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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.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53621 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53621)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge, by
-Francis Ledwidge
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge
- with Introductions by Lord Dunsany
-
-Author: Francis Ledwidge
-
-Release Date: November 28, 2016 [EBook #53621]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPLETE POEMS--FRANCIS LEDWIDGE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (online soon
-in an extended version, also linking to free sources for
-education worldwide ... MOOC's, educational materials,...)
-Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-THE COMPLETE POEMS
-
-OF
-
-FRANCIS LEDWIDGE
-
-
-WITH INTRODUCTION
-
-BY LORD DUNSANY
-
-
-HERBERT JENKINS LIMITED
-
-YORK STREET ST. JAMES'S
-
-LONDON S.W.1
-
-MCMXIX
-
-
-
-TO
-
-MY MOTHER
-
-THE FIRST SINGER I KNEW
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION TO SONGS OF THE FIELDS
-
-
-DUNSANY CASTLE,
-
-_June,_ 1914.
-
-If one who looked from a tower for a new star, watching for years the
-same part of the sky, suddenly saw it (quite by chance while thinking
-of other things), and knew it for the star for which he had hoped, how
-many millions of men would never care?
-
-And the star might blaze over deserts and forests and seas, cheering
-lost wanderers in desolate lands, or guiding dangerous quests; millions
-would never know it. And a poet is no more than a star. If one has
-arisen where I have so long looked for one, amongst the Irish peasants,
-it can be little more than a secret that I shall share with those who
-read this book because they care for poetry.
-
-I have looked for a poet amongst the Irish peasants because it seemed
-to me that almost only amongst them there was in daily use a diction
-worthy of poetry, as well a an imagination capable of dealing with the
-great and simple things that are a poet's wares. Their thoughts are in
-the spring-time, and all their metaphors fresh: in London no one makes
-metaphors any more, but daily speech is strewn thickly with dead ones
-that their users should write upon paper and give to their gardeners to
-burn.
-
-In this same London, two years ago, where I was wasting June, I
-received a letter one day from Mr. Ledwidge and a very old copy-book.
-The letter asked whether there was any good in the verses that filled
-the copy-book, the produce apparently of four or five years. It began
-with a play in verse that no manager would dream of, there were
-mistakes in grammar, in spelling of course, and worse--there were such
-phrases as "'thwart the rolling foam," "waiting for my true love on
-the lea," etc., which are vulgarly considered to be the appurtenances
-of poetry; but out of these and many similar errors there arose
-continually, like a mountain sheer out of marshes, that easy fluency of
-shapely lines which is now so noticeable in all that he writes; that
-and sudden glimpses of the fields that he seems at times to bring so
-near to one that one exclaims, "Why, that is how Meath looks," or "It
-is just like that along the Boyne in April," quite taken by surprise by
-familiar things: for none of us knows, till the poets point them out,
-how many beautiful things are close about us.
-
-Of pure poetry there are two kinds, that which mirrors the beauty of
-the world in which our bodies are, and that which builds the more
-mysterious kingdoms where geography ends and fairyland begins, with
-gods and heroes at war, and the sirens singing still, and Alph going
-down to the darkness from Xanadu. Mr. Ledwidge gives us the first
-kind. When they have read through the profounder poets, and seen the
-problem plays, and studied all the perplexities that puzzle man in the
-cities, the small circle of readers that I predict for him will turn to
-Ledwidge as to a mirror reflecting beautiful fields, as to a very still
-lake rather on a very cloudless evening.
-
-There is scarcely a smile of Spring or a sigh of Autumn that is not
-reflected here, scarcely a phase of the large benedictions of Summer;
-even of Winter he gives us clear glimpses sometimes, albeit mournfully,
-remembering Spring.
-
- "In the red west the twisted moon is low,
- And on the bubbles there are half-lit stars,
- Music and twilight: and the deep blue flow
- Of water: and the watching fire of Mars.
- The deep fish slipping through the moonlit bars
- Make death a thing of sweet dreams,--"
-
-What a Summer's evening is here.
-
-And this is a Summer's night in a much longer poem that I have not
-included in this selection, a summer's night seen by two lovers:
-
- "The large moon rose up queenly as a flower
- Charmed by some Indian pipes. A hare went by,
- A snipe above them circled in the sky."
-
-And elsewhere he writes, giving us the mood and picture of Autumn in a
-single line:
-
- "And somewhere all the wandering birds have flown."
-
-With such simple scenes as this the book is full, giving nothing at all
-to those that look for a "message," but bringing a feeling of quiet
-from gleaming Irish evenings, a book to read between the Strand and
-Piccadilly Circus amidst the thunder and hootings.
-
-To every poet is given the revelation of some living thing so intimate
-that he speaks, when he speaks of it, as an ambassador speaking for his
-sovereign; with Homer it was the heroes, with Ledwidge it is the small
-birds that sing, but in particular especially the blackbird, whose
-cause he champions against all other birds almost with a vehemence
-such as that with which men discuss whether Mr. ----, M. P., or his
-friend the Right Honourable ---- is really the greater ruffian. This
-is how he speaks of the blackbird in one of his earliest poems; he was
-sixteen when he wrote it, in a grocer's shop in Dublin, dreaming of
-Slane, where he was born; and his dreams turned out to be too strong
-for the grocery business, for he walked home one night, a distance of
-thirty miles:
-
- "Above me smokes the little town
- With its whitewashed walls and roofs of brown
- And its octagon spire toned smoothly down
- As the holy minds within.
- And wondrous, impudently sweet,
- Half of him passion, half conceit,
- The blackbird calls adown the street,
- Like the piper of Hamelin."
-
-Let us not call him the Burns of Ireland, you who may like this book,
-nor even the Irish John Clare, though he is more like him, for poets
-are all incomparable (it is only the versifiers that resemble the great
-ones), but let us know him by his own individual song: he is the poet
-of the blackbird.
-
-I hope that not too many will be attracted to this book on account
-of the author being a peasant, lest he come to be praised by the
-how-interesting! school; for know that neither in any class, nor in any
-country, nor in any age, shall you predict the footfall of Pegasus, who
-touches the earth where he pleaseth and is bridled by whom he will.
-
-DUNSANY.
-
-_June, 1914._
-
-
-
-BASINGSTOKE CAMP.
-
-I wrote this preface in such a different June, that if I sent it out
-with no addition it would make the book appear to have dropped a long
-while since out of another world, a world that none of us remembers
-now, in which there used to be leisure.
-
-Ledwidge came last October into the 5th Battalion of the Royal
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, which is in one of the divisions of Kitchener's
-first army, and soon earned a lance-corporal's stripe.
-
-All his future books lie on the knees of the gods. May They not be the
-only readers.
-
-Any well-informed spy can probably tell you our movements, so of such
-things I say nothing.
-
- DUNSANY, _Captain,_
- _5th R. Inniskilling Fusiliers._
-_June, 1915._
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION TO SONGS OF PEACE
-
-
-EBRINGTON BARRACKS,
-
-_September,_ 1916.
-
-In this selection that Corporal Ledwidge has asked me to make from his
-poems I have included "A Dream of Artemis," though it was incomplete
-and has been hurriedly finished Were it not included on that account
-many lines of extraordinary beauty would remain unseen. He asked me if
-I did not think that it ended too abruptly, but so many pleasant things
-ended abruptly in the summer of 1914, when this poem was being written,
-that the blame for that may rest on a meaner, though more, exalted,
-head than that of the poet.
-
-In this poem, as in the other one that has a classical theme, "The
-Departure of Proserpine," those who remember their classics may find
-faults, but I read the "Dream of Artemis" merely as an expression of
-things that the poet has seen and dreamed in Meath, including a most
-beautiful description of a fox-hunt in the north of the county, in
-which he has probably taken part on foot; and in "The Departure of
-Proserpine," whether conscious or not, a crystallization in verse of
-an autumnal mood induced by falling leaves and exile and the possible
-nearness of death.
-
-The second poem in the book was written about a little boy who used
-to drive cows for some farmer past the poet's door very early every
-morning, whistling as he went, and who died just before the war. I
-think that its beautiful and spontaneous simplicity would cost some of
-our writers gallons of midnight oil.
-
-Of the next, "To a Distant One," who will not hope that when "Fame and
-other little things are won" its clear and confident prophecy will be
-happily fulfilled?
-
-Quite perfect, if my judgment is of any value, is the little poem on
-page 175, "In the Mediterranean--Going to the War."
-
-Another beautiful thing is "Homecoming" on page 192.
-
- "The sheep are coming home in Greece,
- Hark the bells on every hill,
- Flock by flock and fleece by fleece."
-
-One feels that the Greeks are of some use, after all, to have
-inspired--with the help of their sheep--so lovely a poem.
-
-"The Shadow People" on page 205 seems to me another perfect poem.
-Written in Serbia and Egypt, it shows the poet still looking
-steadfastly at those fields, though so far distant then, of which he
-was surely born to be the singer. And this devotion to the fields of
-Meath that, in nearly all his songs, from such far places brings his
-spirit home, like the instinct that has been given to the swallows,
-seems to be the key-note of the book. For this reason I have named it
-_Songs of Peace,_ in spite of the circumstances under which they were
-written.
-
-There follow poems at which some may wonder: "To Thomas McDonagh," "The
-Blackbirds," "The Wedding Morning"; but rather than attribute curious
-sympathies to this brave young Irish soldier I would ask his readers to
-consider the irresistible attraction that a lost cause has for almost
-any Irish-man.
-
-Once the swallow instinct appears again--in the poem called "The
-Lure"--and a longing for the South, and again in the poem called
-"Song": and then the Irish fields content him again, and we find him
-on the last page but one in the book making a poem for a little place
-called Faughan, because he finds that its hills and woods and streams
-are unsung. Surely for this if there be, as many believed, gods lesser
-than Those whose business is with destiny, thunder and war, small gods
-that haunt the groves, seen only at times by few, and then indistinctly
-at evening, surely from gratitude they will give him peace.
-
- DUNSANY
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION TO LAST SONGS
-
-
-THE HINDENBERG LINE,
-
-_October 9th,_ 1917.
-
-Writing amidst rather too much noise and squalor to do justice at all
-to the delicate rustic muse of Francis Ledwidge, I do not like to delay
-his book any longer, nor to fail in a promise long ago made to him to
-write this introduction. He has gone down in that vast maelstrom into
-which poets do well to adventure and from which their country might
-perhaps be wise to withhold them, but that is our Country's affair. He
-has left behind him verses of great beauty, simple rural lyrics that
-may be something of an anodyne for this stricken age. If ever an age
-needed beautiful little songs our age needs them; and I know few songs
-more peaceful and happy, or better suited to soothe the scars on the
-mind of those who have looked on certain places, of which the prophecy
-in the gospels seems no more than an ominous hint when it speaks of the
-abomination of desolation.
-
-He told me once that it was on one particular occasion, when walking
-at evening through the village of Slane in summer, that he heard a
-blackbird sing. The notes, he said, were very beautiful, and it is
-this blackbird that he tells of in three wonderful lines in his early
-poem called "Behind the Closed Eye," and it is this song perhaps more
-than anything else that has been the inspiration of his brief life.
-Dynasties shook and the earth shook; and the war, not yet described by
-any man, revelled and wallowed in destruction around him; and Francis
-Ledwidge stayed true to his inspiration, as his homeward songs will
-show.
-
-I had hoped he would have seen the fame he has well deserved; but it is
-hard for a poet to live to see fame even in times of peace. In these
-days it is harder than ever.
-
- DUNSANY.
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- SONGS OF THE FIELDS
-
- TO MY BEST FRIEND
- BEHIND THE CLOSED EYE
- BOUND TO THE MAST
- To A LINNET IN A CAGE
- A TWILIGHT IN MIDDLE MARCH
- SPRING
- DESIRE IN SPRING
- A RAINY DAY IN APRIL
- A SONG OF APRIL
- THE BROKEN TRYST
- THOUGHTS AT THE TRYSTING STILE
- EVENING IN MAY
- AN ATTEMPT AT A CITY SUNSET
- WAITING
- THE SINGER'S MUSE
- INAMORATA
- THE WIFE OF LLEW
- THE HILLS
- JUNE
- IN MANCHESTER
- Music ON WATER
- To M. McG.
- IN THE DUSK
- THE DEATH OF AILILL
- AUGUST
- THE VISITATION OF PEACE
- BEFORE THE TEARS
- GOD'S REMEMBRANCE
- AN OLD PAIN
- THE LOST ONES
- ALL-HALLOWS EVE
- A MEMORY
- A SONG
- A FEAR
- THE COMING POET
- THE VISION ON THE BRINK
- To LORD DUNSANY
- ON AN OATEN STRAW
- EVENING IN FEBRUARY
- THE SISTER
- BEFORE THE WAR OF COOLEY
- LOW-MOON LAND
- THE SORROW OF FINDEBAR
- ON DREAM WATER
- THE DEATH OF SUALTEM
- THE MAID IN LOW-MOON LAND
- THE DEATH OF LEAG, CUCHULAIN'S CHARIOTEER
- THE PASSING OF CAOILTE
- GROWING OLD
- AFTER MY LAST SONG
-
- SONGS OF PEACE
-
- AT HOME
-
- A DREAM OF ARTEMIS
- A LITTLE BOY IN THE MORNING
-
- IN BARRACKS
-
- TO A DISTANT ONE
- THE PLACE
- MAY
- TO ELLISH OF THE FAIR HAIR
-
- IN CAMP
-
- CREWBAWN
- EVENING IN ENGLAND
-
- AT SEA
-
- CROCKNAHARNA
- IN THE MEDITERRANEAN--GOING TO THE WAR
- THE GARDENER
-
- IN SERBIA
-
- AUTUMN EVENING IN SERBIA
- NOCTURNE
- SPRING AND AUTUMN
-
- IN GREECE
-
- THE DEPARTURE OF PROSERPINE
- THE HOME-COMING OF THE SHEEP
- WHEN LOVE AND BEAUTY WANDER AWAY
-
- IN HOSPITAL IN EGYPT
-
- MY MOTHER
- SONG
- To ONE DEAD
- THE RESURRECTION
- THE SHADOW PEOPLE
-
- IN BARRACKS
-
- AN OLD DESIRE
- THOMAS McDONAGH
- THE WEDDING MORNING
- THE BLACKBIRDS
- THE LURE
- THRO' BOGAC BAN
- FATE
- EVENING CLOUDS
- SONG
- THE HERONS
- IN THE SHADOWS
- THE SHIPS OF ARCADY
- AFTER
- To ONE WEEPING
- A DREAM DANCE
- BY FAUGHAN
- IN SEPTEMBER
-
- LAST SONGS
-
- To AN OLD QUILL OF LORD DUNSANY'S
- To A SPARROW
- OLD CLO'
- YOUTH
- THE LITTLE CHILDREN
- AUTUMN
- IRELAND
- LADY FAIR
- AT A POET'S GRAVE
- AFTER COURT MARTIAL
- A MOTHER'S SONG
- AT CURRABWEE
- SONG-TIME IS OVER
- UNA BAWN
- SPRING LOVE
- SOLILOQUY
- DAWN
- CEOL SIDHE
- THE RUSHES
- THE DEAD KINGS
- IN FRANCE
- HAD I A GOLDEN POUND
- FAIRIES
- IN A CAFÉ
- SPRING
- PAN
- WITH FLOWERS
- THE FIND
- A FAIRY HUNT
- TO ONE WHO COMES NOW AND THEN
- THE SYLPH
- HOME
- THE LANAWN SHEE
-
-
-
-
- SONGS OF THE FIELDS
-
-
-
-
- TO MY BEST FRIEND
-
-
- I love the wet-lipped wind that stirs the hedge
- And kisses the bent flowers that drooped for rain,
- That stirs the poppy on the sun-burned ledge
- And like a swan dies singing, without pain.
- The golden bees go buzzing down to stain
- The lilies' frills, and the blue harebell rings,
- And the sweet blackbird in the rainbow sings.
-
- Deep in the meadows I would sing a song,
- The shallow brook my tuning-fork, the birds
- My masters; and the boughs they hop along
- Shall mark my time: but there shall be no words
- For lurking Echo's mock; an angel herds
- Words that I may not know, within, for you,
- Words for the faithful meet, the good and true.
-
-
-
-
- BEHIND THE CLOSED EYE
-
-
- I walk the old frequented ways
- That wind around the tangled braes,
- I live again the sunny days
- Ere I the city knew.
-
- And scenes of old again are born,
- The woodbine lassoing the thorn,
- And drooping Ruth-like in the corn
- The poppies weep the dew.
-
- Above me in their hundred schools
- The magpies bend their young to rules,
- And like an apron full of jewels
- The dewy cobweb swings.
-
- And frisking in the stream below
- The troutlets make the circles flow,
- And the hungry crane doth watch them grow
- As a smoker does his rings.
-
- Above me smokes the little town,
- With its whitewashed walls and roofs of brown
- And its octagon spire toned smoothly down
- As the holy minds within.
-
- And wondrous impudently sweet,
- Half of him passion, half conceit,
- The blackbird calls adown the street
- Like the piper of Hamelin.
-
- I hear him, and I feel the lure
- Drawing me back to the homely moor,
- I'll go and close the mountains' door
- On the city's strife and din.
-
-
-
-
- BOUND TO THE MAST
-
-
- When mildly falls the deluge of the grass,
- And meads begin to rise like Noah's flood,
- And o'er the hedgerows flow, and onward pass,
- Dribbling thro' many a wood;
- When hawthorn trees their flags of truce unfurl,
- And dykes are spitting violets to the breeze;
- When meadow larks their jocund flight will curl
- From Earth's to Heaven's leas;
-
- Ah! then the poet's dreams are most sublime,
- A-sail on seas that know a heavenly calm,
- And in his song you hear the river's rhyme,
- And the first bleat of the lamb.
- Then when the summer evenings fall serene,
- Unto the country dance his songs repair,
- And you may meet some maids with angel mien,
- Bright eyes and twilight hair.
-
- When Autumn's crayon tones the green leaves sere,
- And breezes honed on icebergs hurry past;
- When meadow-tides have ebbed and woods grow drear,
- And bow before the blast;
- When briars make semicircles on the way;
- When blackbirds hide their flutes and cower and die;
- When swollen rivers lose themselves and stray
- Beneath a murky sky;
-
- Then doth the poet's voice like cuckoo's break,
- And round his verse the hungry lapwing grieves,
- And melancholy in his dreary wake
- The funeral of the leaves.
- Then when the Autumn dies upon the plain,
- Wound in the snow alike his right and wrong,
- The poet sings,--albeit a sad strain,--
- Bound to the Mast of Song.
-
-
-
-
- TO A LINNET IN A CAGE
-
-
- When Spring is in the fields that stained your wing,
- And the blue distance is alive with song,
- And finny quiets of the gabbling spring
- Rock lilies red and long,
- At dewy daybreak, I will set you free
- In ferny turnings of the woodbine lane,
- Where faint-voiced echoes leave and cross in glee
- The hilly swollen plain.
-
- In draughty houses you forget your tune,
- The modulator of the changing hours.
- You want the wide air of the moody noon.
- And the slanting evening showers.
- So I will loose you, and your song shall fall
- When morn is white upon the dewy pane,
- Across my eyelids, and my soul recall
- From worlds of sleeping pain.
-
-
-
-
- A TWILIGHT IN MIDDLE MARCH
-
-
- Within the oak a throb of pigeon wings
- Fell silent, and grey twilight hushed the fold,
- And spiders' hammocks swung on half-oped things
- That shook like foreigners upon our cold.
- A gipsy lit a fire and made a sound
- Of moving tins, and from an oblong moon
- The river seemed to gush across the ground
- To the cracked metre of a marching tune.
-
- And then three syllables of melody
- Dropped from a blackbird's flute, and died apart
- Far in the dewy dark. No more but three,
- Yet sweeter music never touched a heart
- Neath the blue domes of London. Flute and reed,
- Suggesting feelings of the solitude
- When will was all the Delphi I would heed,
- Lost like a wind within a summer wood
- From little knowledge where great sorrows brood.
-
-
-
-
- SPRING
-
-
- The dews drip roses on the meadows
- Where the meek daisies dot the sward.
- And Ćolus whispers through the shadows,
- "Behold the handmaid of the Lord!"
- The golden news the skylark waketh
- And 'thwart the heavens his flight is curled;
- Attend ye as the first note breaketh
- And chrism droppeth on the world.
-
- The velvet dusk still haunts the stream
- Where Pan makes music light and gay.
- The mountain mist hath caught a beam
- And slowly weeps itself away.
- The young leaf bursts its chrysalis
- And gem-like hangs upon the bough,
- Where the mad throstle sings in bliss
- O'er earth's rejuvenated brow.
-
- ENVOI
-
- Slowly fall, O golden sands,
- Slowly fall and let me sing,
- Wrapt in the ecstasy of youth,
- The wild delights of Spring.
-
-
-
-
- DESIRE IN SPRING
-
-
- I love the cradle songs the mothers sing
- In lonely places when the twilight drops,
- The slow endearing melodies that bring
- Sleep to the weeping lids; and, when she stops,
- I love the roadside birds upon the tops
- Of dusty hedges in a world of Spring.
-
- And when the sunny rain drips from the edge
- Of midday wind, and meadows lean one way,
- And a long whisper passes thro' the sedge,
- Beside the broken water let me stay,
- While these old airs upon my memory play.
- And silent changes colour up the hedge.
-
-
-
-
- A RAINY DAY IN APRIL
-
-
- When the clouds shake their hyssops, and the rain
- Like holy water falls upon the plain,
- 'Tis sweet to gaze upon the springing grain
- And see your harvest born.
-
- And sweet the little breeze of melody,
- The blackbird puffs upon the budding tree,
- While the wild poppy lights upon the lea
- And blazes 'mid the corn.
-
- The skylark soars the freshening shower to hail,
- And the meek daisy holds aloft her pail,
- And Spring all radiant by the wayside pale,
- Sets up her rock and reel.
-
- See how she weaves her mantle fold on fold,
- Hemming the woods and carpeting the wold.
- Her warp is of the green, her woof the gold,
- The spinning world her wheel.
-
- By'n by above the hills a pilgrim moon
- Will rise to light upon the midnight noon,
- But still she plieth to the lonesome tune
- Of the brown meadow rail.
-
- No heavy dreams upon her eyelids weigh,
- Nor do her busy fingers ever stay;
- She knows a fairy prince is on the way
- To wake a sleeping beauty.
-
- To deck the pathway that his feet must tread,
- To fringe the 'broidery of the roses' bed,
- To show the Summer she but sleeps,--not dead,
- This is her fixed duty.
-
-
- ENVOI
-
- To-day while leaving my dear home behind,
- My eyes with salty homesick teardrops blind,
- The rain fell on me sorrowful and kind
- Like angels' tears of pity.
-
- 'Twas then I heard the small birds' melodies,
- And saw the poppies' bonfire on the leas,
- As Spring came whispering thro' the leafing trees
- Giving to me my ditty.
-
-
-
-
- A SONG OF APRIL
-
-
- The censer of the eglantine was moved
- By little lane winds, and the watching faces
- Of garden flowerets, which of old she loved,
- Peep shyly outward from their silent places.
- But when the sun arose the flowers grew bolder,
- And site will be in white, I thought, and she
- Will have a cuckoo on her either shoulder,
- And woodbine twines and fragrant wings of pea.
-
- And I will meet her on the hills of South,
- And I will lead her to a northern water,
- My wild one, the sweet beautiful uncouth,
- The eldest maiden of the Winter's daughter.
- And down the rainbows of her noon shall slide
- Lark music, and the little sunbeam people,
- And nomad wings shall fill the river side,
- And ground winds rocking in the lily's steeple.
-
-
-
-
- THE BROKEN TRYST
-
-
- The dropping words of larks, the sweetest tongue
- That sings between the dusks, tell all of you;
- The bursting white of Peace is all along
- Wing-ways, and pearly droppings of the dew
- Emberyl the cobwebs' greyness, and the blue
- Of hiding violets, watching for your face,
- Listen for you in every dusky place.
-
- You will not answer when I call your name,
- But in the fog of blossom do you hide
- To change my doubts into a red-faced shame
- By'n by when you are laughing by my side?
- Or will you never come, or have you died,
- And I in anguish have forgotten all?
- And shall the world now end and the heavens fall?
-
-
-
-
- THOUGHTS AT THE TRYSTING STILE
-
-
- Come, May, and hang a white flag on each thorn,
- Make truce with earth and heaven; the April child
- Now hides her sulky face deep in the morn
- Of your new flowers by the water wild
- And in the ripples of the rising grass,
- And rushes bent to let the south wind pass
- On with her tumult of swift nomad wings,
- And broken domes of downy dandelion.
- Only in spasms now the blackbird sings.
- The hour is all a-dream.
- Nets of woodbine
- Throw woven shadows over dreaming flowers,
- And dreaming, a bee-luring lily bends
- Its tender bell where blue dyke-water cowers
- Thro' briars, and folded ferns, and gripping ends
- Of wild convolvulus.
- The lark's sky-way
- Is desolate.
- I watch an apple-spray
- Beckon across a wall as if it knew
- I wait the calling of the orchard maid.
-
- Inly I feel that she will come in blue,
- With yellow on her hair, and two curls strayed
- Out of her comb's loose stocks, and I shall steal
- Behind and lay my hands upon her eyes,
- "Look not, but be my Psyche!"
- And her peal
- Of laughter will ring far, and as she tries
- For freedom I will call her names of flowers
- That climb up walls; then thro' the twilight hours
- We'll talk about the loves of ancient queens,
- And kisses like wasp-honey, false and sweet,
- And how we are entangled in love's snares
- Like wind-looped flowers.
