away I go.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Over the hills and over the meadows<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Gay is my way till day be done:</span
+ ><br>
+ Blue as the heaven are all the shadows,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And every light is gold in the sun.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ The sea keeps not the Sabbath day,<br>
+ His waves come rolling evermore;<br>
+ His noisy toil grindeth the shore,<br>
+ And all the cliff is drencht with spray.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Here as we sit, my love and I,</span><br>
+ Under the pine upon the hill,<br>
+ The sadness of the clouded sky,<br>
+ The bitter wind, the gloomy roar,<br>
+ The seamew's melancholy cry<br>
+ With loving fancy suit but ill.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">We talk of moons and cooling suns,</span
+ ><br>
+ Of geologic time and tide,<br>
+ The eternal sluggards that abide<br>
+ While our fair love so swiftly runs,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of nature that doth half consent</span
+ ><br>
+ That man should guess her dreary scheme<br>
+ Lest he should live too well content<br>
+ In his fair house of mirth and dream:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Whose labour irks his ageing heart,</span
+ ><br>
+ His heart that wearies of desire,<br>
+ Being so fugitive a part<br>
+ Of what so slowly must expire.<a id="page_342"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{342}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She in her agelong toil and care</span
+ ><br>
+ Persistent, wearies not nor stays,<br>
+ Mocking alike hope and despair.<br>
+ <br>
+ &mdash;Ah, but she too can mock our praise,<br>
+ Enchanted on her brighter days,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Days, that the thought of grief refuse,</span
+ ><br>
+ Days that are one with human art,<br>
+ Worthy of the Virgilian muse,<br>
+ Fit for the gaiety of Mozart.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Riding adown the country lanes<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">One day in spring,</span><br>
+ Heavy at heart with all the pains<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of man's imagining:&mdash;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The mist was not yet melted quite<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Into the sky:</span><br>
+ The small round sun was dazzling white,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The merry larks sang high:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The grassy northern slopes were laid<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">In sparkling dew,</span><br>
+ Out of the slow-retreating shade<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Turning from sleep anew:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Deep in the sunny vale a burn<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Ran with the lane,</span><br>
+ O'erhung with ivy, moss and fern<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">It laughed in joyful strain:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And primroses shot long and lush<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Their cluster'd cream;</span><br>
+ Robin and wren and amorous thrush<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Carol'd above the stream:<a id="page_343"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{343}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The stillness of the lenten air<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Call'd into sound</span><br>
+ The motions of all life that were<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">In field and farm around:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ So fair it was, so sweet and bright,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The jocund Spring</span><br>
+ Awoke in me the old delight<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of man's imagining,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Riding adown the country lanes:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The larks sang high.&mdash;</span><br>
+ O heart! for all thy griefs and pains<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thou shalt be loth to die.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">PATER FILIO</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Sense with keenest edge unusèd,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Yet unsteel'd by scathing fire;</span
+ ><br>
+ Lovely feet as yet unbruisèd<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">On the ways of dark desire;</span><br>
+ Sweetest hope that lookest smiling<br>
+ O'er the wilderness defiling!<br>
+ <br>
+ Why such beauty, to be blighted<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">By the swarm of foul destruction?</span
+ ><br>
+ Why such innocence delighted,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">When sin stalks to thy seduction?</span
+ ><br>
+ All the litanies e'er chaunted<br>
+ Shall not keep thy faith undaunted.<br>
+ <br>
+ I have pray'd the sainted Morning<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To unclasp her hands to hold thee;</span
+ ><br>
+ From resignful Eve's adorning<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Stol'n a robe of peace to enfold thee;</span
+ ><br>
+ With all charms of man's contriving<br>
+ Arm'd thee for thy lonely striving.<a id="page_344"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{344}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Me too once unthinking Nature,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >&mdash;Whence Love's timeless mockery took me,&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Fashion'd so divine a creature,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Yea, and like a beast forsook me.</span
+ ><br>
+ I forgave, but tell the measure<br>
+ Of her crime in thee, my treasure.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">NOVEMBER</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The lonely season in lonely lands, when fled<br>
+ Are half the birds, and mists lie low, and the sun<br>
+ Is rarely seen, nor strayeth far from his bed;<br>
+ The short days pass unwelcomed one by one.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Out by the ricks the mantled engine stands</span
+ ><br>
+ Crestfallen, deserted,&mdash;for now all hands<br>
+ Are told to the plough,&mdash;and ere it is dawn appear<br>
+ The teams following and crossing far and near,<br>
+ As hour by hour they broaden the brown bands<br>
+ Of the striped fields; and behind them firk and prance<br>
+ The heavy rooks, and daws grey-pated dance:<br>
+ As awhile, surmounting a crest, in sharp outline<br>
+ (A miniature of toil, a gem's design,)<br>
+ They are pictured, horses and men, or now near by<br>
+ Above the lane they shout lifting the share,<br>
+ By the trim hedgerow bloom'd with purple air;<br>
+ Where, under the thorns, dead leaves in huddle lie<br>
+ Packed by the gales of Autumn, and in and out<br>
+ The small wrens glide<br>
+ With a happy note of cheer,<br>
+ And yellow amorets flutter above and about,<br>
+ Gay, familiar in fear.<a id="page_345"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{345}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And now, if the night shall be cold, across the sky</span
+ ><br>
+ Linnets and twites, in small flocks helter-skelter,<br>
+ All the afternoon to the gardens fly,<br>
+ From thistle-pastures hurrying to gain the shelter<br>
+ Of American rhododendron or cherry-laurel:<br>
+ And here and there, near chilly setting of sun,<br>
+ In an isolated tree a congregation<br>
+ Of starlings chatter and chide,<br>
+ Thickset as summer leaves, in garrulous quarrel:<br>
+ Suddenly they hush as one,&mdash;<br>
+ The tree top springs,&mdash;<br>
+ And off, with a whirr of wings,<br>
+ They fly by the score<br>
+ To the holly-thicket, and there with myriads more<br>
+ Dispute for the roosts; and from the unseen nation<br>
+ A babel of tongues, like running water unceasing,<br>
+ Makes live the wood, the flocking cries increasing,<br>
+ Wrangling discordantly, incessantly,<br>
+ While falls the night on them self-occupied;<br>
+ The long dark night, that lengthens slow,<br>
+ Deepening with Winter to starve grass and tree,<br>
+ And soon to bury in snow<br>
+ The Earth, that, sleeping 'neath her frozen stole,<br>
+ Shall dream a dream crept from the sunless pole<br>
+ Of how her end shall be.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">15</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%">WINTER NIGHTFALL</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The day begins to droop,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Its course is done:</span><br>
+ But nothing tells the place<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Of the setting sun.<a id="page_346"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{346}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The hazy darkness deepens,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And up the lane</span><br>
+ You may hear, but cannot see,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The homing wain.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ An engine pants and hums<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">In the farm hard by:</span><br>
+ Its lowering smoke is lost<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">In the lowering sky.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ The soaking branches drip,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And all night through</span><br>
+ The dropping will not cease<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">In the avenue.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ A tall man there in the house<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Must keep his chair:</span><br>
+ He knows he will never again<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Breathe the spring air:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ His heart is worn with work;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He is giddy and sick</span><br>
+ If he rise to go as far<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">As the nearest rick:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ He thinks of his morn of life,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His hale, strong years;</span><br>
+ And braves as he may the night<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of darkness and tears.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">16</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ Since we loved,&mdash;(the earth that shook<br>
+ As we kissed, fresh beauty took)&mdash;<br>
+ Love hath been as poets paint,<br>
+ Life as heaven is to a saint;<br>
+ <br>
+ All my joys my hope excel,<br>
+ All my work hath prosper'd well,<br>
+ All my songs have happy been,<br>
+ O my love, my life, my queen.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_347"></a><span class="pagenumb">{347}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">17</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ When Death to either shall come,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I pray it be first to me,&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Be happy as ever at home,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">If so, as I wish, it be.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Possess thy heart, my own;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And sing to the child on thy knee,</span
+ ><br>
+ Or read to thyself alone<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The songs that I made for thee.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">18</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">WISHES</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ I wish'd to sing thy grace, but nought<br>
+ Found upon earth that could compare:<br>
+ Some day, maybe, in heaven, I thought,&mdash;<br>
+ If I should win the welcome there,&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ There might I make thee many a song:<br>
+ But now it is enough to say<br>
+ I ne'er have done our life the wrong<br>
+ Of wishing for a happier day.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">19</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">A LOVE LYRIC</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Why art thou sad, my dearest?<br>
+ What terror is it thou fearest,<br>
+ Braver who art than I<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The fiend to defy?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Why art thou sad, my dearest?<br>
+ And why in tears appearest,<br>
+ Closer than I that wert<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >At hiding thy hurt?<a id="page_348"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{348}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Why art thou sad, my dearest,<br>
+ Since now my voice thou hearest?<br>
+ Who with a kiss restore<br>
+ Thy valour of yore.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">20</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">&#917;&#929;&#937;&#931;</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+
+ Why hast thou nothing in thy face?<br>
+ Thou idol of the human race,<br>
+ Thou tyrant of the human heart,<br>
+ The flower of lovely youth that art;<br>
+ Yea, and that standest in thy youth<br>
+ An image of eternal Truth,<br>
+ With thy exuberant flesh so fair,<br>
+ That only Pheidias might compare,<br>
+ Ere from his chaste marmoreal form<br>
+ Time had decayed the colours warm;<br>
+ Like to his gods in thy proud dress,<br>
+ Thy starry sheen of nakedness.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Surely thy body is thy mind,</span><br>
+ For in thy face is nought to find,<br>
+ Only thy soft unchristen'd smile,<br>
+ That shadows neither love nor guile,<br>
+ But shameless will and power immense,<br>
+ In secret sensuous innocence.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O king of joy, what is thy thought?</span
+ ><br>
+ I dream thou knowest it is nought,<br>
+ And wouldst in darkness come, but thou<br>
+ Makest the light where'er thou go.<br>
+ Ah yet no victim of thy grace,<br>
+ None who e'er long'd for thy embrace,<br>
+ Hath cared to look upon thy face.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_349"></a><span class="pagenumb">{349}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">21</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">THE FAIR BRASS</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ An effigy of brass<br>
+ Trodden by careless feet<br>
+ Of worshippers that pass,<br>
+ Beautiful and complete,<br>
+ <br>
+ Lieth in the sombre aisle<br>
+ Of this old church unwreckt,<br>
+ And still from modern style<br>
+ Shielded by kind neglect.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">It shows a warrior arm'd:</span><br>
+ Across his iron breast<br>
+ His hands by death are charm'd<br>
+ To leave his sword at rest,<br>
+ <br>
+ Wherewith he led his men<br>
+ O'ersea, and smote to hell<br>
+ The astonisht Saracen,<br>
+ Nor doubted he did well.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Would wé could teach our sons</span><br>
+ His trust in face of doom,<br>
+ Or give our bravest ones<br>
+ A comparable tomb:<br>
+ <br>
+ Such as to look on shrives<br>
+ The heart of half its care;<br>
+ So in each line survives<br>
+ The spirit that made it fair;<br>
+ <br>
+ So fair the characters,<br>
+ With which the dusty scroll,<br>
+ That tells his title, stirs<br>
+ A requiem for his soul.<a id="page_350"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{350}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Yet dearer far to me,</span><br>
+ And brave as he are they,<br>
+ Who fight by land and sea<br>
+ For England at this day;<br>
+ <br>
+ Whose vile memorials,<br>
+ In mournful marbles gilt,<br>
+ Deface the beauteous walls<br>
+ By growing glory built:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Heirs of our antique shrines,</span><br>
+ Sires of our future fame,<br>
+ Whose starry honour shines<br>
+ In many a noble name<br>
+ <br>
+ Across the deathful days,<br>
+ Link'd in the brotherhood<br>
+ That loves our country's praise,<br>
+ And lives for heavenly good.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">22</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">THE DUTEOUS HEART</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Spirit of grace and beauty,<br>
+ Whom men so much miscall:<br>
+ Maidenly, modest duty,<br>
+ I cry thee fair befall!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Pity for them that shun thee,</span><br>
+ Sorrow for them that hate,<br>
+ Glory, hath any won thee<br>
+ To dwell in high estate!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But rather thou delightest</span><br>
+ To walk in humble ways,<br>
+ Keeping thy favour brightest<br>
+ Uncrown'd by foolish praise;<a id="page_351"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{351}</span><br>
+ In such retirement dwelling,<br>
+ Where, hath the worldling been,<br>
+ He straight returneth telling<br>
+ Of sights that he hath seen,<br>
+ <br>
+ Of simple men and truest<br>
+ Faces of girl and boy;<br>
+ The souls whom thou enduest<br>
+ With gentle peace and joy.<br>
+ <br>
+ Fair from my song befall thee,<br>
+ Spirit of beauty and grace!<br>
+ Men that so much miscall thee<br>
+ Have never seen thy face.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">23</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">THE IDLE FLOWERS</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ I have sown upon the fields<br>
+ Eyebright and Pimpernel,<br>
+ And Pansy and Poppy-seed<br>
+ Ripen'd and scatter'd well,<br>
+ <br>
+ And silver Lady-smock<br>
+ The meads with light to fill,<br>
+ Cowslip and Buttercup,<br>
+ Daisy and Daffodil;<br>
+ <br>
+ King-cup and Fleur-de-lys<br>
+ Upon the marsh to meet<br>
+ With Comfrey, Watermint,<br>
+ Loose-strife and Meadowsweet;<br>
+ <br>
+ And all along the stream<br>
+ My care hath not forgot<br>
+ Crowfoot's white galaxy<br>
+ And love's Forget-me-not:<a id="page_352"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{352}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And where high grasses wave<br>
+ Shall great Moon-daisies blink,<br>
+ With Rattle and Sorrel sharp<br>
+ And Robin's ragged pink.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thick on the woodland floor</span><br>
+ Gay company shall be,<br>
+ Primrose and Hyacinth<br>
+ And frail Anemone,<br>
+ <br>
+ Perennial Strawberry-bloom,<br>
+ Woodsorrel's pencilled veil,<br>
+ Dishevel'd Willow-weed<br>
+ And Orchis purple and pale,<br>
+ <br>
+ Bugle, that blushes blue,<br>
+ And Woodruff's snowy gem,<br>
+ Proud Foxglove's finger-bells<br>
+ And Spurge with milky stem.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">High on the downs so bare,</span><br>
+ Where thou dost love to climb,<br>
+ Pink Thrift and Milkwort are,<br>
+ Lotus and scented Thyme;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And in the shady lanes</span><br>
+ Bold Arum's hood of green,<br>
+ Herb Robert, Violet,<br>
+ Starwort and Celandine;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And by the dusty road</span><br>
+ Bedstraw and Mullein tall,<br>
+ With red Valerian<br>
+ And Toadflax on the wall,<br>
+ <br>
+ Yarrow and Chicory,<br>
+ That hath for hue no like,<br>
+ Silene and Mallow mild<br>
+ And Agrimony's spike,<a id="page_353"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{353}</span><br>
+ Blue-eyed Veronicas<br>
+ And grey-faced Scabious<br>
+ And downy Silverweed<br>
+ And striped Convolvulus:<br>
+ <br>
+ Harebell shall haunt the banks,<br>
+ And thro' the hedgerow peer<br>
+ Withwind and Snapdragon<br>
+ And Nightshade's flower of fear.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And where men never sow,</span><br>
+ Have I my Thistles set,<br>
+ Ragwort and stiff Wormwood<br>
+ And straggling Mignonette,<br>
+ <br>
+ Bugloss and Burdock rank<br>
+ And prickly Teasel high,<br>
+ With Umbels yellow and white,<br>
+ That come to kexes dry.<br>
+ <br>
+ Pale Chlora shalt thou find,<br>
+ Sun-loving Centaury,<br>
+ Cranesbill and Sinjunwort,<br>
+ Cinquefoil and Betony:<br>
+ <br>
+ Shock-headed Dandelion,<br>
+ That drank the fire of the sun:<br>
+ Hawkweed and Marigold,<br>
+ Cornflower and Campion.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Let Oak and Ash grow strong,</span><br>
+ Let Beech her branches spread;<br>
+ Let Grass and Barley throng<br>
+ And waving Wheat for bread;<br>
+ <br>
+ Be share and sickle bright<br>
+ To labour at all hours;<br>
+ For thee and thy delight<br>
+ I have made the idle flowers.<a id="page_354"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{354}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But now 'tis Winter, child,</span><br>
+ And bitter northwinds blow,<br>
+ The ways are wet and wild,<br>
+ The land is laid in snow.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">24</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">DUNSTONE HILL</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ A cottage built of native stone<br>
+ Stands on the mountain-moor alone,<br>
+ High from man's dwelling on the wide<br>
+ And solitary mountain-side,<br>
+ <br>
+ The purple mountain-side, where all<br>
+ The dewy night the meteors fall,<br>
+ And the pale stars musically set<br>
+ To the watery bells of the rivulet,<br>
+ <br>
+ And all day long, purple and dun,<br>
+ The vast moors stretch beneath the sun,<br>
+ The wide wind passeth fresh and hale,<br>
+ And whirring grouse and blackcock sail.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ah, heavenly Peace, where dost thou dwell?</span
+ ><br>
+ Surely 'twas here thou hadst a cell,<br>
+ Till flaming Love, wandering astray<br>
+ With fury and blood, drove thee away.&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ Far down across the valley deep<br>
+ The town is hid in smoky sleep,<br>
+ At moonless nightfall wakening slow<br>
+ Upon the dark with lurid glow:<br>
+ <br>
+ Beyond, afar the widening view<br>
+ Merges into the soften'd blue,<br>
+ Cornfield and forest, hill and stream,<br>
+ Fair England in her pastoral dream.<a id="page_355"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{355}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ To one who looketh from this hill<br>
+ Life seems asleep, all is so still:<br>
+ Nought passeth save the travelling shade<br>
+ Of clouds on high that float and fade:<br>
+ <br>
+ Nor since this landscape saw the sun<br>
+ Might other motion o'er it run,<br>
+ Till to man's scheming heart it came<br>
+ To make a steed of steel and flame.<br>
+ <br>
+ Him may you mark in every vale<br>
+ Moving beneath his fleecy trail,<br>
+ And tell whene'er the motions die<br>
+ Where every town and hamlet lie.<br>
+ <br>
+ He gives the distance life to-day,<br>
+ Rushing upon his level'd way<br>
+ From man's abode to man's abode,<br>
+ And mocks the Roman's vaunted road,<br>
+ <br>
+ Which o'er the moor purple and dun<br>
+ Still wanders white beneath the sun,<br>
+ Deserted now of men and lone<br>
+ Save for this cot of native stone.<br>
+ <br>
+ There ever by the whiten'd wall<br>
+ Standeth a maiden fair and tall,<br>
+ And all day long in vacant dream<br>
+ Watcheth afar the flying steam.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">25</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">SCREAMING TARN</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ The saddest place that e'er I saw<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Is the deep tarn above the inn</span><br>
+ That crowns the mountain-road, whereby<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >One southward bound his way must win.<a
+ id="page_356"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{356}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Sunk on the table of the ridge<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >From its deep shores is nought to see:</span
+ ><br>
+ The unresting wind lashes and chills<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Its shivering ripples ceaselessly.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Three sides 'tis banked with stones aslant,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And down the fourth the rushes grow,</span
+ ><br>
+ And yellow sedge fringing the edge<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With lengthen'd image all arow.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Tis square and black, and on its face<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">When noon is still, the mirror'd sky</span
+ ><br>
+ Looks dark and further from the earth<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Than when you gaze at it on high.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ At mid of night, if one be there,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >&mdash;So say the people of the hill&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ A fearful shriek of death is heard,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >One sudden scream both loud and shrill.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And some have seen on stilly nights,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And when the moon was clear and round,</span
+ ><br>
+ Bubbles which to the surface swam<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And burst as if they held the sound.&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Twas in the days ere hapless Charles<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Losing his crown had lost his head,</span
+ ><br>
+ This tale is told of him who kept<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The inn upon the watershed:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ He was a lowbred ruin'd man<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Whom lawless times set free from fear:</span
+ ><br>
+ One evening to his house there rode<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">A young and gentle cavalier.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ With curling hair and linen fair<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And jewel-hilted sword he went;</span
+ ><br>
+ The horse he rode he had ridden far,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And he was with his journey spent.<a id="page_357"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{357}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ He asked a lodging for the night,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His valise from his steed unbound,</span
+ ><br>
+ He let none bear it but himself<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And set it by him on the ground.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Here's gold or jewels,' thought the host,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'That's carrying south to find the king.'</span
+ ><br>
+ He chattered many a loyal word,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And scraps of royal airs gan sing.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ His guest thereat grew more at ease<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And o'er his wine he gave a toast,</span
+ ><br>
+ But little ate, and to his room<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Carried his sack behind the host.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Now rest you well,' the host he said,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But of his wish the word fell wide;</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor did he now forget his son<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Who fell in fight by Cromwell's side.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Revenge and poverty have brought<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Full gentler heart than his to crime;</span
+ ><br>
+ And he was one by nature rude,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Born to foul deeds at any time.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ With unshod feet at dead of night<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In stealth he to the guest-room crept,</span
+ ><br>
+ Lantern and dagger in his hand,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And stabbed his victim while he slept.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ But as he struck a scream there came,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">A fearful scream so loud and shrill:</span
+ ><br>
+ He whelm'd the face with pillows o'er,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And lean'd till all had long been still.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Then to the face the flame he held<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >To see there should no life remain:&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ When lo! his brutal heart was quell'd:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Twas a fair woman he had slain.<a id="page_358"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{358}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The tan upon her face was paint,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The manly hair was torn away,</span><br>
+ Soft was the breast that he had pierced;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Beautiful in her death she lay.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ His was no heart to faint at crime,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Tho' half he wished the deed undone.</span
+ ><br>
+ He pulled the valise from the bed<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To find what booty he had won.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ He cut the straps, and pushed within<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His murderous fingers to their theft.</span
+ ><br>
+ A deathly sweat came o'er his brow,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He had no sense nor meaning left.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ He touched not gold, it was not cold,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">It was not hard, it felt like flesh.</span
+ ><br>
+ He drew out by the curling hair<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A young man's head, and murder'd fresh;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ A young man's head, cut by the neck.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But what was dreader still to see,</span
+ ><br>
+ Her whom he had slain he saw again,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The twain were like as like can be.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Brother and sister if they were,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Both in one shroud they now were wound,&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Across his back and down the stair,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Out of the house without a sound.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ He made his way unto the tarn,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The night was dark and still and dank;</span
+ ><br>
+ The ripple chuckling neath the boat<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Laughed as he drew it to the bank.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Upon the bottom of the boat<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He laid his burden flat and low,</span
+ ><br>
+ And on them laid the square sandstones<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >That round about the margin go.<a id="page_359"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{359}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Stone upon stone he weighed them down,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Until the boat would hold no more;</span
+ ><br>
+ The freeboard now was scarce an inch:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >He stripp'd his clothes and push'd from shore.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ All naked to the middle pool<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He swam behind in the dark night;</span
+ ><br>
+ And there he let the water in<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And sank his terror out of sight.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ He swam ashore, and donn'd his dress,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And scraped his bloody fingers clean;</span
+ ><br>
+ Ran home and on his victim's steed<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Mounted, and never more was seen.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ But to a comrade ere he died<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He told his story guess'd of none:</span
+ ><br>
+ So from his lips the crime returned<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To haunt the spot where it was done.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">26</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">THE ISLE OF ACHILLES</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5%">(FROM THE GREEK)</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ &#932;&#8001;&#957; &#966;&#7985;&#955;&#964;&#945;&#964;&#8001;&#957;
+ &#963;&#959;&#953; &#960;&#945;&#7985;&#948;' &#7953;&#956;&#959;&#7985;
+ &#964;', &#7945;&#967;&#953;&#955;&#955;&#7953;&#945;<br>
+ &#8017;&#968;&#949;&#953; &#948;&#8017;&#956;&#959;&#965;&#962;
+ &#957;&#945;&#7985;&#959;&#957;&#964;&#945;
+ &#957;&#951;&#963;&#953;&#969;&#964;&#953;&#954;&#959;&#8017;&#962;<br>
+ &#916;&#949;&#965;&#954;&#7969;&#957; &#954;&#945;&#964;'
+ &#7937;&#954;&#964;&#7969;&#957; &#7953;&#957;&#964;&#8001;&#962;
+ &#917;&#8017;&#958;&#949;&#7985;&#957;&#959;&#965;
+ &#960;&#8001;&#961;&#959;&#965;.&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 20%">Eur. And. 1250.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Voyaging northwards by the western strand</span
+ ><br>
+ Of the Euxine sea we came to where the land<br>
+ Sinks low in salt morass and wooded plain:<br>
+ Here mighty Ister pushes to the main,<br>
+ Forking his turbid flood in channels three<br>
+ To plough the sands wherewith he chokes the sea.<a
+ id="page_360"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{360}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Against his middle arm, not many a mile</span
+ ><br>
+ In the offing of black water is the isle<br>
+ Named of Achilles, or as Leukê known,<br>
+ Which tender Thetis, counselling alone<br>
+ With her wise sire beneath the ocean-wave<br>
+ Unto her child's departed spirit gave,<br>
+ Where he might still his love and fame enjoy,<br>
+ Through the vain Danaan cause fordone at Troy.<br>
+ Thither Achilles passed, and long fulfill'd<br>
+ His earthly lot, as the high gods had will'd,<br>
+ Far from the rivalries of men, from strife,<br>
+ From arms, from woman's love and toil of life.<br>
+ Now of his lone abode I will unfold<br>
+ What there I saw, or was by others told.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >There is in truth a temple on the isle;</span
+ ><br>
+ Therein a wooden statue of rude style<br>
+ And workmanship antique with helm of lead:<br>
+ Else all is desert, uninhabited;<br>
+ Only a few goats browse the wind-swept rocks,<br>
+ And oft the stragglers of their starving flocks<br>
+ Are caught and sacrificed by whomsoe'er,<br>
+ Whoever of chance or purpose hither fare:<br>
+ About the fence lie strewn their bleaching bones.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But in the temple jewels and precious stones,</span
+ ><br>
+ Upheapt with golden rings and vials lie,<br>
+ Thankofferings to Achilles, and thereby,<br>
+ Written or scratch'd upon the walls in view,<br>
+ Inscriptions, with the givers' names thereto,<br>
+ Some in Romaic character, some Greek,<br>
+ As each man in the tongue that he might speak<br>
+ Wrote verse of praise, or prayer for good to come,<br>
+ To Achilles most, but to Patroclus some;<br>
+ For those who strongly would Achilles move<br>
+ Approach him by the pathway of his love.<a
+ id="page_361"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{361}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thousands of birds frequent the sheltering shrine,</span
+ ><br>
+ The dippers and the swimmers of the brine,<br>
+ Sea-mew and gull and diving cormorant,<br>
+ Fishers that on the high cliff make their haunt<br>
+ Sheer inaccessible, and sun themselves<br>
+ Huddled arow upon the narrow shelves:&mdash;<br>
+ And surely no like wonder e'er hath been<br>
+ As that such birds should keep the temple clean;<br>
+ But thus they do: at earliest dawn of day<br>
+ They flock to sea and in the waters play,<br>
+ And when they well have wet their plumage light,<br>
+ Back to the sanctuary they take flight<br>
+ Splashing the walls and columns with fresh brine,<br>
+ Till all the stone doth fairly drip and shine,<br>
+ When off again they skim asea for more<br>
+ And soon returning sprinkle steps and floor,<br>
+ And sweep all cleanly with their wide-spread wings.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >From other men I have learnt further things.</span
+ ><br>
+ If any of free purpose, thus they tell,<br>
+ Sail'd hither to consult the oracle,&mdash;<br>
+ For oracle there was,&mdash;they sacrificed<br>
+ Such victims as they brought, if such sufficed,<br>
+ And some they slew, some to the god set free:<br>
+ But they who driven from their course at sea<br>
+ Chanced on the isle, took of the goats thereon<br>
+ And pray'd Achilles to accept his own.<br>
+ Then made they a gift, and when they had offer'd once,<br>
+ If to their question there was no response,<br>
+ They added to the gift and asked again;<br>
+ Yea twice and more, until the god should deign<br>
+ Answer to give, their offering they renew'd;<br>
+ Whereby great riches to the shrine ensued.<br>
+ And when both sacrifice and gifts were made<br>
+ They worship'd at the shrine, and as they pray'd<a
+ id="page_362"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{362}</span><br>
+ Sailors aver that often hath been seen<br>
+ A man like to a god, of warrior mien,<br>
+ A beauteous form of figure swift and strong;<br>
+ Down on his shoulders his light hair hung long<br>
+ And his full armour was enchast with gold:<br>
+ While some, who with their eyes might nought behold,<br>
+ Say that with music strange the air was stir'd;<br>
+ And some there are, who have both seen and heard:<br>
+ And if a man wish to be favour'd more,<br>
+ He need but spend one night upon the shore;<br>
+ To him in sleep Achilles will appear<br>
+ And lead him to his tent, and with good cheer<br>
+ Show him all friendliness that men desire;<br>
+ Patroclus pours the wine, and he his lyre<br>
+ Takes from the pole and plays the strains thereon<br>
+ Which Cheiron taught him first on Pelion.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >These things I tell as they were told to me,</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor do I question but it well may be:<br>
+ For sure I am that, if man ever was,<br>
+ Achilles was a hero, both because<br>
+ Of his high birth and beauty, his country's call,<br>
+ His valour of soul, his early death withal,<br>
+ For Homer's praise, the crown of human art;<br>
+ And that above all praise he had at heart<br>
+ A gentler passion in her sovran sway,<br>
+ And when his love died threw his life away.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_363"></a><span class="pagenumb">{363}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">27</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%">AN ANNIVERSARY</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><small>HE</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ Bright, my belovèd, be thy day,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">This eve of Summer's fall:</span><br>
+ And Autumn mass his flowers gay<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To crown thy festival!</span><br>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><small>SHE</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ I care not if the morn be bright,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Living in thy love-rays:</span><br>
+ No flower I need for my delight,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Being crownèd with thy praise.</span><br>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><small>HE</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ O many years and joyfully<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">This sun to thee return;</span><br>
+ Ever all men speak well of thee,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor any angel mourn!</span><br>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><small>SHE</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ For length of life I would not pray,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">If thy life were to seek;</span><br>