-
-
-
-
- EVENING IN MAY
-
-
- There is nought tragic here, tho' night uplifts
- A narrow curtain where the footlights burned,
- But one long act where Love each bold heart sifts
- And blushes in the dark, but has not spurned
- The strong resolve of noon. The maiden's head
- Is brown upon the shoulder of her youth,
- Hearts are exchanged, long pent up words are said,
- Blushes burn out at the long tale of truth.
-
- The blackbird blows his yellow flute so strong,
- And rolls away the notes in careless glee,
- It breaks the rhythm of the thrushes' song,
- And puts red shame upon his rivalry.
- The yellowhammers on the roof tiles beat
- Sweet little dulcimers to broken time,
- And here the robin with a heart replete
- Has all in one short plagiarised rhyme.
-
-
-
-
- AN ATTEMPT AT A CITY SUNSET
-
- (TO J. K. Q.)
-
-
- There was a quiet glory in the sky
- When thro' the gables sank the large red sun,
- And toppling mounts of rugged cloud went by
- Heavy with whiteness, and the moon had won
- Her way above the woods, with her small star
- Behind her like the cuckoo's little mother....
- It was the hour when visions from some far
- Strange Eastern dreams like twilight bats take wing
- Out of the ruin of memories.
- O brother
- Of high song, wand'ring where the Muses fling
- Rich gifts as prodigal as winter rain,
- Like stepping-stones within a swollen river
- The hidden words are sounding in my brain,
- Too wild for taming; and I must for ever
- Think of the hills upon the wilderness,
- And leave the city sunset to your song.
- For there I am a stranger like the trees
- That sigh upon the traffic all day long.
-
-
-
-
- WAITING
-
-
- A strange old woman on the wayside sate,
- Looked far away and shook her head and sighed.
- And when anon, close by, a rusty gate
- Loud on the warm winds cried,
- She lifted up her eyes and said, "You're late."
- Then shook her head and sighed.
-
- And evening found her thus, and night in state
- Walked thro' the starlight, and a heavy tide
- Followed the yellow moon around her wait,
- And morning walked in wide.
- She lifted up her eyes and said, "You're late."
- Then shook her head and sighed.
-
-
-
-
- THE SINGER'S MUSE
-
-
- I brought in these to make her kitchen sweet,
- Haw blossoms and the roses of the lane.
- Her heart seemed in her eyes so wild they beat
- With welcome for the boughs of Spring again.
- She never heard of Babylon or Troy,
- She read no book, but once saw Dublin town;
- Yet she made a poet of her servant boy
- And from Parnassus earned the laurel crown.
-
- If Fame, the Gorgon, turns me into stone
- Upon some city square, let someone place
- Thorn blossoms and lane roses newly blown
- Beside my feet, and underneath them trace:
- "His heart was like a bookful of girls' song,
- With little loves and mighty Care's alloy.
- These did he bring his muse, and suffered long,
- Her bashful singer and her servant boy."
-
-
-
-
- INAMORATA
-
-
- The bees were holding levees in the flowers,
- Do you remember how each puff of wind
- Made every wing a hum? My hand in yours
- Was listening to your heart, but now
- The glory is all faded, and I find
- No more the olden mystery of the hours
- When you were lovely and our hearts would bow
- Each to the will of each, but one bright day
- Is stretching like an isthmus in a bay
- From the glad years that I have left behind.
-
- I look across the edge of things that were
- And you are lovely in the April ways,
- Holy and mute, the sigh of my despair....
- I hear once more the linnets' April tune
- Beyond the rainbow's warp, as in the days
- You brought me facefuls of your smiles to share
- Some of your new-found wonders.... Oh when soon
- I'm wandering the wide seas for other lands,
- Sometimes remember me with folded hands,
- And keep me happy in your pious prayer.
-
-
-
-
- THE WIFE OF LLEW
-
-
- And Gwydion said to Math, when it was Spring:
- "Come now and let us make a wife for Llew."
- And so they broke broad boughs yet moist with dew,
- And in a shadow made a magic ring:
- They took the violet and the meadow-sweet
- To form her pretty face, and for her feet
- They built a mound of daisies on a wing,
- And for her voice they made a linnet sing
- In the wide poppy blowing for her mouth.
- And over all they chanted twenty hours.
- And Llew came singing from the azure south
- And bore away his wife of birds and flowers.
-
-
-
-
- THE HILLS
-
-
- The hills are crying from the fields to me,
- And calling me with music from a choir
- Of waters in their woods where I can see
- The bloom unfolded on the whins like fire.
- And, as the evening moon climbs ever higher
- And blots away the shadows from the slope,
- They cry to me like things devoid of hope.
-
- Pigeons are home. Day droops. The fields are cold.
- Now a slow wind comes labouring up the sky
- With a small cloud long steeped in sunset gold,
- Like Jason with the precious fleece anigh
- The harbour of Iolcos. Day's bright eye
- Is filmed with the twilight, and the rill
- Shines like a scimitar upon the hill.
-
- And moonbeams drooping thro' the coloured wood
- Are full of little people winged white.
- I'll wander thro' the moon-pale solitude
- That calls across the intervening night
- With river voices at their utmost height,
- Sweet as rain-water in the blackbird's flute
- That strikes the world in admiration mute.
-
-
-
-
- JUNE
-
-
- Broom out the floor now, lay the fender by,
- And plant this bee-sucked bough of woodbine there,
- And let the window down. The butterfly
- Floats in upon the sunbeam, and the fair
- Tanned face of June, the nomad gipsy, laughs
- Above her widespread wares, the while she tells
- The farmers' fortunes in the fields, and quaffs
- The water from the spider-peopled wells.
-
- The hedges are all drowned in green grass seas,
- And bobbing poppies flare like Elmor's light,
- While siren-like the pollen-stainéd bees
- Drone in the clover depths. And up the height
- The cuckoo's voice is hoarse and broke with joy.
- And on the lowland crops the crows make raid,
- Nor fear the clappers of the farmer's boy,
- Who sleeps, like drunken Noah, in the shade.
-
- And loop this red rose in that hazel ring
- That snares your little ear, for June is short
- And we must joy in it and dance and sing,
- And from her bounty draw her rosy worth.
- Ay! soon the swallows will be flying south,
- The wind wheel north to gather in the snow,
- Even the roses spilt on youth's red mouth
- Will soon blow down the road all roses go.
-
-
-
-
- IN MANCHESTER
-
-
- There is a noise of feet that move in sin
- Under the side-faced moon here where I stray,
- Want by me like a Nemesis. The din
- Of noon is in my ears, but far away
- My thoughts are, where Peace shuts the black-birds' wings
- And it is cherry time by all the springs.
-
- And this same moon floats like a trail of fire
- Down the long Boyne, and darts white arrows thro'
- The mill wood; her white skirt is on the weir,
- She walks thro' crystal mazes of the dew,
- And rests awhile upon the dewy slope
- Where I will hope again the old, old hope.
-
- With wandering we are worn my muse and I,
- And, if I sing, my song knows nought of mirth.
- I often think my soul is an old lie
- In sackcloth, it repents so much of birth.
- But I will build it yet a cloister home
- Near the peace of lakes when I have ceased to roam.
-
-
-
-
- MUSIC ON WATER
-
-
- Where does Remembrance weep when we forget?
- From whither brings she back an old delight?
- Why do we weep that once we laughed? and yet
- Why are we sad that once our hearts were light?
- I sometimes think the days that we made bright
- Are damned within us, and we hear them yell,
- Deep in the solitude of that wide hell,
- Because we welcome in some new regret.
-
- I will remember with sad heart next year
- This music and this water, but to-day
- Let me be part of all this joy. My ear
- Caught far-off music which I bid away,
- The light of one fair face that fain would stay
- Upon the heart's broad canvas, as the Face
- On Mary's towel, lighting up the place.
- Too sad for joy, too happy for a tear.
-
- Methinks I see the music like a light
- Low on the bobbing water, and the fields
- Yellow and brown alternate on the height,
- Hanging in silence there like battered shields,
- Lean forward heavy with their coloured yields
- As if they paid it homage; and the strains,
- Prisoners of Echo, up the sunburnt plains
- Fade on the cross-cut to a future night.
-
- In the red West the twisted moon is low,
- And on the bubbles there are half-lit stars:
- Music and twilight and the deep blue flow
- Of water: and the watching fire of Mars:
- The deep fish slipping thro' the moonlit bars
- Make Death a thing of sweet dreams, life a mock.
- And the soul patient by the heart's loud clock
- Watches the time, and thinks it wondrous slow.
-
-
-
-
- TO M. McG.
-
-
- (WHO CAME ONE DAY WHEN WE WERE ALL
- GLOOMY AND CHEERED US WITH SAD MUSIC)
-
-
- We were all sad and could not weep,
- Because our sorrow had not tears:
- You came a silent thing like Sleep,
- And stole away our fears.
-
- Old memories knocking at each heart
- Troubled us with the world's great lie:
- You sat a little way apart
- And made a fiddle cry,
-
- And April with her sunny showers
- Came laughing up the fields again:
- White wings went flashing thro' the hours
- So lately full of pain.
-
- And rivers full of little lights
- Came down the fields of waving green:
- Our immemorial delights
- Stole in on us unseen.
-
- For this may Good Luck let you loose
- Upon her treasures many years,
- And Peace unfurl her flag of truce
- To any threat'ning fears.
-
-
-
-
- IN THE DUSK
-
-
- Day hangs its light between two dusks, my heart,
- Always beyond the dark there is the blue.
- Sometime we'll leave the dark, myself and you,
- And revel in the light for evermore.
- But the deep pain of you is aching smart,
- And a long calling weighs upon you sore.
-
- Day hangs its light between two dusks, and song
- Is there at the beginning and the end.
- You, in the singing dusk, how could you wend
- The songless way Contentment fleetly wings?
- But in the dark your beauty shall be strong,
- Tho' only one should listen how it sings.
-
-
-
-
- THE DEATH OF AILILL
-
-
- When there was heard no more the war's loud sound,
- And only the rough corn-crake filled the hours,
- And hill winds in the furze and drowsy flowers,
- Maeve in her chamber with her white head bowed
- On Ailill's heart was sobbing: "I have found
- The way to love you now," she said, and he
- Winked an old tear away and said: "The proud
- Unyielding heart loves never." And then she:
- "I love you now, tho' once when we were young
- We walked apart like two who were estranged
- Because I loved you not, now all is changed."
- And he who loved her always called her name
- And said: "You do not love me, 'tis your tongue
- Talks in the dusk; you love the blazing gold
- Won in the battles, and the soldier's fame.
- You love the stories that are often told
- By poets in the hall." Then Maeve arose
- And sought her daughter Findebar: "O, child,
- Go tell your father that my love went wild
- With all my wars in youth, and say that now
- I love him stronger than I hate my foes...."
- And Findebar unto her father sped
- And touched him gently on the rugged brow,
- And knew by the cold touch that he was dead.
-
-
-
-
- AUGUST
-
-
- She'll come at dusky first of day,
- White over yellow harvest's song.
- Upon her dewy rainbow way
- She shall be beautiful and strong.
- The lidless eye of noon shall spray
- Tan on her ankles in the hay,
- Shall kiss her brown the whole day long.
-
- I'll know her in the windrows, tall
- Above the crickets of the hay.
- I'll know her when her odd eyes fall,
- One May-blue, one November-grey.
- I'll watch her from the red barn wall
- Take down her rusty scythe, and call,
- And I will follow her away.
-
-
-
-
- THE VISITATION OF PEACE
-
-
- I closed the book of verse where Sorrow wept
- Above Love's broken fane where Hope once prayed,
- And thought of old trysts broken and trysts kept
- Only to chide my fondness. Then I strayed
- Down a green coil of lanes where murmuring wings
- Moved up and down like lights upon the sea,
- Searching for calm amid untroubled things
- Of wood and water. The industrious bee
- Sang in his barn within the hollow beech,
- And in a distant haggard a loud mill
- Hummed like a war of hives. A whispered speech
- Of corn and wind was on the yellow hill,
- And tattered scarecrows nodded their assent
- And waved their arms like orators. The brown
- Nude beauty of the Autumn sweetly bent
- Over the woods, across the little town.
-
- I sat in a retreating shade beside
- The river, where it fell across a weir
- Like a white mane, and in a flourish wide
- Roars by an island field and thro' a tier
- Of leaning sallies, like an avenue
- When the moon's flambeau hunts the shadows out
- And strikes the borders white across the dew.
- Where little ringlets ended, the fleet trout
- Fed on the water moths. A marsh hen crossed
- On flying wings and swimming feet to where
- Her mate was in the rushes forest, tossed
- On the heaving dusk like swallows in the air.
-
- Beyond the river a walled rood of graves
- Hung dead with all its hemlock wan and sere,
- Save where the wall was broken and long waves
- Of yellow grass flowed outward like a weir,
- As if the dead were striving for more room
- And their old places in the scheme of things;
- For sometimes the thought comes that the brown tomb
- Is not the end of all our labourings,
- But we are born once more of wind and rain,
- To sow the world with harvest young and strong,
- That men may live by men 'til the stars wane,
- And still sweet music fill the blackbird's song.
-
- But O for truths about the soul denied.
- Shall I meet Keats in some wild isle of balm,
- Dreaming beside a tarn where green and wide
- Boughs of sweet cinnamon protect the calm
- Of the dark water? And together walk
- Thro' hills with dimples full of water where
- White angels rest, and all the dead years talk
- About the changes of the earth? Despair
- Sometimes takes hold of me but yet I hope
- To hope the old hope in the better times
- When I am free to cast aside the rope
- That binds me to all sadness 'till my rhymes
- Cry like lost birds. But O, if I should die
- Ere this millennium, and my hands be crossed
- Under the flowers I loved, the passers-by
- Shall scowl at me as one whose soul is lost.
-
- But a soft peace came to me when the West
- Shut its red door and a thin streak of moon
- Was twisted on the twilight's dusky breast.
- It wrapped me up as sometimes a sweet tune
- Heard for the first time wraps the scenes around,
- That we may have their memories when some hand
- Strikes it in other times and hopes unbound
- Rising see clear the everlasting land.
-
-
-
-
- BEFORE THE TEARS
-
-
- You looked as sad as an eclipséd moon
- Above the sheaves of harvest, and there lay
- A light lisp on your tongue, and very soon
- The petals of your deep blush fell away;
- White smiles that come with an uneasy grace
- From inner sorrow crossed your forehead fair,
- When the wind passing took your scattered hair
- And flung it like a brown shower in my face.
-
- Tear-fringéd winds that fill the heart's low sighs
- And never break upon the bosom's pain,
- But blow unto the windows of the eyes
- Their misty promises of silver rain,
- Around your loud heart ever rose and fell.
- I thought 'twere better that the tears should come
- And strike your every feeling wholly numb,
- So thrust my hand in yours and shook fare-well.
-
-
-
-
- GOD'S REMEMBRANCE
-
-
- There came a whisper from the night to me
- Like music of the sea, a mighty breath
- From out the valley's dewy mouth, and Death
- Shook his lean bones, and every coloured tree
- Wept in the fog of morning. From the town
- Of nests among the branches one old crow
- With gaps upon his wings flew far away.
- And, thinking of the golden summer glow,
- I heard a blackbird whistle half his lay
- Among the spinning leaves that slanted down.
-
- And I who am a thought of God's now long
- Forgotten in His Mind, and desolate
- With other dreams long over, as a gate
- Singing upon the wind the anvil song,
- Sang of the Spring when first He dreamt of me
- In that old town all hills and signs that creak:--
- And He remembered me as something far
- In old imaginations, something weak
- With distance, like a little sparking star
- Drowned in the lavender of evening sea.
-
-
-
-
- AN OLD PAIN
-
-
- What old, old pain is this that bleeds anew?
- What old and wandering dream forgotten long
- Hobbles back to my mind? With faces two,
- Like Janus of old Rome, I look about,
- And yet discover not what ancient wrong
- Lies unrequited still. No speck of doubt
- Upon to-morrow's promise. Yet a pain
- Of some dumb thing is on me, and I feel
- How men go mad, how faculties do reel
- When these old querns turn round within the brain.
-
- 'Tis something to have known one day of joy,
- Now to remember when the heart is low,
- An antidote of thought that will destroy
- The asp bite of Regret. Deep will I drink
- By'n by the purple cups that overflow,
- And fill the shattered heart's urn to the brink.
- But some are dead who laughed! Some scattered are
- Around the sultry breadth of foreign zones.
- You, with the warm clay wrapt about your bones,
- Are nearer to me than the live afar.
-
- My heart has grown as dry as an old crust,
- Deep in book lumber and moth-eaten wood,
- So long it has forgot the old love lust,
- So long forgot the thing that made youth dear,
- Two blue love lamps, a heart exceeding good,
- And how, when first I heard that voice ring clear
- Among the sering hedges of the plain,
- I knew not which from which beyond the corn,
- The laughter by the callow twisted thorn,
- The jay-thrush whistling in the haws for rain.
-
- I hold the mind is the imprisoned soul,
- And all our aspirations are its own
- Struggles and strivings for a golden goal,
- That wear us out like snow men at the thaw.
- And we shall make our Heaven where we have sown
- Our purple longings. Oh! can the loved dead draw
- Anear us when we moan, or watching wait
- Our coming in the woods where first we met,
- The dead leaves falling on their wild hair wet,
- Their hands upon the fastenings of the gate?
-
- This is the old, old pain come home once more,
- Bent down with answers wild and very lame
- For all my delving in old dog-eared lore
- That drove the Sages mad. And boots the world
- Aught for their wisdom? I have asked them, tame,
- And watched the Earth by its own self be hurled
- Atom by atom into nothingness,
- Loll out of the deep canyons, drops of fixe,
- And kindle on the hills its funeral pyre,
- And all we learn but shows we know the less.
-
-
-
-
- THE LOST ONES
-
-
- Somewhere is music from the linnets, bills,
- And thro' the sunny flowers the bee-wings drone,
- And white bells of convolvulus on hills
- Of quiet May make silent ringing, blown
- Hither and thither by the wind of showers,
- And somewhere all the wandering birds have flown;
- And the brown breath of Autumn chills the flowers.
-
- But where are all the loves of long ago?
- Oh, little twilight ship blown up the tide,
- Where are the faces laughing in the glow
- Of morning years, the lost ones scattered wide?
- Give me your hand, Oh brother, let us go
- Crying about the dark for those who died.
-
-
-
-
- ALL-HALLOWS EVE
-
-
- The dreadful hour is sighing for a moon
- To light old lovers to the place of tryst,
- And old footsteps from blessed acres soon
- On old known pathways will be lightly prest;
- And winds that went to eavesdrop since the noon,
- Kinking[1] at some old tale told sweetly brief,
- Will give a cowslick[2] to the yarrow leaf,[3]
- And sling the round nut from the hazel down.
-
- And there will be old yarn balls,[4] and old spells
- In broken lime-kilns, and old eyes will peer
- For constant lovers in old spidery wells,[5]
- And old embraces will grow newly dear.
- And some may meet old lovers in old dells,
- And some in doors ajar in towns light-lorn;--
- But two will meet beneath a gnarly thorn
- Deep in the bosom of the windy fells.
-
- Then when the night slopes home and white-faced day
- Yawns in the east there will be sad farewells;
- And many feet will tap a lonely way
- Back to the comfort of their chilly cells,
- And eyes will backward turn and long to stay
- Where love first found them in the clover bloom--
- But one will never seek the lonely tomb,
- And two will linger at the tryst alway.
-
-
-[Footnote 1: Provincially a kind of laughter.]
-
-[Footnote 2: A curl of hair thrown back from the forehead: used
-metaphorically here, and itself a metaphor taken from the curl of a
-cow's tongue.]
-
-[Footnote 3: Maidens on Hallows Eve pull leaves of yarrow, and, saying
-over them certain words, put them under their pillows and so dream of
-their true-loves.]
-
-[Footnote 4: They also throw balls of yarn (which must be black) over
-their left shoulders into old lime-kilns, holding one end and then
-winding it in till they feel it somehow caught, and expect to see in
-the darkness the face of their lover.]
-
-[Footnote 5: Also they look for his face in old wells.]
-
-
-
-
- A MEMORY
-
-
- Low sounds of night that drip upon the ear,
- The plumed lapwing's cry, the curlew's call,
- Clear in the far dark heard, a sound as drear
- As raindrops pelted from a nodding rush
- To give a white wink once and broken fall
- Into a deep dark pool: they pain the hush,
- As if the fiery meteor's slanting lance
- Had found their empty craws: they fill with sound
- The silence, with the merry round,
- The sounding mazes of a last year's dancer
-
- I thought to watch the stars come spark by spark
- Out on the muffled night, and watch the moon
- Go round the full, and turn upon the dark,
- And sharpen towards the new, and waiting watch
- The grand Kaleidoscope of midnight noon
- Change colours on the dew, where high hills notch
- The low and moony sky. But who dare cast
- One brief hour's horoscope, whose tunéd ear
- Makes every sound the music of last year?
- Whose hopes are built up in the door of Past?
-
- No, not more silent does the spider stitch
- A cobweb on the fern, nor fogdrops fall
- On sheaves of harvest when the night is rich
- With moonbeams, than the spirits of delight
- Walk the dark passages of Memory's hall.
- We feel them not, but in the wastes of night
- We hear their low-voiced mediums, and we rise
- To wrestle old Regrets, to see old faces,
- To meet and part in old tryst-trodden places
- With breaking heart, and emptying of eyes.
-
- I feel the warm hand on my shoulder light,
- I hear the music of a voice that words
- The slow time of the feet, I see the white
- Arms slanting, and the dimples fold and fill....
- I hear wing-flutters of the early birds,
- I see the tide of morning landward spill,
- The cloaking maidens, hear the voice that tells
- "You'd never know" and "Soon perhaps again,"
- With white teeth biting down the inly pain,
- Then sounds of going away and sad farewells
-
- A year ago! It seems but yesterday.
- Yesterday! And a hundred years! All one.
- 'Tis laid a something finished, dark, away,
- To gather mould upon the shelves of Time.
- What matters hours or ćons when 'tis gone?
- And yet the heart will dust it of its grime,
- And hover round it in a silver spell,
- Be lost in it and cry aloud in fear;
- And like a lost soul in a pious ear,
- Hammer in mine a never easy bell.
-
-
-
-
- A SONG
-
-
- My heart has flown on wings to you, away
- In the lonely places where your footsteps lie
- Full up of stars when the short showers of day
- Have passed like ancient sorrows. I would fly
- To your green solitude of woods to hear
- You singing in the sounds of leaves and birds;
- But I am sad below the depth of words
- That nevermore we two shall draw anear.
-
- Had I but wealth of land and bleating flocks
- And barnfuls of the yellow harvest yield,
- And a large house with climbing hollyhocks
- And servant maidens singing in the field,
- You'd love me; but I own no roaming herds,
- My only wealth is songs of love for you,
- And now that you are lost I may pursue
- A sad life deep below the depth of words.
-
-
-
-
- A FEAR
-
-
- I roamed the woods to-day and seemed to hear,
- As Dante heard, the voice of suffering trees.
- The twisted roots seemed bare contorted knees,
- The bark was full of faces strange with fear.
-
- I hurried home still wrapt in that dark spell,
- And all the night upon the world's great lie
- I pondered, and a voice seemed whisp'ring nigh,
- "You died long since, and all this thing is hell!"
-
-
-
-
- THE COMING POET
-
-
- "Is it far to the town?" said the poet,
- As he stood 'neath the groaning vane,
- And the warm lights shimmered silver
- On the skirts of the windy rain.
- "There are those who call me," he pleaded,
- "And I'm wet and travel sore."
- But nobody spoke from the shelter.
- And he turned from the bolted door.
-
- And they wait in the town for the poet
- With stones at the gates, and jeers,
- But away on the wolds of distance
- In the blue of a thousand years
- He sleeps with the age that knows him,
- In the clay of the unborn, dead,
- Rest at his weary insteps,
- Fame at his crumbled head.
-
-
-
-
- THE VISION ON THE BRINK
-
-
- To-night when you sit in the deep hours alone,
- And from the sleeps you snatch wake quick and feel
- You hear my step upon the threshold-stone,
- My hand upon the doorway latchward steal,
- Be sure 'tis but the white winds of the snow,
- For I shall come no more
-
- And when the candle in the pane is wore,
- And moonbeams down the hill long shadows throw,
- When night's white eyes are in the chinky door,
- Think of a long road in a valley low,
- Think of a wanderer in the distance far,
- Lost like a voice among the scattered hills.
-
- And when the moon has gone and ocean spills
- Its waters backward from the trysting bar,
- And in dark furrows of the night there tills
- A jewelled plough, and many a falling star
- Moves you to prayer, then will you think of me
- On the long road that will not ever end.
-
- Jonah is hoarse in Nineveh--I'd lend
- My voice to save the town--and hurriedly
- Goes Abraham with murdering knife, and Ruth
- Is weary in the corn.... Yet will I stay,
- For one flower blooms upon the rocks of truth,
- God is in all our hurry and delay.
-
-
-
-
- TO LORD DUNSANY
-
- (ON HIS RETURN FROM EAST AFRICA)
-
-
- For you I knit these lines, and on their ends
- Hang little tossing bells to ring you home.
- The music is all cracked, and Poesy tends
- To richer blooms than mine; but you who roam
- Thro' coloured gardens of the highest muse,
- And leave the door ajar sometimes that we
- May steal small breathing things of reds and blues
- And things of white sucked empty by the bee,
- Will listen to this bunch of bells from me.
-
- My cowslips ring you welcome to the land
- Your muse brings honour to in many a tongue,
- Not only that I long to clasp your hand,
- But that you're missed by poets who have sung
- And viewed with doubt the music of their verse
- All the long winter, for you love to bring
- The true note in and say the wise thing terse,
- And show what birds go lame upon a wing,
- And where the weeds among the flowers do spring.
-
-
-
-
- ON AN OATEN STRAW
-
-
- My harp is out of tune, and so I take
- An oaten straw some shepherd dropped of old.
- It is the hour when Beauty doth awake
- With trembling limbs upon the dewy cold.
- And shapes of green show where the woolly fold
- Slept in the winding shelter of the brake.
-
- This I will pipe for you, how all the year
- The one I love like Beauty takes her way.
- Wrapped in the wind of winter she doth cheer
- The loud woods like a sunbeam of the May.
- This I will pipe for you the whole blue day
- Seated with Pan upon the mossy weir.
-
-
-
-
- EVENING IN FEBRUARY
-
-
- The windy evening drops a grey
- Old eyelid down across the sun,
- The last crow leaves the ploughman's way
- And happy lambs make no more fun.
-
- Wild parsley buds beside my feet,
- A doubtful thrush makes hurried tune,
- The steeple in the village street
- Doth seem to pierce the twilight moon.
-
- I hear and see those changing charms,
- For all--my thoughts are fixed upon
- The hurry and the loud alarms
- Before the fall of Babylon.
-
-
-
-
- THE SISTER
-
-
- I saw the little quiet town,
- And the whitewashed gables on the hill,
- And laughing children coming down
- The laneway to the mill.
-
- Wind-blushes up their faces glowed,
- And they were happy as could be,
- The wobbling water never flowed
- So merry and so free.
-
- One little maid withdrew aside
- To pick a pebble from the sands.
- Her golden hair was long and wide,
- And there were dimples on her hands.
-
- And when I saw her large blue eyes,
- What was the pain that went thro' me?
- Why did I think on Southern skies
- And ships upon the sea?
-
-
-
-
- BEFORE THE WAR OF COOLEY
-
- At daybreak Maeve rose up from where she prayed
- And took her prophetess across her door
- To gaze upon her hosts. Tall spear and blade
- Burnished for early battle dimly shook
- The morning's colours, and then Maeve said:
- "Look
- And tell me how you see them now."
- And then
- The woman that was lean with knowledge said:
- "There's crimson on them, and there's dripping red."
- And a tall soldier galloped up the glen
- With foam upon his boot, and halted there
- Beside old Maeve. She said, "Not yet," and turned
- Into her blazing dun, and knelt in prayer
- One solemn hour, and once again she came
- And sought her prophetess. With voice that mourned,
- "How do you see them now?" she asked.
- "All lame
- And broken in the noon." And once again
- The soldier stood before her.
- "No, not yet."
- Maeve answered his inquiring look and turned
- Once more unto her prayer, and yet once more
- "How do you see them now?" she asked.
- "All wet
- With storm rains, and all broken, and all tore
- With midnight wolves." And when the soldier came
- Maeve said, "It is the hour." There was a flash
- Of trumpets in the dim, a silver flame
- Of rising shields, loud words passed down the ranks,
- And twenty feet they saw the lances leap.
- They passed the dun with one short noisy dash.
- And turning proud Maeve gave the wise one thanks,
- And sought her chamber in the dun to weep.
-
-
-
-
- LOW-MOON LAND
-
-
- I often look when the moon is low
- Thro' that other window on the wall,
- At a land all beautiful under snow,
- Blotted with shadows that come and go
- When the winds rise up and fall.
- And the form of a beautiful maid
- In the white silence stands,
- And beckons me with her hands.
-
- And when the cares of the day are laid,
- Like sacred things, in the mart away,
- I dream of the low-moon land and the maid
- Who will not weary of waiting, or jade
- Of calling to me for aye.
- And I would go if I knew the sea
- That lips the shore where the moon is low,
- For a longing is on me that will not go.
-
-
-
-
- THE SORROW OF FINDEBAR
-
-
- "Why do you sorrow, child? There is loud cheer
- In the wide halls, and poets red with wine
- Tell of your eyebrows and your tresses long,
- And pause to let your royal mother hear
- The brown bull low amid her silken kine.
- And you who are the harpstring and the song
- Weep like a memory born of some old pain."
-
- And Findebar made answer, "I have slain
- More than Cuculain's sword, for I have been
- The promised meed of every warrior brave
- In Tain Bo Cualigne wars, and I am sad
- As is the red banshee that goes to keen
- Above the wet dark of the deep brown grave,
- For the warm loves that made my memory glad."
-
- And her old nurse bent down and took a wild
- Curl from her eye and hung it on her ear,
- And said, "The woman at the heavy quern,
- Who weeps that she will never bring a child,
- And sees her sadness in the coming year,
- Will roll up all her beauty like a fern;
- Not you, whose years stretch purple to the end."
-
- And Findebar, "Beside the broad blue bend
- Of the slow river where the dark banks slope
- Wide to the woods sleeps Ferdia apart.
- I loved him, and then drove him for pride's sake
- To early death, and now I have no hope,
- For mine is Maeve's proud heart, Ailill's kind heart,
- And that is why it pines and will not break."
-
-
-
-
- ON DREAM WATER
-
-
- And so, o'er many a league of sea
- We sang of those we left behind.
- Our ship split thro' the phosphor free,
- Her white sails pregnant with the wind,
- And I was wondering in my mind
- How many would remember me.
-
- Then red-edged dawn expanded wide,
- A stony foreland stretched away,
- And bowed capes gathering round the tide
- Kept many a little homely bay.
- O joy of living there for aye,
- O Soul so often tried!
-
-
-
-
- THE DEATH OF SUALTEM
-
-
- After the brown bull passed from Cooley's fields
- And all Muirevne was a wail of pain,
- Sualtem came at evening thro' the slain
- And heard a noise like water rushing loud,
- A thunder like the noise of mighty shields.
- And in his dread he shouted: "Earth is bowed,
- The heavens are split and stars make war with stars
- And the sea runs in fear!"
- For all his scars
- He hastened to Dun Dealgan, and there found
- It was his son, Cuculain, making moan.
- His hair was red with blood, and he was wound
- In wicker full of grass, and a cold stone
- Was on his head.
- "Cuculain, is it so?"
- Sualtem said, and then, "My hair is snow,
- My strength leaks thro' my wounds, but I will die
- Avenging you."
- And then Cuculain said:
- "Not so, old father, but take horse and ride
- To Emain Macha, and tell Connor this."
- Sualtem from his red lips took a kiss,
- And turned the stone upon Cuculain's head.
- The Lia-Macha with a heavy sigh
- Ran up and halted by his wounded side.
- In Emain Macha to low lights and song
- Connor was dreaming of the beauteous Maeve.
- He saw her as at first, by Shannon's wave,
- Her insteps in the water, mounds of white.
- It was in Spring, and music loud and strong
- Rocked all the coloured woods, and the blue height
- Of heaven was round the lark, and in his heart
- There was a pain of love.
- Then with a start
- He wakened as a loud voice from below
- Shouted, "The land is robbed, the women shamed,
- The children stolen, and Cuculain low!"
- Then Connor rose, his war-worn soul inflamed,
- And shouted down for Cathbad; then to greet
- The messenger he hurried to the street.
- And there he saw Sualtem shouting still
- The message of Muirevne 'mid the sound
- Of hurried Ducklings and uneasy horse.
- At sight of him the Lia-Macha wheeled,
- So that Sualtem fell upon his shield,
- And his grey head came shouting to the ground.
- They buried him by moonlight on the hill,
- And all about him waves the heavy gorse.
-
-
-
-
- THE MAID IN LOW-MOON LAND
-
-
- I know not where she be, and yet
- I see her waiting white and tall.
- Her eyes are blue, her lips are wet,
- And move as tho' they'd love to call.
- I see her shadow on the wall
- Before the changing moon has set.
-
- She stands there lovely and alone
- And up her porch blue creepers swing.
- The world she moves in is her own,
- To sun and shade and hasty wing.
- And I would wed her in the Spring,
- But only I sit here and moan.
-
-
-
-
- THE DEATH OF LEAG. CUCHULAIN'S CHARIOTEER
-
-
- CONALL
-
- "I only heard the loud ebb on the sand,
- The high ducks talking in the chilly sky.
- The voices that you fancied floated by
- Were wind notes, or the whisper on the trees.
- But you are still so full of war's red din,
- You hear impatient hoof-beats up the land
- When the sea's changing, or a lisping breeze
- Is playing on the waters of the linn."
-
- LEAG
-
- "I hear Cuchulain's voice, and Emer's voice,
- The Lia Macha's neigh, the chariot's wheels,
- Farther away a bell bough's drowsy peals;
- And sleep lays heavy thumbs upon my eyes.
- I hear Cuchulain sing above the chime
- Of One Who comes to make the world rejoice,
- And comes again to blot away the skies,
- To wipe away the world and roll up Time."
-
- CONALL
-
- "In the dark ground forever mouth to mouth
- They kiss thro' all the changes of the world,
- The grey sea fogs above them are unfurled
- At evening when the sea walks with the moon,
- And peace is with them in the long cairn shut.
- You loved him as the swallow loves the South,
- And Love speaks with you since the evening put
- Mist and white dews upon short shadowed noon."
-
- LEAG
-
- "Sleep lays his heavy thumbs upon my eyes,
- Shuts out all sounds and shakes me at the wrists.
- By Nanny water where the salty mists
- Weep o'er Riangabra let me stand deep
- Beside my father. Sleep lays heavy thumbs
- Upon my eyebrows, and I hear the sighs
- Of far loud waters, and a troop that comes
- With boughs of bells----"
-
- CONALL
-
- "They come to you with sleep."
-
-
-
-
- THE PASSING OF CAOILTE
-
-
- 'Twas just before the truce sang thro' the din
- Caoilte, the thin man, at the war's red end
- Leaned from the crooked ranks and saw his friend
- Fall in the farther fury; so when truce
- Halted advancing spears the thin man came
- And bending by pale Oscar called his name;
- And then he knew of all who followed Finn,
- He only felt the cool of Gavra's dews.
-
- And Caoilte, the thin man, went down the field
- To where slow water moved among the whins,
- And sat above a pool of twinkling fins
- To court old memories of the Fenian men,
- Of how Finn's laugh at Conan's tale of glee
- Brought down the rowan's boughs on Knoc-naree,
- And how he made swift comets with his shield
- At moonlight in the Fomar's rivered glen.
-
- And Caoilte, the thin man, was weary now,
- And nodding in short sleeps of half a dream:
- There came a golden barge down middle stream,
- And a tall maiden coloured like a bird
- Pulled noiseless oars, but not a word she said.
- And Caoilte, the thin man, raised up his head
- And took her kiss upon his throbbing brow,
- And where they went away what man has heard?
-
-
-
-
- GROWING OLD
-
-
- We'll fill a Provence bowl and pledge us deep
- The memory of the far ones, and between
- The soothing pipes, in heavy-lidded sleep,
- Perhaps we'll dream the things that once have been.
- 'Tis only noon and still too soon to die,
- Yet we are growing old, my heart and I.
-
- A hundred books are ready in my head
- To open out where Beauty bent a leaf.
- What do we want with Beauty? We are wed
- Like ancient Proserpine to dismal grief.
- And we are changing with the hours that fly,
- And growing odd and old, my heart and I.
-
- Across a bed of bells the river flows,
- And roses dawn, but not for us; we want
- The new thing ever as the old thing grows
- Spectral and weary on the hills we haunt.
- And that is why we feast, and that is why
- We're growing odd and old, my heart and I.
-
-
-
-
- AFTER MY LAST SONG
-
-
- Where I shall rest when my last song is over
- The air is smelling like a feast of wine;
- And purple breakers of the windy clover
- Shall roll to cool this burning brow of mine;
- And there shall come to me, when day is told
- The peace of sleep when I am grey and old.
-
- I'm wild for wandering to the far-off places
- Since one forsook me whom I held most dear.
- I want to see new wonders and new faces
- Beyond East seas; but I will win back here
- When my last song is sung, and veins are cold
- As thawing snow, and I am grey and old.
-
- Oh paining eyes, but not with salty weeping,
- My heart is like a sod in winter rain;
- Ere you will see those baying waters leaping
- Like hungry hounds once more, how many a pain
- Shall heal; but when my last short song is trolled
- You'll sleep here on wan cheeks grown thin and old.
-
-
-
-
- SONGS OF PEACE AT HOME
-
-
- A DREAM OF ARTEMIS
-
-
- There was soft beauty on the linnet's tongue
- To see the rainbow's coloured bands arch wide.
- The thunder darted his red fangs among
- South mountains, but the East was like a bride
- Drest for the altar at her mother's door
- Weeping between two loves. The fields were pied
- With May's munificence of flowers, that wore
- The fashion of the days when Eve was young,
- God's kirtles, ere the first sweet summer died.
- The blackbird in a thorn of waving white
- Sang bouquets of small tunes that bid me turn
- From twilight wanderings thro' some old delight
- I heard in my far memory making mourn.
- Such music fills me with a joy half pain,
- And beats a track across my life I spurn
- In sober moments. Ah, this wandering brain
- Could play its hurdy-gurdy all the night
- To vagrant joys of days beyond the bourn.
-
- I heard the river warble sweetly nigh
- To meet the warm salt tide below the weir,
- And saw a coloured line of cows pass by,--
- And then a voice said quickly, "Iris here!"
- "What message now hath Hera?" then I woke,
- An exile in Arcadia, and a spear
- Flashed by me, and ten nymphs fleet-footed broke
- Out of the coppice with a silver cry,
- Into the bow of lights to disappear.
-
- For one blue minute then there was no sound
- Save water-noise, slow round a rushy bend,
- And bird-delight, and ripples on the ground
- Of windy flowers that swelling would ascend
- The coloured hill and break all beautiful
- And, falling backwards, to the woods would send
- The full tide of their love. What soft moons pull
- Their moving fragrance? did I ask, and found
- Sad Io in far Egypt met a friend.--
- It was my body thought so, far away
- In the grey future, not the wild bird tied
- That is the wandering soul. Behind the day
- We may behold thee, soft one, hunted wide
- By the loud gadfly; but the truant soul
- Knows thee before thou lay by night's dark side,
- Wed to the dimness; long before its dole
- Was meted it, to be thus pound in clay--
- That daubs its whiteness and offends its pride.
-
- There were loud questions in the rainbow's end,
- And hurried answers, and a sound of spears.
- And through the yellow blaze I saw one bend
- Down on a trembling white knee, and her tears
- Fell down in globes of light, and her small mouth
- Was filled up with a name unspoken. Years
- Of waiting love, and all their long, long drought
- Of kisses parched her lips, and did she spend
- Her eyes blue candles searching thro' her fears.
- "She hath loved Ganymede, the stolen boy."
- Said one, and then another, "Let us sing
- To Zeus that he may give her living joy
- Above Olympus, where the cool hill-spring
- Of Lethe bubbles up to bathe the heart
- Sorrow's lean fingers bruised. There eagles wing
- To eyries in the stars, and when they part
- Their broad dark wings a wind is born to buoy
- The bee home heavy in the far evening."
-
-
-
- HYMN TO ZEUS
-
-
- "God, whose kindly hand doth sow
- The rainbow showers on hill and lawn,
- To make the young sweet grasses grow
- And fill the udder of the fawn.
- Whose light is life of leaf and flower,
- And all the colours of the birds.
- Whose song goes on from hour to hour
- Upon the river's liquid words.
- Reach out a golden beam of thine
- And touch her pain. Your finger-tips
- Do make the violets' blue eclipse
- Like milk upon a daisy shine.
-
- God, who lights the little stars,
- And over night the white dew spills.
- Whose hand doth move the season's cars
- And clouds that mock our pointed hills.
- Whose bounty fills the cow-trod wold,
- And fills with bread the warm brown sod.
- Who brings us sleep, where we grow old
- 'Til sleep and age together nod.
-
- Reach out a beam and touch the pain
- A heart has oozed thro' all the years.
- Your pity dries the morning's tears
- And fills the world with joy again!"
- The rainbow's lights were shut, and all the maids
- Stood round the sad nymph in a snow-white ring,
- She rising spoke, "A blue and soft light bathes
- Me to the fingers. Lo, I upward swing!"
- And round her fell a mantle of blue light.
- "Watch for me on the forehead of evening."
- And lifting beautiful went out of sight.
- And all the flowers flowed backward from the glades,
- An ebb of colours redolent of Spring.
-
- Beauty and Love are sisters of the heart,
- Love has no voice, and Beauty whispered song.
- Now in my own, drawn silently apart
- Love looked, and Beauty sang. I felt a strong
- Pulse on my wrist, a feeling like a pain
- In my quick heart, for Love with gazes long
- Was worshipping at Artemis, now lain
- Among the heaving flowers ... I longed to dart
- And fold her to my breast, nor saw the wrong.
- She lay there, a tall beauty by her spear,
- Her kirtle falling to her soft round knee.
- Her hair was like the day when evening's near,
- And her moist mouth might tempt the golden bee.
- Smile's creases ran from dimples pink and deep,
- And when she raised her arms I loved to see
- The white mounds of her muscles. Gentle sleep
- Threatened her far blue looks. The noisy weir
- Fell into a low murmuring lullaby.
- And then the flowers came back behind the heel
- Of hunted Io: she, poor maid, had fear
- Wide in her eyes looking half back to steal
- A glimpse of the loud gadfly fiercely near.
- In her right hand she held Planting light,
- And in her left her train. Artemis here
- Raised herself on her palms, and took a white
- Horn from her side and blew a silver peal
- Til three hounds from the coppice did appear.
-
- The white nine left the spaces of flowers, and now
- Went calling thro' the wood the hunter's call.
- Young echoes sleeping in the hollow bough
- Took up the shouts and handed them to all
- Their sisters of the crags, 'til all the day
- Was filled with voices loud and musical.
- I followed them across a tangled way
- 'Til the red deer broke out and took the brow
- Of a wide hill in bounces like a ball.
- Beside swift Artemis I joined the chase;
- We roused up kine and scattered fleecy flocks;
- Crossed at a mill a swift and bubbly race;
- Scaled in a wood of pine the knotty rocks;
- Past a grey vision of a valley town;
- Past swains at labour in their coloured frocks;
- Once saw a boar upon a windy down;
- Once heard a cradle in a lonely place,
- And saw the red flash of a frightened fox.
-
- We passed a garden where three maids in blue
- Were talking of a queen a long time dead.
- We caught a green glimpse of the sea: then thro'
- A town all hills; now round a wood we sped
- And killed our quarry in his native lair.
- Then Artemis spun round to me and said,
- "Whence come you?" and I took her long damp hair
- And made a ball of it, and said, "Where you
- Are midnight's dreams of love." She dropped her head,
- No word she spoke, but, panting in her side,
- I heard her heart. The trees were all at peace,
- And lifting slowly on the grey evetide
- A large and lovely star. Then to release
- Her hair, my hand dropped to her girded waist
- And lay there shyly. "O my love, the lease
- Of your existence is for ever: taste
- No less with me the love of earth," I cried.
- "Though for so short a while on lands and seas
- Our mortal hearts know beauty, and overblow,
- And we are dust upon some passing wind,
- Dust and a memory. But for you the snow
- That so long cloaks the mountains to the knees
- Is no more than a morning. It doth go
- And summer comes, and leaf upon the trees:
- Still you are fair and young, and nothing find
- In all man's story that seems long ago.
- I have not loved on Earth the strife for gold,
- Nor the great name that makes immortal man,
- But all that struggle upward to behold
- What still is left of Beauty undisgraced,
- The snowdrop at the heel of winter cold
- And shivering, and the wayward cuckoo chased
- By lingering March, and, in the thunder's van
- The poor lambs merry on the meagre wold,
- By-ways and cast-off things that lie therein,
- Old boots that trod the highways of the world,
- The schoolboy's broken hoop, the battered bin
- That heard the ragman's story, blackened places
- Where gipsies camped and circuses made din,
- Fast water and the melancholy traces
- Of sea tides, and poor people madly whirled
- Up, down, and through the black retreats of sin.
- These things a god might love, and stooping bless
- With benedictions of eternal song.--
- But I have not loved Artemis the less
- For loving these, but deem it noble love
- To sing of live or dead things in distress
- And wake memorial memories above.
-
- Such is the soul that comes to plead with you
- Oh, Artemis, to tend you in your needs.
- At mornings I will bring you bells of dew
- From honey places, and wild fish from, streams
- Flowing in secret places. I will brew
- Sweet wine of alder for your evening dreams,
- And pipe you music in the dusky reeds
- When the four distances give up their blue.
-
- And when the white procession of the stars
- Crosses the night, and on their tattered wings,
- Above the forest, cry the loud night-jars,
- We'll hunt the stag upon the mountain-side,
- Slipping like light between the shadow bars
- 'Til burst of dawn makes every distance wide.
- Oh, Artemis--what grief the silence brings!
- I hear the rolling chariot of Mars!"
-
-
-
-
- A LITTLE BOY IN THE MORNING
-
- He will not come, and still I wait.
- He whistles at another gate
- Where angels listen. Ah, I know
- He will not come, yet if I go
- How shall I know he did not pass
- Barefooted in the flowery grass?
-
- The moon leans on one silver horn
- Above the silhouettes of morn,
- And from their nest sills finches whistle
- Or stooping pluck the downy thistle.
- How is the morn so gay and fair
- Without his whistling in its air?
- The world is calling, I must go.
- How shall I know he did not pass
- Barefooted in the shining grass?
-
-
-
-
- IN BARRACKS
-
-
-
-
- TO A DISTANT ONE
-
-
- Through wild by-ways I come to you, my love,
- Nor ask of those I meet the surest way,
- What way I turn I cannot go astray
- And miss you in my life. Though Fate may prove
- A tardy guide she will not make delay
- Leading me through strange seas and distant lands,
- I'm coming still, though slowly, to your hands.
- We'll meet one day.
-
- There is so much to do, so little done,
- In my life's space that I perforce did leave
- Love at the moonlit trysting-place to grieve
- Till fame and other little things were won.
- I have missed much that I shall not retrieve,
- Far will I wander yet with much to do.
- Much will I spurn before I yet meet you,
- So fair I can't deceive.
-
- Your name is in the whisper of the woods
- Like Beauty calling for a poet's song
- To one whose harp had suffered many a wrong
- In the lean hands of Pain. And when the broods
- Of flower eyes waken all the streams along
- In tender whiles, I feel most near to you:--
- Oh, when we meet there shall be sun and blue
- Strong as the spring is strong.
-
-
-
-
- THE PLACE
-
-
- Blossoms as old as May I scatter here,
- And a blue wave I lifted from the stream.
- It shall not know when winter days are drear
- Or March is hoarse with blowing. But a-dream
- The laurel boughs shall hold a canopy
- Peacefully over it the winter long,
- Till all the birds are back from oversea,
- And April rainbows win a blackbird's song.
-
- And when the war is over I shall take
- My lute a-down to it and sing again
- Songs of the whispering things amongst the brake,
- And those I love shall know them by their strain.
- Their airs shall be the blackbird's twilight song,
- Their words shall be all flowers with fresh dews hoar.--
- But it is lonely now in winter long,
- And, God! to hear the blackbird sing once more.
-
-
-
-
- MAY
-
-
- She leans across an orchard gate somewhere,
- Bending from out the shadows to the light,
- A dappled spray of blossom in her hair
- Studded with dew-drops lovely from the night
- She smiles to think how many hearts she'll smite
- With beauty ere her robes fade from the lawn.
- She hears the robin's cymbals with delight,
- The skylark in the rosebush of the dawn.
-
- For her the cowslip rings its yellow bell,
- For her the violets watch with wide blue eyes.
- The wandering cuckoo doth its clear name tell
- Thro' the white mist of blossoms where she lies
- Painting a sunset for the western skies.
- You'd know her by her smile and by her tear
- And by the way the swift and martin flies,
- Where she is south of these wild days and drear.
-
-
-
-
- TO EILISH OF THE FAIR HAIR
-
-
- I'd make my heart a harp to play for you
- Love songs within the evening dim of day,
- Were it not dumb with ache and with mildew
- Of sorrow withered like a flower away.
- It hears so many calls from homeland places,
- So many sighs from all it will remember,
- From the pale roads and woodlands where your face is
- Like laughing sunlight running thro' December.
-
- But this it singeth loud above its pain,
- To bring the greater ache: whate'er befall
- The love that oft-times woke the sweeter strain
- Shall turn to you always. And should you call
- To pity it some day in those old places
- Angels will covet the loud joy that fills it.
- But thinking of the by-ways where your face is
- Sunlight on other hearts--Ah! how it kills it.
-
-
-
-
- IN CAMP
-
-
-
-
- CREWBAWN
-
-
- White clouds that change and pass,
- And stars that shine awhile,
- Dew water on the grass,
- A fox upon a stile.
-
- A river broad and deep,
- A slow boat on the waves,
- My sad thoughts on the sleep
- That hollows out the graves.
-
-
-
-
- EVENING IN ENGLAND
-
-
- From its blue vase the rose of evening drops.
- Upon the streams its petals float away.
- The hills all blue with distance hide their tops
- In the dim silence falling on the grey.
- A little wind said "Hush!" and shook a spray
- Heavy with May's white crop of opening bloom,
- A silent bat went dipping up the gloom.
-
- Night tells her rosary of stars full soon,
- They drop from out her dark hand to her knees.
- Upon a silhouette of woods the moon
- Leans on one horn as if beseeching ease
- From all her changes which have stirred the seas.
- Across the ears of Toil Rest throws her veil,
- I and a marsh bird only make a wail.
-
-
-
-
- AT SEA
-
-
-
-
- CROCKNAHARNA
-
-
- On the heights of Crocknaharna,
- (Oh, the lure of Crocknaharna)
- On a morning fair and early
- Of a dear remembered May,
- There I heard a colleen singing
- In the brown rocks and the grey.