+ Nor ask what men and angels say<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But when of thee they speak.</span><br>
+
+ &nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><small>HE</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ Arise! The sky hath heard my song,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The flowers o'erhear thy praise;</span
+ ><br>
+ And little loves are waking long<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To wish thee happy days.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_364"></a><span class="pagenumb">{364}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">28</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">REGINA CARA</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%"
+ ><small>JUBILEE-SONG, FOR MUSIC, 1897</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Hark! The world is full of thy praise,<br>
+ England's Queen of many days;<br>
+ Who, knowing how to rule the free,<br>
+ Hast given a crown to monarchy.<br>
+ <br>
+ Honour, Truth and growing Peace<br>
+ Follow Britannia's wide increase,<br>
+ And Nature yield her strength unknown<br>
+ To the wisdom born beneath thy throne!<br>
+ <br>
+ In wisdom and love firm is thy fame:<br>
+ Enemies bow to revere thy name:<br>
+ The world shall never tire to tell<br>
+ Praise of the queen that reignèd well.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span class="smcap"
+ >O felix anima, Domina praeclara,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Amore semper coronabere</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Regina cara.</span></span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_365"></a><span class="pagenumb">{365}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ <a id="Later_Poems"></a
+ ><span class="smcap">Later Poems</span>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="head">OCCASIONAL ODES &amp;C.</p>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_185.png"
+ width="30"
+ height="50"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_366"></a> <span class="pagenumb">{366}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="font-style: italic; border:none; padding:1px; border-collapse: collapse;">
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:center'>PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>1. Monthly Review. February, 1903.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>2. Country Life. 1906.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>3. 'Volunteer Haversack.' 1902.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>4. Daniel Press. Poems by A. Buckton. 1901.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>5. 6. Saturday Review.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>7. 'The Sheaf.' June, 1902.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>8. English Review. March, 1911.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>9. Academy. April 1, 1905.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>10, 11. Monthly Review. June, 1904.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>13. Speaker.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>14. Monthly Review. March, 1902.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>15. 'Wayfarer's Love.' 1904.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 16. Saturday Review. April 13, 1907. Book of the Oxford Pageant. July
+ 1907.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style='text-align:left'>
+ 17, 18, 19. Published with the Music by Novello, Ewer &amp; Co.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_367"></a><span class="pagenumb">{367}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>LATER POEMS</h2>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">1</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%">RECOLLECTIONS OF SOLITUDE</span><br>&nbsp;
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><small>AN ELEGY</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Ended are many days, and now but few<br>
+ Remain; since therefore it is happy and true<br>
+ That memoried joys keep ever their delight,<br>
+ Like steadfast stars in the blue vault of night,<br>
+ While hours of pain (among those heavenly spheres<br>
+ Like falling meteors, the martyr's tears)<br>
+ Dart their long trails at random, and anon,<br>
+ Ere we exclaim, pass, and for aye are gone;<br>
+ Therefore my heedy thought will oft restore<br>
+ The long light-hearted days that are no more,<br>
+ Save where in her memorial crypt they shine<br>
+ Spangling the silent past with joy divine.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But why in dream of this enchanted mood</span
+ ><br>
+ Should all my boyhood seem a solitude?<br>
+ Good reason know I, when I wander there,<br>
+ In that transmuted scene, why all is fair;<br>
+ The woods as when in holiday of spring<br>
+ Million buds burst, and flowers are blossoming;<br>
+ The meadows deep in grass, the fields unshorn<br>
+ In beauty of the multitudinous corn,<br>
+ Where the strait alleys hide me, wall'd between<br>
+ High bloomy stalks and rustling banners green;<br>
+ The gardens, too, in dazzling hues full-blown,<br>
+ With wafted scent and blazing petals strewn;<br>
+ The orchards reddening thro' the patient hours,<br>
+ While idle autumn in his mossy bowers<a id="page_368"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{368}</span><br>
+ Inviteth meditation to endear<br>
+ The sanctuaries of the mellowing year;<br>
+ And every spot wherein I loved to stray<br>
+ Hath borrowed radiance of eternal day;<br>
+ But why am I ever alone, alone?<br>
+ Here in the corner of a field my throne,<br>
+ Now in the branching chair of some tall tree<br>
+ Drinking the gale in bird-like liberty;<br>
+ Or to the seashore wandered in the sun<br>
+ To watch the fateful waves break one by one;<br>
+ Or if on basking downs supine I lie<br>
+ Bathing my spirit in blue calms of the sky;<br>
+ Or to the river bank am stolen by night<br>
+ Hearkening unto the moonlit ripple bright<br>
+ That warbles o'er the shallows of smooth stone;<br>
+ Why should my memory find me all alone,<br>
+ When I had such companions every day<br>
+ Jocund and dear? 'Twixt glimpses of their play<br>
+ 'Tis a vast solitude, wherein I see<br>
+ Only myself and what I came to be.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Yet never think, dear spirits, if now ye may</span
+ ><br>
+ Remember aught of that brief earthly day,<br>
+ Ere ye the mournful Stygian river crost,<br>
+ From our familiar home too early lost,&mdash;<br>
+ O never think that I your tears forget,<br>
+ Or that I loved not well, or love not yet.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Nor ye who held my heart in passion's chain,&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ As kings and queens succeed in glorious reign&mdash;<br>
+ When, as a man, I made you to outvie<br>
+ God's work, and, as a god, then set you by<br>
+ Among the sainted throng in holiest shrine<br>
+ Of mythic creed and poetry divine;<br>
+ True was my faith, and still your loves endure,<br>
+ The jewels of my fancy, bright and pure.<a
+ id="page_369"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{369}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Nor only in fair places do I see</span
+ ><br>
+ The picture fair now it has ceased to be:<br>
+ For fate once led me, and myself some days<br>
+ Did I devote, to dull laborious ways,<br>
+ By soaring thought detained to tread full low,&mdash;<br>
+ Yea might I say unbeauteous paths of woe<br>
+ And dreary abodes, had not my youthful sprite<br>
+ Hallow'd each nook with legends of delight.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ah! o'er that smoky town who looketh now</span
+ ><br>
+ By winter sunset from the dark hill-brow,<br>
+ Under the dying trees exultantly<br>
+ Nursing the sting of human tragedy?<br>
+ Or in that little room upstair'd so high,<br>
+ Where London's roofs in thickest huddle lie,<br>
+ Who now returns at evening to entice<br>
+ To his fireside the joys of Paradise?<br>
+ Once sacred was that hearth, and bright the air;<br>
+ The flame of man's redemption flickered there,<br>
+ In worship of those spirits, whose deathless fames<br>
+ Have thrilled the stars of heaven to hear their names;<br>
+ They that excell'd in wisdom to create<br>
+ Beauty, with mortal passion conquering fate;<br>
+ And, mid the sovran powers of elder time,<br>
+ The loveliness of music and new rhyme,<br>
+ The masters young that first enthrallèd me;<br>
+ Of whom if I should name, whom then but thee,<br>
+ Sweet Shelley, or the boy whose book was found<br>
+ Thrust in thy bosom on thy body drowned?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >O mighty Muse, wooer of virgin thought,</span
+ ><br>
+ Beside thy charm all else counteth as nought;<br>
+ The revelation of thy smile doth make<br>
+ Him whom thou lovest reckless for thy sake;<br>
+ Earthborn of suffering, that knowest well<br>
+ To call thine own, and with enamouring spell<a
+ id="page_370"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{370}</span><br>
+ Feedest the stolen powers of godlike youth<br>
+ On dear imagination's only truth,<br>
+ Building with song a temple of desire;<br>
+ And with the yearning music of thy quire,<br>
+ In nuptial sacrament of thought and sense<br>
+ Hallowest for toil the hours of indolence:<br>
+ Thou in thy melancholic beauty drest,<br>
+ Subduest ill to serve thy fair behest,<br>
+ With tragic tears, and sevenfold purified<br>
+ Silver of mirth; and with extremest pride,<br>
+ With secret doctrine and unfathomed lore<br>
+ Remainest yet a child for evermore,<br>
+ The only enchantress of the earth that art<br>
+ To cheer his day and staunch man's bleeding heart.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >O heavenly Muse, for heavenly thee we call</span
+ ><br>
+ Who in the fire of love refinest all,<br>
+ Accurst is he who heark'neth not thy voice;<br>
+ But happy he who, numbered of thy choice,<br>
+ Walketh aloof from nature's clouded plan:<br>
+ For all God's world is but the thought of man;<br>
+ Wherein hast thou re-formed a world apart,<br>
+ The mutual mirror of his better heart.<br>
+ There is no foulness, misery, nor sin,<br>
+ But he who loves finds his desire therein,<br>
+ And there with thee in lonely commerce lives:<br>
+ Nay, all that nature gave or fortune gives,<br>
+ Joys that his spirit is most jealous of,<br>
+ His only-embraced and best-deserving love,<br>
+ Who walketh in the noon of heavenly praise,<br>
+ The troubled godhead of his children's gaze,<br>
+ Wear thine eternity, and are loved best<br>
+ By thee transfigured and in thee possest;<br>
+ Who madest beauty, and from thy boundless store<br>
+ Of beauty shalt create for evermore.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1900.</span>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_371"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{371}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">2</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ Gay Marigold is frolic,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She laughs till summer is done;</span
+ ><br>
+ She hears the Grillie chirping<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">All day i' the blazing sun.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But when the pale moon rises,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">She fain her face would hide;</span><br>
+ For the high Queen of sorrows<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Disdains her empty pride.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ Fair Primrose haunts the shadow<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With children of the Spring,</span><br>
+ Till in the bloomy woodland<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The nightingale will sing.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And when he lauds the May-night<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And spirits throng the grove,</span><br>
+ The moon shines thro' the branches<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And floods her heart with love.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">3</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%">MATRES DOLOROSAE</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Ye Spartan mothers, gentle ones,<br>
+ Of lion-hearted, loving sons,<br>
+ Fal'n, the flower of English youth,<br>
+ To a barbarous foe in a land uncouth:&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ O what a delicate sacrifice!<br>
+ Unequal the stake and costly the price<br>
+ As when the queen of Love deplor'd<br>
+ Her darling by the wild-beast gor'd.<a id="page_372"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{372}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ They rode to war as if to the hunt,<br>
+ But ye at home, ye bore the brunt,<br>
+ Bore the siege of torturing fears,<br>
+ Fed your hope on the bread of tears.<br>
+ <br>
+ Proud and spotless warriors they<br>
+ With love or sword to lead the way;<br>
+ For ye had cradled heart and hand,<br>
+ The commander hearken'd to your command.<br>
+ <br>
+ Ah, weeping mothers, now all is o'er,<br>
+ Ye know your honour and mourn no more:<br>
+ Nor ask ye a name in England's story,<br>
+ Who gave your dearest for her glory.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <span style="margin-left: 60%"><i>May 20, 1902.</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">4</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%">A VIGNETTE</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Among the meadows<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">lightly going,</span><br>
+ With worship and joy<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">my heart o'erflowing,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Far from town<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">and toil of living,</span><br>
+ To a holy day<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">my spirit giving,...</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">*&nbsp; *&nbsp; *&nbsp; </span><br>
+ <br>
+ Thou tender flower,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I kneel beside thee</span><br>
+ Wondering why God<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >so beautified thee.&mdash;<a id="page_373"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{373}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ An answering thought<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">within me springeth,</span><br>
+ A bloom of the mind<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">her vision bringeth.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Between the dim hill's<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">distant azure</span><br>
+ And flowery foreground<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">of sparkling pleasure</span><br>
+ <br>
+ I see the company<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">of figures sainted,</span><br>
+ For whom the picture<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">of earth was painted.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Those robèd seers<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">who made man's story</span><br>
+ The crown of Nature,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Her cause his glory.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ They walk in the city<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">which they have builded,</span><br>
+ The city of God<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">from evil shielded:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ To them for canopy<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">the vault of heaven,</span><br>
+ The flowery earth<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">for carpet is given;</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Whereon I wander<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">not unknowing,</span><br>
+ With worship and joy<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">my heart o'erflowing.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1901.</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_374"></a><span class="pagenumb">{374}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">5</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">MILLICENT</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Thou dimpled Millicent, of merry guesses,<br>
+ Strong-limb'd and tall, tossing thy wayward tresses,<br>
+ What mystery of the heart can so surprise<br>
+ The mirth and music of thy brimming eyes?<br>
+ <br>
+ Pale-brow, thou knowest not and diest to learn<br>
+ The mortal secret that doth in thee burn;<br>
+ With look imploring 'If you love me, tell,<br>
+ What is it in me that you love so well?'<br>
+ <br>
+ And suddenly thou stakest all thy charms,<br>
+ And leapest on me; and in thy circling arms<br>
+ When almost stifled with their wild embrace,<br>
+ I feel thy hot tears sheltering on my face.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1901.</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">6</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">VIVAMUS</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ When thou didst give thy love to me,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Asking no more of gods or men</span><br>
+ I vow'd I would contented be,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">If Fate should grant us summers ten.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ But now that twice the term is sped,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And ever young my heart and gay,</span
+ ><br>
+ I fear the words that then I said,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And turn my face from Fate away.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ To bid thee happily good-bye<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I have no hope that I can see,</span><br>
+ No way that I shall bravely die,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Unless I give my life for thee.</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1901.</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_375"></a><span class="pagenumb">{375}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">7</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ One grief of thine<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">if truth be confest</span><br>
+ Was joy to me;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">for it drave to my breast</span><br>
+ Thee, to my heart<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">to find thy rest.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ How long it was<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">I never shall know:</span><br>
+ I watcht the earth<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">so stately and slow,</span><br>
+ And the ancient things<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">that waste and grow.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ But now for me<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">what speed devours</span><br>
+ Our heavenly life,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">our brilliant hours!</span><br>
+ How fast they fly,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">the stars and flowers!</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem25">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">8</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ In still midsummer night<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">When the moon is late</span><br>
+ And the stars all watery and white<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For her coming wait,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ A spirit, whose eyes are possest<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">By wonder new,</span><br>
+ Passeth&mdash;her arms upon her breast<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Enwrapt from the dew<a id="page_376"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{376}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ In a raiment of azure fold<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With diaper</span><br>
+ Of flower'd embroidery of gold<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Bestarr'd with silver.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ The daisy folk are awake<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Their carpet to spread,</span><br>
+ And the thron'd stars gazing on her make<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Fresh crowns for her head,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Netted in her floating hair<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">As she drifteth free</span><br>
+ Between the starriness of the air<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And the starry lea,</span><br>
+ <br>
+ From the silent-shadow'd vale<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">By the west wind drawn</span><br>
+ Aloft to melt into the pale<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Moonrise of dawn.</span><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1910.</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">9</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">MELANCHOLIA</span><br>
+
+ The sickness of desire, that in dark days<br>
+ Looks on the imagination of despair,<br>
+ Forgetteth man, and stinteth God his praise;<br>
+ Nor but in sleep findeth a cure for care.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Incertainty that once gave scope to dream</span
+ ><br>
+ Of laughing enterprise and glory untold,<br>
+ Is now a blackness that no stars redeem,<br>
+ A wall of terror in a night of cold.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Fool! thou that hast impossibly desired</span
+ ><br>
+ And now impatiently despairest, see<br>
+ How nought is changed: Joy's wisdom is attired<br>
+ Splendid for others' eyes if not for thee:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Not love or beauty or youth from earth is fled:</span
+ ><br>
+ If they delite thee not, 'tis thou art dead.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1914.</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_377"></a><span class="pagenumb">{377}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">10</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: -2%"
+ >TO THE PRESIDENT OF MAGDALEN<br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;COLLEGE, OXFORD</span
+ ><br>
+
+ Since now from woodland mist and flooded clay<br>
+ I am fled beside the steep Devonian shore,<br>
+ Nor stand for welcome at your gothic door,<br>
+ 'Neath the fair tower of Magdalen and May,<br>
+ Such tribute, Warren, as fond poets pay<br>
+ For generous esteem, I write, not more<br>
+ Enhearten'd than my need is, reckoning o'er<br>
+ My life-long wanderings on the heavenly way:<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But well-befriended we become good friends,</span
+ ><br>
+ Well-honour'd honourable; and all attain<br>
+ Somewhat by fathering what fortune sends.<br>
+ I bid your presidency a long reign,<br>
+ True friend; and may your praise to greater ends<br>
+ Aid better men than I, nor me in vain.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">11</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">TO JOSEPH JOACHIM</span><br>
+
+ Belov'd of all to whom that Muse is dear<br>
+ Who hid her spirit of rapture from the Greek,<br>
+ Whereby our art excelleth the antique,<br>
+ Perfecting formal beauty to the ear;<br>
+ Thou that hast been in England many a year<br>
+ The interpreter who left us nought to seek,<br>
+ Making Beethoven's inmost passion speak,<br>
+ Bringing the soul of great Sebastian near:<a
+ id="page_378"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{378}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Their music liveth ever, and 'tis just</span
+ ><br>
+ That thou, good Joachim, so high thy skill,<br>
+ Rank (as thou shalt upon the heavenly hill)<br>
+ Laurel'd with them, for thy ennobling trust<br>
+ Remember'd when thy loving hand is still<br>
+ And every ear that heard thee stopt with dust.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">12</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">TO THOS. FLOYD</span><br>
+
+ How fares it, friend, since I by Fate annoy'd<br>
+ Left the old home in need of livelier play<br>
+ For body and mind? How fare, this many a day,<br>
+ The stubborn thews and ageless heart of Floyd?<br>
+ If not too well with country sport employ'd,<br>
+ Visit my flock, the breezy hill that they<br>
+ Choose for their fold; and see, for thence you may,<br>
+ From rising walls all roofless yet and void,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The lovely city, thronging tower and spire,</span
+ ><br>
+ The mind of the wide landscape, dreaming deep,<br>
+ Grey-silvery in the vale; a shrine where keep<br>
+ Memorial hopes their pale celestial fire:<br>
+ Like man's immortal conscience of desire,<br>
+ The spirit that watcheth in me ev'n in my sleep.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">1906.</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_379"></a><span class="pagenumb">{379}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">13</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">LA GLOIRE DE VOLTAIRE</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>A DIALOGUE IN VERSE.</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <i
+ >Je donnerais pour revivre à vingt ans<br>
+ L'or de Rothschild, la gloire de Voltaire.</i
+ ><br>
+ I like that: Béranger in his printems,<br>
+ Voltaire and Rothschild: what three graces there<br>
+ Foot it together! But of old Voltaire,<br>
+ I'd ask what Béranger found so sublime<br>
+ In that man's glory to adorn his rhyme.<br>
+ Was it mere fame?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 9em">Nay: for as wide a fame</span><br>
+ Was won by the gold-garnering millionaire,<br>
+ Who in the poet's verse might read his name<br>
+ And what is that? when so much froth and scum<br>
+ Float down the stream of Time (as Bacon saith),<br>
+ What is that for deliverance from the death?<br>
+ Could any sober man be proud to hold<br>
+ A lease of common talk, or die consoled<br>
+ For thinking that on lips of fools to come<br>
+ He'll live with Pontius Pilate and Tom Thumb?<br>
+ That were more like eternal punishment,<br>
+ The true fool's Paradise by all consent.<br>
+ Béranger thought to set a crown on merit.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Man's merit! and to crown it in Voltaire?<br>
+ The modest eye, the gentle, fearless heart,<br>
+ The mouth of peace and truth, the angelic spirit!<br>
+ Why Arouet was <i>soufflé</i> with the leaven,<a
+ id="page_380"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{380}</span><br>
+ Of which the little flock was bid beware:<br>
+ His very ambition was to play a part;<br>
+ Indifferent whether he did wrong or right,<br>
+ So he won credit; eager to deny<br>
+ A lie that failed, by adding lie to lie;<br>
+ Repaying evil unto seven-times-seven;<br>
+ A fount of slander, flattery and spite;<br>
+ Vain, irritable; true but to his face<br>
+ Of mockery and mischievous grimace,<br>
+ A monkey of the schools, the saints' despair!<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet for his voice half Europe stood at pause<br>
+ To hear, and when he spoke rang with applause.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Granted he was a wonder of his kind.<br>
+ There is a devilish mockery in things<br>
+ Which only a born devil can enjoy.<br>
+ True banter is of melancholy mind,<br>
+ Akin to madness; thus must Shakespeare toy<br>
+ With Hamlet's reason, ere his fine art dare<br>
+ Push his relentless humour to the quick;<br>
+ And so his mortal thrusts pierce not the skin.<br>
+ But for the superficial bickerings<br>
+ That poison life and never seem to prick,<br>
+ The reasonable educated grin,<br>
+ Truly no wag is equal to Voltaire;<br>
+ His never-dying ripple, wide and light,<br>
+ Has nigh the force of Nature: to compare,<br>
+ 'Tis like the ocean when the sky is bright,<br>
+ And the cold north-wind tickles with surprise<br>
+ The briny levels of the infinite sea.<br>
+ &mdash;Shall we conclude his merit was his wit,<br>
+ His magic art and versatility?<a id="page_381"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{381}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And think of those foredoom'd in Dante's pit,<br>
+ Who, sunk at bottom of the loathly slough,<br>
+ Made the black mud up-bubble with their sighs;<br>
+ And all because they were unkind to Mirth,<br>
+ And went with smoky heart and gloomy brow<br>
+ The while they lived upon the pleasant earth<br>
+ In the sweet air that rallies to the sun,<br>
+ And ne'er so much as smiled or gave God thanks:<br>
+ Surely a sparkle of the Frenchman's fun<br>
+ Had rescued all their souls.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 14.5em">I think I see</span><br>
+ The Deity who in this Heaven abides,<br>
+ <i>Le bon Dieu</i>, holding both his aching sides,<br>
+ With radiant face of Pan, ruddy and hairy:<br>
+ Give him his famous whistles and goat-shanks,<br>
+ And then present him to Alighieri.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Nay, 'twixt the Frenchman and the Florentine<br>
+ I ask no truce, grave Dante weaving well<br>
+ His dark-eyed thought into a song divine,<br>
+ Drawing high poetry from heaven and hell&mdash;<br>
+ And him who lightly mockt at all in turn.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ It follow'd from his mundane thought of art<br>
+ That he contemn'd religion: his concern<br>
+ Was comfort, taste, and wit: he had no heart<br>
+ For man's attempt to build and beautify<br>
+ His home in Nature; so he set all by<br>
+ That wisdom had evolved with purpose kind;<a
+ id="page_382"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{382}</span><br>
+ Stamped it as folly, or as fraud attacked;<br>
+ Never discerning how his callow zest<br>
+ Was impiously defiling his own nest;<br>
+ Whereas the least philosophy may find<br>
+ The truths are the ideas; the sole fact<br>
+ Is the long story of man's growing mind.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Upon your thistle now I see my fig&mdash;<br>
+ Béranger thought of Voltaire as a seer,<br>
+ A latter-day John Baptist in a wig;<br>
+ A herald of that furious gospel-storm<br>
+ Of words and blood, that made the nations fear;<br>
+ When sickening France adulterously sinn'd<br>
+ With Virtue, and went mad conceiving wind.<br>
+ He ranks him with those captains of reform,<br>
+ Luther and Calvin; who, whate'er they taught,<br>
+ Led folk from superstition to free thought.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ They did. But whence or whither led Voltaire?<br>
+ The steward with fifty talents given in charge,<br>
+ Who spent them on himself, and liv'd at large;<br>
+ His only virtue that he did not hide<br>
+ The pounds, but squander'd them to serve his pride;<br>
+ His praise that, cunning in his generation,<br>
+ He of the heavenly treasure did not spare<br>
+ To win himself an earthly habitation.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Deny him not this laurel, nor to France<br>
+ The apostolate of modern tolerance:<br>
+ Their Theseus he, who slew the Minotaur,<br>
+ The Dragon Persecution, in which war<br>
+ He tipp'd the shafts that made the devil bleed;<a
+ id="page_383"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{383}</span><br>
+ And won a victory that hath overcome<br>
+ Many misdoings in a well-done deed;<br>
+ And more, I think, the mind of Christ revealing,<br>
+ Yea, more of common-sense and human feeling<br>
+ Than all the Creeds and Bulls of Christendom.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet was he only one of them that slew:<br>
+ The fiend had taken a deadly wound from Bayle;<br>
+ And did he 'roar to see his kingdom fail'<br>
+ 'Neath Robespierre, or raise his head anew?<br>
+ Nay, Voltaire's teaching never cured the heart:<br>
+ The lack of human feeling blots his art.<br>
+ When most his phrase with indignation burns,<br>
+ Still to the gallery his face he turns.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ You bear him hard. Men are of common stuff,<br>
+ Each hath some fault, and he had faults enough:<br>
+ But of all slanderers that ever were<br>
+ A virtuous critic is the most unfair.<br>
+ In greatness ever is some good to see;<br>
+ And what is character, unless it be<br>
+ The colour of persistent qualities,<br>
+ That, like a ground in painting, balances<br>
+ All hues and forms, combining with one tone<br>
+ Whatever lights or shades are on it thrown?<br>
+ Now Voltaire had of Nature a rich ground,<br>
+ Two virtues rarely in conjunction found:<br>
+ Industry, which no pedant could excel,<br>
+ He matched with gaiety inexhaustible;<br>
+ And with heroic courage held these fast,<br>
+ As sailors nail their colours to the mast,<br>
+ With ruling excellence atoning all.<br>
+ Though, for the rest, he still for praise may call;<a
+ id="page_384"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{384}</span><br>
+ Prudent to gain, as generous to share<br>
+ <i>Le superflu, chose si nécessaire</i>;<br>
+ To most a rare companion above scorn,<br>
+ To not a few a kind, devoted friend<br>
+ Through his long battling life, which in the end<br>
+ He strove with good works richly to adorn.<br>
+ I have admired, and why should I abuse<br>
+ A man who can so long and well amuse?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ To some Parisian art there's this objection,<br>
+ 'Tis mediocrity pushed to perfection.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Judge not,' say I, 'and ye shall not be judged!'<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Let me say, 'praise men, if ye would be praised:'<br>
+ Let your unwholesome flattery flow ungrudged,<br>
+ And with ungrudging measure shall men pour<br>
+ Their stifling homage back till ye be crazed,<br>
+ And sane men humour you as fools past cure.<br>
+ But these wise maxims deal not with the dead,<br>
+ 'Tis by example that the young are led,<br>
+ And judgement owes its kindness but to them;<br>
+ Nor will I praise, call you me hard or nice,<br>
+ One that degraded art, and varnished vice.<br>
+ They that praise ill thereby themselves condemn.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Béranger could not praise.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em">Few are who can;</span><br>
+ Not he: if ever he assay'd to impart<br>
+ A title loftier than his own renown,<a id="page_385"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{385}</span><br>
+ Native irreverence defied his art,<br>
+ His fingers soil'd the lustre of his crown.<br>
+ Here he adored what he was envious of,<br>
+ The vogue and dazzling fashion of the man.<br>
+ But man's true praise, the poet's praise, is love.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">B.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ And that, perhaps, was hardly his affair....<br>
+ Pray, now, what set you talking of Voltaire?<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">A.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ This only, that in weeding out my shelves,<br>
+ In fatherly regard for babes upgrown,<br>
+ Until they learn to garden for themselves,<br>
+ Much as I like to keep my sets entire,<br>
+ When I came out to you I had just thrown<br>
+ Three of his precious works behind the fire.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">14</span><br>&nbsp; <br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">TO ROBERT BURNS</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><small>AN EPISTLE ON INSTINCT</small></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>1</small></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Thou art a poet, Robbie Burns,<br>
+ Master of words and witty turns,<br>
+ Of lilting songs and merry yarns,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Drinking and kissing:</span><br>
+ There's much in all thy small concerns,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But more that's missing.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>2</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ The wisdom of thy common sense,<br>
+ Thy honest hate of vain pretence,<br>
+ Thy love and wide benevolence<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Full often lead thee</span><br>
+ Where feeling is its own defence;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Yet while I read thee,<a id="page_386"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{386}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>3</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ It seems but chance that all our race<br>
+ Trod not the path of thy disgrace,<br>
+ And, living freely to embrace<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The moment's pleasure,</span><br>
+ Snatch'd not a kiss of Nature's face<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">For all her treasure.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>4</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ The feelings soft, the spirits gay<br>
+ Entice on such a flowery way,<br>
+ And sovran youth in high heyday<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Hath such a fashion</span><br>
+ To glorify the bragging sway<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of sensual passion.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>5</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ But rakel Chance and Fortune blind<br>
+ Had not the power:&mdash;Eternal Mind<br>
+ Led man upon a way design'd,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">By strait selection</span><br>
+ Of pleasurable ways, to find<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Severe perfection.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>6</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ For Nature did not idly spend<br>
+ Pleasure: she ruled it should attend<br>
+ On every act that doth amend<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Our life's condition:</span><br>
+ 'Tis therefore not well-being's end,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But its fruition.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>7</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Beasts that inherited delight<br>
+ In what promoted health or might,<br>
+ Survived their cousins in the fight:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">If some&mdash;like Adam&mdash;</span><br>
+ Prefer'd the wrong tree to the right,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The devil had 'em.<a id="page_387"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{387}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>8</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ So when man's Reason took the reins,<br>
+ She found that she was saved her pains;<br>
+ She had but to approve the gains<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of agelong inscience,</span><br>
+ And spin it fresh into her brains<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">As moral conscience.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>9</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ But Instinct in the beasts that live<br>
+ Is of three kinds; (Nature did give<br>
+ To man three shakings in her sieve)&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The first is Racial,</span><br>
+ The second Self-preservative,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The third is Social.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>10</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Without the first no race could be,<br>
+ So 'tis the strongest of the three;<br>
+ Nay, of such forceful tyranny<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">'Tis hard to attune it,</span><br>
+ Because 'twas never made to agree<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">To serve the unit:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>11</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Art will not picture it, its name<br>
+ In common talk is utter shame:<br>
+ And yet hath Reason learn'd to tame<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Its conflagration</span><br>
+ Into a sacramental flame<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of consecration.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>12</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Those hundred thousand years, ah me!<br>
+ Of budding soul! What slow degree,<br>
+ With aim so dim, so true! We see,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Now that we know them,</span><br>
+ Our humble cave-folk ancestry,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >How much we owe them:<a id="page_388"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{388}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>13</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ While with the savage beasts around<br>
+ They fought at odds, yet underground<br>
+ Their miserable life was sound;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Their loves and quarrels</span><br>
+ Did well th' ideal bases found<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Of art and morals:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>14</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ One prime distinction, Good and Ill,<br>
+ Was all their notion, all their skill;&mdash;<br>
+ But Unity stands next to Nil;&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Want of analysis</span><br>
+ Saved them from doubts that wreck the Will<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With pale paralysis.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>15</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ In vain philosophers dispute<br>
+ 'Is Good or Pleasure our pursuit?'&mdash;<br>
+ The fruit likes man, not man the fruit;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The good that likes him,</span><br>
+ The good man's pleasure 'tis to do 't;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That's how it strikes him.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>16</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Tho' Science hide beneath her feet<br>
+ The point where moral reasonings meet,<br>
+ The vicious circle is complete;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">There is no lodgement</span><br>
+ Save Aristotle's own retreat,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The just man's judgement.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>17</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ And if thou wert not that just man,<br>
+ Wild Robin, born to crown his plan,<br>
+ We shall not for that matter ban<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Thy petty treason,</span><br>
+ Nor closely thy defection scan<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >From highest Reason.<a id="page_389"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{389}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>18</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Thou might'st have lived like Robin Hood<br>
+ Waylaying Abbots in the wood,<br>
+ Doing whate'er thee-seemèd good,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The law defying,</span><br>
+ And 'mong the people's heroes stood<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Living and dying:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>19</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Yet better bow than his thou bendest,<br>
+ And well the poor man thou befriendest,<br>
+ And oftentime an ill amendest;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">When, if truth touch thee,</span><br>
+ Sharply the arrow home thou sendest;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">There's none can match thee.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>20</small></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ So pity it is thou knew'st the teen<br>
+ Of sad remorse: the Might-have-been<br>
+ Shall not o'ercloud thy merry scene<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">With vain repentance,</span><br>
+ Nor forfeit from thy spirit keen<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">My friendly sentence.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">15</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1%">THE PORTRAIT OF A GRANDFATHER</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ With mild eyes agaze, and lips ready to speak,<br>
+ Whereon the yearning of love, the warning of wisdom plays,<br>
+ One portrait ever charms me and teaches me when I seek:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >It is of him whom I, remembering my young days,</span
+ ><br>
+ Imagine fathering my father; when he, in sonship afore,<br>
+ Liv'd honouring and obeying the eyes now pictur'd agaze,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The lips ready to speak, that promise but speak no more.<a
+ id="page_390"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{390}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ O high parental claim, that were not but for the knowing,<br>
+ O fateful bond of duty, O more than body that bore,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The smile that guides me to right, the gaze that follows my
+ going,</span
+ ><br>
+ How had I stray'd without thee! and yet how few will seek<br>
+ The spirit-hands, that heaven, in tender-free bestowing,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Holds to her children, to guide the wandering and aid the weak.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And Thee! ah what of thee, thou lover of men? if truly<br>
+ A painter had stell'd thee there, with thy lips ready to speak,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In all-fathering passion to souls enchanted newly,</span
+ ><br>
+ &mdash;Tenderer call than of sire to son, or of lover to maiden,&mdash;<br>
+ Ever ready to speak to us, if we will hearken duly,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Come, O come unto me, ye weary and heavy-laden!'</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p><span style="margin-left: 60%">[1880.]</span><br>&nbsp;<br></p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">16</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1%"
+ >AN INVITATION TO THE OXFORD<br>
+ &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;PAGEANT, JULY 1907</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Fair lady of learning, playfellow of spring,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Who to thy towery hospice in the vale</span
+ ><br>
+ Invitest all, with queenly claim to bring<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Scholars from every land within thy pale;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">If aught our pageantry may now avail</span
+ ><br>
+ To paint thine antique story to the eye,<br>
+ Inspire the scene, and bid thy herald cry<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Welcome to all, and to all comers hail!</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Come hither, then he crieth, and hail to all.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Bow each his heart a pilgrim at her shrine,</span
+ ><br>
+ Whatever chance hath led you to my call,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ye that love pomp, and ye that seek a sign,<a
+ id="page_391"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{391}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Or on the low earth look for things divine;</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor ye, whom reverend Camus near-allied,<br>
+ Writes in the roll of his ennobled pride,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Refrain your praise and love to mix with mine.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Praise her, the mother of celestial moods,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Who o'er the saints' inviolate array</span
+ ><br>
+ Hath starr'd her robe of fair beatitudes<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With jewels worn by Hellas, on the day</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >She grew from girlhood into wisdom gay;</span
+ ><br>
+ And hath laid by her crozier, evermore<br>
+ With both hands gathering to enrich her store,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And make her courts with music ring alway.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Love her, for that the world is in her heart,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Man's rude antiquity and doubtful goal,</span
+ ><br>
+ The heaven-enthralling luxury of art,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The burden'd pleading of his clay-bound soul,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The mutual office of delight and dole,</span
+ ><br>
+ The merry laugh of youth, the joy of life<br>
+ Older than thought, and the unamending strife<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">'Twixt liberty and politic control.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ There is none holier, not the lilied town<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >By Arno, whither the spirit of Athens fled,</span
+ ><br>
+ Escap't from Hades to a less renown,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Yet joyful to be risen from the dead;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Nor she whose wide imperious arms were spread</span
+ ><br>
+ To spoil mankind, until the avenger came<br>
+ In darkening storm, and left a ruin'd name,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >A triple crown, upon a vanquish't head.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ What love in myriad hearts in every clime<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The vision of her beauty calls to pray'r:</span
+ ><br>
+ Where at his feet Himâlaya sublime<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Holds up aslope the Arabian floods, or where<a
+ id="page_392"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{392}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Patriarchal Nile rears at his watery stair;</span
+ ><br>
+ In the broad islands of the Antipodes,<br>
+ By Esperanza, or in the coral seas<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Where Buddha's vain pagodas throng the air;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Or where the chivalry of Nipon smote<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">The wily Muscovite, intent to creep</span
+ ><br>
+ Around the world with half his pride afloat,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And sent his battle to the soundless deep;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Or with our pilgrim-kin, and them that reap</span
+ ><br>
+ The prairie-corn beyond cold Labrador<br>
+ To California and the Alaskan shore,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Her exiled sons their pious memory keep:</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Bright memories of young poetic pleasure<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In free companionship, the loving stress</span
+ ><br>
+ Of all life-beauty lull'd in studious leisure,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >When every Muse was jocund with excess</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Of fine delight and tremulous happiness;</span
+ ><br>
+ The breath of an indolent unbridled June,<br>
+ When delicate thought fell from the dreamy moon:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >But now strange care, sorrow, and grief oppress.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ '<i>Ah! fewer tears shall be</i>,&mdash;'tis thus they dream,&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ ><i>Ah, fewer, softer tears, when we lie low:</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <i>On younger brows shall brighter laurel gleam:</i><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ ><i>Lovelier and earlier shall the rosebuds blow</i>.'</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >For in this hope she nurs'd them, and to know</span
+ ><br>
+ That Truth, while men regard a tetter'd page,<br>
+ Leaps on the mountains, and from age to age<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Reveals the dayspring's inexhausted glow.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Yet all their joy is mingled with regret:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >As the lone scholar on a neighbouring height,</span
+ ><br>
+ Brooding disconsolate with eyelids wet<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ere o'er the unkind world he took his flight,<a
+ id="page_393"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{393}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Look'd down upon her festal lamps at night,</span
+ ><br>
+ And while the far call of her warning bell<br>
+ Reach't to his heart, sang us his fond farewell,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Beneath the stars thinking of lost delight;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ 'Farewell! for whether we be young or old,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thou dost remain, but we shall pass away:</span
+ ><br>
+ Time shall against himself thy house uphold,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And build thy sanctuary from decay;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Children unborn shall be thy pride and stay.</span
+ ><br>
+ May Earth protect thee, and thy sons be true;<br>
+ And God with heavenly food thy life renew,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thy pleasure and thy grace from day to day.'</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 22%">17</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">IN MEMORY OF THE OLD-ETONIANS</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1%"
+ >WHOSE LIVES WERE LOST IN THE S. AFRICAN WAR</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 2%"
+ ><i>An ode set to music by Sir Hubert Parry and performed when</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%"
+ ><i>K. Edward VII inaugurated the Memorial Hall at</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>Eton College</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">I</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Resound! Resound! To jubilant music ring!<br>
+ Your birthday trumpets sound the alarm of strenuous days.<br>
+ Ye new-built walls, awake! and welcome England's King<br>
+ With a high GLORY-TO-GOD, and holy cheer of praise.<br>
+ Awake to fairest hope of fames unknown, unseen,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >When ye-too silver and solemn with age shall be:</span
+ ><br>
+ For all that is fair upon earth is reared with tend'rest teen,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >As the burden'd years to memory flee.<a
+ id="page_394"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{394}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">II</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Lament, O Muse of the Thames, in pride lament again,<br>
+ With low melodious grief remember them in this hour!&mdash;<br>
+ Beyond your dauntless joy, my brother, was our pain.<br>
+ Above all gold, my country, the lavish price of thy power&mdash;<br>
+ The ancient groves have mourn'd our sons, for whom no more<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >The sisterly kisses of life, the loved embraces.</span
+ ><br>
+ Remember the love of them who came not home from the war,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >The fatherly tears and the veil'd faces.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">III</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Now henceforth their shrine is builded, high and vast,<br>
+ Alway drawing noble hearts to noble deeds;<br>
+ In the toil of glory to be, and the tale of glory past:<br>
+ While ever the laughing waves of youth pass over the meads,<br>
+ And the tongue of Hellas is heard, and old Time slumbereth light<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In the cradle of Peace. O let thy dancing feet</span
+ ><br>
+ Roam in our land and abide, dear Peace, thou child of Right,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Giver of happiness, gentle and sweet.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 22%">18</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">ODE TO MUSIC</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1%"
+ ><small>WRITTEN FOR THE BICENTENARY COMMEMORATION OF</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">HENRY PURCELL</span><br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: -1%"
+ ><i>Music composed by Sir Hubert Parry, and performed at the</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%"
+ ><i>Leeds Festival and Commemoration Festival in</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"><i>London, 1895</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">I</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Myriad-voiced Queen, Enchantress of the air,<br>
+ Bride of the life of man! With tuneful reed,<br>
+ With string and horn and high-adoring quire<br>
+ Thy welcome we prepare.<br>
+ In silver-speaking mirrors of desire,<a id="page_395"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{395}</span><br>
+ In joyous ravishment of mystery draw thou near,<br>
+ With heavenly echo of thoughts, that dreaming lie<br>
+ Chain'd in unborn oblivion drear,<br>
+ Thy many-hearted grace restore<br>
+ Unto our isle our own to be,<br>
+ And make again our Graces three.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">II</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Turn, O return! In merry England<br>
+ Foster'd thou wert with infant Liberty.<br>
+ Her gloried oaks, that stand<br>
+ With trembling leaves and giant heart<br>
+ Drinking in beauty from the summer moon,<br>
+ Her wild-wood once was dear to thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">There the birds with tiny art</span><br>
+ Earth's immemorial cradle-tune<br>
+ Warble at dawn to fern and fawn,<br>
+ In the budding thickets making merry;<br>
+ And for their love the primrose faint<br>
+ Floods the green shade with youthful scent.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Come, thy jocund spring renew</span><br>
+ By hyacinthine lakes of blue:<br>
+ Thy beauty shall enchant the buxom May;<br>
+ And all the summer months shall strew thy way,<br>
+ And rose and honeysuckle rear<br>
+ Their flowery screens, till under fruit and berry<br>
+ The tall brake groweth golden with the year.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">III</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Thee fair Poetry oft hath sought,<br>
+ Wandering lone in wayward thought,<br>
+ On level meads by gliding streams,<br>
+ When summer noon is full of dreams:<br>
+ And thy loved airs her soul invade,<br>
+ Haunting retired the willow shade.<a id="page_396"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{396}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Or in some walled orchard nook</span><br>
+ She communes with her ancient book,<br>
+ Beneath the branches laden low;<br>
+ While the high sun o'er bosom'd snow<br>
+ Smiteth all day the long hill-side<br>
+ With ripening cornfields waving wide.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">There if thou linger all the year,</span
+ ><br>
+ No jar of man can reach thine ear,<br>
+ Or sweetly comes, as when the sound<br>
+ From hidden villages around,<br>
+ Threading the woody knolls, is borne<br>
+ Of bells that dong the Sabbath morn.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">IV</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>I</small></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ The sea with melancholy war<br>
+ Moateth about our castled shore;<br>
+ His world-wide elemental moan<br>
+ Girdeth our lives with tragic zone.<br>
+ <br>
+ He, ere men dared his watery path,<br>
+ Fenced them aloof in wrath;<br>
+ Their jealous brotherhoods<br>
+ Sund'ring with bitter floods:<br>
+ Till science grew and skill,<br>
+ And their adventurous will<br>
+ Challenged his boundaries, and went free<br>
+ To know the round world, and the sea<br>
+ From midday night to midnight sun<br>
+ Binding all nations into one.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>2</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Yet shall his storm and mastering wave</span
+ ><br>
+ Assure the empire to the brave;<a id="page_397"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{397}</span><br>
+ And to his billowy bass belongs<br>
+ The music of our patriot songs,<br>
+ When to the wind his ridges go<br>
+ In furious following, careering a-row,<br>
+ Lasht with hail and withering snow:<br>
+ And ever undaunted hearts outride<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">His rushing waters wide.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>3</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">But when the winds fatigued or fled</span
+ ><br>
+ Have left the drooping barks unsped,<br>
+ And nothing stirs his idle plain<br>
+ Save fire-breathed ships with silvery train,<br>
+ While lovingly his waves he layeth,<br>
+ And his slow heart in passion swells<br>
+ To the pale moon in heav'n that strayeth,<br>
+ And all his mighty music deep<br>
+ Whispers among the heapèd shells,<br>
+ Or in dark caverns lies asleep;&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then dreams of Peace invite,</span><br>
+ Haunting our shore with kisses light:<br>
+ Nay&mdash;even Love's Paphian Queen hath come<br>
+ Out of her long retirèd home<br>
+ To show again her beauty bright;<br>
+ And twice or thrice in sight hath play'd<br>
+ Of a young lover unaffray'd,<br>
+ And all his verse immortal made.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">V</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>I</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Love to Love calleth,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Love unto Love replieth:</span><br>
+ From the ends of the earth, drawn by invisible bands,<br>
+ Over the dawning and darkening lands<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >Love cometh to Love.<a id="page_398"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{398}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To the pangs of desire;</span><br>
+ To the heart by courage and might<br>
+ Escaped from hell,<br>
+ From the torment of raging fire,<br>
+ From the sighs of the drowning main,<br>
+ From shipwreck of fear and pain,<br>
+ From the terror of night.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>2</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ All mankind by Love shall be banded<br>
+ To combat Evil, the many-handed:<br>
+ For the spirit of man on beauty feedeth,<br>
+ The airy fancy he heedeth,<br>
+ He regardeth Truth in the heavenly height,<br>
+ In changeful pavilions of loveliness dight,<br>
+ The sovran sun that knows not the night;<br>
+ He loveth the beauty of earth,<br>
+ And the sweet birds' mirth;<br>
+ And out of his heart there falleth<br>
+ A melody-making river<br>
+ Of passion, that runneth ever<br>
+ To the ends of the earth and crieth,<br>
+ That yearneth and calleth;<br>
+ And Love from the heart of man<br>
+ To the heart of man replieth:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">On the wings of desire</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Love cometh to Love.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">VI</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>I</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ To me, to me, fair hearted Goddess, come,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">To Sorrow come,</span><br>
+ Where by the grave I linger dumb;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With sorrow bow thine head,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >For all my beauty is dead,<a id="page_399"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{399}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Leave Freedom's vaunt and playful thought awhile,<br>
+ Come with thine unimpassioned smile<br>
+ Of heavenly peace, and with thy fourfold choir<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of fair uncloying harmony</span><br>
+ Unveil the palaces where man's desire<br>
+ Keepeth celestial solemnity.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>2</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Lament, fair hearted queen, lament with me:<br>
+ For when thy seer died no song was sung,<br>
+ Nor for our heroes fal'n by land or sea<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Hath honour found a tongue:</span><br>
+ Nor aught of beauty for their tomb can frame<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Worthy their noble name.</span><br>
+ Let Mirth go bare: make mute thy dancing string:<br>
+ With thy majestic consolation<br>
+ Sweeten our suffering.<br>
+ Speak thou my woe; that from her pain<br>
+ My spirit arise to see again<br>
+ The Truth unknown that keeps our faith,<br>
+ The Beauty unseen that bates our breath,<br>
+ The heaven that doth our joy renew,<br>
+ And drinketh up our tears as dew.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">VII</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 16%"><small>DIRGE</small></span
+ ><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Man born of desire<br>
+ Cometh out of the night,<br>
+ A wandering spark of fire,<br>
+ A lonely word of eternal thought<br>
+ Echoing in chance and forgot.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>I</small></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He seeth the sun,</span><br>
+ He calleth the stars by name,<a id="page_400"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{400}</span><br>
+ He saluteth the flowers.&mdash;<br>
+ Wonders of land and sea,<br>
+ The mountain towers<br>
+ Of ice and air<br>
+ He seeth, and calleth them fair:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then he hideth his face;&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Whence he came to pass away<br>
+ Where all is forgot,<br>
+ Unmade&mdash;lost for aye<br>
+ With the things that are not.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>2</small></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He striveth to know,</span><br>
+ To unravel the Mind<br>
+ That veileth in horror:<br>
+ He wills to adore.<br>
+ In wisdom he walketh<br>
+ And loveth his kind;<br>
+ His labouring breath<br>
+ Would keep evermore:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Then he hideth his face;&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Whence he came to pass away<br>
+ Where all is forgot,<br>
+ Unmade&mdash;lost for aye<br>
+ With the things that are not.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%"><small>3</small></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">He dreameth of beauty,</span><br>
+ He seeks to create<br>
+ Fairer and fairer<br>
+ To vanquish his Fate;<br>
+ No hindrance he&mdash;<br>
+ No curse will brook,<br>
+ He maketh a law<br>
+ No ill shall be:<a id="page_401"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{401}</span><br>
+ Then he hideth his face;&mdash;<br>
+ Whence he came to pass away<br>
+ Where all is forgot,<br>
+ Unmade&mdash;lost for aye<br>
+ With the things that are not.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">VIII</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Rejoice, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell,<br>
+ Rejoice that yet on earth your fame is bright,<br>
+ And that your names, remember'd day and night,<br>
+ Live on the lips of those who love you well.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Tis ye that conquer'd have the powers of Hell</span
+ ><br>
+ Each with the special grace of your delight;<br>
+ Ye are the world's creators, and by might<br>
+ Alone of Heavenly love ye did excel.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Now ye are starry names</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">Behind the sun ye climb</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">To light the glooms of Time</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">With deathless flames.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">IX</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Open for me the gates of delight,<br>
+ The gates of the garden of man's desire;<br>
+ Where spirits touch'd by heavenly fire<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Have planted the trees of life.&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Their branches in beauty are spread,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Their fruit divine</span><br>
+ To the nations is given for bread,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And crush'd into wine.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ To thee, O man, the sun his truth hath given,<br>
+ The moon hath whisper'd in love her silvery dreams;<br>
+ Night hath unlockt the starry heaven,<br>
+ The sea the trust of his streams:<a id="page_402"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{402}</span><br>
+ And the rapture of woodland spring<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Is stay'd in its flying;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And Death cannot sting</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Its beauty undying.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Fear and Pity disentwine<br>
+ Their aching beams in colours fine;<br>
+ Pain and woe forgo their might.<br>
+ After darkness thy leaping sight,<br>
+ After dumbness thy dancing sound,<br>
+ After fainting thy heavenly flight,<br>
+ After sorrow thy pleasure crown'd:<br>
+ O enter the garden of thy delight,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Thy solace is found.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">X</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To us, O Queen of sinless grace,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Now at our prayer unveil thy face:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Awake again thy beauty free;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Return and make our Graces three.</span
+ ><br>
+ And with our thronging strength to the ends of the earth<br>
+ Thy myriad-voicèd loveliness go forth,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >To lead o'er all the world's wide ways</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">God's everlasting praise,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">And every heart inspire</span><br>
+ With the joy of man in the beauty of Love's desire.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_403"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{403}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem20">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">19</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">A HYMN OF NATURE</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 11%"
+ ><small>AN ODE WRITTEN FOR MUSIC</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: -2%"
+ ><i>The music composed by Sir Hubert Parry, performed at</i></span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><i>the Gloucester Festival, 1898</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">I</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Power eternal, power unknown, uncreate:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Force of force, fate of fate.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Beauty and light are thy seeing,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Wisdom and right thy decreeing,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Life of life is thy being.</span><br>
+ In the smile of thine infinite starry gleam,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Without beginning or end,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Measure or number,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Beyond time and space,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Without foe or friend,</span><br>
+ In the void of thy formless embrace,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">All things pass as a dream</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of thine unbroken slumber.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">II</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Gloom and the night are thine:</span><br>
+ On the face of thy mirror darkness and terror,<br>
+ The smoke of thy blood, the frost of thy breath.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">In silence and woful awe</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Thy harrying angels of death</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Destroy whate'er thou makest&mdash;</span
+ ><br>
+ Makest, destroyest, destroyest and makest.<br>
+ Thy gems of life thou dost squander,<a id="page_404"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{404}</span><br>
+ Their virginal beauty givest to plunder,<br>
+ Doomest to uttermost regions of age-long ice<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">To starve and expire:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Consumest with glance of fire,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or back to confusion shakest</span><br>
+ With earthquake, elemental storm and thunder.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">III</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">In ways of beauty and peace</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Fair desire, companion of man,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Leadeth the children of earth.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">As when the storm doth cease,</span><br>
+ The loving sun the clouds dispelleth,<br>
+ And woodland walks are sweet in spring;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The birds they merrily sing</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And every flower-bud swelleth.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or where the heav'ns o'erspan</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">The lonely downs</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">When summer is high:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Below their breezy crowns</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">And grassy steep</span><br>
+ Spreadeth the infinite smile of the sunlit sea;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Whereon the white ships swim,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And steal to havens far</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Across the horizon dim,</span><br>
+ Or lie becalm'd upon the windless deep,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Like thoughts of beauty and peace,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">When the storm doth cease,</span><br>
+ And fair desire, companion of man,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Leadeth the children of earth.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">IV</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Man, born to toil, in his labour rejoiceth;<br>
+ His voice is heard in the morn:<a id="page_405"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{405}</span><br>
+ He armeth his hand and sallieth forth<br>
+ To engage with the generous teeming earth,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And drinks from the rocky rills</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">The laughter of life.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Or else, in crowded cities gathering close,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">He traffics morn and eve</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">In thronging market-halls;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or within echoing walls</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of busy arsenals</span><br>
+ Weldeth the stubborn iron to engines vast;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Or tends the thousand looms</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Where, with black smoke o'ercast,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The land mourns in deep glooms.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Life is toil, and life is good:</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">There in loving brotherhood</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Beateth the nation's heart of fire.</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Strife! Strife! The strife is strong!</span
+ ><br>
+ There battle thought and voice, and spirits conspire<br>
+ In joyous dance around the tree of life,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And from the ringing choir</span><br>
+ Riseth the praise of God from hearts in tuneful song.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">V</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Hark! What spirit doth entreat<br>
+ The love-obedient air?<br>
+ All the pomp of his delight<br>
+ Revels on the ravisht night,<br>
+ Wandering wilful, soaring fair:<br>
+ There! 'Tis there, 'tis there.<br>
+ Like a flower of primal fire<br>
+ Late redeem'd by man's desire.<br>
+ <br>
+ Away, on wings away<br>
+ My spirit far hath flown,<a id="page_406"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{406}</span><br>
+ To a land of love and peace,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of beauty unknown.</span><br>
+ The world that earth-born man,<br>
+ By evil undismay'd,<br>
+ Out of the breath of God<br>
+ Hath for his heaven made.<br>
+ <br>
+ Where all his dreams soe'er<br>
+ Of holy things and fair<br>
+ In splendour are upgrown,<br>
+ Which thro' the toilsome years<br>
+ Martyrs and faithful seers<br>
+ And poets with holy tears<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of hope have sown.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ There, beyond power of ill,<br>
+ In joy and blessing crown'd,<br>
+ Christ with His lamp of truth<br>
+ Sitteth upon the hill<br>
+ Of everlasting youth,<br>
+ And calls His saints around.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">VI</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Sweet compassionate tears<br>
+ Have dimm'd my earthly sight,<br>
+ Tears of love, the showers wherewith<br>
+ The eternal morn is bright:<br>
+ Dews of the heav'nly spheres.<br>
+ With tears my eyes are wet,<br>
+ Tears not of vain regret,<br>
+ Tears of no lost delight,<br>
+ Dews of the heav'nly spheres<br>
+ Have dimm'd my earthly sight,<br>
+ Sweet compassionate tears.<a id="page_407"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{407}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">VII</span><br>
+
+ <br>
+ Gird on thy sword, O man, thy strength endue,<br>
+ In fair desire thine earth-born joy renew.<br>
+ Live thou thy life beneath the making sun<br>
+ Till Beauty, Truth, and Love in thee are one.<br>
+ <br>
+ Thro' thousand ages hath thy childhood run:<br>
+ On timeless ruin hath thy glory been:<br>
+ From the forgotten night of loves fordone<br>
+ Thou risest in the dawn of hopes unseen.<br>
+ <br>
+ Higher and higher shall thy thoughts aspire,<br>
+ Unto the stars of heaven, and pass away,<br>
+ And earth renew the buds of thy desire<br>
+ In fleeting blooms of everlasting day.<br>
+ <br>
+ Thy work with beauty crown, thy life with love;<br>
+ Thy mind with truth uplift to God above:<br>
+ For whom all is, from whom was all begun,<br>
+ In whom all Beauty, Truth, and Love are one.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_408"></a><span class="pagenumb">{408}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_409"></a><span class="pagenumb">{409}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <h2>
+ <a id="Poems"></a> P<small>OEMS</small><br>
+ <small>IN</small><br>
+ C<small>LASSICAL</small> P<small>ROSODY</small>
+ </h2>
+
+ <p class="figcenter">
+ <img
+ src="images/ill_logo_bridges.png"
+ width="30"
+ height="48"
+ alt="decoration"
+ title=""
+ >
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3" style='text-align:center'><i>PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS</i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; text-align:center"><i>Fp.</i></td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top"><i> I.</i></td>
+ <td>Daniel Press. 1903.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; text-align:center">"</td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top"><i>II.</i></td>
+ <td>
+ <i
+ >Monthly Review. July, 1903, with<br>
+ an abstract of Stone's Prosody, as<br>
+ there used.</i
+ >
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; text-align:center"><i>No.</i></td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top"><i> 3.</i></td>
+ <td><i>Printed by C. H. Daniel. 1903.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; text-align:center">"</td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top"><i> 8.</i></td>
+ <td><i>In 'Pelican,' C.C.C., Oxford.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; text-align:center">"</td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top"><i> 9.</i></td>
+ <td><i>English Review. March, 1912.</i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top; text-align:center">"</td>
+ <td style="vertical-align: top"><i> 21.</i></td>
+ <td>
+ <i
+ >New Quarterly. Jan. 1909, with<br>
+ an essay on the Virgilian Hexameter,<br>
+ &amp;c.</i
+ >
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_410"></a><span class="pagenumb">{410}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>
+ These experiments in quantitive verse were made in fulfilment of a
+ promise to William Johnson Stone that I would some day test his theory.