- She, the pearl of Crocknaharna,
- Crocknaharna, Crocknaharna,
- Wild with girls is Crocknaharna
- Twenty hundred miles away.
-
- On the heights of Crocknaharna,
- (Oh, thy sorrow Crocknaharna)
- On an evening dim and misty
- Of a cold November day,
- There I heard a woman weeping
- In the brown rocks and the grey.
- Oh, the pearl of Crocknaharna
- (Crocknaharna, Crocknaharna),
- Black with grief is Crocknaharna
- Twenty hundred miles away.
-
-
-
-
- IN THE MEDITERRANEAN--GOING TO THE WAR
-
-
- Lovely wings of gold and green
- Flit about the sounds I hear,
- On my window when I lean
- To the shadows cool and clear.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Roaming, I am listening still,
- Bending, listening overlong,
- In my soul a steadier will,
- In my heart a newer song.
-
-
-
-
- THE GARDENER
-
-
- Among the flowers, like flowers, her slow hands move
- Easing a muffled bell or stooping low
- To help sweet roses climb the stakes above,
- Where pansies stare and seem to whisper "Lo!"
- Like gaudy butterflies her sweet peas blow
- Filling the garden with dim rustlings. Clear
- On the sweet Book she reads how long ago
- There was a garden to a woman dear.
-
- She makes her life one grand beatitude
- Of Love and Peace, and with contented eyes
- She sees not in the whole world mean or rude,
- And her small lot she trebly multiplies.
- And when the darkness muffles up the skies
- Still to be happy is her sole desire,
- She sings sweet songs about a great emprise,
- And sees a garden blowing in the fire.
-
-
-
-
- IN SERBIA
-
-
-
-
- AUTUMN EVENING IN SERBIA
-
-
- All the thin shadows
- Have closed on the grass,
- With the drone on their dark wings
- The night beetles pass.
- Folded her eyelids,
- A maiden asleep,
- Day sees in her chamber
- The pallid moon peep.
-
- From the bend of the briar
- The roses are torn,
- And the folds of the wood tops
- Are faded and worn.
- A strange bird is singing
- Sweet notes of the sun,
- Tho' song time is over
- And Autumn begun.
-
-
-
-
- NOCTURNE
-
-
- The rim of the moon
- Is over the corn.
- The beetle's drone
- Is above the thorn.
- Grey days come soon
- And I am alone;
- Can you hear my moan
- Where you rest, Aroon?
-
- When the wild tree bore
- The deep blue cherry,
- In night's deep hall
- Our love kissed merry.
- But you come no more
- Where its woodlands call,
- And the grey days fall
- On my grief, Astore!
-
-
-
-
- SPRING AND AUTUMN
-
-
- Green ripples singing down the corn,
- With blossoms dumb the path I tread,
- And in the music of the morn
- One with wild roses on her head.
-
- Now the green ripples turn to gold
- And all the paths are loud with rain,
- I with desire am growing old
- And full of winter pain.
-
-
-
-
- IN GREECE
-
-
-
-
- THE DEPARTURE OF PROSERPINE
-
-
- Old mother Earth for me already grieves,
- Her morns wake weeping and her noons are dim,
- Silence has left her woods, and all the leaves
- Dance in the windy shadows on the rim
- Of the dull lake thro' which I soon shall pass
- To my dark bridal bed
- Down in the hollow chambers of the dead.
- Will not the thunder hide me if I call,
- Wrapt in the corner of some distant star
- The gods have never known?
- Alas! alas!
- My voice has left with the last wing, my fall
- Shall crush the flowery fields with gloom, as far
- As swallows fly.
- Would I might die
- And in a solitude of roses lie
- As the last bud's outblown.
- Then nevermore Demeter would be heard
- Wail in the blowing rain, but every shower
- Would come bound up with rainbows to the birds
- Wrapt in a dusty wing, and the dry flower
- Hanging a shrivelled lip.
- This weary change from light to darkness fills
- My heart with twilight, and my brightest day
- Dawns over thunder and in thunder spills
- Its urn of gladness
- With a sadness
- Through which the slow dews drip
- And the bat goes over on a thorny wing.
- Is it a dream that once I used to sing
- From Ćgean shores across her rocky isles,
- Making the bells of Babylon to ring
- Over the wiles
- That lifted me from darkness to the Spring
- And the King
- Seeing his wine in blossom on the tree
- Danced with the queen a merry roundelay,
- And all the blue circumference of the day
- Was loud with flying song.----
- --But let me pass along:
- What brooks it the unfree to thus delay?
- No secret turning leads from the gods' way.
-
-
-
-
- THE HOMECOMING OF THE SHEEP
-
-
- The sheep are coming home in Greece,
- Hark the bells on every hill!
- Flock by flock, and fleece by fleece,
- Wandering wide a little piece
- Thro' the evening red and still,
- Stopping where the pathways cease,
- Cropping with a hurried will.
-
- Thro' the cotton-bushes low
- Merry boys with shouldered crooks
- Close them in a single row,
- Shout among them as they go
- With one bell-ring o'er the brooks.
- Such delight you never know
- Reading it from gilded books.
-
- Before the early stars are bright
- Cormorants and sea-gulls call,
- And the moon comes large and white
- Filling with a lovely light
- The ferny curtained waterfall.
- Then sleep wraps every bell up tight
- And the climbing moon grows small.
-
-
-
-
- WHEN LOVE AND BEAUTY WANDER AWAY
-
-
- When Love and Beauty wander away,
- And there's no more hearts to be sought and won,
- When the old earth limps thro' the dreary day,
- And the work of the Seasons cry undone:
- Ah! what shall we do for a song to sing,
- Who have known Beauty, and Love, and Spring?
-
- When Love and Beauty wander away,
- And a pale fear lies on the cheeks of youth,
- When there's no more goal to strive for and pray,
- And we live at the end of the world's untruth:
- Ah! what shall we do for a heart to prove,
- Who have known Beauty, and Spring, and Love?
-
-
-
-
- IN HOSPITAL IN EGYPT
-
-
-
-
- MY MOTHER
-
-
- God made my mother on an April day,
- From sorrow and the mist along the sea,
- Lost birds' and wanderers' songs and ocean spray
- And the moon loved her wandering jealously.
-
- Beside the ocean's din she combed her hair,
- Singing the nocturne of the passing ships,
- Before her earthly lover found her there
- And kissed away the music from her lips.
-
- She came unto the hills and saw the change
- That brings the swallow and the geese in turns.
- But there was not a grief she deeméd strange,
- For there is that in her which always mourns.
-
- Kind heart she has for all on hill or wave
- Whose hopes grew wings like ants to fly away.
- I bless the God Who such a mother gave
- This poor bird-hearted singer of a day.
-
-
-
-
- SONG
-
-
- Nothing but sweet music wakes
- My Beloved, my Beloved.
- Sleeping by the blue lakes,
- My own Beloved!
-
- Song of lark and song of thrush,
- My Beloved! my Beloved!
- Sing in morning's rosy bush,
- My own Beloved!
-
- When your eyes dawn blue and clear,
- My Beloved! my Beloved!
- You will find me waiting here,
- My own Beloved!
-
-
-
-
- TO ONE DEAD
-
-
- A blackbird singing
- On a moss upholstered stone,
- Bluebells swinging,
- Shadows wildly blown,
- A song in the wood,
- A ship on the sea.
- The song was for you
- And the ship was for me.
-
- A blackbird singing
- I hear in my troubled mind,
- Bluebells swinging
- I see in a distant wind.
- But sorrow and silence
- Are the wood's threnody,
- The silence for you
- And the sorrow for me.
-
-
-
-
- THE RESURRECTION
-
-
- My true love still is all that's fair,
- She is flower and blossom blowing free,
- For all her silence lying there
- She sings a spirit song to me.
-
- New lovers seek her in her bower,
- The rain, the dew, the flying wind,
- And tempt her out to be a flower,
- Which throws a shadow on my mind.
-
-
-
-
- THE SHADOW PEOPLE
-
-
- Old lame Bridget doesn't hear
- Fairy music in the grass
- When the gloaming's on the mere
- And the shadow people pass:
- Never hears their slow grey feet
- Coming from the village street
- Just beyond the parson's wall,
- Where the clover globes are sweet
- And the mushroom's parasol
- Opens in the moonlit rain.
- Every night I hear them call
- From their long and merry train.
- Old lame Bridget says to me,
- "It is just your fancy, child,"
- She cannot believe I see
- Laughing faces in the wild,
- Hands that twinkle in the sedge
- Bowing at the water's edge
- Where the finny minnows quiver,
- Shaping on a blue wave's ledge
- Bubble foam to sail the river.
- And the sunny hands to me
- Beckon ever, beckon ever.
- Oh! I would be wild and free
- And with the shadow people be.
-
-
-
-
- IN BARRACKS
-
-
-
-
- AN OLD DESIRE
-
-
- I searched thro' memory's lumber-room
- And there I found an old desire,
- I took it gently from the gloom
- To cherish by my scanty tire.
-
- And all the night a sweet-voiced one,
- Sang of the place my loves abide,
- Til Earth leaned over from the dawn
- And hid the last star in her side.
-
- And often since, when most alone,
- I ponder on my old desire,
- But never hear the sweet-voiced one,
- And there are ruins in my fire.
-
-
-
-
- THOMAS McDONAGH
-
-
- He shall not hear the bittern cry
- In the wild sky, where he is lain,
- Nor voices of the sweeter birds
- Above the wailing of the rain.
-
- Nor shall he know when loud March blows
- Thro' slanting snows her fanfare shrill,
- Blowing to flame the golden cup
- Of many an upset daffodil.
-
- But when the Dark Cow leaves the moor,
- And pastures poor with greedy weeds,
- Perhaps he'll hear her low at morn
- Lifting her horn in pleasant meads.
-
-
-
-
- THE WEDDING MORNING
-
-
- Spread the feast, and let there be
- Such music heard as best beseems
- A king's son coming from the sea
- To wed a maiden of the streams.
-
- Poets, pale for long ago,
- Bring sweet sounds from rock and flood,
- You by echo's accent know
- Where the water is and wood.
-
- Harpers whom the moths of Time
- Bent and wrinkled dusty brown,
- Her chains are falling with a chime,
- Sweet as bells in Heaven town.
-
- But, harpers, leave your harps aside,
- And, poets, leave awhile your dreams.
- The storm has come upon the tide
- And Cathleen weeps among her streams.
-
-
-
-
- THE BLACKBIRDS
-
-
- I heard the Poor Old Woman say:
- "At break of day the fowler came,
- And took my blackbirds from their songs
- Who loved me well thro shame and blame.
-
- No more from lovely distances
- Their songs shall bless me mile by mile,
- Nor to white Ashbourne call me down
- To wear my crown another while.
-
- With bended flowers the angels mark
- For the skylark the place they lie,
- From there its little family
- Shall dip their wings first in the sky.
-
- And when the first surprise of flight
- Sweet songs excite, from the far dawn
- Shall there come blackbirds loud with love,
- Sweet echoes of the singers gone.
-
- But in the lonely hush of eve
- Weeping I grieve the silent bills."
- I heard the Poor Old Woman say
- In Derry of the little hills.
-
-
-
-
- THE LURE
-
-
- I saw night leave her halos down
- On Mitylene's dark mountain isle,
- The silhouette of one fair town
- Like broken shadows in a pile.
- And in the farther dawn I heard
- The music of a foreign bird.
-
- In fields of shady angles now
- I stand and dream in the half dark:
- The thrush is on the blossomed bough,
- Above the echoes sings the lark,
- And little rivers drop between
- Hills fairer than dark Mitylene.
-
- Yet something calls me with no voice
- And wakes sweet echoes in my mind;
- In the fair country of my choice
- Nor Peace nor Love again I find,
- Nor anything of rest I know
- When south-east winds are blowing low.
-
-
-
-
- THRO' BOGAC BAN
-
-
- I met the Silent Wandering Man,
- Thro' Bogac Ban he made his way,
- Humming a slow old Irish tune,
- On Joseph Plunkett's wedding day.
-
- And all the little whispering things
- That love the springs of Bogac Ban,
- Spread some new rumour round the dark
- And turned their faces from the dawn.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- My hand upon my harp I lay,
- I cannot say what things I know;
- To meet the Silent Wandering Man
- Of Bogac Ban once more I go.
-
-
-
-
- FATE
-
-
- Lugh made a stir in the air
- With his sword of cries,
- And fairies thro' hidden ways
- Came from the skies,
- And their spells withered up the fair
- And vanquished the wise.
-
- And old lame Balor came down
- With his gorgon eye
- Hidden behind its lid,
- Old, withered and dry.
- He looked on the wattle town,
- And the town passed by.
-
- These things I know in my dreams,
- The crying sword of Lugh,
- And Balor's ancient eye
- Searching me through,
- Withering up my songs
- And my pipe yet new.
-
-
-
-
- EVENING CLOUDS
-
-
- A little flock of clouds go down to rest
- In some blue corner off the moon's highway,
- With shepherd winds that shook them in the West
- To borrowed shapes of earth, in bright array,
- Perhaps to weave a rainbow's gay festoons
- Around the lonesome isle which Brooke has made
- A little England full of lovely noons,
- Or dot it with his country's mountain shade.
-
- Ah, little wanderers, when you reach that isle
- Tell him, with dripping dew, they have not failed,
- What he loved most; for late I roamed awhile
- Thro' English fields and down her rivers sailed;
- And they remember him with beauty caught
- From old desires of Oriental Spring
- Heard in his heart with singing overwrought;
- And still on Purley Common gooseboys sing.
-
-
-
-
- SONG
-
-
- The winds are scented with woods after rain,
- And a raindrop shines in the daisy's eye.
- Shall we follow the swallow again, again,
- Ah! little yearning thing, you and I?
-
- You and I to the South again,
- And heart! Oh, heart, how you shall sigh,
- For the kind soft wind that follows the rain,
- And the raindrop shed from the daisy's eye.
-
-
-
-
- THE HERONS
-
-
- As I was climbing Ardan Mor
- From the shore of Sheelan lake,
- I met the herons coming down
- Before the water's wake.
-
- And they were talking in their flight
- Of dreamy ways the herons go
- When all the hills are withered up
- Nor any waters flow.
-
-
-
-
- IN THE SHADOWS
-
-
- The silent music of the flowers
- Wind-mingled shall not fail to cheer
- The lonely hours
- When I no more am here.
-
- Then in some shady willow place
- Take up the book my heart has made,
- And hide your face
- Against my name which was a shade.
-
-
-
-
- THE SHIPS OF ARCADY
-
-
- Thro' the faintest filigree
- Over the dim waters go
- Little ships of Arcady
- When the morning moon is low.
-
- I can hear the sailors' song
- From the blue edge of the sea,
- Passing like the lights along
- Thro' the dusky filigree.
-
- Then where moon and waters meet
- Sail by sail they pass away,
- With little friendly winds replete
- Blowing from the breaking day.
-
- And when the little ships have flown,
- Dreaming still of Arcady
- I look across the waves, alone
- In the misty filigree.
-
-
-
-
- AFTER
-
-
- And in the after silences
- Of flower-lit distances I'll be,
- And who would find me travels far
- In lands unsung of minstrelsy.
- Strong winds shall cross my secret way,
- And planet mountains hide my goal,
- I shall go on from pass to pass,
- By monstrous rocks, a lonely soul.
-
-
-
-
- TO ONE WEEPING
-
-
- Maiden, these are sacred tears,
- Let me not disturb your grief!
- Had I but your bosom's fears
- I should weep, nor seek relief.
-
- My woe is a silent woe
- 'Til I give it measured rhyme,
- When the blackbird's flute is low
- In my heart at singing time.
-
-
-
-
- A DREAM DANCE
-
-
- Maeve held a ball on the dún,
- Cuculain and Eimer were there,
- In the light of an old broken moon
- I was dancing with Deirdre the fair.
-
- How loud was the laughter of Finn
- As he blundered about thro' a reel,
- Tripping up Caoilte the thin,
- Or jostling the dreamy Aleel.
-
- And when the dance ceased for a song,
- How sweet was the singing of Fand,
- We could hear her far, wandering along,
- My hand in that beautiful hand.
-
-
-
-
- BY FAUGHAN
-
-
- For hills and woods and streams unsung
- I pipe above a rippled cove.
- And here the weaver autumn hung
- Between the hills a wind she wove
- From sounds the hills remember yet
- Of purple days and violet.
-
- The hills stand up to trip the sky,
- Sea-misted, and along the tops
- Wing after wing goes summer by,
- And many a little roadway stops
- And starts, and struggles to the sea,
- Cutting them up in filigree.
-
- Twixt wind and silence Faughan flows,
- In music broken over rocks,
- Like mingled bells the poet knows
- Ring in the fields of Eastern flocks.
- And here this song for you I find
- Between the silence and the wind.
-
-
-
-
- IN SEPTEMBER
-
-
- Still are the meadowlands, and still
- Ripens the upland corn,
- And over the brown gradual hill
- The moon has dipped a horn.
-
- The voices of the dear unknown
- With silent hearts now call,
- My rose of youth is overblown
- And trembles to the fall.
-
- My song forsakes me like the birds
- That leave the rain and grey,
- I hear the music of the words
- My lute can never say.
-
-
-
-
- LAST SONGS
-
-
-
-
- TO AN OLD QUILL OF LORD DUNSANY'S
-
-
- Before you leave my hands' abuses
- To lie where many odd things meet you,
- Neglected darkling of the Muses,
- I, the last of singers, greet you.
-
- Snug in some white wing they found you,
- On the Common bleak and muddy,
- Noisy goslings gobbling round you
- In the pools of sunset, ruddy.
-
- Have you sighed in wings untravelled
- For the heights where others view the
- Bluer widths of heaven, and marvelled
- At the utmost top of Beauty?
-
- No! it cannot be; the soul you
- Sigh with craves nor begs of us.
- From such heights a poet stole you
- From a wing of Pegasus.
-
- You have been where gods were sleeping
- In the dawn of new creations,
- Ere they woke to woman's weeping
- At the broken thrones of nations.
-
- You have seen this old world shattered
- By old gods it disappointed,
- Lying up in darkness, battered
- By wild comets, unanointed.
-
- But for Beauty unmolested
- Have you still the sighing olden?
- I know mountains heather-crested,
- Waters white, and waters golden.
-
- There I'd keep you, in the lowly
- Beauty-haunts of bird and poet,
- Sailing in a wing, the holy
- Silences of lakes below it.
-
- But I leave you by where no man
- Finds you, when I too be gone
- From the puddles on this common
- Over the dark Rubicon.
-
- _Londonderry,_
-
- _September 18th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- TO A SPARROW
-
-
- Because you have no fear to mingle
- Wings with those of greater part,
- So like me, with song I single
- Your sweet impudence of heart.
-
- And when prouder feathers go where
- Summer holds her leafy show,
- You still come to us from nowhere
- Like grey leaves across the snow.
-
- In back ways where odd and end go
- To your meals you drop down sure,
- Knowing every broken window
- Of the hospitable poor.
-
- There is no bird half so harmless,
- None so sweetly rude as you,
- None so common and so charmless,
- None of virtues nude as you.
-
- But for all your faults I love you,
- For you linger with us still,
- Though the wintry winds reprove you
- And the snow is on the hill.
-
- _Londonderry,_
-
- _September 20th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- OLD CLO'
-
-
- I was just coming in from the garden,
- Or about to go fishing for eels,
- And, smiling, I asked you to pardon
- My boots very low at the heels.
- And I thought that you never would go,
- As you stood in the doorway ajar,
- For my heart would keep saying, "Old Clo',
- You're found out at last as you are."
-
- I was almost ashamed to acknowledge
- That I was the quarry you sought,
- For was I not bred in a college
- And reared in a mansion, you thought.
- And now in the latest style cut
- With fortune more kinder I go
- To welcome you half-ways. Ah! but
- I was nearer the gods when "Old Clo'."
-
-
-
-
- YOUTH
-
-
- She paved the way with perfume sweet
- Of flowers that moved like winds alight,
- And never weary grew my feet
- Wandering through the spring's delight.
-
- She dropped her sweet fife to her lips
- And lured me with her melodies,
- To where the great big wandering ships
- Put out into the peaceful seas.
-
- But when the year grew chill and brown,
- And all the wings of Summer flown,
- Within the tumult of a town
- She left me to grow old alone.
-
-
-
-
- THE LITTLE CHILDREN
-
-
- Hunger points a bony finger
- To the workhouse on the hill,
- But the little children linger
- While there's flowers to gather still
- For my sunny window sill.
-
- In my hands I take their faces,
- Smiling to my smiles they run.
- Would that I could take their places
- Where the murky bye-ways shun
- The benedictions of the sun.
-
- How they laugh and sing returning
- Lightly on their secret way.
- While I listen in my yearning
- Their laughter fills the windy day
- With gladness, youth and May.
-
-
-
-
- AUTUMN
-
-
- Now leafy winds are blowing cold,
- And South by West the sun goes down,
- A quiet huddles up the fold
- In sheltered corners of the brown.
-
- Like scattered fire the wild fruit strews
- The ground beneath the blowing tree,
- And there the busy squirrel hews
- His deep and secret granary.
-
- And when the night comes starry clear,
- The lonely quail complains beside
- The glistening waters on the mere
- Where widowed Beauties yet abide.
-
- And I, too, make my own complaint
- Upon a reed I plucked in June,
- And love to hear it echoed faint
- Upon another heart in tune.
-
- _Londonderry,_
-
- _September 29th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- IRELAND
-
-
- I called you by sweet names by wood and linn,
- You answered not because my voice was new,
- And you were listening for the hounds of Finn
- And the long hosts of Lugh.
-
- And so, I came unto a windy height
- And cried my sorrow, but you heard no wind,
- For you were listening to small ships in flight,
- And the wail on hills behind.
-
- And then I left you, wandering the war
- Armed with will, from distant goal to goal,
- To find you at the last free as of yore,
- Or die to save your soul.
-
- And then you called to us from far and near
- To bring your crown from out the deeps of time,
- It is my grief your voice I couldn't hear
- In such a distant clime.
-
-
-
-
- LADY FAIR
-
-
- Lady fair, have we not met
- In our lives elsewhere?
- Darkling in my mind to-night
- Faint fair faces dare
- Memory's old unfaithfulness
- To what was true and fair.
- Long of memory is Regret,
- But what Regret has taken flight
- Through my memory's silences?
- Lo! I turn it to the light.
- 'Twas but a pleasure in distress,
- Too faint and far off for redress.
- But some light glancing in your hair
- And in the liquid of your eyes
- Seem to murmur old good-byes
- In our lives elsewhere.
- Have we not met, Lady fair?
-
- _Londonderry,_
-
- _October 27th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- AT A POET'S GRAVE
-
-
- When I leave down this pipe my friend
- And sleep with flowers I loved, apart,
- My songs shall rise in wilding things
- Whose roots are in my heart.
-
- And here where that sweet poet sleeps
- I hear the songs he left unsung,
- When winds are fluttering the flowers
- And summer-bells are rung.
-
- _November, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- AFTER COURT MARTIAL
-
-
- My mind is not my mind, therefore
- I take no heed of what men say,
- I lived ten thousand years before
- God cursed the town of Nineveh.
-
- The Present is a dream I see
- Of horror and loud sufferings,
- At dawn a bird will waken me
- Unto my place among the kings.
-
- And though men called me a vile name,
- And all my dream companions gone,
- 'Tis I the soldier bears the shame.
- Not I the king of Babylon.
-
-
-
-
- A MOTHER'S SONG
-
-
- Little ships of whitest pearl
- With sailors who were ancient kings,
- Come over the sea when my little girl
- Sings.
-
- And if my little girl should weep,
- Little ships with torn sails
- Go headlong down among the deep
- Whales.
-
- _November, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- AT CURRABWEE
-
-
- Every night at Currabwee
- Little men with leather hats
- Mend the boots of Faery
- From the tough wings of the bats.
- So my mother told to me,
- And she is wise you will agree.
-
- Louder than a cricket's wing
- All night long their hammer's glee
- Times the merry songs they sing
- Of Ireland glorious and free.
- So I heard Joseph Plunkett say,
- You know he heard them but last May.
-
- And when the night is very cold
- They warm their hands against the light
- Of stars that make the waters gold
- Where they are labouring all the night.
- So Pearse said, and he knew the truth,
- Among the stars he spent his youth.
-
- And I, myself, have often heard
- Their singing as the stars went by,
- For am I not of those who reared
- The banner of old Ireland high,
- From Dublin town to Turkey's shores,
- And where the Vardar loudly roars?
-
- _December, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- SONG-TIME IS OVER
-
-
- I will come no more awhile,
- O Song-time is over.
- A fire is burning in my heart,
- I was ever a rover.
-
- You will hear me no more awhile,
- The birds are dumb,
- And a voice in the distance calls
- "Come," and "Come,"
-
- _December 13th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- UNA BAWN
-
-
- Una Bawn, the days are long,
- And the seas I cross are wide,
- I must go when Ireland needs,
- And you must bide.
-
- And should I not return to you
- When the sails are on the tide,
- 'Tis you will find the days so long,
- Una Bawn, and I must bide.
-
- _December 13th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- SPRING LOVE
-
-
- I saw her coming through the flowery grass,
- Round her swift ankles butterfly and bee
- Blent loud and silent wings; I saw her pass
- Where foam-bows shivered on the sunny sea.
-
- Then came the swallow crowding up the dawn,
- And cuckoo-echoes filled the dewy South.
- I left my love upon the hill, alone,
- My last kiss burning on her lovely mouth.
-
- B.E.F.--_December 26th, 1916._
-
-
-
-
- SOLILOQUY
-
-
- When I was young I had a care
- Lest I should cheat me of my share
- Of that which makes it sweet to strive
- For life, and dying still survive,
- A name in sunshine written higher
- Than lark or poet dare aspire.
-
- But I grew weary doing well,
- Besides, 'twas sweeter in that hell,
- Down with the loud banditti people
- Who robbed the orchards, climbed the steeple
- For jackdaws' eggs and made the cock
- Crow ere 'twas daylight on the clock.
- I was so very bad the neighbours
- Spoke of me at their daily labours.
-
- And now I'm drinking wine in France,
- The helpless child of circumstance.
- To-morrow will be loud with war,
- How will I be accounted for?
-
- It is too late now to retrieve
- A fallen dream, too late to grieve
- A name unmade, but not too late
- To thank the gods for what is great;
- A keen-edged sword, a soldier's heart,
- Is greater than a poet's art.
- And greater than a poet's fame
- A little grave that has no name.
-
-
-
-
- DAWN
-
-
- Quiet miles of golden sky,
- And in my heart a sudden flower.
- I want to clap my hands and cry
- For Beauty in her secret bower.
-
- Quiet golden miles of dawn--Smiling
- all the East along;
- And in my heart nigh fully blown
- A little rose-bud of a song.
-
-
-
-
- CEOL SIDHE[1]
-
-
- When May is here, and every morn
- Is dappled with pied bells,
- And dewdrops glance along the thorn
- And wings flash in the dells,
- I take my pipe and play a tune
- Of dreams, a whispered melody,
- For feet that dance beneath the moon
- In fairy jollity.
-
- And when the pastoral hills are grey
- And the dim stars are spread,
- A scamper fills the grass like play
- Of feet where fairies tread.
- And many a little whispering thing
- Is calling to the Shee.
- The dewy bells of evening ring,
- And all is melody.
-
- _France,_
-
- _December 29th, 1916._
-
-[Footnote 1: Fairy music.]
-
-
-
-
- THE RUSHES
-
-
- The rushes nod by the river
- As the winds on the loud waves go,
- And the things they nod of are many,
- For it's many the secret they know.
-
- And I think they are wise as the fairies
- Who lived ere the hills were high,
- They nod so grave by the river
- To everyone passing by.
-
- If they would tell me their secrets
- I would go by a hidden way,
- To the rath when the moon retiring
- Dips dim horns into the gray.
-
- And a fairy-girl out of Leinster
- In a long dance I should meet,
- My heart to her heart beating,
- My feet in rhyme with her feet.
-
- _France,_
- _January 6th, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- THE DEAD KINGS
-
-
- All the dead kings came to me
- At Rosnaree, where I was dreaming.
- A few stars glimmered through the morn,
- And down the thorn the dews were streaming.
-
- And every dead king had a story
- Of ancient glory, sweetly told.
- It was too early for the lark,
- But the starry dark had tints of gold.
-
- I listened to the sorrows three
- Of that Eirë passed into song.
- A cock crowed near a hazel croft,
- And up aloft dim larks winged strong.
-
- And I, too, told the kings a story
- Of later glory, her fourth sorrow:
- There was a sound like moving shields
- In high green fields and the lowland furrow.
-
- And one said: "We who yet are kings
- Have heard these things lamenting inly."
- Sweet music flowed from many a bill
- And on the hill the morn stood queenly.
-
- And one said: "Over is the singing,
- And bell bough ringing, whence we come;
- With heavy hearts we'll tread the shadows,
- In honey meadows birds are dumb."
-
- And one said: "Since the poets perished
- And all they cherished in the way,
- Their thoughts unsung, like petal showers
- Inflame the hours of blue and gray."
-
- And one said: "A loud tramp of men
- We'll hear again at Rosnaree."
- A bomb burst near me where I lay.
- I woke, 'twas day in Picardy.
-
- _France,_
- _January 7th, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- IN FRANCE
-
-
- The silence of maternal hills
- Is round me in my evening dreams;
- And round me music-making bills
- And mingling waves of pastoral streams.
-
- Whatever way I turn I find
- The path is old unto me still.
- The hills of home are in my mind,
- And there I wander as I will.
-
- _February 3rd, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- HAD I A GOLDEN POUND
-
- (AFTER THE IRISH)
-
-
- Had I a golden pound to spend,
- My love should mend and sew no more.
- And I would buy her a little quern,
- Easy to turn on the kitchen floor.
-
- And for her windows curtains white,
- With birds in flight and flowers in bloom,
- To face with pride the road to town,
- And mellow down her sunlit room.
-
- And with the silver change we'd prove
- The truth of Love to life's own end,
- With hearts the years could but embolden,
- Had I a golden pound to spend.
-
- _February 5th, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- FAIRIES
-
-
- Maiden-poet, come with me
- To the heaped up cairn of Maeve,
- And there we'll dance a fairy dance
- Upon a fairy's grave.
-
- In and out among the trees,
- Filling all the night with sound,
- The morning, strung upon her star,
- Shall chase us round and round.
-
- What are we but fairies too,
- Living but in dreams alone,
- Or, at the most, but children still,
- Innocent and overgrown?
-
- _February 6th,_ 1917.
-
-
-
-
- IN A CAFÉ
-
-
- Kiss the maid and pass her round,
- Lips like hers were made for many.
- Our loves are far from us to-night,
- But these red lips are sweet as any.
-
- Let no empty glass be seen
- Aloof from our good table's sparkle,
- At the acme of our cheer
- Here are francs to keep the circle.
-
- They are far who miss us most--Sip
- and kiss--how well we love them,
- Battling through the world to keep
- Their hearts at peace, their God above them.
-
- _February 11th, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- SPRING
-
-
- Once more the lark with song and speed
- Cleaves through the dawn, his hurried bars
- Fall, like the flute of Ganymede
- Twirling and whistling from the stars.
-
- The primrose and the daffodil
- Surprise the valleys, and wild thyme
- Is sweet on every little hill,
- When lambs come down at folding time.
-
- In every wild place now is heard
- The magpie's noisy house, and through
- The mingled tunes of many a bird
- The ruffled wood-dove's gentle coo.
-
- Sweet by the river's noisy brink
- The water-lily bursts her crown,
- The kingfisher comes down to drink
- Like rainbow jewels falling down.
-
- And when the blue and grey entwine
- The daisy shuts her golden eye,
- And peaces-wraps all those hills of mine
- Safe in my dearest memory.
-
- _France,_
- _March 8th, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- PAN
-
-
- He knows the safe ways and unsafe
- And he will lead the lambs to fold,
- Gathering them with his merry pipe,
- The gentle and the overbold.
-
- He counts them over one by one,
- And leads them back by cliff and steep,
- To grassy hills where dawn is wide,
- And they may run and skip and leap.
-
- And just because he loves the lambs
- He settles them for rest at noon,
- And plays them on his oaten pipe
- The very wonder of a tune.
-
- _France,_
- _March 11th, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- WITH FLOWERS
-
-
- These have more language than my song,
- Take them and let them speak for me.
- I whispered them a secret thing
- Down the green lanes of Allary.
-
- You shall remember quiet ways
- Watching them fade, and quiet eyes,
- And two hearts given up to love,
- A foolish and an overwise.
-
- _France,_
- _April, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- THE FIND
-
-
- I took a reed and blew a tune,
- And sweet it was and very clear
- To be about a little thing
- That only few hold dear.
-
- Three times the cuckoo named himself,
- But nothing heard him on the hill,
- Where I was piping like an elf
- The air was very still.
-
- 'Tw'as all about a little thing
- I made a mystery of sound,
- I found it in a fairy ring
- Upon a fairy mound.
-
- _June 2nd, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- A FAIRY HUNT
-
-
- Who would hear the fairy horn
- Calling all the hounds of Finn
- Must be in a lark's nest born
- When the moon is very thin.
-
- I who have the gift can hear
- Hounds and horn and tally ho,
- And the tongue of Bran as clear
- As Christmas bells across the snow.
-
- And beside my secret place
- Hurries by the fairy fox,
- With the moonrise on his face,
- Up and down the mossy rocks.
-
- Then the music of a horn
- And the flash of scarlet men,
- Thick as poppies in the corn
- All across the dusky glen.
-
- Oh! the mad delight of chase!
- Oh! the shouting and the cheer!
- Many an owl doth leave his place
- In the dusty tree to hear.
-
-
-
-
- TO ONE WHO COMES NOW AND THEN
-
-
- When you come in, it seems a brighter fire
- Crackles upon the hearth invitingly,
- The household routine which was wont to tire
- Grows full of novelty.
-
- You sit upon our home-upholstered chair
- And talk of matters wonderful and strange,
- Of books, and travel, customs old which dare
- The gods of Time and Change.
-
- Till we with inner word our care refute
- Laughing that this our bosoms yet assails,
- While there are maidens dancing to a flute
- In Andalusian vales.
-
- And sometimes from my shelf of poems you take
- And secret meanings to our hearts disclose,
- As when the winds of June the mid bush shake
- We see the hidden rose.
-
- And when the shadows muster, and each tree
- A moment flutters, full of shutting wings,
- You take the fiddle and mysteriously
- Wake wonders on the strings.
-
- And in my garden, grey with misty flowers,
- Low echoes fainter than a beetle's horn
- Fill all the corners with it, like sweet showers
- Of bells, in the owl's morn.
-
- Come often, friend, with welcome and surprise
- We'll greet you from the sea or from the town;
- Come when you like and from whatever skies
- Above you smile or frown.
-
- _Belgium,_
- _July 22nd, 1917_.
-
-
-
-
- THE SYLPH
-
-
- I saw you and I named a flower
- That lights with blue a woodland space,
- I named a bird of the red hour
- And a hidden fairy place.
-
- And then I saw you not, and knew
- Dead leaves were whirling down the mist,
- And something lost was crying through
- An evening of amethyst.
-
-
-
-
- HOME
-
-
- A burst of sudden wings at dawn,
- Faint voices in a dreamy noon,
- Evenings of mist and murmurings,
- And nights with rainbows of the moon.
-
- And through these things a wood-way dim,
- And waters dim, and slow sheep seen
- On uphill paths that wind away
- Through summer sounds and harvest green.
-
- This is a song a robin sang
- This morning on a broken tree,
- It was about the little fields
- That call across the world to me.
-
- _Belgium,_
- _July, 1917._
-
-
-
-
- THE LANAWN SHEE
-
-
- Powdered and perfumed the full bee
- Winged heavily across the clover,
- And where the hills were dim with dew,
- Purple and blue the west leaned over.
-
- A willow spray dipped in the stream,
- Moving a gleam of silver ringing,
- And by a finny creek a maid
- Filled all the shade with softest singing.
-
- Listening, my heart and soul at strife,
- On the edge of life I seemed to hover,
- For I knew my love had come at last,
- That my joy was past and my gladness over.
-
- I tiptoed gently tip and stooped
- Above her looped and shining tresses,
- And asked her of her kin and name,
- And why she came from fairy places.
-
- She told me of a sunny coast
- Beyond the most adventurous sailor,
- Where she had spent a thousand years
- Out of the fears that now assail her.
-
- And there, she told me, honey drops
- Out of the tops of ash and willow,
- And in the mellow shadow Sleep
- Doth sweetly keep her poppy pillow.
-
- Nor Autumn with her brown line marks
- The time of larks, the length of roses,
- But song-time there is over never
- Nor flower-time ever, ever closes.
-
- And wildly through uncurling ferns
- Fast water turns down valleys singing,
- Filling with scented winds the dales,
- Setting the bells of sleep a-ringing.
-
- And when the thin moon lowly sinks,
- Through cloudy chinks a silver glory
- Lingers upon the left of night
- Till dawn delights the meadows hoary.
-
- And by the lakes the skies are white,
- (Oh, the delight!) when swans are coming,
- Among the flowers sweet joy-bells peal,
- And quick bees wheel in drowsy humming.
-
- The squirrel leaves her dusty house
- And in the boughs makes fearless gambol,
- And, falling down in fire-drops, red,
- The fruit is shed from every bramble.
-
- Then, gathered all about the trees
- Glad galaxies of youth are dancing,
- Treading the perfume of the flowers,
- Filling the hours with mazy glancing.
-
- And when the dance is done, the trees
- Are left to Peace and the brown woodpecker,
- And on the western slopes of sky
- The day's blue eye begins to flicker.
-
- But at the sighing of the leaves,
- When all earth grieves for lights departed
- An ancient and a sad desire
- Steals in to tire the human-hearted.
-
- No fairy aid can save them now
- Nor turn their prow upon the ocean,
- The hundred years that missed each heart
- Above them start their wheels in motion.
-
- And so our loves are lost, she sighed,
- And far and wide we seek new treasure,
- For who on Time or Timeless hills
- Can live the ills of loveless leisure?
-
- ("Fairer than Usna's youngest son,
- O, my poor one, what flower-bed holds you?
- Or, wrecked upon the shores of home,
- What wave of foam with white enfolds you?
-
- "You rode with kings on hills of green,
- And lovely queens have served you banquet,
- Sweet wine from berries bruised they brought
- And shyly sought the lips which drank it.
-
- "But in your dim grave of the sea
- There shall not be a friend to love you.
- And ever heedless of your loss
- The earth ships cross the storms above you.
-
- "And still the chase goes on, and still
- The wine shall spill, and vacant places
- Be given over to the new
- As love untrue keeps changing faces.
-
- "And I must wander with my song
- Far from the young till Love returning,
- Brings me the beautiful reward
- Of some heart stirred by my long yearning.")
-
- Friend, have you heard a bird lament
- When sleet is sent for April weather?
- As beautiful she told her grief,
- As down through leaf and flower I led her.
-
- And friend, could I remain unstirred
- Without a word for such a sorrow?
- Say, can the lark forget the cloud
- When poppies shroud the seeded furrow?
-
- Like a poor widow whose late grief
- Seeks for relief in lonely byeways,
- The moon, companionless and dim,
- Took her dull rim through starless highways.
-
- I was too weak with dreams to feel
- Enchantment steal with guilt upon me,
- She slipped, a flower upon the wind,
- And laughed to find how she had won me.
-
- From hill to hill, from land to land,
- Her lovely hand is beckoning for me,
- I follow on through dangerous zones,
- Cross dead men's bones and oceans stormy.
-
- Some day I know she'll wait at last
- And lock me fast in white embraces,
- And down mysterious ways of love
- We two shall move to fairy places.
-
- _Belgium,_
- _July, 1917._
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge, by
-Francis Ledwidge
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPLETE POEMS--FRANCIS LEDWIDGE ***
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge, by
-Francis Ledwidge
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge
- with Introductions by Lord Dunsany
-
-Author: Francis Ledwidge
-
-Release Date: November 28, 2016 [EBook #53621]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPLETE POEMS--FRANCIS LEDWIDGE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (online soon
-in an extended version, also linking to free sources for
-education worldwide ... MOOC's, educational materials,...)
-Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<h1>THE COMPLETE POEMS</h1>
-
-<h3>OF</h3>
-
-<h2>FRANCIS LEDWIDGE</h2>
-
-
-
-<h4>WITH INTRODUCTION</h4>
-
-<h4>BY LORD DUNSANY</h4>
-
-
-<h5>HERBERT JENKINS LIMITED</h5>
-
-<h5>YORK STREET ST. JAMES'S</h5>
-
-<h5>LONDON S.W.1</h5>
-
-<h5>MCMXIX</h5>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/ledwidge.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<p class="capt">Francis Ledwidge</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">TO</p>
-
-<p class="center">MY MOTHER</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">THE FIRST SINGER I KNEW</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>INTRODUCTION TO SONGS OF THE FIELDS</h4>
-
-
-<p class="smcap" style="margin-left: 65%;">Dunsany Castle,</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 65%;"><i>June,</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>If one who looked from a tower for a new star, watching for years the
-same part of the sky, suddenly saw it (quite by chance while thinking
-of other things), and knew it for the star for which he had hoped, how
-many millions of men would never care?</p>
-
-<p>And the star might blaze over deserts and forests and seas, cheering
-lost wanderers in desolate lands, or guiding dangerous quests; millions
-would never know it. And a poet is no more than a star. If one has
-arisen where I have so long looked for one, amongst the Irish peasants,
-it can be little more than a secret that I shall share with those who
-read this book because they care for poetry.</p>
-
-<p>I have looked for a poet amongst the Irish peasants because it seemed
-to me that almost only amongst them there was in daily use a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> diction
-worthy of poetry, as well a an imagination capable of dealing with the
-great and simple things that are a poet's wares. Their thoughts are in
-the spring-time, and all their metaphors fresh: in London no one makes
-metaphors any more, but daily speech is strewn thickly with dead ones
-that their users should write upon paper and give to their gardeners to
-burn.</p>
-
-<p>In this same London, two years ago, where I was wasting June, I
-received a letter one day from Mr. Ledwidge and a very old copy-book.
-The letter asked whether there was any good in the verses that filled
-the copy-book, the produce apparently of four or five years. It began
-with a play in verse that no manager would dream of, there were
-mistakes in grammar, in spelling of course, and worse&mdash;there were such
-phrases as "'thwart the rolling foam," "waiting for my true love on
-the lea," etc., which are vulgarly considered to be the appurtenances
-of poetry; but out of these and many similar errors there arose
-continually, like a mountain sheer out of marshes, that easy fluency of
-shapely lines which is now so noticeable in all that he writes; that
-and sudden glimpses of the fields that he seems at times to bring so
-near to one that one exclaims,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> "Why, that is how Meath looks," or "It
-is just like that along the Boyne in April," quite taken by surprise by
-familiar things: for none of us knows, till the poets point them out,
-how many beautiful things are close about us.</p>
-
-<p>Of pure poetry there are two kinds, that which mirrors the beauty of
-the world in which our bodies are, and that which builds the more
-mysterious kingdoms where geography ends and fairyland begins, with
-gods and heroes at war, and the sirens singing still, and Alph going
-down to the darkness from Xanadu. Mr. Ledwidge gives us the first
-kind. When they have read through the profounder poets, and seen the
-problem plays, and studied all the perplexities that puzzle man in the
-cities, the small circle of readers that I predict for him will turn to
-Ledwidge as to a mirror reflecting beautiful fields, as to a very still
-lake rather on a very cloudless evening.</p>
-
-<p>There is scarcely a smile of Spring or a sigh of Autumn that is not
-reflected here, scarcely a phase of the large benedictions of Summer;
-even of Winter he gives us clear glimpses sometimes, albeit mournfully,
-remembering Spring.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-"In the red west the twisted moon is low,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>And on the bubbles there are half-lit stars,<br />
-Music and twilight: and the deep blue flow<br />
-Of water: and the watching fire of Mars.<br />
-The deep fish slipping through the moonlit bars<br />
-Make death a thing of sweet dreams,&mdash;"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>What a Summer's evening is here.</p>
-
-<p>And this is a Summer's night in a much longer poem that I have not
-included in this selection, a summer's night seen by two lovers:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-"The large moon rose up queenly as a flower<br />
-Charmed by some Indian pipes. A hare went by,<br />
-A snipe above them circled in the sky."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>And elsewhere he writes, giving us the mood and picture of Autumn in a
-single line:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-"And somewhere all the wandering birds have flown."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>With such simple scenes as this the book is full, giving nothing at all
-to those that look for a "message," but bringing a feeling of quiet
-from gleaming Irish evenings, a book to read between* the Strand and
-Piccadilly Circus amidst the thunder and hootings.</p>
-
-<p>To every poet is given the revelation of some living thing so intimate
-that he speaks, when he speaks of it, as an ambassador speaking for his
-sovereign; with Homer it was the heroes, with Ledwidge it is the small
-birds that sing, but in particular especially the blackbird, whose
-cause he champions against all other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> birds almost with a vehemence
-such as that with which men discuss whether Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, M. P., or his
-friend the Right Honourable &mdash;&mdash; is really the greater ruffian. This
-is how he speaks of the blackbird in one of his earliest poems; he was
-sixteen when he wrote it, in a grocer's shop in Dublin, dreaming of
-Slane, where he was born; and his dreams turned out to be too strong
-for the grocery business, for he walked home one night, a distance of
-thirty miles:</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-"Above me smokes the little town<br />
-With its whitewashed walls and roofs of brown<br />
-And its octagon spire toned smoothly down<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As the holy minds within.</span><br />
-And wondrous, impudently sweet,<br />
-Half of him passion, half conceit,<br />
-The blackbird calls adown the street,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Like the piper of Hamelin."</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Let us not call him the Burns of Ireland, you who may like this book,
-nor even the Irish John Clare, though he is more like him, for poets
-are all incomparable (it is only the versifiers that resemble the great
-ones), but let us know him by his own individual song: he is the poet
-of the blackbird.</p>
-
-<p>I hope that not too many will be attracted to this book on account
-of the author being a peasant, lest he come to be praised by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-how-interesting! school; for know that neither in any class, nor in any
-country, nor in any age, shall you predict the footfall of Pegasus, who
-touches the earth where he pleaseth and is bridled by whom he will.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 75%; font-size: 0.8em;">DUNSANY.</p>
-
-<p><i>June, 1914.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="smcap" style="margin-left: 65%;" >Basingstoke Camp.</p>
-
-<p>I wrote this preface in such a different June, that if I sent it out
-with no addition it would make the book appear to have dropped a long
-while since out of another world, a world that none of us remembers
-now, in which there used to be leisure.</p>
-
-<p>Ledwidge came last October into the 5th Battalion of the Royal
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, which is in one of the divisions of Kitchener's
-first army, and soon earned a lance-corporal's stripe.</p>
-
-<p>All his future books lie on the knees of the gods. May They not be the
-only readers.</p>
-
-<p>Any well-informed spy can probably tell you our movements, so of such
-things I say nothing.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span style="margin-left: 65%; font-size: 0.8em;">DUNSANY,</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 50%;"><i>Captain, 5th R. Inniskilling Fusiliers.</i></span><br />
-<i>June, 1915.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4>INTRODUCTION TO SONGS OF PEACE</h4>
-
-
-<p class="smcap" style="margin-left: 60%;">Ebrington Barracks,</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 65%;"><i>September,</i> 1916.</p>
-
-<p>In this selection that Corporal Ledwidge has asked me to make from his
-poems I have included "A Dream of Artemis," though it was incomplete
-and has been hurriedly finished Were it not included on that account
-many lines of extraordinary beauty would remain unseen. He asked me if
-I did not think that it ended too abruptly, but so many pleasant things
-ended abruptly in the summer of 1914, when this poem was being written,
-that the blame for that may rest on a meaner, though more, exalted,
-head than that of the poet.</p>
-
-<p>In this poem, as in the other one that has a classical theme, "The
-Departure of Proserpine," those who remember their classics may find
-faults, but I read the "Dream of Artemis" merely as an expression of
-things that the poet has seen and dreamed in Meath, including a most
-beautiful description of a fox-hunt in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> the north of the county, in
-which he has probably taken part on foot; and in "The Departure of
-Proserpine," whether conscious or not, a crystallization in verse of
-an autumnal mood induced by falling leaves and exile and the possible
-nearness of death.</p>
-
-<p>The second poem in the book was written about a little boy who used
-to drive cows for some farmer past the poet's door very early every
-morning, whistling as he went, and who died just before the war. I
-think that its beautiful and spontaneous simplicity would cost some of
-our writers gallons of midnight oil.</p>
-
-<p>Of the next, "To a Distant One," who will not hope that when "Fame and
-other little things are won" its clear and confident prophecy will be
-happily fulfilled?</p>
-
-<p>Quite perfect, if my judgment is of any value, is the little poem on
-page <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, "In the Mediterranean&mdash;Going to the War."</p>
-
-<p>Another beautiful thing is "Homecoming" on page <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-"The sheep are coming home in Greece,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hark the bells on every hill,</span><br />
-Flock by flock and fleece by fleece."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One feels that the Greeks are of some use, after all, to have
-inspired&mdash;with the help of their sheep&mdash;so lovely a poem.</p>
-
-<p>"The Shadow People" on page <a href="#Page_205">205</a> seems to me another perfect poem.
-Written in Serbia and Egypt, it shows the poet still looking
-steadfastly at those fields, though so far distant then, of which he
-was surely born to be the singer. And this devotion to the fields of
-Meath that, in nearly all his songs, from such far places brings his
-spirit home, like the instinct that has been given to the swallows,
-seems to be the key-note of the book. For this reason I have named it
-<i>Songs of Peace,</i> in spite of the circumstances under which they were
-written.</p>
-
-<p>There follow poems at which some may wonder: "To Thomas McDonagh," "The
-Blackbirds," "The Wedding Morning"; but rather than attribute curious
-sympathies to this brave young Irish soldier I would ask his readers to
-consider the irresistible attraction that a lost cause has for almost
-any Irish-man.</p>
-
-<p>Once the swallow instinct appears again&mdash;in the poem called "The
-Lure"&mdash;and a longing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> for the South, and again in the poem called
-"Song": and then the Irish fields content him again, and we find him
-on the last page but one in the book making a poem for a little place
-called Faughan, because he finds that its hills and woods and streams
-are unsung. Surely for this if there be, as many believed, gods lesser
-than Those whose business is with destiny, thunder and war, small gods
-that haunt the groves, seen only at times by few, and then indistinctly
-at evening, surely from gratitude they will give him peace.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 75%; font-size: 0.8em;">DUNSANY</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h4><a name="INTRODUCTION_TO_LAST_SONGS" id="INTRODUCTION_TO_LAST_SONGS">INTRODUCTION TO LAST SONGS</a></h4>
-
-
-<p class="smcap" style="margin-left: 60%;">The Hindenberg Line,</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 65%;"><i>October 9th,</i> 1917.</p>
-
-<p>Writing amidst rather too much noise and squalor to do justice at all
-to the delicate rustic muse of Francis Ledwidge, I do not like to delay
-his book any longer, nor to fail in a promise long ago made to him to
-write this introduction. He has gone down in that vast maelstrom into
-which poets do well to adventure and from which their country might
-perhaps be wise to withhold them, but that is our Country's affair. He
-has left behind him verses of great beauty, simple rural lyrics that
-may be something of an anodyne for this stricken age. If ever an age
-needed beautiful little songs our age needs them; and I know few songs
-more peaceful and happy, or better suited to soothe the scars on the
-mind of those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> who have looked on certain places, of which the prophecy
-in the gospels seems no more than an ominous hint when it speaks of the
-abomination of desolation.</p>
-
-<p>He told me once that it was on one particular occasion, when walking
-at evening through the village of Slane in summer, that he heard a
-blackbird sing. The notes, he said, were very beautiful, and it is
-this blackbird that he tells of in three wonderful lines in his early
-poem called "Behind the Closed Eye," and it is this song perhaps more
-than anything else that has been the inspiration of his brief life.