+ His premature death converted my consent into a serious obligation. This
+ personal explanation is due to myself for two reasons: because I might
+ otherwise appear firstly as an advocate of the system, secondly as
+ responsible for Stone's determination of the lengths of English
+ syllables. Before writing quantitive verse it is necessary to learn to
+ <i>think</i> in quantities. This is no light task, and a beginner
+ requires fixed rules. Except for a few minor details, which I had
+ disputed with Mr. Stone, I was bound to take his rules as he had
+ elaborated them; and it was not until I had made some progress and could
+ think fairly well in his prosody that I seriously criticized it. The two
+ chief errors that I find in it are that he relied too much on the
+ quality of a vowel in determining its syllabic length, and that he
+ regarded the <i>h</i> as <i>always</i> consonantal in quality. His
+ valuation of the <i>er</i> sound is doubtful, but defensible and
+ convenient, and I have never discarded it. My earlier experiments
+ contain therefore a good many 'false quantities', and these, where they
+ could not be very easily (though <i>inconsistently</i>) amended, I have
+ left, and marked most of them in the text: a few false quantities do not
+ make a poem less readable. Thus a long mark over a syllable means that
+ Stone reckoned it as long, and that the verse requires it to be so
+ pronounced, but that I regard it as short, or at least as
+ <i>doubtful</i>. For example on p. 414 <i>R&#363;in</i> is thus written.
+ Of all accented long vowels in 'open' position the long <i>u</i> seems
+ perhaps to retain its quantity best, but there is evidence that Tennyson
+ held it to be shortened, and I do not know whether it might be an
+ exception or go with th&#277;ory, p&#301;ety, p&#335;etry, &amp;c.
+ Again, where a final syllable should be lengthened or not shortened by
+ position, but lacks its consonantal support, I have put a<sup>v</sup> in
+ the gap: these weak places are chiefly due to my accepting Stone's
+ unchanging valuation of <i>h</i>. My emancipation from Stone's rules was
+ gradual, so that I have not been able to distinguish definitely my
+ earlier experiments from the later, in which the quantities are such as
+ I have now come to approve of: but my line-for-line paraphrase of Virgil
+ is such a later experiment. It was accompanied in the
+ <i>New Quarterly</i> by a long examination of the Virgilian hexameter,
+ to which I would refer any one who is interested in the subject. In
+ these English hexameters I have used and advocate the use of Miltonic
+ elision. The mark ' in the text shows where I have purposely allowed a
+ short syllable to sustain a long place. Though the difficulty of
+ adapting our English syllables to the Greek rules is very great, and
+ even deterrent&mdash;for I cannot pretend to have attained to an
+ absolutely consistent scheme&mdash;yet the experiments that I have made
+ reveal a vast unexplored field of delicate and expressive rhythms
+ hitherto unknown in our poetry: and this amply rewarded me for my
+ friendly undertaking.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_411"></a> <span class="pagenumb">{411}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 16%">1</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">EPISTLE I</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14%"><small>TO</small> L. M.</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">WINTRY DELIGHTS</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Now in wintry delights, and long fireside meditation,<br>
+ 'Twixt studies and routine paying due court to the Muses,<br>
+ My solace in solitude, when broken roads barricade me<br>
+ Mudbound, unvisited for months with my merry children,<br>
+ Grateful t'ward Providence, and heeding a slander against me<br>
+ Less than a rheum, think of me to-day, dear L&#299;onel, and take<br>
+ This letter as some account of Will Stone's versification.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >We, whose first memories reach half of a century backward,</span
+ ><br>
+ May praise our fortune to have outliv'd so many dangers,&mdash;<br>
+ Faultiness of Nature's unruly machinery or man's&mdash;;
+ <span class="linenum">10</span><br>
+ For, once born, whatever 'tis worth, <span class="smcap">LIFE</span> is to
+ be held to,<br>
+ Its mere persistence esteem'd as r&#275;al attainment,<br>
+ Its crown of silver reverenc'd as one promise of youth<br>
+ Fruiting, of existence one needful purpose accomplish'd:<br>
+ And 'twere worth the living, howe'er unkindly bereft of<br>
+ Those joys and comforts, throu' which we chiefly regard it:<br>
+ Nay,&mdash;set aside the pleasant unhinder'd order of our life,<br>
+ Our happy enchantments of Fortune, easy surroundings,<br>
+ Courteous acquaintance, dwelling in fair homes, the delight of<br>
+ Long-plann'd excursions, the romance of journeying in lands<br>
+ Historic, of s&#275;eing their glory, the famous adornments
+ <span class="linenum">21</span><br>
+ Giv'n to memorial Earth by man, decorator of all-time,<br>
+ (&mdash;As w&#275; saw with virginal eyes travelling to behold
+ them,&mdash;)<br>
+ Her gorgeous palaces,<sup>v</sup>her tow'rs and stately cathedrals;<br>
+ Where the turrets and domes of pictured Tuscany slumber,<a
+ id="page_412"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{412}</span><br>
+ Or the havoc'd splendours of Rome imperial, or where<br>
+ Glare the fretted minarets and mosks of trespassing Islam,<br>
+ And old Nilus, amid the mummied suzerainty of Egypt,<br>
+ Glideth, a godly presence, consciously regardless of all things,<br>
+ Save his unending toil and &#275;ternal recollections:&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">30</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Set these out of account, and with them too put away
+ <span class="smcap">ART</span>,</span
+ ><br>
+ Those ravishings of mind, those sensuous intelligences,<br>
+ By whose grace the elect enjoy their sacred aloofness<br>
+ From Life's meagre affairs, in beauty's r&#275;generate youth<br>
+ Reading immortality's sublime revelation, adoring<br>
+ Their own heav'nly desire; nor alone in worship assist they,<br>
+ But take, call'd of God, part and pleasure in cr&#275;ation<br>
+ Of that beauty, the first of His first purposes extoll'd:&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Yea, set aside with these all
+ <span class="smcap">Nature's</span> beauty, the wildwood's</span
+ ><br>
+ Flow'ry domain, the flushing, softcrowding loveliness of Spring,
+ <span class="linenum">40</span><br>
+ Lazy Summer's burning d&#299;al, the serenely solemn spells<br>
+ Of Sibylline Autumn, with gay-wing'd Plenty departing;<br>
+ All fair change, whether of seasons or bright recurrent day,<br>
+ Morning or eve; the divine night's wonderous empyrean;<br>
+ High noon's melting azure, his thin cloud-country, the landscape<br>
+ Mountainous or maritime, blue calms of midsummer Ocean,<br>
+ Broad corn-grown champaign goldwaving in invisible wind,<br>
+ Wide-water'd pasture, with shade of whispering aspen;<br>
+ All whereby Nature winneth our love, fondly appearing<br>
+ As to caress her children, or all that in exaltation
+ <span class="linenum">50</span><br>
+ Lifteth aloft our hearts to an unseen glory beyond her:&mdash;<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Put these out of account; yea, more I say, banish also</span
+ ><br>
+ From the credit s&#365;m of enjoyment those simple
+ <span class="smcap">AFFECTIONS</span>,<br>
+ Whose common exercise informs our natural instinct;<br>
+ That, set in our animal flesh-fabric, of our very lifeblood<br>
+ Draw their subsistence, and even in ungenerous hearts<a
+ id="page_413"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{413}</span><br>
+ Root, like plants in stony deserts and 'neath pitiless snows.<br>
+ Yea, put away all <span class="smcap">Love</span>, the blessings and
+ p&#299;eties<sup>v</sup>of home,<br>
+ All delicate heart-bonds, vital tendernesses untold,<br>
+ Joys that fear to be named, feelings too holy to gaze on;
+ <span class="linenum">60</span><br>
+ And with his inviolate peace-tr&#299;umph his passionate war<br>
+ Be forgone, his mighty desire, thrilling ecstasies, ardours<br>
+ Of mystic reverence, his fierce flame-eager emotions,<br>
+ Idolatrous service, blind faith and ritual of fire.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >If from us all these things were taken away, (that is all art</span
+ ><br>
+ And all beauty whate'er, and all love's varied affection,)<br>
+ Yet would enough subsist in other concerns to suffice us,<br>
+ And feed intelligence, and make life's justification.<br>
+ What this is, if you should ask me, beyond or above the rejoicing<br>
+ In vegetant or brute existence, answer is easy;
+ <span class="linenum">70</span><br>
+ 'Tis the reflective effort of mind that, conscious of itself,<br>
+ Fares forth exploring nature for principle and cause,<br>
+ Keenly with all the cunning pleasure and instinct of a hunter,<br>
+ Who, in craft fashioning weapon and sly snare, tracketh after<br>
+ His prey flying afield, and that which his arm killeth eateth.<br>
+ <br>
+ History and <span class="smcap">SCIENCE</span> our playthings are:
+ what an untold<br>
+ Wealth of inexhaustive treasure is stored up for amusement!<br>
+ Shall the amass'd Earth-structure appeal to me less than in early<br>
+ Childhood an old fives-ball, whose wraps I wondering unwound,<br>
+ Untwining the ravel'd worsted, that mere rubbish and waste<br>
+ Of leather and shavings had bound and moulded elastic
+ <span class="linenum">81</span><br>
+ Into a perfect sphere? Shall not the celestial earth-ball<br>
+ Equally entertain a mature enquiry, reward our<br>
+ Examination of its contexture, conglomerated<br>
+ Of layer'd débris, the erosion of infinite ages?<br>
+ Tho' I lack the wizard Darwin's sc&#299;entific insight<br>
+ On the barren sea-beaches of East Patagonia gazing,<a
+ id="page_414"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{414}</span><br>
+ I must wond'ring attend, nay learn myself to decipher<br>
+ Time's rich h&#299;eroglyph, with vast elemental pencil<br>
+ Scor'd upon Earth's rocky crust,&mdash;minute shells slowly collecting
+ <span class="linenum">90</span><br>
+ Press'd to a stone, uprais'd to a mountain, again to a fine sand<br>
+ Worn, burying the remains of an alien organic epoch,<br>
+ In the flat accretions of new sedimentary strata;<br>
+ All to be crush'd, crumpled, confused, contorted, abandon'd,<br>
+ Broke, as a child's puzzle is, to be recompos'd with attention;<br>
+ Nature's history-book, which sh&#275; hath torn as asham'd of;<br>
+ And lest those pictures on<sup>v</sup>her fragmentary pages<br>
+ Should too lightly reveal frustrate Antiquity, hath laid<br>
+ R&#363;in upon r&#363;in, revolution upon revolution:<br>
+ Yet no single atom, no least insignificant grain
+ <span class="linenum">100</span><br>
+ But, having order alike of fate, and faulty disorder,<br>
+ Holds a record of Time, very vestiges of the Creation;<br>
+ Which who will not attend scorns blindly the only commandments<br>
+ By God's finger of old inscribed on table of earth-stone.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >This for me wer' enough: yet confin'd G&#275;ology's field</span
+ ><br>
+ Counts not in all Sc&#299;ence more than the planet to the Cosmos;<br>
+ Where our central Sun, almighty material author,<br>
+ And sustainer, appears as a half-consumed vanishing spark,<br>
+ Bearing along with it, entangled in immensity's onward<br>
+ Spiral eddies, the blacken'd dust-motes whirl'd off from around it.
+ <span class="linenum">110</span><br>
+ But tho' man's microscopical functions measure all things<br>
+ By his small footprints, finger-spans and ticking of clocks,<br>
+ And thereby conceive the immense&mdash;such multiple extent<br>
+ As to defy Id&#275;as of imperative cerebration,&mdash;<br>
+ None the less observing, measuring, patiently recording,<br>
+ H&#275; mappeth out the utter wilderness of unlimited space;<br>
+ Carefully weigheth a weight to the sun, reckoneth for it its path<br>
+ Of trackless travelling, the precise momentary places<a
+ id="page_415"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{415}</span><br>
+ Of the planets and their satellites, their annual orbits,<br>
+ Times, perturbations of times, and orbit of orbit.
+ <span class="linenum">120</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >What was Alexander's subduing of Asia, or that</span
+ ><br>
+ Sheep-worry of Europe, when pigmy Napoleon enter'd<br>
+ Her sovereign chambers, and her kings with terror eclips'd?<br>
+ His footsore soldiers inciting across the ravag'd plains,<br>
+ Thro' bloody fields of death tramping to an ugly disaster?<br>
+ Shows any crown, set above the promise (so rudely accomplisht)<br>
+ Of their fair godlike young faces, a glory to compare<br>
+ With the immortal olive that circles bold Galileo's<br>
+ Brows, the laurel'd halo<sup>v</sup>of Newton's unwithering fame?
+ <span class="linenum">129</span><br>
+ Or what a child's surmise, how trifling a journey Columbus<br>
+ Adventur'd, to a land like that which he sail'd from arriving,<br>
+ If compar'd to Bessel's magic divination, awarding<br>
+ Magnificent Sirius<sup>v</sup>his dark and invisible bride;<br>
+ Or when Adams by Cam, (more nearly Leverrier in France,)<br>
+ From the minutely measur'd vacillation of Uranus, augur'd<br>
+ Where his mighty brother Neptune went wandering unnamed,<br>
+ And thro' those thousand-million league-darknesses of space<br>
+ Drew him slowly whene'er he pass'd, and slowly released him!<br>
+ <i>Nil admirari!</i> 'Tis surely a most shabby thinker
+ <span class="linenum">139</span><br>
+ Who, looking on Nature, finds not the reflection appalling<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And if these wonders we must with wonder abandon,</span
+ ><br>
+ Astronomy's Cosmos, the Immense, and those physical laws<br>
+ That link mind to matter, laws mutual in revelation,<br>
+ Which measure and analyse Nature's primordial orgasm,<br>
+ Lifegiving omnipotential <span class="smcap">Light</span>, its speed to
+ determine,<br>
+ Untwist its rainbow of various earthcoloring rays,<br>
+ Counting strictly to each its own millionth-millimetred<br>
+ Wave-length, and mapping out on fray'd diffraction of ether<br>
+ All the adust elements and furnaced alchemy of<sup>v</sup>heav'n;<br>
+ Laws which atone the disorder of infinit observation
+ <span class="linenum">150</span><br>
+ With tyrannous numbers and abstract theory, closing<a
+ id="page_416"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{416}</span><br>
+ Protean Nature with nets of principle exact;<br>
+ Her metamorphoses transmuting by correlation,<br>
+ All heat, all chemical concourse or electrical action,<br>
+ All force and all motion of all matter, or subtle or gross:&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >If we these wonders, I say, with wonder abandon,</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor can for mental heaviness their high study pursue,<br>
+ Yet no story of adventures or fabulous exploit<br>
+ Of famous'd heroes hath so r&#333;mantic a discourse,<br>
+ As these growing annals of long heav'n-scaling achievement<br>
+ And far discoveries, which he who<sup>v</sup>idly neglecteth
+ <span class="linenum">161</span><br>
+ Is but a boor as truly ridiculous as the village clown,<br>
+ In whose thought the pleasant sun-ball performeth a circuit<br>
+ Daily above mother earth, and resteth nightly beneath her.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Nor will a man, whose mind respects its own operations,</span
+ ><br>
+ Lightly resign himself to remain in darkness uninform'd,<br>
+ While any true sc&#299;ence of fact lies easy within reach<br>
+ Concerning Nature's &#275;ternal essential object,<br>
+ Self-matter, embodying substratum of ev'ry relation<br>
+ Both of Time and Space, at once the machinery and stuff<br>
+ Of those Id&#275;as; carrier, giver, only receiver
+ <span class="linenum">171</span><br>
+ Of such perceptions as arise in sensible organs.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Now whether each element is a c&#333;herency of equal</span
+ ><br>
+ Strictly symmetric atoms, or among themselves the atoms are<br>
+ Like animals in a herd, having each an identity distinct,<br>
+ &mdash;So that atoms of gold compar'd with sulphur or iron<br>
+ Are but as ancient Greeks compar'd with Chinamen and Turks;&mdash;<br>
+ Nor whether all elements are untransmutable offspring<br>
+ From one kind or more thro' endless eternity changing,<br>
+ Or whether invisibles claim rightly the name of immortals,<br>
+ I make no<sup>v</sup>enquiry; matter minutely divided
+ <span class="linenum">181</span><br>
+ Showing a like paradox, with ever-continuous extent,<br>
+ And, as Adam, the atom will pose as a naked assumption:&mdash;<br>
+ But since all the knowledge which man was born to attain to<br>
+ Hath these only channels, (which must limit and qualify<sup>v</sup>it,)<a
+ id="page_417"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{417}</span><br>
+ We shall con the grammar, the material alphabet of life,<br>
+ Yea, ev'n more from error to preserve our inquisitive mind,<br>
+ Than to secure well-b&#275;ing against adversity and ill.<br>
+ Surely if all is a flux, 'tis well to look into the fl&#363;id,<br>
+ Inspect and question the apparent, shifty behaviour,
+ <span class="linenum">190</span><br>
+ Wherein lurketh alone our witness of all physical law,<br>
+ As we read the habits unchanging of invisible things,<br>
+ Their timeless chronicles, the unintelligent ethic of dust:<br>
+ In which dense labyrinth he who was guiding avised me,<br>
+ With caution saying 'Were this globe's area of land<br>
+ Wholly cover'd from sight, pack'd close to the watery margins<br>
+ With mere empty vessels, I could myself put in each one<br>
+ Some different substance, and write its formula thereon.'<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thus would speak the chemist; and Nature's superabundance,</span
+ ><br>
+ Her vast infinitude of waste v&#257;riety untold,
+ <span class="linenum">200</span><br>
+ As<sup>v</sup>her immense extent and inconceivable object,<br>
+ Squandering activities throughout &#275;ternity, dwarfeth<br>
+ Man's little aim and hour, his doubtful fancy: what are we?<br>
+ Our petty selfseekings, our speedily passing affections?<br>
+ Life having existed so extravagantly before us;<br>
+ Earth bearing so slight a regard or care for us; and all<br>
+ After us unconcern'd to remain, strange, beautiful as now.<br>
+ May not an idle echo<sup>v</sup>of an antique p&#333;etry haunt me,<br>
+ 'Friendship is all feigning, yea<sup>v</sup>all loving is folly only'?<br>
+ &mdash;Yet doth not very mention of antique p&#333;etry and love
+ <span class="linenum">210</span><br>
+ Quickly recall to better motions my dispirited faith?<br>
+ And I see man's discontent as witness asserting<br>
+ His moral id&#275;al, that, born of Nature, is heir to<br>
+ Her children's titles, which nought may cancel or impugn;<br>
+ Not wer' of all her works man least, but ranking among them<br>
+ Highly or ev'n as best, he wrongs himself to imagine<br>
+ His soul foe to her aim, or from<sup>v</sup>her sanction an outlaw.<a
+ id="page_418"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{418}</span><br>
+ Nay, but just as man should appear more fully accordant<br>
+ With things not himself, would they rank with<sup>v</sup>him as equals:<br>
+ Judging other creatures he sets them wholly beneath him;<br>
+ His disqu&#299;et among manifold and alien objects
+ <span class="linenum">221</span><br>
+ B&#275;ing sure evidence, the effect of an understanding,<br>
+ And perception allow'd by Nature solely to himself.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Highly then is to be prais'd the resourceful wisdom of our time,</span
+ ><br>
+ That spunged out the written science and th&#275;ories of life,<br>
+ And, laying foundation of its knowledge in physical law,<br>
+ Gave it pr&#275;eminence o'er all enquiry, erecting<br>
+ Superstructive of all, bringing ev'ry research to the object,<br>
+ Boldly a new sc&#299;ence of MAN, from dreamy scholastic<br>
+ Imprisoning set free, and inveterate divination,
+ <span class="linenum">230</span><br>
+ Into the light of truth, to the touch of history and fact.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Since 'the proper study of mankind is man',&mdash;nor aforetime</span
+ ><br>
+ Was the proverb esteem'd as a truism less than it is now,&mdash;<br>
+ 'Tis strange that the method lay out of sight unaccomplisht,<br>
+ And that we, so late to arrive, should first set a value<br>
+ On the delusive efforts of human babyhood; and so<br>
+ Witnessing impatiently the rear of their disappearance,<br>
+ Upgathering the relics and vestiges of primitive man,<br>
+ Should ratify<sup>v</sup>instinct for sc&#299;ence, look to the
+ darkness<br>
+ For light, find a knowledge where 'twas most groping or unknown:
+ <span class="linenum">240</span><br>
+ While civilization's advances mutely regarding<br>
+ Talk we of old scapegoats, discuss bloodrites, immolations,<br>
+ Worship of ancestors; explain complexities involved<br>
+ Of tribal marriages, derivation of early religions,<br>
+ Priestly taboos, totems, archaic mysteries of trees,<br>
+ All the devils and dreams abhorr'd of barbarous ages.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And 'tis a far escape from wires, wheels and penny papers</span
+ ><br>
+ And the worried congestion of our Victorian era,<a
+ id="page_419"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{419}</span><br>
+ Whose many inventions of world-wide luxury have changed<br>
+ Life's very face:&mdash;but enough w&#275; hear of progress, enough have
+ <span class="linenum">250</span><br>
+ Our conscious sc&#299;ence and comforts trumpeted; altho'<br>
+ Hardly can I, who so many years eagerly frequented<br>
+ Bartholomew's fountain, not speak of things to awaken<br>
+ Kind old <span class="smcap">Hippocrates</span>, howe'er h&#275;;
+ slumbereth, entomb'd<br>
+ 'Neath the shatter'd winejars and r&#363;ined factories of Cos,<br>
+ Or where h&#275; wander'd in Thessalian Larissa:<br>
+ For when his doctrine, which Rome had wisely adopted,<br>
+ Sank lost with the treasures of<sup>v</sup>her deep-foundering empire,<br>
+ No<sup>v</sup>art or sc&#299;ence grew so contemptible, order'd
+ <span class="linenum">259</span><br>
+ So by mere folly, windy caprice, superstition and chance,<br>
+ As boastful <span class="smcap">Medicine</span>, with humours fit for a
+ madhouse,<br>
+ Save when some Sydenham, like Samson among the Philistines,<br>
+ Strode bond-bursting along with a smile of genial instinct.<br>
+ Nor when here and there some ray, in darkness arising,<br>
+ Hopefully seem'd to herald the coming dawn, (as when a Laennec<br>
+ Or Jenner invented his meed of worthy remembrance,)<br>
+ Did one mind foresee, one seer foretell the appearance<br>
+ Of that unexpected daylight that arose upon our time.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Who dream'd that living air poison'd our
+ <span class="smcap">SURGERY</span>, coating</span
+ ><br>
+ All our sheeny weapons with germs of an invisible death,
+ <span class="linenum">270</span><br>
+ Till he saw the sterile steel work with immunity, and save<br>
+ Quickly as its warring scimitars of victory had slain?<br>
+ Saw what school-tradition for nature's kind method admir'd,<br>
+ &mdash;In those lifedraining slow cures and bedridden agues,&mdash;<br>
+ Forgotten, or condemn'd as want of care in a surgeon?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Tho' <span class="smcap">Medicine</span> makes not so plain an appeal
+ to the vulgar,</span
+ ><br>
+ Yet she lags not a whit: her pregnant th&#275;ory touches<br>
+ Deeper discoveries,<sup>v</sup>her more complete revolution<br>
+ Gives promise of wider benefits in larger abundance.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Where she nam'd the disease she now separates the bacillus;&nbsp;
+ &nbsp; 280<a id="page_420"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{420}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Sets the atoms of offence, those blind and sickly bloodeaters,<br>
+ 'Neath lens and daylight, forcing their foul propagations,<br>
+ Which had ever prosper'd in dark impunity unguest,<br>
+ Now to behave in sight, deliver their poisonous extract<br>
+ And their strange self-brew'd, self-slaying juice to be handled,<br>
+ Experimented upon, set aside and stor'd to oppose them.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >So novel and obscure a research, such hard revelations</span
+ ><br>
+ Of Nature's cabinet,&mdash;tho' with fact amply accordant,<br>
+ And by hypothesis much dark difficulty resolving,<br>
+ Are not quickly receiv'd nor approv'd, and sensitive idlers,<br>
+ Venturing in the profound terrible penetralia of life,
+ <span class="linenum">291</span><br>
+ Are shock'd by<sup>v</sup>a method that shuns not contamination<br>
+ With cr&#363;el Nature's most secret processes unmaskt.<br>
+ And yet in all mankind's disappointed history, now first<br>
+ Have<sup>v</sup>his scouts push'd surely within<sup>v</sup>his foul
+ enemies' lines,<br>
+ And his sharpshooters descried their insidious foe,<br>
+ Those swarming parasites, that barely within the detection<br>
+ Of manifold search-light, have bred, swimming unsuspected<br>
+ Thro' man's brain and limbs, slaying with loathly pollution<br>
+ His beauty's children,<sup>v</sup>his sweet sc&#299;ons of affection,
+ <span class="linenum">300</span><br>
+ In fev'rous torment and tears, his home desolating<br>
+ Of their fair innocence, breaking<sup>v</sup>his proud passionate
+ heart,<br>
+ And his kindly belief in <span class="smcap">God's</span> good justice
+ arraigning.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >With what wildly directed attack, what an armory illjudged,</span
+ ><br>
+ Has he, (alas, poor man,) with what cumbrous machination<br>
+ Sought to defend himself from their Lilliputian onslaught;<br>
+ Aye discharging around him, in obscure night, at a venture,<br>
+ Ev'ry missile which<sup>v</sup>his despair confus'dly imagin'd;<br>
+ His simples, compounds, specifics, chemical therapeutics,<br>
+ Juice of plants, whatever was nam'd in lordly Salerno's
+ <span class="linenum">310</span><br>
+ Herbaries and gardens, vipers, snails, all animal filth,<br>
+ Incredible quackeries, the pretentious jugglery of knaves,<br>
+ Green electricities, saints' bones and priestly anointings.<br>
+ Fools! that oppose his one sc&#299;entific intelligent hope!<br>
+ Grant us an hundred years, and man shall hold in abeyance<br>
+ These foul distempers, and with this world's benefactors<a
+ id="page_421"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{421}</span><br>
+ Shall <span class="smcap">Pasteur</span> obtain the reward of saintly
+ devotion,<br>
+ His crown h&#275;roic, who fought not destiny in vain.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Tis success that attracts: 'twas therefore so many workers</span
+ ><br>
+ Ran pellmell to the schools of Nature in our generation,
+ <span class="linenum">320</span><br>
+ While other employments have lack'd their genius and pined.<br>
+ Our fathers' likings w&#275; thought semibarbarous, our art<br>
+ Self-consciously sickens in qualms of an æsthetic aura,<br>
+ Noisily in the shallows splashing and disporting uninspir'd.<br>
+ Our famed vulgarities whether in speech, taste or amusement,<br>
+ Are not amended: Is it foolish, hoping for a rescue,<br>
+ First to appeal to the strong, for health to the healthy amongst us?<br>
+ &mdash;For the Sophists' doctrine that <span class="smcap">Grace</span> is
+ dying of old age<br>
+ I hold in derision, their inkpot th&#275;ories of man,<br>
+ Of his cradle of art, his deathbed of algebra;&mdash;and see
+ <span class="linenum">330</span><br>
+ How Sc&#299;ence has wrought, since we went idling at Eton,<br>
+ One thing above surmise:&mdash;An' if I may dare to remind you<br>
+ How Vergil praises your lov'd Lucretius, (of whom<br>
+ My matter and metre<sup>v</sup>have set you thinking, as I fear,)<br>
+ In that glory which ends 'et inexorabile fatum<br>
+ Subjecit pedibus strepitumque Acherontis avari':<br>
+ Sounded not most empty to us such boast of a pagan,<br>
+ Strangely to us tutor'd to believe, with faith mediæval,<br>
+ Torture everlasting to be justly the portion of all souls,<br>
+ Nor but by the elects' secret pr&#275;destiny escaped?
+ <span class="linenum">340</span><br>
+ If you think to reply,&mdash;making this question in answer,&mdash;<br>
+ 'Did the belief disturb for a moment our pleasure in life?'<br>
+ No.&mdash;And men gather in harvest on slopes of an active<br>
+ Volcano: natheless the terror's &#275;normity was there;<br>
+ Now 'tis away: Sc&#299;ence has pierced man's cloudy common-sense,<br>
+ Dow'rd his homely vision with more expansive an embrace,<br>
+ And the rotten foundation of old superstition exposed.<br>
+ That trouble of Pascal, those vain paradoxes of Austin,<br>
+ Those Semitic parables of Paul, those tomes of Aquinas,<a
+ id="page_422"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{422}</span><br>
+ All are thrown to the limbo of antediluvian idols,
+ <span class="linenum">350</span><br>
+ Only because we learn mankind's true history, and know<br>
+ That not at all from a high perfection sinfully man fell,<br>
+ But from baseness arose: We have with sympathy enter'd<br>
+ Those dark caves, his joyless abodes, where with ravening brutes,<br>
+ Bear or filthy hyena, he once disputed a shelter:&mdash;<br>
+ That was his Paradise, his garden of Eden,&mdash;abandon'd<br>
+ Ages since to the drift and drip, the cementing accretions<br>
+ Whence we now separate his bones buried in the stalagma,<br>
+ His household makeshifts, his hunting tools, his adornments,<br>
+ From the scatter'd skeletons of a lost prehistoric order,
+ <span class="linenum">360</span><br>
+ Its mammoth and woolly rhinoceros, the machairodos, and beasts<br>
+ Whose unnamed pastures the immense Atlantic inundates.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In what corner of earth lie not dispersed the familiar</span
+ ><br>
+ Flinty relics of his old primitive stone-cutlery? what child<br>
+ Kens not now the design, the adapted structure of each one<br>
+ Of those hand-labor'd chert-flakes, whether axe, chisel, or knife,<br>
+ Spearhead, barb of arrow, rough plane or rudely serrate saw?<br>
+ Stones that in our grandsires' time told no sermon, (awaiting<br>
+ Indestructible, unnumber'd, on chary attention,)<br>
+ From their pr&#275;adamite pulpits now cry Revelation.
+ <span class="linenum">370</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Not to a Greek his chanted epic had mortal allurement,</span
+ ><br>
+ Conjuring old-world fancies of Ilium and of Olympus,<br>
+ As this story to me, this tale primæval of unsung,<br>
+ Unwritten, ancestral fate and adversity, this siege<br>
+ Of courage and happiness protracted so many thousand<br>
+ Thousand years in a slow persistent victory of brain<br>
+ And right hand o'er all the venom'd stings, sharpnesses of fang<br>
+ And dread fury whate'er Nature, tirelessly devising,<br>
+ Could develop with tooth, claw, tusk, or horn to oppose them.<br>
+ See now Herakles, who strangled snakes when an infant
+ <span class="linenum">380</span><br>
+ In<sup>v</sup>his cradle alone; and nought but those petty stonechips<a
+ id="page_423"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{423}</span><br>
+ For the battle: 'twas wonder above wonders his achievement:<br>
+ Yea, and since he thought as a child 'twas natural in<sup>v</sup>him,<br>
+ Meeting in existence with purposes antagonistic,<br>
+ Circumstances oppos'd to desire, vast activities, which<br>
+ Thwarted effort, to assume All-might as spiteful against him.<br>
+ Nay, as an artist born, impell'd to devise a religion,&mdash;<br>
+ So to relate himself id&#275;ally with the immortal,&mdash;<br>
+ This quarrel of reason with what displeas'd his affections<br>
+ Was not amiss. The desire and love of beauty possess man:<br>
+ Art is of all that beauty the best outwardly presented;
+ <span class="linenum">391</span><br>
+ Truth to the soul is merely the best that mind can imagine.<br>
+ No lover &#275;ternal will hold to an older opinion<br>
+ If but lovelier ideas, with Nature agr&#275;eing,<br>
+ Are to his understanding offer'd.... But enough: 'tis an unsolv'd<br>
+ Mystery.&mdash;Yet man dreams to flatter<sup>v</sup>his d&#275;ity
+ saying<br>
+ 'Beautiful is Nature!' rather 'tis various, endless,<br>
+ And her efforts fertile in error tho' grand in attainment.<br>
+ If wé, while praising<sup>v</sup>her scheme and infinite order,<br>
+ Are compell'd to select, our choice condemns the remainder;<br>
+ Nor can wisdom honour those loathly polluting offences,
+ <span class="linenum">401</span><br>
+ Whose very names to the Muse are either accursèd or unknown.<br>
+ Nay, if such foul things thou deemest worthy, the fault was<br>
+ Making us, O Nature, thy judge and tearful accuser.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Turn our thought for awhile to the symphonies of Beethoven,</span
+ ><br>
+ Or the rever'd preludes of mighty Sebastian; Is there<br>
+ One work of Nature's contrivance beautiful as these?<br>
+ Judg'd by beauty alone man wins, as sensuous artist;<br>
+ And for other qualities, the spirit's differentia, Nature<br>
+ Scarce observes them at all: that keen unfaltering insight,
+ <span class="linenum">410</span><br>
+ Whereby<sup>v</sup>earthly desire's roaming wildernesses are changed<br>
+ Into a garden a-bloom; its wandering impossible ways<br>
+ Into pillar'd avenues, alleys and fair-flow'ry terrac'd walks,<br>
+ (Where <span class="smcap">God</span> talks with man, as once 'twas
+ fancied of Eden;)<br>
+ That transcendental supreme interpreting of sense,<a
+ id="page_424"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{424}</span><br>
+ Rendering intelligence passionate with mystery, linking<br>
+ Sympathy with grandeur, the reserve of dignity with play;<br>
+ Those soul-formalities, the balance held 'twixt the den&#299;al<br>
+ And the betrayal of intention, whose masteries invite,<br>
+ Entice, welcome ever, meet, and with kindliness embrace;
+ <span class="linenum">420</span><br>
+ Those guarded floodgates of boundless, lovely resources,<br>
+ Whence nothing ill issues, no distraction nor abortion<br>
+ Hindering enjoyment, but in easy security flow forth<br>
+ Ecstasies of fitness, raptures and harmonies of heav'n.<br>
+ Surely before such work of man, so kindly attemper'd,<br>
+ Nature must be asham'd, had sh&#275; not this ready answer,<br>
+ 'Fool, and who made thee?'&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em">I shall not seem a deserter,</span><br>
+ Where in an idle essay my verse to a fancy abandon'd<br>
+ Praiseth others: rather while art and beauty delight us,<br>
+ While hope, faith and love are warm and lively in our hearts,<br>
+ Sweet our earthly desire and dear our human affection,
+ <span class="linenum">431</span><br>
+ We may, joyfully despising the pedantries of old age,<br>
+ Hold to the time, nor lose the delight of mortal attainment;<br>
+ Keenly rejoicing in all that wisdom approves, nor allowing<br>
+ Ourselves at the challenge of younger craft to be outsailed;<br>
+ But trimming our old canvas in all change of weather and wind,<br>
+ Freely without fear urge o'erseas our good vessel onward,<br>
+ Piloting into the far, unmapp'd futurity.&mdash;Farewell.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_425"></a><span class="pagenumb">{425}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem10">
+ <span style="margin-left: 16%">2</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">EPISTLE II</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14%"><small>TO</small> L. M.</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">TO A SOCIALIST IN LONDON</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ No<sup>v</sup>ethical system, no contemplation or action,<br>
+ No reason'd attitude of mind nor principle of faith,<br>
+ Neither S&#333;cratical wisdom nor saintly devotion,<br>
+ Buildeth a fortress against heart-ache &amp; compassionate grief,<br>
+ Nor responds to desire, nor with true mastery yieldeth<br>
+ Easy repose to the mind; And since all our study endeth<br>
+ Emptily in full doubt,&mdash;fathoming the divine intention<br>
+ In this one thing alone, that, hows&#333;e'er it affect us,<br>
+ 'Twas never intended for mortal fancy to compass,&mdash;<br>
+ I<sup>v</sup>have concluded that from first purposes unknown
+ <span class="linenum">10</span><br>
+ None should seek to deduce id&#275;al laws to be liv'd by;<br>
+ And, loving art, am true to the Muse, &amp; p&#333;etry extol:<br>
+ Therefore 'twas that afore I prais'd &amp; heartily enjoy'd<br>
+ Your human verses, <span class="smcap">Fraser</span>, when nobody bought
+ them,<br>
+ More than again I praise those serious exhortations,<br>
+ Wherewith you wu'd amend the degraded people about you.<br>
+ Nay tho' like a prophet with heav'n-sent dignity inspir'd,<br>
+ With ready convincement and stern example assuring,<br>
+ Mightily you proclaim your love-messag' in the assembly,<br>
+ Exhibiting panac&#275;as of ancient ill, propagating
+ <span class="linenum">20</span><br>
+ Out of a Scotch cerebrum the reforming zeal of a
+ <span class="smcap">Tolstoi</span>,<br>
+ I listen all unmov'd, as a sceptic among the believers.<br>
+ Yet what a charm has an earnest soul, whom sympathy uncheckt<br>
+ For human suffering has strengthen'd and dedicated<br>
+ Bravely to serve his kind, to renounce his natural instinct,<br>
+ And liv' apart, indulging in acts of mercy, delighted<br>
+ In wisdom's rock-hewn citadel<sup>v</sup>her law to illustrate,<br>
+ Embodying the pattern of self-integrity complete.<a
+ id="page_426"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{426}</span><br>
+ Yea, what a charm pervades discourse, that loftily reason'd<br>
+ Points the narrow pathway throu' this world's ugly disorder;<br>
+ How very fair will appear any gate of cleanliness, open
+ <span class="linenum">30</span><br>
+ From the city's tumult, its rank impurity, its dread<br>
+ Vulgarity's triumph: Nay sure &amp; bounteous as Truth,<br>
+ Beautiful in confusion appeareth Simplicity's way.<br>
+ &mdash;'Simple it is, (yóu say) God is good,&mdash;Nature is
+ ample,&mdash;<br>
+ 'Earth yields plenty for all,&mdash;and all might share in abundance,<br>
+ 'Were profit and labour but fairly divided among them.<br>
+ 'Scarce any laws are needed in our Utopia but these,&mdash;<br>
+ 'No fruitless labour to provide mere useless adornment,<br>
+ 'No money encouraging man's sloth &amp; slavery, no rents
+ <span class="linenum">40</span><br>
+ 'Of titeld landlords, no pamper'd luxury breeding<br>
+ 'Fleshly disease, worst fiend &amp; foe of mind body and soul;<br>
+ 'All should work, and only produce life's only requirements:<br>
+ 'So with days all halfholidays, toil healthfully enjoy'd,<br>
+ 'Each might, throu' leisure hours of amusement p&#299;ety and peace,<br>
+ 'In the domestic joys &amp; holy community partake.&mdash;'<br>
+ &mdash;This wer' a downleveling, my friend; yo&#363; need, to assure
+ me,<br>
+ Fix a limit to the folk; else, as their number is increas't,<br>
+ Their happiness may dwindle away, &amp; what was at outset<br>
+ Goal &amp; prize, the provoker of all your wise revolution,
+ <span class="linenum">50</span><br>
+ Will by subdivision disappear in course of atainment.<br>
+ When goods are<sup>v</sup>increas'd, mouths are<sup>v</sup>increas'd to
+ devour them:<br>
+ If the famine be reliev'd this season in India, next dearth<br>
+ Will be a worse. Yo&#363; know how one day Herschel acosted<br>
+ Súch a philanthropical Save-all, who claimed to acomplish<br>
+ Some greatest happiness for a greatest number; 'Attend, man;<br>
+ (Saíd-he) Resólve me anon one query: Suppose Adam and Eve<br>
+ First cr&#275;ated on Earth but twice ten centuries ere Christ,<a
+ id="page_427"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{427}</span><br>
+ That they gat four children in all, who liv'd, getting also<br>
+ Four to the pair: Had thus mankind ever equaly increast
+ <span class="linenum">60</span><br>
+ By moderate families but doubling in each generation,<br>
+ How many souls would now be alive to revise the conundrum<br>
+ Of greatest happiness? No<sup>v</sup>answer? Well, 'tis a long sum.<br>
+ Say if on earth such a crowd could stand. No? Pray then imágine<br>
+ All earth's land as a plain, &amp; all this company thereon,<br>
+ Piled together like peas in a pintpot: How many layers?<br>
+ No guess? Then how high the column? How far wu'd it extend<br>
+ Into the sky?&mdash;To the moon?&mdash;Further&mdash;To the sun?&mdash;To
+ the sun! Pshaw!<br>
+ That column of happy men would reach up, as I fathom its height,<br>
+ Million d&#299;ameters of Neptune's infinit' orbit.'
+ <span class="linenum">70</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >My<sup>v</sup>objection annoys your kindly philanthropy?&mdash;'It
+ proves</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Too much.'&mdash;Yes nature shows in that scrutiny bankrupt;<br>
+ Mere matter in deposit gives out. Yóu wish to determine<br>
+ No limit of future polities: your actual object<br>
+ Is to relieve suffering, to repeal injustice acruing<br>
+ From monied inheritance, which makes a nonentity potent<br>
+ For public mischief, who might, if usefully harness'd<br>
+ In common employment, have assisted social order.<br>
+ Why should Law give fifty talents where Nature alloys one?<br>
+ For money is the talent of supreme empery: Gold, Gold
+ <span class="linenum">80</span><br>
+ Envieth all, getteth all, absorbeth, mastereth all things:<br>
+ It pusheth out &amp; thrusteth away pitilessly the weak ones,<br>
+ Those ill-fated, opprest, unfortun'd needy: Beneath them<br>
+ Yawns the abyss. Down down they fall, as a stream on a mountain,<br>
+ With ceaseless cataract. None hearkeneth; only the silent<br>
+ Grave, that darkly devours their cry of desperate anguish.<br>
+ Spáre me the story; believe more feel this grief than avow it:<a
+ id="page_428"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{428}</span><br>
+ 'Tis put aside from thought with death's incurable evil;<br>
+ Left for them, that assume mankind as cause, to lament it.<br>
+ And what if all Nature ratify this merciless outrage?