-Dynasties shook and the earth shook; and the war, not yet described by
-any man, revelled and wallowed in destruction around him; and Francis
-Ledwidge stayed true to his inspiration, as his homeward songs will
-show.</p>
-
-<p>I had hoped he would have seen the fame he has well deserved; but it is
-hard for a poet to live to see fame even in times of peace. In these
-days it is harder than ever.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 75%; font-size: 0.8em;">DUNSANY.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<p style="font-size: 0.8em; margin-left: 10%;">
-<span class="caption">CONTENTS</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-SONGS OF THE FIELDS<br />
-<br />
-TO MY BEST FRIEND <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_27">27</a></span><br />
-BEHIND THE CLOSED EYE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_29">29</a></span><br />
-BOUND TO THE MAST <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_31">31</a></span><br />
-To A LINNET IN A CAGE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_34">34</a></span><br />
-A TWILIGHT IN MIDDLE MARCH <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_36">36</a></span><br />
-SPRING <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_38">38</a></span><br />
-DESIRE IN SPRING <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_40">40</a></span><br />
-A RAINY DAY IN APRIL <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_41">41</a></span><br />
-A SONG OF APRIL <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_44">44</a></span><br />
-THE BROKEN TRYST <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_46">46</a></span><br />
-THOUGHTS AT THE TRYSTING STILE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_48">48</a></span><br />
-EVENING IN MAY <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_51">51</a></span><br />
-AN ATTEMPT AT A CITY SUNSET <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;53</span><br />
-WAITING <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_55">55</a></span><br />
-THE SINGER'S MUSE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_56">56</a></span><br />
-INAMORATA <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_58">58</a></span><br />
-THE WIFE OF LLEW <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_60">60</a></span><br />
-THE HILLS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_61">61</a></span><br />
-JUNE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_63">63</a></span><br />
-IN MANCHESTER <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_65">65</a></span><br />
-MUSIC ON WATER <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_67">67</a></span><br />
-To M. McG. <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_70">70</a></span><br />
-IN THE DUSK <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_72">72</a></span><br />
-THE DEATH OF AILILL <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_74">74</a></span><br />
-AUGUST <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_76">76</a></span><br />
-THE VISITATION OF PEACE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_77">77</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-BEFORE THE TEARS <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_82">82</a></span><br />
-GOD'S REMEMBRANCE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_84">84</a></span><br />
-AN OLD PAIN <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_86">86</a></span><br />
-THE LOST ONES <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_90">90</a></span><br />
-ALL-HALLOWS EVE <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_92">92</a></span><br />
-A MEMORY <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_95">95</a></span><br />
-A SONG <span class="tabnum">&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_99">99</a></span><br />
-A FEAR <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></span><br />
-THE COMING POET <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></span><br />
-THE VISION ON THE BRINK <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></span><br />
-To LORD DUNSANY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></span><br />
-ON AN OATEN STRAW <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></span><br />
-EVENING IN FEBRUARY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></span><br />
-THE SISTER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></span><br />
-BEFORE THE WAR OF COOLEY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></span><br />
-LOW-MOON LAND <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></span><br />
-THE SORROW OF FINDEBAR <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></span><br />
-ON DREAM WATER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></span><br />
-THE DEATH OF SUALTEM <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></span><br />
-THE MAID IN LOW-MOON LAND <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></span><br />
-THE DEATH OF LEAG, CUCHULAIN'S CHARIOTEER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></span><br />
-THE PASSING OF CAOILTE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></span><br />
-GROWING OLD <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></span><br />
-AFTER MY LAST SONG <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></span><br />
-<br />
-SONGS OF PEACE<br />
-<br />
-AT HOME<br />
-<br />
-A DREAM OF ARTEMIS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></span><br />
-A LITTLE BOY IN THE MORNING <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></span><br />
-<br />
-IN BARRACKS<br />
-<br />
-TO A DISTANT ONE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></span><br />
-THE PLACE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></span><br />
-MAY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-TO ELLISH OF THE FAIR HAIR <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></span><br />
-<br />
-IN CAMP<br />
-<br />
-CREWBAWN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></span><br />
-EVENING IN ENGLAND <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_168">168</a></span><br />
-<br />
-AT SEA<br />
-<br />
-CROCKNAHARNA <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></span><br />
-IN THE MEDITERRANEAN&mdash;GOING TO THE WAR <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></span><br />
-THE GARDENER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></span><br />
-<br />
-IN SERBIA<br />
-<br />
-AUTUMN EVENING IN SERBIA <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></span><br />
-NOCTURNE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></span><br />
-SPRING AND AUTUMN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></span><br />
-<br />
-IN GREECE<br />
-<br />
-THE DEPARTURE OF PROSERPINE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></span><br />
-THE HOME-COMING OF THE SHEEP <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></span><br />
-WHEN LOVE AND BEAUTY WANDER AWAY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></span><br />
-<br />
-IN HOSPITAL IN EGYPT<br />
-<br />
-MY MOTHER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></span><br />
-SONG <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></span><br />
-TO ONE DEAD <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></span><br />
-THE RESURRECTION <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></span><br />
-THE SHADOW PEOPLE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></span><br />
-<br />
-IN BARRACKS<br />
-<br />
-AN OLD DESIRE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></span><br />
-THOMAS McDONAGH <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></span><br />
-THE WEDDING MORNING <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></span><br />
-THE BLACKBIRDS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></span><br />
-THE LURE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-THRO' BOGAC BAN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></span><br />
-FATE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></span><br />
-EVENING CLOUDS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></span><br />
-SONG <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></span><br />
-THE HERONS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></span><br />
-IN THE SHADOWS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></span><br />
-THE SHIPS OF ARCADY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></span><br />
-AFTER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></span><br />
-To ONE WEEPING <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></span><br />
-A DREAM DANCE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_229">229</a></span><br />
-BY FAUGHAN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_230">230</a></span><br />
-IN SEPTEMBER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_232">232</a></span><br />
-<br />
-LAST SONGS<br />
-<br />
-TO AN OLD QUILL OF LORD DUNSANY'S <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></span><br />
-TO A SPARROW <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_238">238</a></span><br />
-OLD CLO' <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></span><br />
-YOUTH <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_242">242</a></span><br />
-THE LITTLE CHILDREN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></span><br />
-AUTUMN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_245">245</a></span><br />
-IRELAND <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></span><br />
-LADY FAIR <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></span><br />
-AT A POET'S GRAVE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></span><br />
-AFTER COURT MARTIAL <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></span><br />
-A MOTHER'S SONG <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></span><br />
-AT CURRABWEE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_254">254</a></span><br />
-SONG-TIME IS OVER <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></span><br />
-UNA BAWN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_257">257</a></span><br />
-SPRING LOVE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></span><br />
-SOLILOQUY <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></span><br />
-DAWN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></span><br />
-CEOL SIDHE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></span><br />
-THE RUSHES <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_264">264</a></span><br />
-THE DEAD KINGS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></span><br />
-IN FRANCE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_269">269</a></span><br />
-HAD I A GOLDEN POUND <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>FAIRIES <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></span><br />
-IN A CAFÉ <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></span><br />
-SPRING <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_273">273</a></span><br />
-PAN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></span><br />
-WITH FLOWERS <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></span><br />
-THE FIND <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_277">277</a></span><br />
-A FAIRY HUNT <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_278">278</a></span><br />
-TO ONE WHO COMES NOW AND THEN <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_280">280</a></span><br />
-THE SYLPH <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_283">283</a></span><br />
-HOME <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></span><br />
-THE LANAWN SHEE <span class="tabnum"><a href="#Page_285">285</a></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a><br /><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a><br /><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-SONGS OF THE FIELDS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO MY BEST FRIEND<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I love the wet-lipped wind that stirs the hedge<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And kisses the bent flowers that drooped for rain,</span><br />
-That stirs the poppy on the sun-burned ledge<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And like a swan dies singing, without pain.</span><br />
-The golden bees go buzzing down to stain<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The lilies' frills, and the blue harebell rings,</span><br />
-And the sweet blackbird in the rainbow sings.<br />
-<br />
-Deep in the meadows I would sing a song,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The shallow brook my tuning-fork, the birds</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-My masters; and the boughs they hop along<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shall mark my time: but there shall be no words</span><br />
-For lurking Echo's mock; an angel herds<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Words that I may not know, within, for you,</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
-Words for the faithful meet, the good and true.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-BEHIND THE CLOSED EYE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I walk the old frequented ways<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">That wind around the tangled braes,</span><br />
-I live again the sunny days<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ere I the city knew.</span><br />
-<br />
-And scenes of old again are born,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The woodbine lassoing the thorn,</span><br />
-And drooping Ruth-like in the corn<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The poppies weep the dew.</span><br />
-<br />
-Above me in their hundred schools<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The magpies bend their young to rules,</span><br />
-And like an apron full of jewels<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The dewy cobweb swings.</span><br />
-<br />
-And frisking in the stream below<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The troutlets make the circles flow,</span><br />
-And the hungry crane doth watch them grow<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As a smoker does his rings.</span><br />
-<br />
-Above me smokes the little town,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With its whitewashed walls and roofs of brown</span><br />
-And its octagon spire toned smoothly down<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As the holy minds within.</span><br />
-<br />
-And wondrous impudently sweet,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Half of him passion, half conceit,</span><br />
-The blackbird calls adown the street<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Like the piper of Hamelin.</span><br />
-<br />
-I hear him, and I feel the lure<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Drawing me back to the homely moor,</span><br />
-I'll go and close the mountains' door<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On the city's strife and din.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-BOUND TO THE MAST<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When mildly falls the deluge of the grass,<br />
-And meads begin to rise like Noah's flood,<br />
-And o'er the hedgerows flow, and onward pass,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Dribbling thro' many a wood;</span><br />
-When hawthorn trees their flags of truce unfurl,<br />
-And dykes are spitting violets to the breeze;<br />
-When meadow larks their jocund flight will curl<br />
-From Earth's to Heaven's leas;<br />
-<br />
-Ah! then the poet's dreams are most sublime,<br />
-A-sail on seas that know a heavenly calm,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-And in his song you hear the river's rhyme,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the first bleat of the lamb.</span><br />
-Then when the summer evenings fall serene,<br />
-Unto the country dance his songs repair,<br />
-And you may meet some maids with angel mien,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bright eyes and twilight hair.</span><br />
-<br />
-When Autumn's crayon tones the green leaves sere,<br />
-And breezes honed on icebergs hurry past;<br />
-When meadow-tides have ebbed and woods grow drear,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And bow before the blast;</span><br />
-When briars make semicircles on the way;<br />
-When blackbirds hide their flutes and cower and die;<br />
-When swollen rivers lose themselves and stray<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Beneath a murky sky;</span><br />
-<br />
-Then doth the poet's voice like cuckoo's break,<br />
-And round his verse the hungry lapwing grieves,<br />
-And melancholy in his dreary wake<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The funeral of the leaves.</span><br />
-Then when the Autumn dies upon the plain,<br />
-Wound in the snow alike his right and wrong,<br />
-The poet sings,&mdash;albeit a sad strain,&mdash;<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Bound to the Mast of Song.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-TO A LINNET IN A CAGE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When Spring is in the fields that stained your wing,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the blue distance is alive with song,</span><br />
-And finny quiets of the gabbling spring<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rock lilies red and long,</span><br />
-At dewy daybreak, I will set you free<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In ferny turnings of the woodbine lane,</span><br />
-Where faint-voiced echoes leave and cross in glee<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The hilly swollen plain.</span><br />
-<br />
-In draughty houses you forget your tune,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The modulator of the changing hours.</span><br />
-You want the wide air of the moody noon.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the slanting evening showers.</span><br />
-So I will loose you, and your song shall fall<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When morn is white upon the dewy pane,</span><br />
-Across my eyelids, and my soul recall<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">From worlds of sleeping pain.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-A TWILIGHT IN MIDDLE MARCH<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Within the oak a throb of pigeon wings<br />
-Fell silent, and grey twilight hushed the fold,<br />
-And spiders' hammocks swung on half-oped things<br />
-That shook like foreigners upon our cold.<br />
-A gipsy lit a fire and made a sound<br />
-Of moving tins, and from an oblong moon<br />
-The river seemed to gush across the ground<br />
-To the cracked metre of a marching tune.<br />
-<br />
-And then three syllables of melody<br />
-Dropped from a blackbird's flute, and died apart<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-Far in the dewy dark. No more but three,<br />
-Yet sweeter music never touched a heart<br />
-Neath the blue domes of London. Flute and reed,<br />
-Suggesting feelings of the solitude<br />
-When will was all the Delphi I would heed,<br />
-Lost like a wind within a summer wood<br />
-From little knowledge where great sorrows brood.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-SPRING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The dews drip roses on the meadows<br />
-Where the meek daisies dot the sward.<br />
-And Ćolus whispers through the shadows,<br />
-"Behold the handmaid of the Lord!"<br />
-The golden news the skylark waketh<br />
-And 'thwart the heavens his flight is curled;<br />
-Attend ye as the first note breaketh<br />
-And chrism droppeth on the world.<br />
-<br />
-The velvet dusk still haunts the stream<br />
-Where Pan makes music light and gay.<br />
-The mountain mist hath caught a beam<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
-And slowly weeps itself away.<br />
-The young leaf bursts its chrysalis<br />
-And gem-like hangs upon the bough,<br />
-Where the mad throstle sings in bliss<br />
-O'er earth's rejuvenated brow.<br />
-<br />
-ENVOI<br />
-<br />
-Slowly fall, O golden sands,<br />
-Slowly fall and let me sing,<br />
-Wrapt in the ecstasy of youth,<br />
-The wild delights of Spring.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-DESIRE IN SPRING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I love the cradle songs the mothers sing<br />
-In lonely places when the twilight drops,<br />
-The slow endearing melodies that bring<br />
-Sleep to the weeping lids; and, when she stops,<br />
-I love the roadside birds upon the tops<br />
-Of dusty hedges in a world of Spring.<br />
-<br />
-And when the sunny rain drips from the edge<br />
-Of midday wind, and meadows lean one way,<br />
-And a long whisper passes thro' the sedge,<br />
-Beside the broken water let me stay,<br />
-While these old airs upon my memory play.<br />
-And silent changes colour up the hedge.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A RAINY DAY IN APRIL<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When the clouds shake their hyssops, and the rain<br />
-Like holy water falls upon the plain,<br />
-'Tis sweet to gaze upon the springing grain<br />
-And see your harvest born.<br />
-<br />
-And sweet the little breeze of melody,<br />
-The blackbird puffs upon the budding tree,<br />
-While the wild poppy lights upon the lea<br />
-And blazes 'mid the corn.<br />
-<br />
-The skylark soars the freshening shower to hail,<br />
-And the meek daisy holds aloft her pail,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-And Spring all radiant by the wayside pale,<br />
-Sets up her rock and reel.<br />
-<br />
-See how she weaves her mantle fold on fold,<br />
-Hemming the woods and carpeting the wold.<br />
-Her warp is of the green, her woof the gold,<br />
-The spinning world her wheel.<br />
-<br />
-By'n by above the hills a pilgrim moon<br />
-Will rise to light upon the midnight noon,<br />
-But still she plieth to the lonesome tune<br />
-Of the brown meadow rail.<br />
-<br />
-No heavy dreams upon her eyelids weigh,<br />
-Nor do her busy fingers ever stay;<br />
-She knows a fairy prince is on the way<br />
-And the meek daisy holds aloft her pail,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-<br />
-To deck the pathway that his feet must tread,<br />
-To fringe the 'broidery of the roses' bed,<br />
-To show the Summer she but sleeps,&mdash;not dead,<br />
-This is her fixed duty.<br />
-<br />
-ENVOI<br />
-<br />
-To-day while leaving my dear home behind,<br />
-My eyes with salty homesick teardrops blind,<br />
-The rain fell on me sorrowful and kind<br />
-Like angels' tears of pity.<br />
-<br />
-'Twas* then I heard the small birds' melodies,<br />
-And saw the poppies' bonfire on the leas,<br />
-As Spring came whispering thro' the leafing trees<br />
-Giving to me my ditty.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A SONG OF APRIL<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The censer of the eglantine was moved<br />
-By little lane winds, and the watching faces<br />
-Of garden flowerets, which of old she loved,<br />
-Peep shyly outward from their silent places.<br />
-But when the sun arose the flowers grew bolder,<br />
-And site will be in white, I thought, and she<br />
-Will have a cuckoo on her either shoulder,<br />
-And woodbine twines and fragrant wings of pea.<br />
-<br />
-And I will meet her on the hills of South,<br />
-And I will lead her to a northern water,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
-My wild one, the sweet beautiful uncouth,<br />
-The eldest maiden of the Winter's daughter.<br />
-And down the rainbows of her noon shall slide<br />
-Lark music, and the little sunbeam people,<br />
-And nomad wings shall fill the river side,<br />
-And ground winds rocking in the lily's steeple.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE BROKEN TRYST<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The dropping words of larks, the sweetest tongue<br />
-That sings between the dusks, tell all of you;<br />
-The bursting white of Peace is all along<br />
-Wing-ways, and pearly droppings of the dew<br />
-Emberyl the cobwebs' greyness, and the blue<br />
-Of hiding violets, watching for your face,<br />
-Listen for you in every dusky place.<br />
-<br />
-You will not answer when I call your name,<br />
-But in the fog of blossom do you hide<br />
-To change my doubts into a red-faced shame<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>By'n by when you are laughing by my side?<br />
-Or will you never come, or have you died,<br />
-And I in anguish have forgotten all?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>And shall the world now end and the heavens fall?<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THOUGHTS AT THE TRYSTING STILE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Come, May, and hang a white flag on each thorn,<br />
-Make truce with earth and heaven; the April child<br />
-Now hides her sulky face deep in the morn<br />
-Of your new flowers by the water wild<br />
-And in the ripples of the rising grass,<br />
-And rushes bent to let the south wind pass<br />
-On with her tumult of swift nomad wings,<br />
-And broken domes of downy dandelion.<br />
-Only in spasms now the blackbird sings.<br />
-The hour is all a-dream.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 13em;">Nets of woodbine</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
-Throw woven shadows over dreaming flowers,<br />
-And dreaming, a bee-luring lily bends<br />
-Its tender bell where blue dyke-water cowers<br />
-Thro' briars, and folded ferns, and gripping ends<br />
-Of wild convolvulus.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 11em;">The lark's sky-way</span><br />
-Is desolate.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">I watch an apple-spray</span><br />
-Beckon across a wall as if it knew<br />
-I wait the calling of the orchard maid.<br />
-<br />
-Inly I feel that she will come in blue,<br />
-With yellow on her hair, and two curls strayed<br />
-Out of her comb's loose stocks, and I shall steal<br />
-Behind and lay my hands upon her eyes,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
-"Look not, but be my Psyche!"<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 17em;">And her peal</span><br />
-Of laughter will ring far, and as she tries<br />
-For freedom I will call her names of flowers<br />
-That climb up walls; then thro' the twilight hours<br />
-We'll talk about the loves of ancient queens,<br />
-And kisses like wasp-honey, false and sweet,<br />
-And how we are entangled in love's snares<br />
-Like wind-looped flowers.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-EVENING IN MAY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-There is nought tragic here, tho' night uplifts<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A narrow curtain where the footlights burned,</span><br />
-But one long act where Love each bold heart sifts<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And blushes in the dark, but has not spurned</span><br />
-The strong resolve of noon. The maiden's head<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is brown upon the shoulder of her youth,</span><br />
-Hearts are exchanged, long pent up words are said,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Blushes burn out at the long tale of truth.</span><br />
-<br />
-The blackbird blows his yellow flute so strong,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And rolls away the notes in careless glee,</span><br />
-It breaks the rhythm of the thrushes' song,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And puts red shame upon his rivalry.</span><br />
-The yellowhammers on the roof tiles beat<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sweet little dulcimers to broken time,</span><br />
-And here the robin with a heart replete<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Has all in one short plagiarised rhyme.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AN ATTEMPT AT A CITY SUNSET<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">(TO J. K. Q.)</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-There was a quiet glory in the sky<br />
-When thro' the gables sank the large red sun,<br />
-And toppling mounts of rugged cloud went by<br />
-Heavy with whiteness, and the moon had won<br />
-Her way above the woods, with her small star<br />
-Behind her like the cuckoo's little mother....<br />
-It was the hour when visions from some far<br />
-Strange Eastern dreams like twilight bats take wing<br />
-Out of the ruin of memories.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 15em;">O brother</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-Of high song, wand'ring where the Muses fling<br />
-Rich gifts as prodigal as winter rain,<br />
-Like stepping-stones within a swollen river<br />
-The hidden words are sounding in my brain,<br />
-Too wild for taming; and I must for ever<br />
-Think of the hills upon the wilderness,<br />
-And leave the city sunset to your song.<br />
-For there I am a stranger like the trees<br />
-That sigh upon the traffic all day long.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-WAITING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A strange old woman on the wayside sate,<br />
-Looked far away and shook her head and sighed.<br />
-And when anon, close by, a rusty gate<br />
-Loud on the warm winds cried,<br />
-She lifted up her eyes and said, "You're late."<br />
-Then shook her head and sighed.<br />
-<br />
-And evening found her thus, and night in state<br />
-Walked thro' the starlight, and a heavy tide<br />
-Followed the yellow moon around her wait,<br />
-And morning walked in wide.<br />
-She lifted up her eyes and said, "You're late."<br />
-Then shook her head and sighed.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE SINGER'S MUSE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I brought in these to make her kitchen sweet,<br />
-Haw blossoms and the roses of the lane.<br />
-Her heart seemed in her eyes so wild they beat<br />
-With welcome for the boughs of Spring again.<br />
-She never heard of Babylon or Troy,<br />
-She read no book, but once saw Dublin town;<br />
-Yet she made a poet of her servant boy<br />
-And from Parnassus earned the laurel crown.<br />
-<br />
-If Fame, the Gorgon, turns me into stone<br />
-Upon some city square, let someone place<br />
-Thorn blossoms and lane roses newly blown<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
-Beside my feet, and underneath them trace:<br />
-"His heart was like a bookful of girls' song,<br />
-With little loves and mighty Care's alloy.<br />
-These did he bring his muse, and suffered long,<br />
-Her bashful singer and her servant boy."<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-INAMORATA<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The bees were holding levees in the flowers,<br />
-Do you remember how each puff of wind<br />
-Made every wing a hum? My hand in yours<br />
-Was listening to your heart, but now<br />
-The glory is all faded, and I find<br />
-No more the olden mystery of the hours<br />
-When you were lovely and our hearts would bow<br />
-Each to the will of each, but one bright day<br />
-Is stretching like an isthmus in a bay<br />
-From the glad years that I have left behind.<br />
-<br />
-I look across the edge of things that were<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
-And you are lovely in the April ways,<br />
-Holy and mute, the sigh of my despair....<br />
-I hear once more the linnets' April tune<br />
-Beyond the rainbow's warp, as in the days<br />
-You brought me facefuls of your smiles to share<br />
-Some of your new-found wonders.... Oh when soon<br />
-I'm wandering the wide seas for other lands,<br />
-Sometimes remember me with folded hands,<br />
-And keep me happy in your pious prayer.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE WIFE OF LLEW<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-And Gwydion said to Math, when it was Spring:<br />
-"Come now and let us make a wife for Llew."<br />
-And so they broke broad boughs yet moist with dew,<br />
-And in a shadow made a magic ring:<br />
-They took the violet and the meadow-sweet<br />
-To form her pretty face, and for her feet<br />
-They built a mound of daisies on a wing,<br />
-And for her voice they made a linnet sing<br />
-In the wide poppy blowing for her mouth.<br />
-And over all they chanted twenty hours.<br />
-And Llew came singing from the azure south<br />
-And bore away his wife of birds and flowers.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE HILLS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The hills are crying from the fields to me,<br />
-And calling me with music from a choir<br />
-Of waters in their woods where I can see<br />
-The bloom unfolded on the whins like fire.<br />
-And, as the evening moon climbs ever higher<br />
-And blots away the shadows from the slope,<br />
-They cry to me like things devoid of hope.<br />
-<br />
-Pigeons are home. Day droops. The fields are cold.<br />
-Now a slow wind comes labouring up the sky<br />
-With a small cloud long steeped in sunset gold,<br />
-Like Jason with the precious fleece anigh<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-The harbour of Iolcos. Day's bright eye<br />
-Is filmed with the twilight, and the rill<br />
-Shines like a scimitar upon the hill.<br />
-<br />
-And moonbeams drooping thro' the coloured wood<br />
-Are full of little people winged white.<br />
-I'll wander thro' the moon-pale solitude<br />
-That calls across the intervening night<br />
-With river voices at their utmost height,<br />
-Sweet as rain-water in the blackbird's flute<br />
-That strikes the world in admiration mute.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-JUNE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Broom out the floor now, lay the fender by,<br />
-And plant this bee-sucked bough of woodbine there,<br />
-And let the window down. The butterfly<br />
-Floats in upon the sunbeam, and the fair<br />
-Tanned face of June, the nomad gipsy, laughs<br />
-Above her widespread wares, the while she tells<br />
-The farmers' fortunes in the fields, and quaffs<br />
-The water from the spider-peopled wells.<br />
-<br />
-The hedges are all drowned in green grass seas,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-And bobbing poppies flare like Elmor's light,<br />
-While siren-like the pollen-stainéd bees<br />
-Drone in the clover depths. And up the height<br />
-The cuckoo's voice is hoarse and broke with joy.<br />
-And on the lowland crops the crows make raid,<br />
-Nor fear the clappers of the farmer's boy,<br />
-Who sleeps, like drunken Noah, in the shade.<br />
-<br />
-And loop this red rose in that hazel ring<br />
-That snares your little ear, for June is short<br />
-And we must joy in it and dance and sing,<br />
-And from her bounty draw her rosy worth.<br />
-Ay! soon the swallows will be flying south,<br />
-The wind wheel north to gather in the snow,<br />
-Even the roses spilt on youth's red mouth<br />
-Will soon blow down the road all roses go.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-IN MANCHESTER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-There is a noise of feet that move in sin<br />
-Under the side-faced moon here where I stray,<br />
-Want by me like a Nemesis. The din<br />
-Of noon is in my ears, but far away<br />
-My thoughts are, where Peace shuts the black-birds' wings<br />
-And it is cherry time by all the springs.<br />
-<br />
-And this same moon floats like a trail of fire<br />
-Down the long Boyne, and darts white arrows thro'<br />
-The mill wood; her white skirt is on the weir,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
-She walks thro' crystal mazes of the dew,<br />
-And rests awhile upon the dewy slope<br />
-Where I will hope again the old, old hope.<br />
-<br />
-With wandering we are worn my muse and I,<br />
-And, if I sing, my song knows nought of mirth.<br />
-I often think my soul is an old lie<br />
-In sackcloth, it repents so much of birth.<br />
-But I will build it yet a cloister home<br />
-Near the peace of lakes when I have ceased to roam.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-MUSIC ON WATER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Where does Remembrance weep when we forget?<br />
-From whither brings she back an old delight?<br />
-Why do we weep that once we laughed? and yet<br />
-Why are we sad that once our hearts were light?<br />
-I sometimes think the days that we made bright<br />
-Are damned within us, and we hear them yell,<br />
-Deep in the solitude of that wide hell,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-Because we welcome in some new regret.<br />
-<br />
-I will remember with sad heart next year<br />
-This music and this water, but to-day<br />
-Let me be part of all this joy. My ear<br />
-Caught far-off music which I bid away,<br />
-The light of one fair face that fain would stay<br />
-Upon the heart's broad canvas, as the Face<br />
-On Mary's towel, lighting up the place.<br />
-Too sad for joy, too happy for a tear.<br />
-<br />
-Methinks I see the music like a light<br />
-Low on the bobbing water, and the fields<br />
-Yellow and brown alternate on the height,<br />
-Hanging in silence there like battered shields,<br />
-Lean forward heavy with their coloured yields<br />
-As if they paid it homage; and the strains,<br />
-Prisoners of Echo, up the sunburnt plains<br />
-Fade on the cross-cut to a future night.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-<br />
-In the red West the twisted moon is low,<br />
-And on the bubbles there are half-lit stars:<br />
-Music and twilight and the deep blue flow<br />
-Of water: and the watching fire of Mars:<br />
-The deep fish slipping thro' the moonlit bars<br />
-Make Death a thing of sweet dreams, life a mock.<br />
-And the soul patient by the heart's loud clock<br />
-Watches the time, and thinks it wondrous slow.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO M. McG.<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">(WHO CAME ONE DAY WHEN WE WERE ALL</span><br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">GLOOMY AND CHEERED US WITH SAD MUSIC)</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-We were all sad and could not weep,<br />
-Because our sorrow had not tears:<br />
-You came a silent thing like Sleep,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And stole away our fears.</span><br />
-<br />
-Old memories knocking at each heart<br />
-Troubled us with the world's great lie:<br />
-You sat a little way apart<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And made a fiddle cry,</span><br />
-<br />
-And April with her sunny showers<br />
-Came laughing up the fields again:<br />
-White wings went flashing thro' the hours<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">So lately full of pain.</span><br />
-<br />
-And rivers full of little lights<br />
-Came down the fields of waving green:<br />
-Our immemorial delights<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stole in on us unseen.</span><br />
-<br />
-For this may Good Luck let you loose<br />
-Upon her treasures many years,<br />
-And Peace unfurl her flag of truce<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To any threat'ning fears.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-IN THE DUSK<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Day hangs its light between two dusks, my heart,<br />
-Always beyond the dark there is the blue.<br />
-Sometime we'll leave the dark, myself and you,<br />
-And revel in the light for evermore.<br />
-But the deep pain of you is aching smart,<br />
-And a long calling weighs upon you sore.<br />
-<br />
-Day hangs its light between two dusks, and song<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-Is there at the beginning and the end.<br />
-You, in the singing dusk, how could you wend<br />
-The songless way Contentment fleetly wings?<br />
-But in the dark your beauty shall be strong,<br />
-Tho' only one should listen how it sings.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE DEATH OF AILILL<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When there was heard no more the war's loud sound,<br />
-And only the rough corn-crake filled the hours,<br />
-And hill winds in the furze and drowsy flowers,<br />
-Maeve in her chamber with her white head bowed<br />
-On Ailill's heart was sobbing: "I have found<br />
-The way to love you now," she said, and he<br />
-Winked an old tear away and said: "The proud<br />
-Unyielding heart loves never." And then she:<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-"I love you now, tho' once when we were young<br />
-We walked apart like two who were estranged<br />
-Because I loved you not, now all is changed."<br />
-And he who loved her always called her name<br />
-And said: "You do not love me, 'tis your tongue<br />
-Talks in the dusk; you love the blazing gold<br />
-Won in the battles, and the soldier's fame.<br />
-You love the stories that are often told<br />
-By poets in the hall." Then Maeve arose<br />
-And sought her daughter Findebar: "O, child,<br />
-Go tell your father that my love went wild<br />
-With all my wars in youth, and say that now<br />
-I love him stronger than I hate my foes...."<br />
-And Findebar unto her father sped<br />
-And touched him gently on the rugged brow,<br />
-And knew by the cold touch that he was dead.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AUGUST<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-She'll come at dusky first of day,<br />
-White over yellow harvest's song.<br />
-Upon her dewy rainbow way<br />
-She shall be beautiful and strong.<br />
-The lidless eye of noon shall spray<br />
-Tan on her ankles in the hay,<br />
-Shall kiss her brown the whole day long.<br />
-<br />
-I'll know her in the windrows, tall<br />
-Above the crickets of the hay.<br />
-I'll know her when her odd eyes fall,<br />
-One May-blue, one November-grey.<br />
-I'll watch her from the red barn wall<br />
-Take down her rusty scythe, and call,<br />
-And I will follow her away.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE VISITATION OF PEACE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I closed the book of verse where Sorrow wept<br />
-Above Love's broken fane where Hope once prayed,<br />
-And thought of old trysts broken and trysts kept<br />
-Only to chide my fondness. Then I strayed<br />
-Down a green coil of lanes where murmuring wings<br />
-Moved up and down like lights upon the sea,<br />
-Searching for calm amid untroubled things<br />
-Of wood and water. The industrious bee<br />
-Sang in his barn within the hollow beech,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-And in a distant haggard a loud mill<br />
-Hummed like a war of hives. A whispered speech<br />
-Of corn and wind was on the yellow hill,<br />
-And tattered scarecrows nodded their assent<br />
-And waved their arms like orators. The brown<br />
-Nude beauty of the Autumn sweetly bent<br />
-Over the woods, across the little town.<br />
-<br />
-I sat in a retreating shade beside<br />
-The river, where it fell across a weir<br />
-Like a white mane, and in a flourish wide<br />
-Roars by an island field and thro' a tier<br />
-Of leaning sallies, like an avenue<br />
-When the moon's flambeau hunts the shadows out<br />
-And strikes the borders white across the dew.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
-Where little ringlets ended, the fleet trout<br />
-Fed on the water moths. A marsh hen crossed<br />
-On flying wings and swimming feet to where<br />
-Her mate was in the rushes forest, tossed<br />
-On the heaving dusk like swallows in the air.<br />
-<br />
-Beyond the river a walled rood of graves<br />
-Hung dead with all its hemlock wan and sere,<br />
-Save where the wall was broken and long waves<br />
-Of yellow grass flowed outward like a weir,<br />
-As if the dead were striving for more room<br />
-And their old places in the scheme of things;<br />
-For sometimes the thought comes that the brown tomb<br />
-Is not the end of all our labourings,<br />
-But we are born once more of wind and rain,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
-To sow the world with harvest young and strong,<br />
-That men may live by men 'til the stars wane,<br />
-And still sweet music fill the blackbird's song.<br />
-<br />
-But O for truths about the soul denied.<br />
-Shall I meet Keats in some wild isle of balm,<br />
-Dreaming beside a tarn where green and wide<br />
-Boughs of sweet cinnamon protect the calm<br />
-Of the dark water? And together walk<br />
-Thro' hills with dimples full of water where<br />
-White angels rest, and all the dead years talk<br />
-About the changes of the earth? Despair<br />
-Sometimes takes hold of me but yet I hope<br />
-To hope the old hope in the better times<br />
-When I am free to cast aside the rope<br />
-That binds me to all sadness 'till my rhymes<br />
-Cry like lost birds. But O, if I should die<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
-Ere this millennium, and my hands be crossed<br />
-Under the flowers I loved, the passers-by<br />
-Shall scowl at me as one whose soul is lost.<br />
-<br />
-But a soft peace came to me when the West<br />
-Shut its red door and a thin streak of moon<br />
-Was twisted on the twilight's dusky breast.<br />
-It wrapped me up as sometimes a sweet tune<br />
-Heard for the first time wraps the scenes around,<br />
-That we may have their memories when some hand<br />
-Strikes it in other times and hopes unbound<br />
-Rising see clear the everlasting land.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-BEFORE THE TEARS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-You looked as sad as an eclipséd moon<br />
-Above the sheaves of harvest, and there lay<br />
-A light lisp on your tongue, and very soon<br />
-The petals of your deep blush fell away;<br />
-White smiles that come with an uneasy grace<br />
-From inner sorrow crossed your forehead fair,<br />
-When the wind passing took your scattered hair<br />
-And flung it like a brown shower in my face.<br />
-<br />
-Tear-fringéd* winds that fill the heart's low sighs<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
-And never break upon the bosom's pain,<br />
-But blow unto the windows of the eyes<br />
-Their misty promises of silver rain,<br />
-Around your loud heart ever rose and fell.<br />
-I thought 'twere better that the tears should come<br />
-And strike your every feeling wholly numb,<br />
-So thrust my hand in yours and shook fare-well.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-GOD'S REMEMBRANCE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-There came a whisper from the night to me<br />
-Like music of the sea, a mighty breath<br />
-From out the valley's dewy mouth, and Death<br />
-Shook his lean bones, and every coloured tree<br />
-Wept in the fog of morning. From the town<br />
-Of nests among the branches one old crow<br />
-With gaps upon his wings flew far away.<br />
-And, thinking of the golden summer glow,<br />
-I heard a blackbird whistle half his lay<br />
-Among the spinning leaves that slanted down.<br />
-<br />
-And I who am a thought of God's now long<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-Forgotten in His Mind, and desolate<br />
-With other dreams long over, as a gate<br />
-Singing upon the wind the anvil song,<br />
-Sang of the Spring when first He dreamt of me<br />
-In that old town all hills and signs that creak:&mdash;<br />
-And He remembered me as something far<br />
-In old imaginations, something weak<br />
-With distance, like a little sparking star<br />
-Drowned in the lavender of evening sea.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AN OLD PAIN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-What old, old pain is this that bleeds anew?<br />
-What old and wandering dream forgotten long<br />
-Hobbles back to my mind? With faces two,<br />
-Like Janus of old Rome, I look about,<br />
-And yet discover not what ancient wrong<br />
-Lies unrequited still. No speck of doubt<br />
-Upon to-morrow's promise. Yet a pain<br />
-Of some dumb thing is on me, and I feel<br />
-How men go mad, how faculties do reel<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-When these old querns turn round within the brain.<br />
-<br />
-'Tis something to have known one day of joy,<br />
-Now to remember when the heart is low,<br />
-An antidote of thought that will destroy<br />
-The asp bite of Regret. Deep will I drink<br />
-By'n by the purple cups that overflow,<br />
-And fill the shattered heart's urn to the brink.<br />
-But some are dead who laughed! Some scattered are<br />
-Around the sultry breadth of foreign zones.<br />
-You, with the warm clay wrapt about your bones,<br />
-Are nearer to me than the live afar.<br />
-<br />
-My heart has grown as dry as an old crust,<br />
-Deep in book lumber and moth-eaten wood,<br />
-So long it has forgot the old love lust,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
-So long forgot the thing that made youth dear,<br />
-Two blue love lamps, a heart exceeding good,<br />
-And how, when first I heard that voice ring clear<br />
-Among the sering hedges of the plain,<br />
-I knew not which from which beyond the corn,<br />
-The laughter by the callow twisted thorn,<br />
-The jay-thrush whistling in the haws for rain.<br />
-<br />
-I hold the mind is the imprisoned soul,<br />
-And all our aspirations are its own<br />
-Struggles and strivings for a golden goal,<br />
-That wear us out like snow men at the thaw.<br />
-And we shall make our Heaven where we have sown<br />
-Our purple longings. Oh! can the loved dead draw<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
-Anear us when we moan, or watching wait<br />
-Our coming in the woods where first we met,<br />
-The dead leaves falling on their wild hair wet,<br />
-Their hands upon the fastenings of the gate?<br />
-<br />
-This is the old, old pain come home once more,<br />
-Bent down with answers wild and very lame<br />
-For all my delving in old dog-eared lore<br />
-That drove the Sages mad. And boots the world<br />
-Aught for their wisdom? I have asked them, tame,<br />
-And watched the Earth by its own self be hurled<br />
-Atom by atom into nothingness,<br />
-Loll out of the deep canyons, drops of fixe,<br />
-And kindle on the hills its funeral pyre,<br />
-And all we learn but shows we know the less.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE LOST ONES<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Somewhere is music from the linnets, bills,<br />
-And thro' the sunny flowers the bee-wings drone,<br />
-And white bells of convolvulus on hills<br />
-Of quiet May make silent ringing, blown<br />
-Hither and thither by the wind of showers,<br />
-And somewhere all the wandering birds have flown;<br />
-And the brown breath of Autumn chills the flowers.<br />
-<br />
-But where are all the loves of long ago?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-Oh, little twilight ship blown up the tide,<br />
-Where are the faces laughing in the glow<br />
-Of morning years, the lost ones scattered wide?<br />
-Give me your hand, Oh brother, let us go<br />
-Crying about the dark for those who died.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-ALL-HALLOWS EVE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The dreadful hour is sighing for a moon<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To light old lovers to the place of tryst,</span><br />
-And old footsteps from blessed acres soon<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On old known pathways will be lightly prest;</span><br />
-And winds that went to eavesdrop since the noon,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kinking<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> at some old tale told sweetly brief,</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Will give a cowslick<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> to the yarrow leaf,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
-And sling the round nut from the hazel down.<br />
-<br />
-And there will be old yarn balls,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> and old spells<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In broken lime-kilns, and old eyes will peer</span><br />
-For constant lovers in old spidery wells,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And old embraces will grow newly dear.</span><br />
-And some may meet old lovers in old dells,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And some in doors ajar in towns light-lorn;&mdash;</span><br />
-But two will meet beneath a gnarly thorn<br />
-Deep in the bosom of the windy fells.<br />
-<br />
-Then when the night slopes home and white-faced day<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Yawns in the east there will be sad farewells;</span><br />
-And many feet will tap a lonely way<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Back to the comfort of their chilly cells,</span><br />
-And eyes will backward turn and long to stay<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where love first found them in the clover bloom&mdash;</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But one will never seek the lonely tomb,</span><br />
-And two will linger at the tryst alway.<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="p2"><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Provincially a kind of laughter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> A curl of hair thrown back from the forehead: used metaphorically
-here, and itself a metaphor taken from the curl of a
-cow's tongue.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Maidens on Hallows Eve pull leaves of yarrow, and, saying
-over them certain words, put them under their pillows and so
-dream of their true-loves.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> They also throw balls of yarn (which must be black) over
-their left shoulders into old lime-kilns, holding one end and then
-winding it in till they feel it somehow caught, and expect to see
-in the darkness the face of their lover.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Also they look for his face in old wells.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="p6" style="margin-left: 10%;">
-A MEMORY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Low sounds of night that drip upon the ear,<br />
-The plumed lapwing's cry, the curlew's call,<br />
-Clear in the far dark heard, a sound as drear<br />
-As raindrops pelted from a nodding rush<br />
-To give a white wink once and broken fall<br />
-Into a deep dark pool: they pain the hush,<br />
-As if the fiery meteor's slanting lance<br />
-Had found their empty craws: they fill with sound<br />
-The silence, with the merry round,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
-The sounding mazes of a last year's dancer<br />
-<br />
-I thought to watch the stars come spark by spark<br />
-Out on the muffled night, and watch the moon<br />
-Go round the full, and turn upon the dark,<br />
-And sharpen towards the new, and waiting watch<br />
-The grand Kaleidoscope of midnight noon<br />
-Change colours on the dew, where high hills notch<br />
-The low and moony sky. But who dare cast<br />
-One brief hour's horoscope, whose tunéd* ear<br />
-Makes every sound the music of last year?<br />
-Whose hopes are built up in the door of Past?<br />
-<br />
-No, not more silent does the spider stitch<br />
-A cobweb on the fern, nor fogdrops fall<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-On sheaves of harvest when the night is rich<br />
-With moonbeams, than the spirits of delight<br />
-Walk the dark passages of Memory's hall.<br />
-We feel them not, but in the wastes of night<br />
-We hear their low-voiced mediums, and we rise<br />
-To wrestle old Regrets, to see old faces,<br />
-To meet and part in old tryst-trodden places<br />
-With breaking heart, and emptying of eyes.<br />
-<br />
-I feel the warm hand on my shoulder light,<br />
-I hear the music of a voice that words<br />
-The slow time of the feet, I see the white<br />
-Arms slanting, and the dimples fold and fill....<br />
-I hear wing-flutters of the early birds,<br />
-I see the tide of morning landward spill,<br />
-The cloaking maidens, hear the voice that tells<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-"You'd never know" and "Soon perhaps again,"<br />
-With white teeth biting down the inly pain,<br />
-Then sounds of going away and sad farewells<br />
-<br />
-A year ago! It seems but yesterday.<br />
-Yesterday! And a hundred years! All one.<br />
-'Tis laid a something finished, dark, away,<br />
-To gather mould upon the shelves of Time.<br />
-What matters hours or ćons when 'tis gone?<br />
-And yet the heart will dust it of its grime,<br />
-And hover round it in a silver spell,<br />
-Be lost in it and cry aloud in fear;<br />
-And like a lost soul in a pious ear,<br />
-Hammer in mine a never easy bell.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A SONG<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-My heart has flown on wings to you, away<br />
-In the lonely places where your footsteps lie<br />
-Full up of stars when the short showers of day<br />
-Have passed like ancient sorrows. I would fly<br />
-To your green solitude of woods to hear<br />
-You singing in the sounds of leaves and birds;<br />
-But I am sad below the depth of words<br />
-That nevermore we two shall draw anear.<br />
-<br />
-Had I but wealth of land and bleating flocks<br />
-And barnfuls of the yellow harvest yield,<br />
-And a large house with climbing hollyhocks<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
-And servant maidens singing in the field,<br />
-You'd love me; but I own no roaming herds,<br />
-My only wealth is songs of love for you,<br />
-And now that you are lost I may pursue<br />
-A sad life deep below the depth of words.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A FEAR<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I roamed the woods to-day and seemed to hear,<br />
-As Dante heard, the voice of suffering trees.<br />
-The twisted roots seemed bare contorted knees,<br />
-The bark was full of faces strange with fear.<br />
-<br />
-I hurried home still wrapt in that dark spell,<br />
-And all the night upon the world's great lie<br />
-I pondered, and a voice seemed whisp'ring nigh,<br />
-"You died long since, and all this thing is hell!"<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE COMING POET<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-"Is it far to the town?" said the poet,<br />
-As he stood 'neath the groaning vane,<br />
-And the warm lights shimmered silver<br />
-On the skirts of the windy rain.<br />
-"There are those who call me," he pleaded,<br />
-"And I'm wet and travel sore."<br />
-But nobody spoke from the shelter.<br />
-And he turned from the bolted door.<br />
-<br />
-And they wait in the town for the poet<br />
-With stones at the gates, and jeers,<br />
-But away on the wolds of distance<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-In the blue of a thousand years<br />
-He sleeps with the age that knows him,<br />
-In the clay of the unborn, dead,<br />
-Rest at his weary insteps,<br />
-Fame at his crumbled head.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE VISION ON THE BRINK<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-To-night when you sit in the deep hours alone,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And from the sleeps you snatch wake quick and feel</span><br />
-You hear my step upon the threshold-stone,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My hand upon the doorway latchward steal,</span><br />
-Be sure 'tis but the white winds of the snow,<br />
-For I shall come no more<br />
-<br />
-And when the candle in the pane is wore,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And moonbeams down the hill long shadows throw,</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-When night's white eyes are in the chinky door,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Think of a long road in a valley low,</span><br />
-Think of a wanderer in the distance far,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lost like a voice among the scattered hills.</span><br />
-<br />
-And when the moon has gone and ocean spills<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Its waters backward from the trysting bar,</span><br />
-And in dark furrows of the night there tills<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A jewelled plough, and many a falling star</span><br />
-Moves you to prayer, then will you think of me<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">On the long road that will not ever end.</span><br />
-<br />
-Jonah is hoarse in Nineveh&mdash;I'd lend<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My voice to save the town&mdash;and hurriedly</span><br />
-Goes Abraham with murdering knife, and Ruth<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is weary in the corn.... Yet will I stay,</span><br />
-For one flower blooms upon the rocks of truth,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">God is in all our hurry and delay.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO LORD DUNSANY<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">(ON HIS RETURN FROM EAST AFRICA)</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-For you I knit these lines, and on their ends<br />
-Hang little tossing bells to ring you home.<br />
-The music is all cracked, and Poesy tends<br />
-To richer blooms than mine; but you who roam<br />
-Thro' coloured gardens of the highest muse,<br />
-And leave the door ajar sometimes that we<br />
-May steal small breathing things of reds and blues<br />
-And things of white sucked empty by the bee,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
-Will listen to this bunch of bells from me.<br />
-<br />
-My cowslips ring you welcome to the land<br />
-Your muse brings honour to in many a tongue,<br />
-Not only that I long to clasp your hand,<br />
-But that you're missed by poets who have sung<br />
-And viewed with doubt the music of their verse<br />
-All the long winter, for you love to bring<br />
-The true note in and say the wise thing terse,<br />
-And show what birds go lame upon a wing,<br />
-And where the weeds among the flowers do spring.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-ON AN OATEN STRAW<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-My harp is out of tune, and so I take<br />
-An oaten straw some shepherd dropped of old.<br />
-It is the hour when Beauty doth awake<br />
-With trembling limbs upon the dewy cold.<br />
-And shapes of green show where the woolly fold<br />
-Slept in the winding shelter of the brake.<br />
-<br />
-This I will pipe for you, how all the year<br />
-The one I love like Beauty takes her way.<br />
-Wrapped in the wind of winter she doth cheer<br />
-The loud woods like a sunbeam of the May.<br />