+ <span class="linenum">90</span><br>
+ If her wonder of arch-wonders, her fair animal life,<br>
+ Her generate creatures, her motion'd warmblooded offspring,<br>
+ Haunters of the forest &amp; royal country, her antler'd<br>
+ Mild-gazers, that keep silvan sabbath idly without end;<br>
+ Her herded galopers, sleeksided stately careerers<br>
+ Of trembling nostril; her coy unapproachable estrays,<br>
+ Stealthy treaders, climbers; her leapers furry, lissom-limb'd;<br>
+ Her timorous burrowers, and grangers thrifty, the sandy<br>
+ Playmates of the warren; her clumsy-footed, shaggy roamers;<br>
+ Her soarers, the feather'd fast-fliers, loftily floating
+ <span class="linenum">100</span><br>
+ Sky-sailers, exiles of high solitudinous eyries;<br>
+ Her perching carolers, twitterers, &amp; sweetly singing birds;<br>
+ All ocean's finny clans, mute-mouthers, watery breathers,<br>
+ Furtive arrow-darters, and fan-tail'd easy balancers,<br>
+ Silvery-scale, gilt-head, thorn-back, frill'd harlequinading<br>
+ Globe and slimy ribbon: Shell-builders of many-chamber'd<br>
+ Pearly dwellings, soft shapes mosslike or starry, adorning<br>
+ With rich floral fancy the gay rock-garden of ebb-tide:<br>
+ All life, from the massive-bulkt, ivory-tusht, elephantine<br>
+ Cent&#275;narian, acknowledging with crouching obeisance
+ <span class="linenum">110</span><br>
+ Man's will, ev'n to the least petty whiffling ephemeral insect,<br>
+ Which in a hot sunbeam engend'ring, when summer is high,<br>
+ Vaunteth an hour his speck of tinsely gaudiness and dies:<br>
+ Ah! what if all &amp; each of Nature's favorite offspring,<br>
+ 'Mong many distinctions, have this portentous agreement,<br>
+ <span class="smcap">Mouth</span>, <span class="smcap">Stomach</span>,
+ <span class="smcap">Intestine</span>? Question that brute apparatus,<br>
+ So manifoldly devis'd, set alert with furious instinct:<br>
+ What doth it interpret but this, that
+ <span class="smcap">Life Liveth on Life</span>?<br>
+ That the select creatures, who<sup>v</sup>inherit earth's domination,<br>
+ Whose happy existence is Nature's intelligent smile,
+ <span class="linenum">120</span><br>
+ Are bloody survivors of a mortal combat, a-tweenwhiles<br>
+ Chanting a brief pæan for victory on the battlefield?<a
+ id="page_429"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{429}</span><br>
+ Since that of all their kinds most owe their prosperous estate<br>
+ Unto the art, whereby they more successfully destroy'd<br>
+ Their weaker brethren, more insatiably devour'd them;<br>
+ And all fine qualities, their forms pictorial, admired,<br>
+ Their symmetries, their grace, &amp; beauty, the loveliness of them,<br>
+ Were by Murder evolv'd, to 'scape from it or to effect it.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Surely again (yo&#363; say) too much is proven, it argues</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Mere horror &amp; despair; unless persuasion avail us
+ <span class="linenum">130</span><br>
+ 'That the moral virtues are man's id&#275;a, awaken'd<br>
+ 'By the spirit's motions; &amp; therefore not to be conceiv'd<br>
+ 'In Nature's outward &amp; mainly material aspect,<br>
+ 'As that is understood. You, since you hold that opinion,<br>
+ 'Run your own ship aground invoking Nature against me.'&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then withdraw the appeal, my friend, to her active al&#299;ance;</span
+ ><br>
+ B&#275; pessimist Nature with a pitchfork manfully expell'd,<br>
+ Not to return. Yet <i>soul in hand</i>, with brutal alegiance,<br>
+ Hunters &amp; warriors <i>do not forget the comandment</i>.<br>
+ See how lively the old animal continueth in them:
+ <span class="linenum">140</span><br>
+ Of what trifling account they hold life, yet what a practis'd<br>
+ Art pursue to preserve it: if I should rightly define sport<br>
+ <span class="smcap">Slaughter with danger</span>, what were more serious
+ and brave?<br>
+ Their love of air, of strength, of wildness, afford us an inkling<br>
+ Of the delight of beasts, with whom they might innocently<br>
+ Boast a fellow-feeling, summoning them forth to the combat.<br>
+ Nay dream not so quickly to see her ladyship expell'd.<br>
+ Those prowling L&#299;ons of stony Kabylia, whose roar<br>
+ Frights from sleep the huddled herdsmen, soon as the sudden night<br>
+ Falls on Mount Atlas, those grave uxorious outlaws
+ <span class="linenum">150</span><br>
+ Wandering in the Somali desert or waste Kalahari,<br>
+ Sound a challenge that amid summer-idling London is answer'd<br>
+ Haply in Old Bond Street, where some fashionably attired youth<br>
+ Daintily stands poising the weapon foredoom'd to appay them:<a
+ id="page_430"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{430}</span><br>
+ Or<sup>v</sup>he mentally sighteth a tiger of India, that low<br>
+ Crouches among the river jungles, or hunts desolating<br>
+ Grassy Tarâi, 'neath lofty Himálya, or far southward<br>
+ Outacamund, Mysore's residency, the Nilgherry mountains<br>
+ By Malabar; yea, and ere-long shall sight him in earnest,<br>
+ Stalked as a deer, surprised where h&#275; lay slumbering at noon<br>
+ Under a rock full-gorged, or deep in reedy covert hid
+ <span class="linenum">160</span><br>
+ By the trackers disturbed: Two grand eyes shall for a moment<br>
+ Glare upon either side the muzzle. Woe then to the hunter,<br>
+ If h&#275; blench! That fury beclouded in invisible speed<br>
+ What marksman could arrest? what mortal abide his arrachement?<br>
+ Standing above the immense carcase h&#275; gratefully praiseth<br>
+ God for a man-eater so fine, so worthy the slaying.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >See him again; 'tis war: one hill-rock strongly defended</span
+ ><br>
+ Checks advance, to be stormed at cost of half the assailants.<br>
+ Gaily away they go, Highlanders, English, or Irish,
+ <span class="linenum">170</span><br>
+ Or swart Ghoorkas against the leaden hail, climbing, ascending,<br>
+ Lost in a smoke, scattering, creeping, here there, ever upwards:<br>
+ Till some change cometh o'er confusion. Who winneth? ah! see!<br>
+ Ours have arrived, and he who led their bravery is there.<br>
+ None that heard will ever forget that far-echoing cheer:<br>
+ Such heard Nelson, above the crashings &amp; thundering of guns:<br>
+ At Marathon 'twas heard and all time's story remembers.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >See him again, when at home visiting<sup>v</sup>his episcopal
+ uncle:</span
+ ><br>
+ That good priest contrast with this good captain, assay them:<br>
+ Find a common-measure equating their rival emotions;
+ <span class="linenum">180</span><br>
+ Evaporate the rubbish, the degrading pestiferous fuss<br>
+ Of stuck-up importance, the palatial coterie, weigh out<br>
+ Then the solids: whose life would claim the award of an umpire<br>
+ For greatest happiness? High-priest or soldier? Adjudge it<a
+ id="page_431"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{431}</span><br>
+ By their books: Let a child give sentence. Ev'n as a magnet<br>
+ Turns and points to the north, so children's obstinate insight<br>
+ Flies to the tale of war, hairbreadth scapes, daring achievements,<br>
+ Discoveries, conquests, the romance of history: these things<br>
+ Win them away from play to devour with greedy attention<br>
+ Till they long to be men; while all that clerkly palaver
+ <span class="linenum">190</span><br>
+ Tastes like wormwood.&mdash;'Avast! (I hear yo&#363; calling) Avast
+ there!<br>
+ I forbid the appeal.'&mdash;Well, style my humour atrocious;<br>
+ Granted a child cannot understand; yet see what a huge growth<br>
+ Stands to be extermin'd, ere you can set dibble in ground.<br>
+ Nay, more yet; that mighty forest, whose wildness offends you,<br>
+ And silences appal, where earth-life self-suffocating<br>
+ Seethes, lavish as sun-life in a red star's fi'ry corona;<br>
+ That waste magnificence, and vain fecundity, breeding<br>
+ G&#299;ants &amp; parasites embrac'd in flowery tangle,<br>
+ Interwoven alive and dead, where one tyrannous tree
+ <span class="linenum">200</span><br>
+ Blights desolating around it a swamp of rank vegetation;<br>
+ Where Reason yet dreams unawakt, &amp; throu' the solemn day<br>
+ Only the monkey chatters, &amp; discordant the parrot screams:<br>
+ All this is in man's heart with dateless sympathy worshipt,<br>
+ With filial reverence, &amp; awful p&#299;eties involv'd;<br>
+ While that other picture, your formal fancy, the garden<br>
+ Of your stingy promise, must that not quench his imágin'd<br>
+ Id&#275;als of beauty, his angel hope of attainment?<br>
+ What to him are the level'd borders, the symmetric allotments,<br>
+ Where nothing exceedeth, nothing encroacheth, nor assaileth;<br>
+ Where Reason now drudgeth a sad monomaniac, all day
+ <span class="linenum">211</span><br>
+ Watering &amp; weeding, digging &amp; diligently manuring<br>
+ Her label'd families, starch-makers, nitrogen-extract-<br>
+ Purveyors, classified potherbs &amp; empty pretenders<br>
+ Of medical virtues; nay ev'n and <i>their</i> little impulse<a
+ id="page_432"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{432}</span><br>
+ T'ward liberal fruiting disallow'd by stern regulation;<br>
+ So many beans to a pod, with so many pods to a beanstalk;<br>
+ Prun'd, pincht, economiz'd miserly til' all is abortion,<br>
+ Save in such specimens as, but for an extravagant care,<br>
+ Had miserably perish'd. What madness works to delude you,
+ <span class="linenum">220</span><br>
+ B&#275;ing a man, that yo&#363; see not mankind's predilection<br>
+ Is for Magnificence, Force, Freedom, Bounty; his inborn<br>
+ Love for Beauty, his aim to possess, his pride to devise it:<br>
+ And from everlasting his heart is fixt with affections<br>
+ Pr&#275;engag'd to a few sovranly determinate objects,<br>
+ Toys of an &#275;ternal distraction. Beautiful is
+ <span class="smcap">Gold</span>,<br>
+ Clear as a trumpet-call, stirring where'er it appeareth<br>
+ All high pow'rs to battle; with mágisterial ardour<br>
+ Glowing among the metals, elemental drops of a fire-god's<br>
+ Life-blood of old outpour'd in Ch&#257;os: Mágical also
+ <span class="linenum">230</span><br>
+ E<small>V'RY</small> recondite j<span class="ov">ew</span>el of Earth,
+ with their seraphim-names,<br>
+ R<small>UBY</small>, J<small>ACYNTH</small>, E<small>MERALD</small>,
+ A<small>METHYST</small>, S<small>APPHIRE</small>; amaranthine<br>
+
+ Starry essences, elect emblems of purity, heirlooms<br>
+ Of deathless glories, most like to divine imanences.<br>
+ Then that heart-gladdening highpriz'd ambrosia, blending<br>
+ Their dissolute purples &amp; golds with sparkling aroma,<br>
+ That ruddy juice exprest from favour'd vintages, infus'd<br>
+ With cosmic laughter, when upon some sécular epact<br>
+ Blandly the sun's old heart is stirr'd to a septennial smile,<br>
+ Causing strangefortun'd comfort to melancholy mortals:
+ <span class="linenum">240</span><br>
+ Friend to the flésh, if mind be fatigued; rallying to the sound mind,<br>
+ When succour is needed 'gainst fainting weariness of flesh;<br>
+ Shall Wine not be belov'd? Or now let Aristotle answer<br>
+ What goods are,&mdash;Time leaves the scholar's inventory
+ unchang'd;&mdash;<br>
+ All Virtues &amp; Pow'rs, Honour &amp; Pleasure, all that in our life<br>
+ Makes us self-sufficient, Friends, Riches, Comeliness, and Strength;<a
+ id="page_433"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{433}</span><br>
+ They that<sup>v</sup>have these things in plenty desire to retain them,<br>
+ And win more; while they that lack are pleas'd to desire them.<br>
+ Nay and since possession will leave the desire unappeasèd,<br>
+ Save in mere appetites that vary with our physical state,
+ <span class="linenum">250</span><br>
+ Surely delight in goods is an ecstasy rather attendant<br>
+ On their mental image, than on experienc'd operation.<br>
+ So the shepherd envies the monarch, the monarch the shepherd's
+ lot,&mdash;<br>
+ 'O what a life were this, How sweet, how lovely!' the king cries.<br>
+ Whence, I say, as a man feels brave who reads of
+ <span class="smcap">Achilles</span>;<br>
+ One looking on riches may learn some kindred elation,<br>
+ And whatever notions of fortune, luxury, comfort,<br>
+ Genius or virtue, are shown to him, only as aspects<br>
+ Of possible b&#275;ing, 'tis so much gain to desire them;<br>
+ Learning Magnificence in mean obscurity, tasting
+ <span class="linenum">260</span><br>
+ Something of all those goods which Fate outwardly denies him.<br>
+ But say none shall again be king or prosperous or great,&mdash;<br>
+ Arguing 'all eminence is unequal, unequal is unjust',&mdash;<br>
+ Should that once come about, then alas for this merry England,<br>
+ Sunk in a grey monotone of drudgery, dreamily poring<br>
+ O'er her illumin'd page of history, faln to regretful<br>
+ Worship of ancestors, with nought now left to delight her,<br>
+ Nought to attain, save one nurst hope, one ambition only<br>
+ Red Revolution, a wild Reawakening, &amp; a Renaissance.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Impatiently enough yo&#363; hear me, longing to refute me,
+ <span class="linenum">270</span></span
+ ><br>
+ While I<sup>v</sup>in privileg'd pulpit my period expand.<br>
+ Who could allow such a list of strange miscellaneous items,<br>
+ So-call'd goods, Strength, Ríches, Honour, Gold, Genius, and Wine?<br>
+ Is not Wisdom above Rubies? more than Coral or Pearl?<br>
+ Yours is a scheme deep-laid on true distinctive asortment,<br>
+ Parting use or good from useless or evil asunder;<br>
+ Dismissing accessories, while half my heathenish invoice<a
+ id="page_434"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{434}</span><br>
+ Are Vanity's vanities. Well; truly, as old
+ <span class="smcap">Solomon</span> said,<br>
+ So they <i>be</i>: What is excepted? What scapes his araignment?<br>
+ Is't Pleasure or Wisdom? Nay ask <span class="smcap">Theologia</span>:
+ Good-works, <span class="linenum">280</span><br>
+ Saith-she, offend her nostril. If I distinguish, asserting,<br>
+ Say, that if I<sup>v</sup>enjoyed my neighbour's excessive income<br>
+ I would hire me a string-quartett not an automaton car,<br>
+ You blame equally both our tastes for luxury, indeed<br>
+ His shows more of a use. If man's propensity is vain,<br>
+ Vulgar, inane, unworthy; 'tis also vain to bewail it:<br>
+ Think you to change his skin? 'Twere scale by scale to regraft it<br>
+ With purer traditions; and who shall amend the amenders?<br>
+ Nay let bé the bubbles, till man grow more solid in mind,<br>
+ Condemn not the follies: My neighbour's foolery were worse,<br>
+ Sat he agape listening to Mozart, intently desiring
+ <span class="linenum">291</span><br>
+ All that time to be rattling alóng on a furious engine<br>
+ In caoutchouc carapace, with a trail of damnable oilstench.<br>
+ Yea, blame not the pleasures; they are not enough; pleasure only<br>
+ Makes this life liveable: nor scout that doctrine as unsound:<br>
+ Consider if mankind from puling birth to bitter death<br>
+ Knew nought but the sorrows, endured unrespited always<br>
+ Those agonizing assaults which no flesh wholly can escape;<br>
+ Were his hunger a pang like his starvation, alievement<br>
+ Thereof a worse torture, like that which full many die with;<br>
+ Did love burn his soul as fire his skin; did affections
+ <span class="linenum">300</span><br>
+ Rend his will, as Turks rend men with horses asunder;<br>
+ Were his labour a breathless effort; his slumber occasion<br>
+ For visiting Furies to repair his temple of anguish;<br>
+ Were thoughts all mockeries; slow intelligence a deception;<br>
+ His mind's far ventures, her voyages into the unseen<br>
+ But horror &amp; terrified nightmare; None then had ever heard<br>
+ Praise of a Cr&#275;ator, nor seen any D&#275;ity worshipped.<br>
+ 'Twas for heav'nly Pleasure that God did first fashion all thing,<a
+ id="page_435"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{435}</span><br>
+ Nor with other benefit would holy Religion attract us
+ <span class="linenum">310</span><br>
+ Picturing of Paradise. Consult our Lady's Evangel,<br>
+ Where Saint Luke,&mdash;colouring (was it unconsciously, suppose you?)<br>
+ Fact and fable alike,&mdash;contrasts a beggar with a rich man,<br>
+ And from holding a fool's happiness too greatly in esteem<br>
+ Makes pleasure &#275;ternal the balance of temporal evil,<br>
+ And the reverse; nor shrinks, ascribing thus to the next world<br>
+ Vaster inequalities, harsher perversity than this.<br>
+ <i>You</i> have a soul's paradise, its entry the loop of a needle,<br>
+ Come hither &amp; prithy tell me what I must do to be savèd<br>
+ I, that feeding on Id&#275;als in temperat' estate
+ <span class="linenum">320</span><br>
+ Seem so wealthy to poor Lazarus, so needy to Dives:<br>
+ What from my heav'n-bound schooner's dispensable outfit<br>
+ Has to be cast o'erboard? What see yo&#363; here that offends you?<br>
+ These myriad volumes, these tons of music:&mdash;allow them<br>
+ Or disallow? Fiddle and trichord?&mdash;Must all be relinquished?<br>
+ Such toys have not a place in your soc&#299;ety; you say<br>
+ Nobody shall make them, nor made may justly acquire them.<br>
+ Yet, should a plea be alleged for life's most gracious adornment,<br>
+ For contemplative art's last transcendental achievement,<br>
+ Grief's almighty solace, frolicking Mirth's Purification,
+ <span class="linenum">330</span><br>
+ For Man's unparagon'd High-p&#333;etess, inseparate Muse<br>
+ Companion, the belov'd most dearly among her sisters,<br>
+ Revivif&#299;er of age, fairest instructor of all grace,<br>
+ His peacemaker alert with varied sympathy, whose speech<br>
+ Not to arede and love is wholly to miss the celestial<br>
+ Consolatries, the divine interpreting of physical life,&mdash;<br>
+ Yo&#363; wince? make exception? allow things musical? admit<br>
+ So many faked viols, penny trumpets, and amateurish<br>
+ Performers? Nay, nay! stand firm, for concession is vain.<br>
+ Music is outmeasurably a barefaced luxury, her plea
+ <span class="linenum">340</span><br>
+ Will cover art, (&mdash;almost to atone art's vile imitations&mdash;);<a
+ id="page_436"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{436}</span><br>
+ My Japanese paintings, my fair blue Cheney, Hellenic<br>
+ Statues and Caroline silver, my beautiful Aldines,<br>
+ Prized more highly because so few, so fondly familiar,<br>
+ Need no tongue to defend them against rude hands, that assail them<br>
+ Only because their name is <span class="smcap">Rarity</span>; hands
+ insensate,<br>
+ Rending away pitilessly the fair embroideries of life,<br>
+ That close-clust'ring man, his comfort pared to the outskirts<br>
+ Of<sup>v</sup>his discomfort, may share in meanness unenvied<br>
+ But what if I<sup>v</sup>unveil the figure that closely beside you
+ <span class="linenum">350</span><br>
+ Half hides his Hell-charred skeleton with mysteries obscene,<br>
+ That foul one, that Moloch of all Utopias, ancient<br>
+ Poisoner &amp; destroyer-elect of innumerous unborn?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Know you the story of our hive-bees, the yellow honey-makers,</span
+ ><br>
+ Whose images from of old have haunted P&#333;etry, settling<br>
+ On the blossoms of man's dream-garden, as on the summer-flow'rs,<br>
+ Pictures of happy toil, sunny glances, gendering always<br>
+ Such sweet thoughts, as be by slumbrous music awaken'd?<br>
+ How all their outward happiness,&mdash;that fairy demeanour<br>
+ Of busy contentment, singing at their work,&mdash;is an inborn
+ <span class="linenum">360</span><br>
+ Empty habit, the relics of a time when considerate joy<br>
+ Truly possest their tiny bodies; when golden abundance<br>
+ Was not a State-kept hoard; when feasts were plentiful indulg'd<br>
+ With wine well-fermented, or old-stored spicy metheglin:<br>
+ For they died not then miserably within the second moon<br>
+ Forgotten, unrespected of all; but slept many winters,<br>
+ Saw many springs, liv'd, lov'd like men, consciously rejoicing<br>
+ In Nature's promises, with like hopes and recollections.<br>
+ Intelligence had brought them Sc&#299;ence, Genius enter'd;<br>
+ Seers and sages arose, great Bees, perfecting among them
+ <span class="linenum">370</span><br>
+ Copious inventions, with man's art worthily compared.<br>
+ Then was a time when that, which haps not in ages of ages,<br>
+ Strangely befel: they stole from Nature's secresy one key,<a
+ id="page_437"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{437}</span><br>
+ Found the hidden motive which works to var&#299;ety of kind;<br>
+ And thus came wondrously possest of pow'r to determine<br>
+ Their children's qualities, habitudes, yea their specialized form<br>
+ Masculine or feminine to produce, or asexual offspring<br>
+ Redow'rd and differenced with such alternative organs<br>
+ As they chose, to whate'er preferential function adapted,<br>
+ Wax-pocket or honey-bag, with an instinct rightly acordant.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >We know well the result, but not what causes effected
+ <span class="linenum">381</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Their decision to prefer so blindly the race to the unit,<br>
+ As to renounce happiness for a problem, a vain abstraction;<br>
+ Making home and kingdom a vast egg-factory, wherein<br>
+ Food and life are stor'd up alike, and strictly proportion'd<br>
+ In loveless labour with mean anx&#299;ety. Wondrous<br>
+ Their reason'd motive, their altr&#363;istic obedience<br>
+ Unto a self-impos'd life-sentence of prison or toil.<br>
+ Wonder wisely! then ask if these ingenious insects,<br>
+ (Who made Natur' against her will their activ' acomplice,<br>
+ And, methodizing anew her heartless system, averted
+ <span class="linenum">391</span><br>
+ From their house the torrent of whelming natural increase,)<br>
+ Are blood-guiltless among their own-born prógeny: What skill<br>
+ Keeps their peace, or what price buys it? Alack! 'tis murder,<br>
+ Murder again. No worst Oriental despot, assuring<br>
+ 'Gainst birthright or faction or envy his ill-gotten empire,<br>
+ So decimates his kin, as do these rown-bodied egg-queens<br>
+ Surprise competitors, and stab their slumbering infants,<br>
+ Into the wax-cradles replunging their double-edged stings.<br>
+ Or what a deed of blood some high-day, when the summer<sup>v</sup>hath
+ <span class="linenum">400</span><br>
+ Their clammy cells o'erbrim'd, and already ripening orchards<br>
+ And late flow'rs proclaim that starving winter approacheth,<br>
+ Nor will again any queen lead forth her swarm, dispeopling<br>
+ Their strawbuilt citadel; then watch how these busy workers<br>
+ Cease for awhile from toil; how crowding upon the devoted<a
+ id="page_438"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{438}</span><br>
+ Drones they fall; those easy fellows gave some provocation;<br>
+ Yet 'tis a foul massacre, cold murder of unsuspecting<br>
+ Life-long companions; and done bloodthirstily:&mdash;is not<br>
+ Exercise of pow'r a delight? have yóu not a doctrine<br>
+ That calls duty pleasure? What an if they make merry, saying<br>
+ 'Lazy-livers, runagates, evil beasts, greedy devourers,
+ <span class="linenum">411</span><br>
+ 'Too happy and too long ye've liv'd, unashamed to have outliv'd<br>
+ 'Your breeders, feeders, warmers and toiling attendants;<br>
+ 'Had-ye ever been worthy a public good to accomplish,<br>
+ 'Each had nobly perish'd long-ago. Unneeded, obese ones,<br>
+ 'Impious encumbrance, whose hope of service is over,<br>
+ 'Who did not, now can not, assist the community,
+ <span class="smcap">Ye die</span>!'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >My parable may serve. What wisdom man hath attain'd to</span
+ ><br>
+ Came to him of Nature's goodwill throu' tardy selection:<br>
+ Should her teaching accuse herself and her method impugn,<br>
+ I may share with her the reproach of approving as artist
+ <span class="linenum">421</span><br>
+ Far other id&#275;als than what seem needful in action.<br>
+ This difficulty besets our time. If you have an answer,<br>
+ Write me it, as you keep your salt in savour; or if toil<br>
+ Grant you an indulgence, here lies fair country, direct then<br>
+ Your Sabbath excursion westward, and spend a summer-day<br>
+ Preaching among the lilies what you<sup>v</sup>have preached to the
+ chimneys.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_439"></a><span class="pagenumb">{439}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">3</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">PEACE ODE</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 1%"
+ ><small>ON CONCLUSION OF THE BOER WAR, JUNE 1902</small></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Now joy in all hearts with happy auguries,<br>
+ And praise on all lips: for sunny June cometh<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Chasing the thick warcloud, that outspread</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Sulfurous and sullen over England.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Full thirty moons since unwilling enmity,<br>
+ Since daily suspense for hideous peril<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Of brethren unrescued, beleaguer'd</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Plague-stricken in cities unprovided,</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Had quencht accustom'd gaiety, from the day<br>
+ When first the Dutchman's implacable folly,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >The country of Shakspeare def&#772;ing,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >Thought with a curse to appal the nation:</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Whose threat to quell their kinsmen in Africa<br>
+ Anger'd awhile our easy democracy;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">That, reckless and patient of insult,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >Will not abide arrogant def&#299;ance:</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ They called to arms; and war began evilly.<br>
+ From slily forestor'd, well-hidden armouries,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And early advantage, the despot</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >Stood for a time prevalent against us:</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Till from the coil of slow-gathering battle<br>
+ He rancorous, with full moneybags hurried,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Peddling to European envy</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >His traffic of pennyworthy slander.<a id="page_440"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{440}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ For since the first keel launch'd upon Ocean<br>
+ Ne'er had before so mighty an armament<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">O'errun the realm of dark Poseidon,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">So resolutely measur'd the waters,</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ As soon from our ports in diligent passage<br>
+ O'er half the round world plow'd hither &amp; thither<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">The pathless Atlantic, revengeful</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Soldiery pouring on Esperanza:</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Nor shows the Argive story of Ilium,<br>
+ With tale of ancient auxiliar cities,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">So vast a roll of wide alliance</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">As, rallying to the aid of England,</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Came from the swarming counties accoutering,<br>
+ And misty highlands of Caledonia,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">With Cambria's half-Celtic offspring,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em">And the ever-merry fighting Irish:</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Came too the new world's hardy Canadians,<br>
+ And from remote Australia champions<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Like huntsmen, and from those twin islands</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Lying off antipodal beyond her,</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Under the old flag sailing across the sea:<br>
+ For mighty is blood's empery, where honour<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And freedom ancestral have upbuilt</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Inheritance to a lovely glory.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Thee, France, love I, fair lawgiver and scholar:<br>
+ Thy lively grace, thy temper illustrious;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And thee, in all wisdom Diviner,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Germany, deep melodist immortal;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Nor less have envied soft Italy's spirit,<br>
+ In marble unveil'd and eloquent colour:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">But best love I England, wer' I not</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em"
+ >Born to her aery should envy also.<a id="page_441"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{441}</span></span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Wherefore to-day one gift above every gift<br>
+ Let us beseech, that God will accord to her<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Always a right judgement in all things;</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Ev'n to celestial excellencies;</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ And grant us in long peace to accumulate<br>
+ Joy, and to stablish friendliness and commerce,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">And barter in markets for unpriced</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em">Beauty, the pearl of unending empire.</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <span style="margin-left: 60%"><i>May, 1902.</i></span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">4</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">EVENING</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From Wm. Blake</span
+ ><a id="FNanchor_A_1"></a
+ ><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Come, rosy angel, thy coronet donning<br>
+ Of starry j<span class="ov">ew</span>els, smile upon ev'ry bed,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">And grant what each day-weary mortal,</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Labourer or lover, asketh of thee.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Smile thou on our loves, enveloping the land<br>
+ With dusky curtain: consider each blossom<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">That timely upcloseth, that opens</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Her treasure of heavy-laden odours.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ Now, while the west-wind slumbereth on the lake,<br>
+ Silently dost thou with delicate shimmer<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">O'erbloom the frowning front of awful</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em"
+ >Night to a glance of unearthly silver.</span
+ ><br>
+ <br>
+ No hungry wild beast rangeth in our forest,<br>
+ No tiger or wolf prowleth around the fold:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Keep thou from our sheepcotes the tainting</span
+ ><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em">Invisible peril of the darkness.</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_442"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{442}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">5</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">POVRE AME AMOUREUSE</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From Louise Labe, 1555</span></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">(<i>Sapphics</i>)</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ When to my lone soft bed at eve returning<br>
+ Sweet desir'd sleep already stealeth o'er me,<br>
+ My spirit fl&#299;eth to the fairy-land of<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">her tyrannous love.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ Him then I think fondly to kiss, to hold him<br>
+ Frankly then to my bosom; I that all day<br>
+ Have lookèd for<sup>v</sup>him suffering, repining,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">yea many long days.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ O blessèd sleep, with flatteries beguile me;<br>
+ So,<sup>v</sup>if I ne'er may<sup>v</sup>of a surety
+ have<sup>v</sup>him,<br>
+ Grant to my poor soul amorous the dark gift<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 5em">of this illusion.</span><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">6</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">THE FOURTH DIMENSION</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">(<i>Hendecasyllables</i>)</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Truest-hearted of early friends, that Eton<br>
+ Long since gáve to me,&mdash;Ah! 'tis all a life-time,&mdash;<br>
+ With my faithfully festive auspication<br>
+ Of Christmas merriment, this idle item.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">Plato truly believ'd his archetypal</span
+ ><br>
+ Id&#275;as to possess the fourth dimension:<br>
+ For since our solid is triple, but always<br>
+ Its shade only double, solids as <i>umbrae</i><br>
+ Must lack equally one dimension also.<br>
+ Could Plato<sup>v</sup>have avoided or denied it?<a
+ id="page_443"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{443}</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >So Saint Paul, when in argument opposing</span
+ ><br>
+ To our earthly bodies bodies celestial,<br>
+ Meant just those pretty Greek aforesaid abstracts<br>
+ Of four Pl&#257;tonical divine dimensions.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em">If this be not a holy consolation</span
+ ><br>
+ More than plumpudding and a turkey roasted,<br>
+ Whereto you but address a third dimension,<br>
+ Try it, pray, as a pill to aid digestion:<br>
+ I can't find anything better to send you.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">7</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">JOHANNES MILTON, Senex</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%"><i>Scazons</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Since I believe in God the Father Almighty,<br>
+ Man's Maker and Judge, Overruler of Fortune,<br>
+ 'Twere strange should I praise anything and refuse Him praise,<br>
+ Should love the creature forgetting the Cr&#275;ator,<br>
+ Nor unto Him<sup>v</sup>in suff'ring and sorrow turn me:<br>
+ Nay how coud I withdraw me from<sup>v</sup>His embracing?<br>
+ <br>
+ But since that I have seen not, and cannot know Him,<br>
+ Nor in my earthly temple apprehend rightly<br>
+ His wisdom and the heav'nly purpose &#275;ternal;<br>
+ Therefore will I be bound to no studied system<br>
+ Nor argument, nor with delusion enslave me,<br>
+ Nor seek to pléase Him in any foolish invention,<br>
+ Which my spirit within me, that loveth beauty<br>
+ And hateth evil, hath reprov'd as unworthy:<br>
+ <br>
+ But I cherish my freedom in loving service,<br>
+ Gratefully adoring for delight beyond asking<br>
+ Or thinking, and in hours of anguish and darkness<br>
+ Confiding always on<sup>v</sup>His excellent greatness.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_444"></a><span class="pagenumb">{444}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">8</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 8%">PYTHAGORAS</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%"><i>Seasons</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Thou vainly, O Man, self-deceiver, exaltest<br>
+ Thyself the king and only thinker of this world,<br>
+ Where life aboundeth infinite to destroy thee.<br>
+ <br>
+ Well-guided are thy forces and govern'd bravely,<br>
+ But like a tyrant cr&#363;el or savage monster<br>
+ Thou disregardest ignorantly all b&#275;ing<br>
+ Save only thine own insubordinate ruling:<br>
+ <br>
+ As if the flowër held not a happy pact with Spring;<br>
+ As if the brutes lack'd reason and sorrow's torment;<br>
+ Or ev'n divine love from the small atoms grew not,<br>
+ Their grave affection unto thy passion mingling.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ An truly were it nobler and better wisdom<br>
+ To fear the blind thing blindly, lest it espy thee;<br>
+ And scrupulously do<sup>v</sup>honour to dumb creatures,<br>
+ <br>
+ No one offending impiously, nor forcing<br>
+ To service of vile uses; ordering rather<br>
+ Thy slave to beauty, compelling lovingkindness.<br>
+ <br>
+ So should desire, the only priestess of Nature<br>
+ Divinely inspir'd, like a good monarch rule thee,<br>
+ And lead thee onward in the consummate motion<br>
+ Of life eternal unto heav'nly perfection.<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_445"></a><span class="pagenumb">{445}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%"><i>Elegiacs</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 16%">9</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%">AMIEL</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Why, O Maker of all, madest thou man with affections<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Tender above thyself, scrupulous and passionate?</span
+ ><br>
+ Nay, if compassionate thou art, why, thou lover of men,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hidest thou thy face so pitilessly from us?</span
+ ><br>
+ If thou in priesthoods and altar-glory delitest,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In torment and tears of trouble and suffering,</span
+ ><br>
+ Then wert thou displeas'd looking on soft human emotion,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thou must scorn the devout love of a sire to a son.</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Twas but vainly of old, Man, making Faith to approach thee,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Held an imagin'd scheme of providence in honour;</span
+ ><br>
+ And, to redeem thy praise, judg'd himself cause, took upon him<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Humbly the impossible burden of all misery.</span
+ ><br>
+ Now casteth he away his books and logical idols<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Leaveth again his cell of terrified penitence;</span
+ ><br>
+ And that stony goddess, his first-born fancy, dethroning,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hath made after his own homelier art another;</span
+ ><br>
+ Made sweet Hope, the modest unportion'd daughter of anguish,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Whose brimming eye sees but dimly what it looketh on;</span
+ ><br>
+ Dreaming a day when fully, without curse or horrible cross,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thou wilt deign to reveal her vision of happiness.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">10</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Ah, what a change! Thou, who didst emptily thy happiness seek<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In pleasure, art finding thy pleasure in happiness.</span
+ ><br>
+ Slave to the soul, whom thou heldest in slavery, art thou?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thou, that wert but a vain idol, adored a goddess?</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_446"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{446}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">11</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14%">WALKING HOME</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From the Chinese</span></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Thousand threads of rain and fine white wreathing of air-mist<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hide from us earth's greenness, hide the enarching azure.</span
+ ><br>
+ Yet will a breath of Spring homeward convoying attend us,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And the mellow flutings of passionate Philomel.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">12</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14%">THE RUIN</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From the Chinese</span></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ These grey stones have rung with mirth and lordly carousel;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Here proud kings mingled p&#333;etry and ruddy wine.</span
+ ><br>
+ All hath pass'd long ago; nought but this r&#363;in abideth,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Sadly in eyeless trance gazing upon the river.</span
+ ><br>
+ Wouldst thou know who here visiteth, dwelleth and singeth also,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ask the swallows fl&#772;ing from sunny-wall'd Italy.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">13</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 14%">REVENANTS</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From the French</span></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ At dead of unseen night ghosts of the departed assembling<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Flit to the graves, where each in body had burial.</span
+ ><br>
+ Ah, then r&#275;visiting my sad heart their desolate tomb<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Troop the desires and loves vainly buried long ago.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_447"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{447}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">14</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From the Greek</span></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Mortal though I bé, yea ephemeral, if but a moment<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >I gaze up to the night's starry domain of heaven,</span
+ ><br>
+ Then no longer on earth I stand; I touch the Creator,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And my lively spirit drinketh immortality.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">15</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 13%">ANNIVERSARY</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ See, Love, a year is pass'd: in harvest our summer endeth:<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Praising thee the solemn festival I celebrate.</span
+ ><br>
+ Unto us all our days are love's anniversaries, each one<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In turn hath ripen'd something of our happiness.</span
+ ><br>
+ So, lest heart-contented adown life easily floating,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >We note not the passage while living in the delight,</span
+ ><br>
+ I have honour'd always the attentive vigil of Autumn,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And thy day set apart holy to fair Memory.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">16</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 11%">COMMUNION OF SAINTS</span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 12%"
+ ><span class="smcap">From Andre Chenier</span></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+
+ What happy bonds together unite you, ye living and dead,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Your fadeless love-bloom, your manifold memories.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">17</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">EPITAPHS</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Fight well, my comrades, and prove your bravery. Me too<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >God call'd out, but crown'd early before the battle.</span
+ ><br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_448"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{448}</span>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">18</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+ I died in very flow'r: yet call me not unhappy therefore,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ye that against sweet life once a lament have utter'd.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">19</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ When thou, my belovèd, diedst, I saw heaven open,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >And all earthly delight inhabiting Paradise.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">20</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ Where thou art better I too were, dearest, anywhere, than<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Wanting thy well-lov'd lovely presence anywhere.</span
+ ><br>&nbsp;<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="poem15">
+ <span style="margin-left: 18%">21</span>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%">IBANT OBSCURI</span>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ <span style="margin-left: 3%"
+ ><i>A line for line paraphrase of a part of</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 10%"><i>Virgil's Æneid, Bk. VI.</i></span
+ >&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>
+
+ They wer' amid the shadows by night in loneliness obscure<br>
+ Walking forth i' the void and vasty dominyon of Ades;<br>
+ As by an uncertain moonray secretly illumin'd
+ <span class="linenum">270</span><br>
+ One goeth in the forest, when heav'n is gloomily clouded,<br>
+ And black night hath robb'd the colours and beauty from all things.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Here in Hell's very jaws, the threshold of darkening Orcus,</span
+ ><br>
+ Have the avenging Cares laid their sleepless habitation,<br>
+ Wailing Grief, pallid Infections, &amp; heart-stricken Old-age,<br>
+ Dismal Fear, unholy Famine, with low-groveling Want,<br>
+ Forms of spectral horror, gaunt Toil and Death the devourer,<br>
+ And Death's drowsy brother, Torpor; with whom, an inane rout,
+ <span class="linenum">278</span><br>
+ All the Pleasures of Sin; there also the Furies in ambusht<a
+ id="page_449"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{449}</span><br>
+ Chamber of iron, afore whose bars wild War bloodyhanded<br>
+ Raged, and mad Discord high brandisht her venomous locks.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Midway of all this tract, with secular arms an immense elm</span
+ ><br>
+ Reareth a crowd of branches, aneath whose leafy protection<br>
+ Vain dreams thickly nestle, clinging unto the foliage on high:<br>
+ And many strange creatures of monstrous form and features<br>
+ Stable about th' entrance, Centaur and Scylla's abortion,<br>
+ And hundred-handed Briareus, and Lerna the wildbeast<br>
+ Roaring amain, and clothed in frightful flame the Chimæra,<br>
+ Gorgons and Harpies, ' and Pluto's three-bodied ogre.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >In terror Æneas upheld his sword to defend him,
+ <span class="linenum">290</span></span
+ ><br>
+ With ready naked point confronting their dreaded onset:<br>
+ And had not the Sibyl warn'd how these lively spirits were<br>
+ All incorporeal, flitting in thin maskery of form,<br>
+ He had assail'd their host, and wounded vainly the void air.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hence is a road that led them a-down to the Tartarean streams,</span
+ ><br>
+ Where Acheron's whirlpool impetuous, into the reeky<br>
+ Deep of Cokytos disgorgeth, with muddy burden.<br>
+ These floods one ferryman serveth, most awful of aspect,<br>
+ Of squalor infernal, Ch&#257;ron: all filthily unkempt<br>
+ That woolly white cheek-fleece, and fiery the blood-shotten eyeballs:
+ <span class="linenum">300</span><br>
+ On one shoulder a cloak knotted-up his nudity vaunteth.<br>
+ He himself plieth oar or pole, manageth tiller and sheet,<br>
+ And the relics of mén in his ash-grey barge ferries over;<br>
+ Already old, but green to a god and hearty will age be.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Now hitherward to the bank much folk were crowding, a medley</span
+ ><br>
+ Of men and matrons; nor did death's injury conceal<br>
+ Bravespirited heroes, young maidens beauteous unwed,<br>
+ And boys borne to the grave in sight of their sorrowing sires.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Countless as in the forest, at a first white frosting of autumn</span
+ ><br>
+ Sere leaves fall to the ground; or like whenas over the ocean<br>
+ Myria<span class="midletter">^</span>d birds come thickly flocking, when
+ wintry December <span class="linenum">311</span><br>
+ Drives them afar southward for shelter upon sunnier shores,<a
+ id="page_450"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{450}</span><br>
+ So throng'd they; and each his watery journey demanded,<br>
+ All to the further bank stretching-oút their arms impatient:<br>
+ But the sullen boatman took now one now other at will,<br>
+ While some from the river forbade he', an' drave to a distance.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Æneas in wonder alike and deep pity then spake.</span
+ ><br>
+ 'Tell-me,' said he, 'my guide, why flock these crowds to the water?<br>
+ Or what seek the spirits? or by what prejudice are these<br>
+ Rudely denied, while those may upon the solemn river embark?'
+ <span class="linenum">320</span><br>
+ T'whom<a id="FNanchor_B_2"></a
+ ><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a> then briefly again the
+ Avernia<span class="midletter">^</span>n priestess in answer.<br>
+ 'O Son of Anchises, heavn's true-born glorious offspring,<br>
+ Deep Cokytos it is thou see<span class="midletter">^</span>st &amp; Hell's
+ Stygia<span class="midletter">^</span>n flood,<br>
+ Whose dread sanctio<span class="midletter">^</span>n alone Jove's oath
+ from falsehood assureth.<br>
+ These whom thou pitiedst, th' outcast and unburied are they;<br>
+ That ferryman Ch&#257;ron; those whom his bark carries over<br>
+ Are the buried; nor ever may mortal across the livid lake<br>
+ Journey, or e'er upon Earth his bones lie peacefully entomb'd:<br>
+ Haunting a hundred years this mournful plain they wander<br>
+ Doom'd for a term, which term expired they win to deliv'rance.'
+ <span class="linenum">330</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then he that harken'd stood agaze, his journey arrested,</span
+ ><br>
+ Grieving at heart and much pitying their unmerited lot.<br>
+ There miserably fellow'd in death's indignity saw he<br>
+ Leucaspis with his old Lycian seachieften Orontes,<br>
+ Whom together from Troy in home-coming over the waters<br>
+ Wild weather o'ermaster'd, engulphing both shipping and men.<br>
+ And lo! his helmsman, Palinurus, in eager emotion,<br>
+ Who on th' Afric course, in bright star-light, with a fair wind,<br>
+ Fell by slumber opprest unheedfully into the wide sea:<br>
+ Whom i' the gloom when hardly he knew, now changed in affliction,
+ <span class="linenum">340</span><br>
+ <a id="page_451"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{451}</span>First he addrest. 'What God, tell-me O
+ Palinurus, of all gods<br>
+ Plúckt you away and drown'd i' the swift wake-water abandon'd?<br>
+ For never erst nor in else hath kind responsive Apollo<br>
+ Led-me astray, but alone in this thing wholly deluded,<br>
+ When he aver'd that you, to remote Aus&#333;nia steering,<br>
+ Safe would arrive. Where now his truth? Is this the promis'd faith?'<br>
+ But he, 'Neither again did Ph&oelig;bus wrongly bespeak thee,<br>
+ My general, nor yet did a god in his enmity drown me:<br>
+ For the tiller, wherewith I led thy fleet's navigation,<br>
+ And still clung to, was in my struggling hold of it unshipt,
+ <span class="linenum">350</span><br>
+ And came with-me' o'erboard. Ah! then, by ev'ry accurst sea,<br>
+ Tho' in utter despair, far less mine own peril awed me<br>
+ Than my thought o' the ship, what harm might háp to her, yawing<br>
+ In the billows helmless, with a high wind and threatening gale.<br>
+ Two nights and one day buffeted held I to the good spar<br>
+ Windborne, with the current far-drifting, an' on the second morn<br>
+ Saw, when a great wave raised me aloft, the Italyan highlands;<br>
+ And swimming-on with effort got ashore, nay already was saved,<br>
+ Had not there the wrecking savages, who spied-me defenceless,<br>
+ Scarce clinging outwearied to a rock, half-drowned &amp; speechless,
+ <span class="linenum">360</span><br>
+ Beát me to death for hope of an unfound booty upon me.<br>
+ Now to the wind and tidewash a sport my poor body rolleth.<br>
+ Wherefore thee, by heav'n's sweet light &amp; airness, I pray,<br>
+ By thy Sire's memories, thy hope of youthful Iulus,<br>
+ Rescue-me from these ills, brave master; Go to Velija,<br>
+ O'er my mortality's spoil cast thou th' all-hallowing dust;<a
+ id="page_452"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{452}</span><br>
+ Or better, if so be the goddess, heav'n's lady-Creatress,<br>
+ Show-thee the way,&mdash;nor surely without high favoring impulse<br>
+ Mak'st thou ventur' across these floods &amp; black Ereban lake,&mdash;<br>
+ Give thy hand-to-me', an' o'er their watery boundary bring me
+ <span class="linenum">370</span><br>
+ Unto the haven of all, death's home of quiet abiding.'<br>
+ Thus-he lamented, anon spake sternly the maid of Avernus.<br>
+ 'Whence can such unruly desire, Palinurus, assail thee?<br>
+ Wilt thou th' Eumenidan waters visit unburied? o'erpass<br>
+ Hell's Stygian barrier? Ch&#257;ron's boat unbidden enter?<br>
+ Cease to believe that fate can bé by prayër averted.<br>
+ Let my sooth a litel thy cruel destiny comfort<br>
+ Surely the people of all thy new-found country, determin'd<br>
+ By heav'n-sent omens will achieve thy purification,
+ <span class="linenum">379</span><br>
+ Build thee a tomb of honour with yearly solemnity ordain'd,<br>
+ And dedicate for ever thy storied name to the headland.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >These words lighten awhile his fear, his sadness allaying,</span
+ ><br>
+ Nor vain was the promise his name should eternally survive.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >They forthwith their journey renew, tending to the water:</span
+ ><br>
+ Whom when th' old boatman descried silently emerging<br>
+ Out o' the leafy shadows, advancing t'ward the river-shore,<br>
+ Angrily gave-he challenge, imperious in salutation.<br>
+ 'Whosoever thou be, that approachest my river all-arm'd,<br>
+ Stand to announce thyself, nor further make footing onward.<br>
+ Here 'tis a place of ghosts, of night &amp; drowsy delusion:
+ <span class="linenum">390</span><br>
+ Forbidden unto living mortals is my Stygian keel:<br>
+ Truly not Alkides embarkt I cheerfully, nor took<br>
+ Of Theseus or Pirithous glad custody, nay though<br>
+ God-sprung were they both, warriors invincible in might:<br>
+ Hé 'twas would sportively the guard of Tartarus enchain,<br>
+ Yea and from the palace with gay contumely dragged him:<br>
+ Théy to ravish Hell's Queen from Pluto's chamber attempted.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then thus th' Amphrysian prophetess spake briefly in answer.</span
+ ><br>
+ 'No such doughty designs are ours, Cease thou to be movèd!<br>
+ Nor these sheeny weapons intend force. Cerberus unvext<a
+ id="page_453"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{453}</span><br>
+ Surely for us may affray the spirits with 'howling eternal,
+ <span class="linenum">401</span><br>
+ And chaste Persephone enjoy her queenly seclusion.<br>
+ Troian Æneas, bravest and gentlest-hearted,<br>
+ Hath left earth to behold his father in out-lying Ades.<br>
+ If the image &nbsp;'&nbsp; of a so great virtue doth not affect thee,<br>
+ Yet this bough'&mdash;glittering she reveal'd its golden
+ avouchment&mdash;<br>
+ 'Thou mayst know.' Forthwith his bluster of heart was appeasèd:<br>
+ Nor word gave-he, but admiring the celestial omen,<br>
+ That bright sprigg of weird for so long period unseen,<br>
+ Quickly he-túrneth about his boat, to the margin approaching,
+ <span class="linenum">410</span><br>
+ And the spirits, that along the gun'al benchways sat in order,<br>
+ Drave he ashore, offering readyroom: but when the vessel took<br>
+ Ponderous Æneas, her timbers crankily straining<br>
+ Creak'd, an' a brown water came trickling through the upper seams.<br>
+ Natheless both Sibyl ánd Hero, slow wafted across stream,<br>
+ Safe on th' ooze &amp; slime's hideous desolation alighted.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Hence the triple-throated bellowings of Cerberus invade</span
+ ><br>
+ All Hell, where opposite the arrival he lies in a vast den.<br>
+ But the Sibyl, who mark'd his necklaces of stiffening snakes,<br>
+ Cast him a cake, poppy-drench'd with drowsiness and honey-sweeten'd.
+ <span class="linenum">420</span><br>
+ He, rabid and distending a-hungry' his triply-cavern'd jaws,<br>
+ Gulp'd the proffer'd morsel; when slow he-relaxt his immense bulk,<br>
+ And helplessly diffused fell out-sprawl'd over the whole cave.<br>
+ Æneas fled by, and left full boldly the streamway,<br>
+ That biddeth all men across but alloweth ne'er a returning.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Already now i' the air were voices heard, lamentation,</span
+ ><br>
+ And shrilly crying of infant souls by th' entry of Ades.<br>
+ Babes, whom unportion'd of sweet life, unblossoming buds,<br>
+ One black day carried off and chokt in dusty corruption.&mdash;<br>
+ Next are they who falsely accused were wrongfully condemn'd<a
+ id="page_454"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{454}</span><br>
+ Unto the death: but here their lot by justice is order'd.
+ <span class="linenum">431</span><br>
+ Inquisitor Minos, with his urn, summoning to assembly<br>
+ His silent council, their deed or slander arraigneth.&mdash;<br>
+ Next the sullen-hearted, who rashly with else-innocent hand<br>
+ Their own life did-away, for hate or weariness of light,<br>
+ Imperiling their souls. How gladly, if only in Earth's air,<br>
+ Would-they again their toil, discomfort, and pities endure!<br>
+ Fate obstructs: deep sadness now, unloveliness awful<br>
+ Rings them about, &amp; Styx with ninefold circle enarmeth.&mdash;<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Not far hence they come to a land extensive on all sides;
+ <span class="linenum">440</span></span
+ ><br>
+ Weeping Plain 'tis call'd:&mdash;such name such country deserveth.<br>
+ Here the lovers, whom fiery passion hath cruelly consumed,<br>
+ Hide in leafy alleys &nbsp;'&nbsp; and pathways bow'ry, sequester'd<br>
+ By woodland myrtle, nor hath Death their sorrow ended.<br>
+ Here was Phædra to see, Procris &nbsp;'&nbsp; and sad Eriphyle,<br>
+ She of her unfilial deathdoing wound not ashamèd,<br>
+ Evadne, &nbsp;'&nbsp; and Pasiphae &nbsp;'&nbsp; and Laodamia,<br>
+ And epicene Keneus, a woman to a man metamorphos'd,<br>
+ Now by Fate converted again to her old feminine form.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >'Mong these shades, her wound yet smarting ruefully, Dido</span
+ ><br>
+ Wander'd throu' the forest-obscurity; and Æneas
+ <span class="linenum">451</span><br>
+ Standing anigh knew surely the dim form, though i' the darkness<br>
+ Veil'd,&mdash;as when one seëth a young moon on the horizon,<br>
+ Or thinketh to' have seen i' the gloaming her delicate horn;<br>
+ Tearfully in oncelov'd accents he-lovingly addrest her.<br>
+ 'Unhappy! ah! too true 'twas told me' O unhappy Dido,<br>
+ Dead thou wert; to the fell extreme didst thy passion ensue.<br>
+ And was it I that slew-thee? Alas! Smile falsity, ye heav'ns!<br>
+ And Hell-fury attest-me', if here any sanctity reigneth,<br>
+ Unwilling, O my Queen, my step thy kingdom abandon'd.
+ <span class="linenum">460</span><br>
+ Me the command of a god, who here my journey determines<br>
+ Through Ereban darkness, through fields sown with desolation,<a
+ id="page_455"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{455}</span><br>
+ Drave-me to wrong my heart. Nay tho' deep-pain'd to desert thee<br>
+ I ne'er thought to provoke thy pain of mourning eternal.<br>
+ Stay yet awhile, ev'n here unlook'd-for again look upon me:<br>
+ Fly-me not ere the supreme words that Fate granteth us are said.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thus he: but the spirit was raging, fiercely defiant,</span
+ ><br>
+ Whom he approach'd with words to appease, with tears for atonement.<br>
+ She to the ground downcast her &nbsp;'&nbsp; eyes in fixity averted;<br>
+ Nor were her features more by his pleading affected,
+ <span class="linenum">470</span><br>
+ Than wer' a face of flint, or of ensculptur'd alabaster.<br>
+ At length she started disdainful, an' angrily withdrew<br>
+ Into a shady thicket: where her grief kindly Sychæus<br>
+ Sooth'd with other memories, first love and virginal embrace.<br>
+ And ever Æneas, to remorse by deep pity soften'd,<br>
+ With brimming eyes pursued her queenly figure disappearing.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thence the Sibyl to the plain's extremest boundary led him,</span
+ ><br>
+ Where world-fam'd warriors, a lionlike company, haunted.<br>
+ Here great Tydeus saw he eclips'd, &amp; here the benighted<br>
+ Phantom of Adrastus, &nbsp;'&nbsp; of stalwart Parthenopæus.
+ <span class="linenum">480</span><br>
+ Here long mourn'd upon earth went all that prowess of Ilium<br>
+ Fallen in arms; whom, when he-beheld them, so many and great,<br>
+ Much he-bewail'd. By Thersilochus his mighty brothers stood,<br>
+ Children of Antenor; here Demetria<span class="midletter">^</span>n
+ Polyphates,<br>
+ And Idæus, in old chariot-pose dreamily stalking.<br>
+ Right and left the spirits flocking on stood crowding around him;<br>
+ Nor their eyes have enough; they touch, find joy unwonted<br>
+ Marching in equal stép, and eager of his coming enquire.<br>
+ But th' Argive leaders, and they that obey'd Agamemnon<br>
+ When they saw that Trojan in arms come striding among them,
+ <span class="linenum">490</span><br>
+ Old terror invaded their ranks: some fled stricken, as once<a
+ id="page_456"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{456}</span><br>
+ They to the ships had fled for shelter; others the alarm raise,<br>
+ But their thin utterance mock'd vainly the lips wide parted.<br>
+ Here too Deiphobus he espied, his fair body mangled,<br>
+ Cruelly dismember'd, disfeatur'd cruelly his face,<br>
+ Face and hands; and lo! shorn closely from either temple,<br>
+ Gone wer' his ears, and maim'd each nostril in impious outrage.<br>
+ Barely he-knew him again cow'ring shamefastly' an' hiding<br>
+ His dire plight, &amp; thus he 'his old companyon accosted.<br>
+ 'Noblest Deiphobus, great Teucer's intrepid offspring,
+ <span class="linenum">500</span><br>
+ Who was it, inhuman, coveted so cruel a vengeance?<br>
+ Who can hav' adventur'd on thée? That last terrible night<br>
+ Thou wert said to hav' exceeded thy bravery, an' only<br>
+ On thy faln enemies wert faln by weariness o'ercome.<br>
+ Wherefor' upon the belov'd sea-shore thine empty sepulchral<br>
+ Mound I erected, aloud on thy ghost tearfully calling.<br>
+ Name and shield keep for-thee the place; but thy body, dear friend,<br>
+ Found I not, to commit to the land ere sadly' I left it.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then the son of Priam ' 'I thought not, friend, to reproach thee:</span
+ ><br>
+ Thou didst all to the full, ev'n my shade's service, accomplish.
+ <span class="linenum">510</span><br>
+ 'Twas that uninterdicted adultress from Lacedæmon<br>
+ Drave-me to doom, &amp; planted in hell, her trophy triumphant.<br>
+ On that night,&mdash;how vain a security and merrymaking<br>
+ Then sullied us thou know'st, yea must too keenly remember,&mdash;<br>
+ When the ill-omened horse o'erleapt Troy's lofty defences,<br>
+ Dragg'd in amidst our town pregnant with a burden of arm'd men.<br>
+ She then, her Phrygian women in feign'd phrenzy collecting,<br>
+ All with torches aflame, in wild Bacchic orgy paraded,<br>
+ Flaring a signal aloft to her ambusht confederate Greeks.<br>
+ I from a world of care had fled with weariful eyelids
+ <span class="linenum">520</span><br>
+ Unto my unhappy chamber', an' lay fast lockt in oblivyon,<a
+ id="page_457"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{457}</span><br>
+ Sunk to the depth of rest as a child that nought will awaken.<br>
+ Meanwhile that paragon helpmate had robb'd me of all arms,<br>
+ E'en from aneath the pillow my blade of trust purloining;&mdash;<br>
+ Then to the gate; wide flíngs she it op'n an' calls Menelaus.<br>
+ Would not a so great service attach her faithful adorer?<br>
+ Might not it extinguish the repute of her earlier illdeeds?<br>
+ Brief-be the tale. Menelaus arrives: in company there came<br>
+ His crime-counsellor Æolides. So, and more also<br>
+ Déal-ye', O Gods, to the Greeks! an' if I call justly upon you.&mdash;
+ <span class="linenum">530</span><br>
+ But thou; what fortune hitherward, in turn prithy tell me,<br>
+ Sent-thee alive, whether erring upon the bewildering Ocean,<br>
+ Or high-prompted of heav'n, or by Fate wearily hunted,<br>
+ That to the sunless abodes and dusky demesnes thou approachest?'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ev'n as awhile they thus converse it is already mid-day</span
+ ><br>
+ Unperceiv'd, but aloft earth's star had turn'd to declining.<br>
+ And haply' Æneas his time in parley had outgone,<br>
+ Had not then the Sibyl with word of warning avized him.<br>
+ 'Night hieth, Æneas; in tears our journey delayeth.<br>
+ See our road, that it here in twain disparteth asunder;
+ <span class="linenum">540</span><br>
+ This to the right, skirting by th' high city-fortresses of Dis,<br>
+ Endeth in Elysium, our path; but that to the leftward<br>
+ Only receives their feet who wend to eternal affliction.'<br>
+ Deiphobus then again, 'Speak not, great priestess, in anger;<br>
+ I will away to refill my number among th' unfortun'd.<br>
+ Thou, my champyon, adieu! Go where thy glory awaits thee!'<br>
+ When these words he 'had spok'n, he-turn'd and hastily was fled.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Æneas then look'd where leftward, under a mountain,</span
+ ><br>
+ Outspread a wide city lay, threefold with fortresses engirt,<br>
+ Lickt by a Tartarean river of live fire, the torrentia<span
+ class="midletter"
+ >^</span
+ >l <span class="linenum">550</span><br>
+ Red Phlegethon, and huge boulders his roundy bubbles be:<br>
+ Right i' the front stareth the columnar gate adamantine,<br>
+ Such that no battering warfare of mén or immortals<a
+ id="page_458"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{458}</span><br>
+ E'er might shake; blank-faced to the cloud its bastion upstands.<br>
+ Tisiphone thereby in a bloodspotty robe sitteth alway<br>
+ Night and day guarding sleeplessly the desperat entrance,<br>
+ Wherefrom an awestirring groan-cry and fierce clamour outburst,<br>
+ Sharp lashes, insane yells, dragg'd chains and clanking of iron.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Æneas drew back, his heart by' his hearing affrighted:</span
+ ><br>
+ 'What manner of criminals, my guide, now tell-me,' he-question'd,
+ <span class="linenum">560</span><br>
+ 'Or what their penalties? what this great wail that ariseth?'<br>
+ Answering him the divine priestess, 'Brave hero of Il[îû]m,<br>
+ O'er that guilty threshold no breath of purity may come:<br>
+ But Hecate, who gave-me to rule i' the groves of Avernus,<br>
+ Herself led me around, &amp; taught heav'n's high retribution.<br>
+ Here Cretan Rhadamanthus in unblest empery reigneth,<br>
+ Secret crime to punish,&mdash;full surely he-wringeth avowal<br>
+ Even of all that on earth, by vain impunity harden'd,<br>
+ Men sinning have put away from thought till<sup>v</sup>impenitent
+ death.<br>
+ On those convicted tremblers then leapeth avenging
+ <span class="linenum">570</span><br>
+ Tisiphone with keen flesh-whips and vipery scourges,<br>
+ And of her implacable sisters inviteth attendance.'<br>
+ &mdash;Now sudden on screeching hinges that portal accursèd<br>
+ Flung wide its barriers.&mdash;'In what dire custody, mark thou,<br>
+ Is the threshold! guarded by how grim sentry the doorway!<br>
+ More terrible than they the ravin'd insatiable Hydra<br>
+ That sitteth angry within. Know too that Tartarus itself<br>
+ Dives sheer gaping aneath in gloomy profundity downward<br>
+ Twice that height that a man looketh-up t'ward airy Olympus.<br>
+ Lowest there those children of Earth, Titanian elders,
+ <span class="linenum">580</span><br>
+ In the abyss, where once they fell hurl'd, yet wallowing lie.<br>
+ There the Alö&#299;dæ saw I, th' ungainly rebel twins<br>
+ Primæval, that assay'd to devastate th' Empyræan<a
+ id="page_459"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{459}</span><br>
+ With huge hands, and rob from Jove his kingdom immortal.<br>
+ And there Salmoneus I saw, rend'ring heavy payment,<br>
+ For that he idly' had mockt heav'n's fire and thunder electric;<br>
+ With chariot many-yoked and torches brandishing on high<br>
+ Driving among 'his Graian folk in Olympian Elis;<br>
+ Exultant as a God he rode in blasphemy worshipt.
+ <span class="linenum">589</span><br>
+ Fool, who th' unreckoning tempest and deadly dreaded bolt<br>
+ Thought to mimic with brass and confus'd trample of horses!<br>
+ But 'him th' Omnipotent, from amidst his cloudy pavilyon,<br>
+ Blasted, an' eke his rattling car and smoky pretences<br>
+ Extinguish'd at a stroke, scattering &nbsp;'&nbsp; his dust to the
+ whirlwind.<br>
+ There too huge Tityos, whom Earth that gendereth all things<br>
+ Once foster'd, spreadeth-out o'er nine full roods his immense limbs.<br>
+ On him a wild vulture with hook-beak greedily gorgeth<br>
+ His liver upsprouting quick as that Hell-chicken eateth.<br>
+ Shé diggeth and dwelleth under the vast ribs, her bloody bare neck<br>
+ Lifting anon: ne'er loathes-she the food, ne'er fails the renewal.
+ <span class="linenum">600</span><br>
+ Where wer' an end their names to relate, their crimes and torments?<br>
+ Some o'er whom a hanging black rock, slipping at very point of<br>
+ Falling, ever threateneth: Couches luxurious invite<br>
+ Softly-cushion'd to repose: Tables for banqueting outlaid<br>
+ Tempt them ever-famishing: hard by them a Fury regardeth,<br>
+ And should théy but a hand uplift, trembling to the dainties,<br>
+ She with live firebrand and direful yell springeth on them.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Their crimes,&mdash;not to' hav lov'd a brother while love was allow'd
+ them;</span
+ ><br>
+ Or to' hav struck their father, or inveigled a dependant;
+ <span class="linenum">609</span><br>
+ Or who chancing alone on wealth prey'd lustfully thereon,<br>
+ Nor made share with others, no greater company than they:<a
+ id="page_460"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{460}</span><br>
+ Some for adultery slain; some their bright swords had offended<br>
+ Drawn i' the wrong: or a master's trust with perfidy had met:<br>
+ Dungeon'd their penalties they await. Look not to be answer'd<br>
+ What that doom, nor th' end of these men think to determine.<br>
+ Sóme aye roll heavy rocks, some whirl dizzy on the revolving<br>
+ Spokes of a pendant wheel: sitteth and to eternity shall sit<br>
+ Unfortun'd Theseus; while sad Phlegias saddeneth hell<br>
+ With vain oyez to' all loud crying a tardy repentance,<br>
+ "Walk, O man, i' the fear of Gód, and learn to be righteous!"<br>
+ Here another, who sold for gold his country, promoting
+ <span class="linenum">621</span><br>
+ Her tyrant; or annull'd for a base bribe th' inviolate law.<br>
+ This one had unfather'd his blood with bestial incest:<br>
+ All some fearful crime had dared &amp; vaunted achievement.<br>
+ What mind could harbour the offence of such recollection,<br>
+ Or lend welcoming ear to the tale of iniquity and shame,<br>
+ And to the pains wherewith such deeds are justly requited?<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Ev'n when thus she' had spok'n, the priestess dear to Apollo,</span
+ ><br>
+ 'But, ready, come let us ón, perform-we the order appointed!<br>
+ Hast'n-we (saith-she), the wall forged on Cyclopian anvils<br>
+ Now I see, an' th' archway in Ætna's furnace attemper'd,
+ <span class="linenum">631</span><br>
+ Where my lore biddeth us to depose our high-privileg'd gift.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then together they trace i' the drooping dimness a footpath,</span
+ ><br>
+ Whereby, faring across, they arrive at th' arches of iron.<br>
+ Æneas stept into the porch, and duly besprinkling<br>
+ His body with clear water affixt his bough to the lintel;<br>
+ And, having all perform'd at length with ritual exact,<br>
+ They came out on a lovely pleasance, that dream'd-of oasis,<br>
+ Fortunate isle, the abode o' the blest, their fair Happy Woodland.<br>
+ Here is an ampler sky, those meads ar' azur'd by a gentler<a
+ id="page_461"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{461}</span><br>
+ Sun than th' Earth, an' a new starworld their darkness adorneth.
+ <span class="linenum">641</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Some were matching afoot their speed on a grassy arena,</span
+ ><br>
+ In playful combat some wrestling upon the yellow sand,<br>
+ Part in a dance-rhythm or poetry's fine phantasy engage;<br>
+ While full-toga'd anear their high-priest musical Orpheus<br>
+ Bade his prime sev'n tones in varied harmony discourse,<br>
+ Now with finger, anon sounding with an ivory plectrum.<br>
+ And here Æneas met Teucer's fortunate offspring,<br>
+ High-spirited heroes, fair-favor'd sons o' the morning,<br>
+ Assarac and Ilos &nbsp;'&nbsp; and Dardan founder of Iliu<span
+ class="midletter"
+ >^</span
+ >]m: <span class="linenum">650</span><br>
+ Their radiant chariots he' espied rank't empty afar off,<br>
+ Their spears planted afield, their horses wandering at large,<br>
+ Grazing around:&mdash;as on earth their joy had been, whether armour<br>
+ Or chariot had charmed them, or if 'twer' good manage and care<br>
+ Of the gallant warhorse, the delight liv'd here unabated;<br>
+ Lo! then others, that about the meadow sat feasting in idless,<br>
+ And chanting for joy a familyar pæan of old earth,<br>
+ By fragrant laurel o'ercanopied, where 'twixt enamel'd banks<br>
+ Bountiful Eridanus glides throu' their bosky retirement.<br>
+ Here were men who bled for honour, their country defending;
+ <span class="linenum">660</span><br>
+ Priests, whose lives wer' a flame of chastity on God's altar;<br>
+ Holy poets, content to await their crown of Apollo;<br>
+ Discoverers, whose labour had aided life or ennobled;<br>
+ Or who fair memories had left though kindly deserving.<br>
+ On their brow a fillet pearl-white distinguisheth all these:<br>
+ Whom the Sibyl, for they drew round, in question accosted,<br>
+ And most Musæus, who tower'd noble among them,<br>
+ Center of all that sea of bright faces looking upward.<br>
+ 'Tell, happy souls, and thou poet and high mystic illustrious,<br>
+ Where dwelleth Anchises? what home hath he? for 'tis in his quest
+ <span class="linenum">670</span><a id="page_462"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{462}</span><br>
+ We hither have made journey across Hell's watery marches.'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Thertó with brief parley rejoin'd that mystic of old-time.</span
+ ><br>
+ 'In no certain abode we-remain: by turn the forest glade<br>
+ Haunt-we, lilied stream-bank, sunny mead; and o'er valley and rock<br>
+ At will rove-we: but if ye aright your purpose arede me,<br>
+ Mount-ye the hill: myself will prove how easy the pathway.'<br>
+ Speaking he léd: and come to the upland, sheweth a fair plain<br>
+ Gleaming aneath; and they, with grateful adieu, the descent made.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Now Lord Anchises was down i' the green valley musing,</span
+ ><br>
+ Where the spirits confin'd that await mortal resurrection
+ <span class="linenum">680</span><br>
+ While diligently he-mark'd, his thought had turn'd to his own kin,<br>
+ Whose numbers he-reckon'd, an' of all their progeny foretold<br>
+ Their fate and fortune, their ripen'd temper an' action.<br>
+ He then, when he' espied Æneas t'ward him approaching<br>
+ O'er the meadow, both hands uprais'd and ran to receive him,<br>
+ Tears in his eyes, while thus his voice in high passion outbrake.<br>
+ 'Ah, thou'rt come, thou'rt come! at length thy dearly belov'd grace<br>
+ Conquering all hath won-thee the way. 'Tis allow'd to behold thee,<br>
+ O my son,&mdash;yea again the familyar raptur' of our speech.<br>
+ Nay, I look't for 't thus, counting patiently the moments,
+ <span class="linenum">690</span><br>
+ And ever expected; nor did fond fancy betray me.<br>
+ From what lands, my son, from what life-dangering ocean<br>
+ Art-thou arrived? full mighty perils thy path hav' opposèd:<br>
+ And how nearly the dark Libyan thy destiny o'erthrew!'<br>
+ Then 'he, 'Thy spirit, O my sire, 'twas thy spirit often<br>
+ Sadly appearing aroused-me to seek thy fair habitation.<br>
+ My fleet moors i' the blue Tyrrhene: all with-me goeth well.<br>
+ Grant-me to touch thy hand as of old, and thy body embrace.'<br>
+ Speaking, awhile in tears his feeling mutinied, and when<br>
+ For the longing contact of mortal affection, he out-held
+ <span class="linenum">700</span><a id="page_463"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{463}</span><br>
+ His strong arms, the figure sustain'd them not: 'twas as empty<br>
+ E'en as a windworn cloud, or a phantom of irrelevant sleep.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >On the level bosom of this vale more thickly the tall trees</span
+ ><br>
+ Grow, an' aneath quivering poplars and whispering alders<br>
+ Lethe's dreamy river throu' peaceful scenery windeth.<br>
+ Whereby now flitted in vast swarms many people of all lands,<br>
+ As when in early summer 'honey-bees on a flowery pasture<br>
+ Pill the blossoms, hurrying to' an' fro,&mdash;innumerous are they,<br>
+ Revisiting the ravish'd lily cups, while all the meadow hums.<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Æneas was turn'd to the sight, and marvelling inquired,
+ <span class="linenum">710</span></span
+ ><br>
+ 'Say, sir, what the river that there i' the vale-bottom I see?<br>
+ And who they that thickly along its bank have assembled?'<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em"
+ >Then Lord Anchises, 'The spirits for whom a second life</span
+ ><br>
+ And body are destined ar' arriving thirsty to Lethe,<br>
+ And here drink th' unmindful draught from wells of oblivyon.<br>
+ My heart greatly desired of this very thing to acquaint thee,<br>
+ Yea, and show-thee the men to-be-born, our glory her'after,<br>
+ So to gladden thine heart where now thy voyaging endeth.'<br>
+ 'Must it then be-believ'd, my sire, that a soul which attaineth<br>
+ Elysium will again submit to her old body-burden?
+ <span class="linenum">720</span><br>
+ Is this well? what hap can awake such dire longing in them?'<br>
+ 'I will tell thee', O son, nor keep thy wonder awaiting,'<br>
+ Answereth Anchises, and all expoundeth in order.<br>
+ Know first that the heavens, and th' Earth, and space fluid or void,<br>
+ Night's pallid orb, day's Sun, and all his starry coævals,<br>
+ Are by one spirit inly quickened, and, mingling in each part,<br>
+ Mind informs the matter, nature's complexity ruling.<br>
+ Thence the living creatures, man, brute, and ev'ry feather'd fowl,<br>
+ And what breedeth in Ocean aneath her surface of argent:<br>
+ Their seed knoweth a fiery vigour, 'tis of airy divine birth,
+ <span class="linenum">730</span><br>
+ In so far as unimpeded by an alien evil,<br>
+ Nor dull'd by the body's framework condemn'd to corruption.<br>
+ Hence the desires and vain tremblings that assail them, unable<a
+ id="page_464"
+ ></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{464}</span><br>
+ Darkly prison'd to arise to celestial exaltation;<br>
+ Nor when death summoneth them anon earth-life to relinquish,<br>
+ Can they in all discard their stain, nor wholly away with<br>
+ Mortality's plaguespots. It must-be that, O, many wild graffs<br>
+ Deeply at 'heart engrain'd have rooted strangely upon them:<br>
+ Wherefore must suffering purge them, yea, Justice atone them<br>
+ With penalties heavy as their guilt: some purify exposed
+ <span class="linenum">740</span><br>
+ Hung to the viewless winds, or others long watery searchings<br>
+ Low i' the deep wash clean, some bathe in fie<span class="midletter"
+ >^</span
+ >ry renewal:<br>
+ Each cometh unto his own retribution,&mdash;if after in ample<br>
+ Elysium we attain, but a few, to the fair Happy Woodland,<br>
+ Yet slow time still worketh on us to remove the defilement,<br>
+ Till it hath eaten away the acquir'd dross, leaving again free<br>
+ That first fie<span class="midletter">^</span>ry vigour, the celestia<span
+ class="midletter"
+ >^</span
+ >l virtue of our life.<br>
+ All whom here thou see<span class="midletter">^</span>st, hav'
+ accomplished purification:<br>
+ Unto the stream of Lethe a god their company calleth,<br>
+ That forgetful of old failure, pain &amp; disappointment,
+ <span class="linenum">750</span><br>
+ They may again into' earthly bodies with glad courage enter.'<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 15%">*&nbsp; *&nbsp; *&nbsp; </span>
+ <br>
+ Twín be the gates o' the house of sleep: as fable opineth
+ <span class="linenum">893</span><br>
+ One is of horn, and thence for a true dream outlet is easy:<br>
+ Fair the other, shining perfected of ivory carven;<br>
+ But false are the visions that thereby find passage upward.<br>
+ Soon then as Anchises had spok'n, he-led the Sibyl forth<br>
+ And his son, and both dismisst from th' ivory portal.<br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="c">FINIS</p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_465"></a><span class="pagenumb">{465}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <a id="page_466"></a><span class="pagenumb">{466}</span>
+ </p>
+
+ <table style="border: none; border-spacing: 0; border-collapse: collapse; padding: 0;">
+ <tr>
+ <th colspan="2" style='text-align:center'>
+ <a id="INDEX"></a><span style="font-size: larger;">INDEX</span>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th colspan="2" style='text-align:center'>
+ <a id="INDEX_OF_FIRST_LINES"></a
+ ><span style="font-size: larger;">INDEX OF FIRST LINES</span>
+ </th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2" style='text-align:center'>
+ <a href="#A">A</a>, <a href="#B">B</a>, <a href="#C">C</a>,
+ <a href="#D">D</a>, <a href="#E">E</a>, <a href="#F">F</a>,
+ <a href="#G">G</a>, <a href="#H">H</a>, <a href="#I">I</a>,
+ <a href="#J">J</a>, <a href="#L">L</a>, <a href="#M">M</a>,
+ <a href="#N">N</a>, <a href="#O">O</a>, <a href="#P">P</a>,
+ <a href="#R">R</a>, <a href="#S">S</a>, <a href="#T">T</a>,
+ <a href="#V">V</a>, <a href="#W">W</a>, <a href="#Y">Y</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2" style='text-align:right'><small>PAGE</small></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="A"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A cottage built of native stone,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_354">354</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A coy inquisitive spirit,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_027">27</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>After long sleep when Psyche first awoke,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_105">105</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Again with pleasant green,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_252">252</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ah heavenly joy,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_219">219</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ah, what a change,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_445">445</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>All earthly beauty hath one cause,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_204">204</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>All women born,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_241">241</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A man that sees by chance,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_206">206</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Among the meadows,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_372">372</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>And truly need there was,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_113">113</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>An effigy of brass,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_349">349</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Angel spirits of sleep,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_291">291</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>An idle June day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_206">206</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A poppy grows upon the shore,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_234">234</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ariel, O,&mdash;my angel, my own,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_299">299</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A single lamp there stood,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_161">161</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A song of my heart,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_311">311</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Assemble, all ye maidens,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_238">238</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>At dead of unseen night,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_446">446</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A thousand times hath in my heart's behoof,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_201">201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>At times with hurried hoofs,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_205">205</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Awake, my heart, to be loved,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_277">277</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Away now, lovely Muse,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_221">221</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>A winter's night with the snow about,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_272">272</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="B"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Beautiful must be the mountains,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_311">311</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Beauty sat with me,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_215">215</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Because thou canst not see,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_268">268</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Behold! the radiant Spring,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_255">255</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Belov'd of all to whom that Muse is dear,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_377">377</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Beneath the wattled bank,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_330">330</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Betwixt two billows of the downs,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_301">301</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Bright day succeedeth unto day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_061">61</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Bright, my beloved, be thy day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_363">363</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>But Aphrodite to the house of Zeus,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_153">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>But Eros now recover'd from his hurt,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_169">169</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>But fairest Psyche still in favour rose,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_097">97</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="C"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Christ and his Mother,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_313">313</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Clear and gentle stream,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_225">225</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Close up, bright flow'rs,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_071">71</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Cold is the winter day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_308">308</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Come gentle sleep, I woo thee,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_211">211</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Come, rosy angel, thy coronet donning,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_441">441</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Crown Winter with green,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_297">297</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="D"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Dear lady, when thou frownest,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_232">232</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Dreary was winter,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_220">220</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="E"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ended are many days,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_367">367</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Eternal Father, who didst all create,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_221">221</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="F"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Fair lady of learning,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_390">390</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Fight well, my comrades,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_447">447</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Fire of heaven, whose starry arrow,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_290">290</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Flame-throated robin,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_309">309</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>For beauty being the best of all we know,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_191">191</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>For thou art mine,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_188">188</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="G"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Gay and lovely is earth,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_053">53</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Gay Marigold is frolic,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_371">371</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Gay Robin is seen no more,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_285">285</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Gird on thy sword, O man,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_407">407</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Gloom and the night are thine,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_403">403</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="H"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Hark! the world is full of thy praise,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_364">364</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Hark to the merry birds,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_283">283</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Hark! what spirit doth entreat,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_405">405</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Haste on, my joys,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_269">269</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Heavy meanwhile at heart,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_145">145</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>His poisoned shafts,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_240">240</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>How coud I quarrel or blame you,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_193">193</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>How fares it, friend, since I,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_378">378</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>How well my eyes remember,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_332">332</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="I"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I care not if I live,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_203">203</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I climb the mossy bank,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_338">338</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I died in very flow'r,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_448">448</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>If I coud but forget and not recall,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_207">207</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I found to-day out walking,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_468">468</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I have loved flowers that fade,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_263">263</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I have sown upon the fields,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_351">351</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I heard a linnet courting,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_231">231</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I heard great Hector,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_213">213</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I know not how I came,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_246">246</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I live on hope,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_218">218</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I love all beauteous things,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_281">281</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I love my lady's eyes,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_278">278</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I made another song,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_237">237</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In all things beautiful,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_202">202</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In autumn moonlight,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_215">215</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I never shall love the snow again,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_309">309</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In midmost length of hundred-citied Crete,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_089">89</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In still midsummer night,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_375">375</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In the golden glade,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_317">317</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In thee my spring of life,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_190">190</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In this May-month,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_307">307</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In this neglected, ruin'd edifice,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_209">209</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>In ways of beauty and peace,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_404">404</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I praise the tender flower,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_272">272</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I saw the Virgin-mother,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_245">245</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I stand on the cliff,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_266">266</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I travel to thee with the sun's first rays,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_201">201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I will be what God made me,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_218">218</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I will not let thee go,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_232">232</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I wish'd to sing thy grace,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_347">347</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>I would be a bird,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_198">198</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="J"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td><i>Je donnerais pour revivre à vingt ans</i>,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_379">379</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Joy, sweetest lifeborn joy,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_275">275</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="L"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Let praise devote thy work,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_300">300</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Let us, as by this verdant bank,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_250">250</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Long are the hours the sun is above,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_235">235</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Look down the river,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_327">327</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Look! Look! the spring is come,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_318">318</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Love not too much,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_302">302</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Love on my heart from heaven fell,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_287">287</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Love that I know,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_217">217</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Love to Love calleth,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_397">397</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Lo where the virgin veiled in airy beams,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_071">71</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="M"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Man, born of desire,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_399">399</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Man, born to toil,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_469">469</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Man hath with man,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_323">323</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Mortal though I be, yea ephemeral,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_447">447</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My bed and pillow are cold,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_273">273</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My delight and thy delight,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_339">339</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My eyes for beauty pine,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_286">286</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My lady pleases me and I please her,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_202">202</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Myriad-voiced Queen,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_394">394</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My soul is drunk with joy,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_046">46</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My spirit kisseth thine,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_298">298</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My spirit sang all day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_281">281</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>My wearied heart,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_220">220</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="N"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>No ethical system, no contemplation,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_425">425</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Nothing is joy without thee,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_199">199</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Now all the windows,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_340">340</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Now in wintry delights,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_411">411</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Now joy in all hearts,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_439">439</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Now since to me altho' by thee refused,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_193">193</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Now thin mists temper,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_304">304</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="O"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O bold majestic downs,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_251">251</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O flesh and blood, comrade to tragic pain,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_197">197</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O golden Sun, whose ray,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_261">261</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O heavenly fire, life's life,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_040">40</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O Love, I complain,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_335">335</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O Love, my muse,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_286">286</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O miserable man,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_037">37</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td><i>O my goddess divine</i>,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_204">204</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O my life's mischief,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_205">205</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O my uncared-for songs,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_212">212</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O my vague desires,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'>
+ <a href="#page_046">46</a>, <a href="#page_264">264</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Once I would say,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_210">210</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>One grief of thine,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_375">375</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>On the Hellenic board of Crete's fair isle,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_137">137</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Open for me the gates of delight,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_401">401</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O that the earth, or only this fair isle,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_072">72</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O thou unfaithful,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_273">273</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O weary pilgrims,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_198">198</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>O youth whose hope is high,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_280">280</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="P"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Perfect little body,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_267">267</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Poor withered rose,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_228">228</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Power eternal, power unknown,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_403">403</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="R"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Rejoice, ye dead,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'>
+ <a href="#page_196">196</a>, <a href="#page_401">401</a
+ ><a id="page_470"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{470}</span>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Resound! Resound! To jubilant music ring,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_393">393</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Riding adown the country lanes,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_342">342</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="S"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Sad, sombre place,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_258">258</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Say who be these,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_195">195</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Say who is this with silvered hair,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_296">296</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>See, Love, a year is pass'd,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_447">447</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>See, whirling snow,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_306">306</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Sense with keenest edge unused,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_343">343</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since I believe in God,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_443">443</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since not the enamour'd sun,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_214">214</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since now from woodland mist,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_377">377</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since then 'tis only pity looking back,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_210">210</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since thou, O fondest and truest,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_279">279</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since to be loved endures,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_303">303</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Since we loved,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_346">346</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Sometimes when my lady sits by me,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_234">234</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>So sweet love seemed,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_305">305</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Spirit of grace and beauty,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_350">350</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Spring goeth all in white,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_286">286</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Spring hath her own bright days,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_199">199</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Sweet compassionate tears,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_406">406</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="T"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Tears of love, tears of joy,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_207">207</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The birds that sing on autumn eves,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_293">293</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The cliff-top has a carpet,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_229">229</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The clouds have left the sky,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_283">283</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The dark and serious angel,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_217">217</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The day begins to droop,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_345">345</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thee fair Poetry oft hath sought,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_395">395</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The evening darkens over,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_279">279</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The fabled sea-snake, old Leviathan,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_200">200</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The full moon from her cloudless skies,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_277">277</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The green corn waving in the dale,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_288">288</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The hill pines were sighing,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_288">288</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The idle life I lead,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_290">290</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The image of thy love,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_209">209</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The lonely season in lonely lands,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_314">314</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The north wind came up,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_315">315</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The pinks along my garden walks,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_289">289</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The poets were good teachers,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_189">189</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>There is a hill,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_248">248</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>There's many a would-be poet,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'>
+ <a href="#page_192">192</a><a id="page_471"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{471}</span>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>There was no lad handsomer,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_319">319</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The saddest place,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_355">355</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The sea keeps not the Sabbath day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_341">341</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The sea with melancholy war,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_396">396</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>These grey stones have rung with mirth,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_446">446</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>These meagre rhymes,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_214">214</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The sickness of desire,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_376">376</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The snow lies sprinkled on the beach,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_298">298</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The south wind rose at dusk,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_336">336</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The spirit's eager sense,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_211">211</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The storm is over,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_294">294</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The summer trees are tempest-torn,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_292">292</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The upper skies are palest blue,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_282">282</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The very names of things belov'd,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_189">189</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The whole world now is but the minister,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_188">188</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The wood is bare,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_227">227</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The work is done,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_200">200</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The world comes not to an end,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_212">212</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>The world still goeth about to shew and hide,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_197">197</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>They that in play can do the thing they would,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_187">187</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>They wer' amid the shadows,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_448">448</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>This world is unto God a work of art,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_195">195</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thou art a poet, Robbie Burns,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_385">385</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thou didst delight my eyes,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_274">274</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thou dimpled Millicent,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_374">374</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thousand threads of rain,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_446">446</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thou vainly, O Man, self-deceiver,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_444">444</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thus to be humbled,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_203">203</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Thus to thy beauty,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_191">191</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>To me, to me, fair hearted Goddess, come,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_398">398</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>To my love I whisper,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_339">339</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>To us, O Queen of sinless grace,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_402">402</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Truest-hearted of early friends,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_442">442</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Turn, O return,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_395">395</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>'Twas on the very day winter took leave,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_216">216</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="V"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Voyaging northwards,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_359">359</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="W"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Wanton with long delay,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_284">284</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Weep not to-day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_320">320</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>We left the city when the summer day,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_270">270</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>What happy bonds together unite you,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_447">447</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>What is sweeter than new-mown hay,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'>
+ <a href="#page_292">292</a><a id="page_472"></a
+ ><span class="pagenumb">{472}</span>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>'What think you, sister',</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_121">121</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>What voice of gladness,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_306">306</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When Death to either shall come,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_347">347</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When first I saw thee, dearest,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_216">216</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When first we met,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_241">241</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When from the lowest ebbing,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_129">129</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When I see childhood,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_208">208</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When June is come,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_289">289</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When men were all asleep,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_265">265</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When my love was away,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_294">294</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When parch'd with thirst,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_208">208</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When sometimes in an ancient house,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_194">194</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When thou didst give thy love to me,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_374">374</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When thou, my beloved, diedst,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_448">448</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>When to my lone soft bed,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_442">442</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Wherefore to-night so full of care,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_260">260</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Where San Miniato's convent,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_196">196</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Where thou art better I too were,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_448">448</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>While Eros in his chamber hid his tears,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_177">177</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>While yet we wait for spring,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_190">190</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Whither, O splendid ship,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_244">244</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Who builds a ship,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_194">194</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Who has not walked upon the shore,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_236">236</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Who takes the census of the living dead,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_213">213</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Why art thou sad,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_347">347</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Why hast thou nothing,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_348">348</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Why, O Maker of all,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_445">445</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Will Love again awake,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_242">242</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Winter was not unkind,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_192">192</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>With mild eyes agaze,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_389">389</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2"><a id="Y"></a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ye blessed saints,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_219">219</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ye Spartan mothers,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_371">371</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>Ye thrilled me once,</td>
+ <td style='text-align:right'><a href="#page_296">296</a><br></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a id="Footnote_A_1"></a
+ ><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> There is
+ another alcaic translation from Blake on p. 71 in 'Demeter'. The Ode
+ on p. 72 is iambic, and the Chorus on pp. 53, 54 is in choriambics.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p>
+ <a id="Footnote_B_2"></a
+ ><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> Line 321.
+ 'T'whom' is from Milton, in imitation of Virgil's admired Olli. It is
+ not admitted in the ordinary prosody.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37804 ***</div>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #37804 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/37804)
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