-This I will pipe for you the whole blue day<br />
-Seated with Pan upon the mossy weir.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-EVENING IN FEBRUARY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The windy evening drops a grey<br />
-Old eyelid down across the sun,<br />
-The last crow leaves the ploughman's way<br />
-And happy lambs make no more fun.<br />
-<br />
-Wild parsley buds beside my feet,<br />
-A doubtful thrush makes hurried tune,<br />
-The steeple in the village street<br />
-Doth seem to pierce the twilight moon.<br />
-<br />
-I hear and see those changing charms,<br />
-For all&mdash;my thoughts are fixed upon<br />
-The hurry and the loud alarms<br />
-Before the fall of Babylon.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE SISTER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I saw the little quiet town,<br />
-And the whitewashed gables on the hill,<br />
-And laughing children coming down<br />
-The laneway to the mill.<br />
-<br />
-Wind-blushes up their faces glowed,<br />
-And they were happy as could be,<br />
-The wobbling water never flowed<br />
-So merry and so free.<br />
-<br />
-One little maid withdrew aside<br />
-To pick a pebble from the sands.<br />
-Her golden hair was long and wide,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-And there were dimples on her hands.<br />
-<br />
-And when I saw her large blue eyes,<br />
-What was the pain that went thro' me?<br />
-Why did I think on Southern skies<br />
-And ships upon the sea?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-BEFORE THE WAR OF COOLEY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-At daybreak Maeve rose up from where she prayed<br />
-And took her prophetess across her door<br />
-To gaze upon her hosts. Tall spear and blade<br />
-Burnished for early battle dimly shook<br />
-The morning's colours, and then Maeve said:<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 22em;">"Look</span><br />
-And tell me how you see them now."<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 20.5em;">And then</span><br />
-The woman that was lean with knowledge said:<br />
-"There's crimson on them, and there's dripping red."<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
-And a tall soldier galloped up the glen<br />
-With foam upon his boot, and halted there<br />
-Beside old Maeve. She said, "Not yet," and turned<br />
-Into her blazing dun, and knelt in prayer<br />
-One solemn hour, and once again she came<br />
-And sought her prophetess. With voice that mourned,<br />
-"How do you see them now?" she asked.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"All lame</span><br />
-And broken in the noon." And once again<br />
-The soldier stood before her.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 19em;">"No, not yet."</span><br />
-Maeve answered his inquiring look and turned<br />
-Once more unto her prayer, and yet once more<br />
-"How do you see them now?" she asked.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 22em;">"All wet</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
-With storm rains, and all broken, and all tore<br />
-With midnight wolves." And when the soldier came<br />
-Maeve said, "It is the hour." There was a flash<br />
-Of trumpets in the dim, a silver flame<br />
-Of rising shields, loud words passed down the ranks,<br />
-And twenty feet they saw the lances leap.<br />
-They passed the dun with one short noisy dash.<br />
-And turning proud Maeve gave the wise one thanks,<br />
-And sought her chamber in the dun to weep.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-LOW-MOON LAND<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I often look when the moon is low<br />
-Thro' that other window on the wall,<br />
-At a land all beautiful under snow,<br />
-Blotted with shadows that come and go<br />
-When the winds rise up and fall.<br />
-And the form of a beautiful maid<br />
-In the white silence stands,<br />
-And beckons me with her hands.<br />
-<br />
-And when the cares of the day are laid,<br />
-Like sacred things, in the mart away,<br />
-I dream of the low-moon land and the maid<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
-Who will not weary of waiting, or jade<br />
-Of calling to me for aye.<br />
-And I would go if I knew the sea<br />
-That lips the shore where the moon is low,<br />
-For a longing is on me that will not go.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE SORROW OF FINDEBAR<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-"Why do you sorrow, child? There is loud cheer<br />
-In the wide halls, and poets red with wine<br />
-Tell of your eyebrows and your tresses long,<br />
-And pause to let your royal mother hear<br />
-The brown bull low amid her silken kine.<br />
-And you who are the harpstring and the song<br />
-Weep like a memory born of some old pain."<br />
-<br />
-And Findebar made answer, "I have slain<br />
-More than Cuculain's sword, for I have been<br />
-The promised meed of every warrior brave<br />
-In Tain Bo Cualigne wars, and I am sad<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-As is the red banshee that goes to keen<br />
-Above the wet dark of the deep brown grave,<br />
-For the warm loves that made my memory glad."<br />
-<br />
-And her old nurse bent down and took a wild<br />
-Curl from her eye and hung it on her ear,<br />
-And said, "The woman at the heavy quern,<br />
-Who weeps that she will never bring a child,<br />
-And sees her sadness in the coming year,<br />
-Will roll up all her beauty like a fern;<br />
-Not you, whose years stretch purple to the end."<br />
-<br />
-And Findebar, "Beside the broad blue bend<br />
-Of the slow river where the dark banks slope<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
-Wide to the woods sleeps Ferdia apart.<br />
-I loved him, and then drove him for pride's sake<br />
-To early death, and now I have no hope,<br />
-For mine is Maeve's proud heart, Ailill's kind heart,<br />
-And that is why it pines and will not break."<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-ON DREAM WATER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-And so, o'er many a league of sea<br />
-We sang of those we left behind.<br />
-Our ship split thro' the phosphor free,<br />
-Her white sails pregnant with the wind,<br />
-And I was wondering in my mind<br />
-How many would remember me.<br />
-<br />
-Then red-edged dawn expanded wide,<br />
-A stony foreland stretched away,<br />
-And bowed capes gathering round the tide<br />
-Kept many a little homely bay.<br />
-O joy of living there for aye,<br />
-O Soul so often tried!<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE DEATH OF SUALTEM<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-After the brown bull passed from Cooley's fields<br />
-And all Muirevne was a wail of pain,<br />
-Sualtem came at evening thro' the slain<br />
-And heard a noise like water rushing loud,<br />
-A thunder like the noise of mighty shields.<br />
-And in his dread he shouted: "Earth is bowed,<br />
-The heavens are split and stars make war with stars<br />
-And the sea runs in fear!"<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 14em;">For all his scars</span><br />
-He hastened to Dun Dealgan, and there found<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-It was his son, Cuculain, making moan.<br />
-His hair was red with blood, and he was wound<br />
-In wicker full of grass, and a cold stone<br />
-Was on his head.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 9em;">"Cuculain, is it so?"</span><br />
-Sualtem said, and then, "My hair is snow,<br />
-My strength leaks thro' my wounds, but I will die<br />
-Avenging you."<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 8.5em;">And then Cuculain said:</span><br />
-"Not so, old father, but take horse and ride<br />
-To Emain Macha, and tell Connor this."<br />
-Sualtem from his red lips took a kiss,<br />
-And turned the stone upon Cuculain's head.<br />
-The Lia-Macha with a heavy sigh<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-Ran up and halted by his wounded side.<br />
-In Emain Macha to low lights and song<br />
-Connor was dreaming of the beauteous Maeve.<br />
-He saw her as at first, by Shannon's wave,<br />
-Her insteps in the water, mounds of white.<br />
-It was in Spring, and music loud and strong<br />
-Rocked all the coloured woods, and the blue height<br />
-Of heaven was round the lark, and in his heart<br />
-There was a pain of love.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">Then with a start</span><br />
-He wakened as a loud voice from below<br />
-Shouted, "The land is robbed, the women shamed,<br />
-The children stolen, and Cuculain low!"<br />
-Then Connor rose, his war-worn soul inflamed,<br />
-And shouted down for Cathbad; then to greet<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-The messenger he hurried to the street.<br />
-And there he saw Sualtem shouting still<br />
-The message of Muirevne 'mid the sound<br />
-Of hurried Ducklings and uneasy horse.<br />
-At sight of him the Lia-Macha wheeled,<br />
-So that Sualtem fell upon his shield,<br />
-And his grey head came shouting to the ground.<br />
-They buried him by moonlight on the hill,<br />
-And all about him waves the heavy gorse.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE MAID IN LOW-MOON LAND<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I know not where she be, and yet<br />
-I see her waiting white and tall.<br />
-Her eyes are blue, her lips are wet,<br />
-And move as tho' they'd love to call.<br />
-I see her shadow on the wall<br />
-Before the changing moon has set.<br />
-<br />
-She stands there lovely and alone<br />
-And up her porch blue creepers swing.<br />
-The world she moves in is her own,<br />
-To sun and shade and hasty wing.<br />
-And I would wed her in the Spring,<br />
-But only I sit here and moan.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE DEATH OF LEAG. CUCHULAIN'S CHARIOTEER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">CONALL</span><br />
-<br />
-"I only heard the loud ebb on the sand,<br />
-The high ducks talking in the chilly sky.<br />
-The voices that you fancied floated by<br />
-Were wind notes, or the whisper on the trees.<br />
-But you are still so full of war's red din,<br />
-You hear impatient hoof-beats up the land<br />
-When the sea's changing, or a lisping breeze<br />
-Is playing on the waters of the linn."<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">LEAG</span><br />
-<br />
-"I hear Cuchulain's voice, and Emer's voice,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
-The Lia Macha's neigh, the chariot's wheels,<br />
-Farther away a bell bough's drowsy peals;<br />
-And sleep lays heavy thumbs upon my eyes.<br />
-I hear Cuchulain sing above the chime<br />
-Of One Who comes to make the world rejoice,<br />
-And comes again to blot away the skies,<br />
-To wipe away the world and roll up Time."<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">CONALL</span><br />
-<br />
-"In the dark ground forever mouth to mouth<br />
-They kiss thro' all the changes of the world,<br />
-The grey sea fogs above them are unfurled<br />
-At evening when the sea walks with the moon,<br />
-And peace is with them in the long cairn shut.<br />
-You loved him as the swallow loves the South,<br />
-And Love speaks with you since the evening put<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-Mist and white dews upon short shadowed noon."<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">LEAG</span><br />
-<br />
-"Sleep lays his heavy thumbs upon my eyes,<br />
-Shuts out all sounds and shakes me at the wrists.<br />
-By Nanny water where the salty mists<br />
-Weep o'er Riangabra let me stand deep<br />
-Beside my father. Sleep lays heavy thumbs<br />
-Upon my eyebrows, and I hear the sighs<br />
-Of far loud waters, and a troop that comes<br />
-With boughs of bells&mdash;&mdash;"<br />
-<br />
-<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">CONALL</span><br />
-<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 7em;">"They come to you with sleep."</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE PASSING OF CAOILTE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-'Twas just before the truce sang thro' the din<br />
-Caoilte, the thin man, at the war's red end<br />
-Leaned from the crooked ranks and saw his friend<br />
-Fall in the farther fury; so when truce<br />
-Halted advancing spears the thin man came<br />
-And bending by pale Oscar called his name;<br />
-And then he knew of all who followed Finn,<br />
-He only felt the cool of Gavra's dews.<br />
-<br />
-And Caoilte, the thin man, went down the field<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
-To where slow water moved among the whins,<br />
-And sat above a pool of twinkling fins<br />
-To court old memories of the Fenian men,<br />
-Of how Finn's laugh at Conan's tale of glee<br />
-Brought down the rowan's boughs on Knoc-naree,<br />
-And how he made swift comets with his shield<br />
-At moonlight in the Fomar's rivered glen.<br />
-<br />
-And Caoilte, the thin man, was weary now,<br />
-And nodding in short sleeps of half a dream:<br />
-There came a golden barge down middle stream,<br />
-And a tall maiden coloured like a bird<br />
-Pulled noiseless oars, but not a word she said.<br />
-And Caoilte, the thin man, raised up his head<br />
-And took her kiss upon his throbbing brow,<br />
-And where they went away what man has heard?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-GROWING OLD<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-We'll fill a Provence bowl and pledge us deep<br />
-The memory of the far ones, and between<br />
-The soothing pipes, in heavy-lidded sleep,<br />
-Perhaps we'll dream the things that once have been.<br />
-'Tis only noon and still too soon to die,<br />
-Yet we are growing old, my heart and I.<br />
-<br />
-A hundred books are ready in my head<br />
-To open out where Beauty bent a leaf.<br />
-What do we want with Beauty? We are wed<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
-Like ancient Proserpine to dismal grief.<br />
-And we are changing with the hours that fly,<br />
-And growing odd and old, my heart and I.<br />
-<br />
-Across a bed of bells the river flows,<br />
-And roses dawn, but not for us; we want<br />
-The new thing ever as the old thing grows<br />
-Spectral and weary on the hills we haunt.<br />
-And that is why we feast, and that is why<br />
-We're growing odd and old, my heart and I.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AFTER MY LAST SONG<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Where I shall rest when my last song is over<br />
-The air is smelling like a feast of wine;<br />
-And purple breakers of the windy clover<br />
-Shall roll to cool this burning brow of mine;<br />
-And there shall come to me, when day is told<br />
-The peace of sleep when I am grey and old.<br />
-<br />
-I'm wild for wandering to the far-off places<br />
-Since one forsook me whom I held most dear.<br />
-I want to see new wonders and new faces<br />
-Beyond East seas; but I will win back here<br />
-When my last song is sung, and veins are cold<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-As thawing snow, and I am grey and old.<br />
-<br />
-Oh paining eyes, but not with salty weeping,<br />
-My heart is like a sod in winter rain;<br />
-Ere you will see those baying waters leaping<br />
-Like hungry hounds once more, how many a pain<br />
-Shall heal; but when my last short song is trolled<br />
-You'll sleep here on wan cheeks grown thin and old.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a><br /><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
-SONGS OF PEACE AT HOME<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A DREAM OF ARTEMIS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-There was soft beauty on the linnet's tongue<br />
-To see the rainbow's coloured bands arch wide.<br />
-The thunder darted his red fangs among<br />
-South mountains, but the East was like a bride<br />
-Drest for the altar at her mother's door<br />
-Weeping between two loves. The fields were pied<br />
-With May's munificence of flowers, that wore<br />
-The fashion of the days when Eve was young,<br />
-God's kirtles, ere the first sweet summer died.<br />
-The blackbird in a thorn of waving white<br />
-Sang bouquets of small tunes that bid me turn<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
-From twilight wanderings thro' some old delight<br />
-I heard in my far memory making mourn.<br />
-Such music fills me with a joy half pain,<br />
-And beats a track across my life I spurn<br />
-In sober moments. Ah, this wandering brain<br />
-Could play its hurdy-gurdy all the night<br />
-To vagrant joys of days beyond the bourn.<br />
-<br />
-I heard the river warble sweetly nigh<br />
-To meet the warm salt tide below the weir,<br />
-And saw a coloured line of cows pass by,&mdash;<br />
-And then a voice said quickly, "Iris here!"<br />
-"What message now hath Hera?" then I woke,<br />
-An exile in Arcadia, and a spear<br />
-Flashed by me, and ten nymphs fleet-footed broke<br />
-Out of the coppice with a silver cry,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-Into the bow of lights to disappear.<br />
-<br />
-For one blue minute then there was no sound<br />
-Save water-noise, slow round a rushy bend,<br />
-And bird-delight, and ripples on the ground<br />
-Of windy flowers that swelling would ascend<br />
-The coloured hill and break all beautiful<br />
-And, falling backwards, to the woods would send<br />
-The full tide of their love. What soft moons pull<br />
-Their moving fragrance? did I ask, and found<br />
-Sad Io in far Egypt met a friend.&mdash;<br />
-It was my body thought so, far away<br />
-In the grey future, not the wild bird tied<br />
-That is the wandering soul. Behind the day<br />
-We may behold thee, soft one, hunted wide<br />
-By the loud gadfly; but the truant soul<br />
-Knows thee before thou lay by night's dark side,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
-Wed to the dimness; long before its dole<br />
-Was meted it, to be thus pound in clay&mdash;<br />
-That daubs its whiteness and offends its pride.<br />
-<br />
-There were loud questions in the rainbow's end,<br />
-And hurried answers, and a sound of spears.<br />
-And through the yellow blaze I saw one bend<br />
-Down on a trembling white knee, and her tears<br />
-Fell down in globes of light, and her small mouth<br />
-Was filled up with a name unspoken. Years<br />
-Of waiting love, and all their long, long drought<br />
-Of kisses parched her lips, and did she spend<br />
-Her eyes blue candles searching thro' her fears.<br />
-"She hath loved Ganymede, the stolen boy."<br />
-Said one, and then another, "Let us sing<br />
-To Zeus that he may give her living joy<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
-Above Olympus, where the cool hill-spring<br />
-Of Lethe bubbles up to bathe the heart<br />
-Sorrow's lean fingers bruised. There eagles wing<br />
-To eyries in the stars, and when they part<br />
-Their broad dark wings a wind is born to buoy<br />
-The bee home heavy in the far evening."<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-HYMN TO ZEUS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-"God, whose kindly hand doth sow<br />
-The rainbow showers on hill and lawn,<br />
-To make the young sweet grasses grow<br />
-And fill the udder of the fawn.<br />
-Whose light is life of leaf and flower,<br />
-And all the colours of the birds.<br />
-Whose song goes on from hour to hour<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
-Upon the river's liquid words.<br />
-Reach out a golden beam of thine<br />
-And touch her pain. Your finger-tips<br />
-Do make the violets' blue eclipse<br />
-Like milk upon a daisy shine.<br />
-<br />
-God, who lights the little stars,<br />
-And over night the white dew spills.<br />
-Whose hand doth move the season's cars<br />
-And clouds that mock our pointed hills.<br />
-Whose bounty fills the cow-trod wold,<br />
-And fills with bread the warm brown sod.<br />
-Who brings us sleep, where we grow old<br />
-'Til sleep and age together nod.<br />
-<br />
-Reach out a beam and touch the pain<br />
-A heart has oozed thro' all the years.<br />
-Your pity dries the morning's tears<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
-And fills the world with joy again!"<br />
-The rainbow's lights were shut, and all the maids<br />
-Stood round the sad nymph in a snow-white ring,<br />
-She rising spoke, "A blue and soft light bathes<br />
-Me to the fingers. Lo, I upward swing!"<br />
-And round her fell a mantle of blue light.<br />
-"Watch for me on the forehead of evening."<br />
-And lifting beautiful went out of sight.<br />
-And all the flowers flowed backward from the glades,<br />
-An ebb of colours redolent of Spring.<br />
-<br />
-Beauty and Love are sisters of the heart,<br />
-Love has no voice, and Beauty whispered song.<br />
-Now in my own, drawn silently apart<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
-Love looked, and Beauty sang. I felt a strong<br />
-Pulse on my wrist, a feeling like a pain<br />
-In my quick heart, for Love with gazes long<br />
-Was worshipping at Artemis, now lain<br />
-Among the heaving flowers ... I longed to dart<br />
-And fold her to my breast, nor saw the wrong.<br />
-She lay there, a tall beauty by her spear,<br />
-Her kirtle falling to her soft round knee.<br />
-Her hair was like the day when evening's near,<br />
-And her moist mouth might tempt the golden bee.<br />
-Smile's creases ran from dimples pink and deep,<br />
-And when she raised her arms I loved to see<br />
-The white mounds of her muscles. Gentle sleep<br />
-Threatened her far blue looks. The noisy weir<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
-Fell into a low murmuring lullaby.<br />
-And then the flowers came back behind the heel<br />
-Of hunted Io: she, poor maid, had fear<br />
-Wide in her eyes looking half back to steal<br />
-A glimpse of the loud gadfly fiercely near.<br />
-In her right hand she held Planting light,<br />
-And in her left her train. Artemis here<br />
-Raised herself on her palms, and took a white<br />
-Horn from her side and blew a silver peal<br />
-Til three hounds from the coppice did appear.<br />
-<br />
-The white nine left the spaces of flowers, and now<br />
-Went calling thro' the wood the hunter's call.<br />
-Young echoes sleeping in the hollow bough<br />
-Took up the shouts and handed them to all<br />
-Their sisters of the crags, 'til all the day<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
-Was filled with voices loud and musical.<br />
-I followed them across a tangled way<br />
-'Til the red deer broke out and took the brow<br />
-Of a wide hill in bounces like a ball.<br />
-Beside swift Artemis I joined the chase;<br />
-We roused up kine and scattered fleecy flocks;<br />
-Crossed at a mill a swift and bubbly race;<br />
-Scaled in a wood of pine the knotty rocks;<br />
-Past a grey vision of a valley town;<br />
-Past swains at labour in their coloured frocks;<br />
-Once saw a boar upon a windy down;<br />
-Once heard a cradle in a lonely place,<br />
-And saw the red flash of a frightened fox.<br />
-<br />
-We passed a garden where three maids in blue<br />
-Were talking of a queen a long time dead.<br />
-We caught a green glimpse of the sea: then thro'<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
-A town all hills; now round a wood we sped<br />
-And killed our quarry in his native lair.<br />
-Then Artemis spun round to me and said,<br />
-"Whence come you?" and I took her long damp hair<br />
-And made a ball of it, and said, "Where you<br />
-Are midnight's dreams of love." She dropped her head,<br />
-No word she spoke, but, panting in her side,<br />
-I heard her heart. The trees were all at peace,<br />
-And lifting slowly on the grey evetide<br />
-A large and lovely star. Then to release<br />
-Her hair, my hand dropped to her girded waist<br />
-And lay there shyly. "O my love, the lease<br />
-Of your existence is for ever: taste<br />
-No less with me the love of earth," I cried.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
-"Though for so short a while on lands and seas<br />
-Our mortal hearts know beauty, and overblow,<br />
-And we are dust upon some passing wind,<br />
-Dust and a memory. But for you the snow<br />
-That so long cloaks the mountains to the knees<br />
-Is no more than a morning. It doth go<br />
-And summer comes, and leaf upon the trees:<br />
-Still you are fair and young, and nothing find<br />
-In all man's story that seems long ago.<br />
-I have not loved on Earth the strife for gold,<br />
-Nor the great name that makes immortal man,<br />
-But all that struggle upward to behold<br />
-What still is left of Beauty undisgraced,<br />
-The snowdrop at the heel of winter cold<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
-And shivering, and the wayward cuckoo chased<br />
-By lingering March, and, in the thunder's van<br />
-The poor lambs merry on the meagre wold,<br />
-By-ways and cast-off things that lie therein,<br />
-Old boots that trod the highways of the world,<br />
-The schoolboy's broken hoop, the battered bin<br />
-That heard the ragman's story, blackened places<br />
-Where gipsies camped and circuses made din,<br />
-Fast water and the melancholy traces<br />
-Of sea tides, and poor people madly whirled<br />
-Up, down, and through the black retreats of sin.<br />
-These things a god might love, and stooping bless<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
-With benedictions of eternal song.&mdash;<br />
-But I have not loved Artemis the less<br />
-For loving these, but deem it noble love<br />
-To sing of live or dead things in distress<br />
-And wake memorial memories above.<br />
-<br />
-Such is the soul that comes to plead with you<br />
-Oh, Artemis, to tend you in your needs.<br />
-At mornings I will bring you bells of dew<br />
-From honey places, and wild fish from, streams<br />
-Flowing in secret places. I will brew<br />
-Sweet wine of alder for your evening dreams,<br />
-And pipe you music in the dusky reeds<br />
-When the four distances give up their blue.<br />
-<br />
-And when the white procession of the stars<br />
-Crosses the night, and on their tattered wings,<br />
-Above the forest, cry the loud night-jars,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
-We'll hunt the stag upon the mountain-side,<br />
-Slipping like light between the shadow bars<br />
-'Til burst of dawn makes every distance wide.<br />
-Oh, Artemis&mdash;what grief the silence brings!<br />
-I hear the rolling chariot of Mars!"<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A LITTLE BOY IN THE MORNING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-He will not come, and still I wait.<br />
-He whistles at another gate<br />
-Where angels listen. Ah, I know<br />
-He will not come, yet if I go<br />
-How shall I know he did not pass<br />
-Barefooted in the flowery grass?<br />
-<br />
-The moon leans on one silver horn<br />
-Above the silhouettes of morn,<br />
-And from their nest sills finches whistle<br />
-Or stooping pluck the downy thistle.<br />
-How is the morn so gay and fair<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
-Without his whistling in its air?<br />
-The world is calling, I must go.<br />
-How shall I know he did not pass<br />
-Barefooted in the shining grass?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a><br /><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a><br /><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>IN BARRACKS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO A DISTANT ONE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Through wild by-ways I come to you, my love,<br />
-Nor ask of those I meet the surest way,<br />
-What way I turn I cannot go astray<br />
-And miss you in my life. Though Fate may prove<br />
-A tardy guide she will not make delay<br />
-Leading me through strange seas and distant lands,<br />
-I'm coming still, though slowly, to your hands.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">We'll meet one day.</span><br />
-<br />
-There is so much to do, so little done,<br />
-In my life's space that I perforce did leave<br />
-Love at the moonlit trysting-place to grieve<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
-Till fame and other little things were won.<br />
-I have missed much that I shall not retrieve,<br />
-Far will I wander yet with much to do.<br />
-Much will I spurn before I yet meet you,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">So fair I can't deceive.</span><br />
-<br />
-Your name is in the whisper of the woods<br />
-Like Beauty calling for a poet's song<br />
-To one whose harp had suffered many a wrong<br />
-In the lean hands of Pain. And when the broods<br />
-Of flower eyes waken all the streams along<br />
-In tender whiles, I feel most near to you:&mdash;<br />
-Oh, when we meet there shall be sun and blue<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 4em;">Strong as the spring is strong.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE PLACE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Blossoms as old as May I scatter here,<br />
-And a blue wave I lifted from the stream.<br />
-It shall not know when winter days are drear<br />
-Or March is hoarse with blowing. But a-dream<br />
-The laurel boughs shall hold a canopy<br />
-Peacefully over it the winter long,<br />
-Till all the birds are back from oversea,<br />
-And April rainbows win a blackbird's song.<br />
-<br />
-And when the war is over I shall take<br />
-My lute a-down to it and sing again<br />
-Songs of the whispering things amongst the brake,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
-And those I love shall know them by their strain.<br />
-Their airs shall be the blackbird's twilight song,<br />
-Their words shall be all flowers with fresh dews hoar.&mdash;<br />
-But it is lonely now in winter long,<br />
-And, God! to hear the blackbird sing once more.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-MAY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-She leans across an orchard gate somewhere,<br />
-Bending from out the shadows to the light,<br />
-A dappled spray of blossom in her hair<br />
-Studded with dew-drops lovely from the night<br />
-She smiles to think how many hearts she'll smite<br />
-With beauty ere her robes fade from the lawn.<br />
-She hears the robin's cymbals with delight,<br />
-The skylark in the rosebush of the dawn.<br />
-<br />
-For her the cowslip rings its yellow bell,<br />
-For her the violets watch with wide blue eyes.<br />
-The wandering cuckoo doth its clear name tell<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
-Thro' the white mist of blossoms where she lies<br />
-Painting a sunset for the western skies.<br />
-You'd know her by her smile and by her tear<br />
-And by the way the swift and martin flies,<br />
-Where she is south of these wild days and drear.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO EILISH OF THE FAIR HAIR<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I'd make my heart a harp to play for you<br />
-Love songs within the evening dim of day,<br />
-Were it not dumb with ache and with mildew<br />
-Of sorrow withered like a flower away.<br />
-It hears so many calls from homeland places,<br />
-So many sighs from all it will remember,<br />
-From the pale roads and woodlands where your face is<br />
-Like laughing sunlight running thro' December.<br />
-<br />
-But this it singeth loud above its pain,<br />
-To bring the greater ache: whate'er befall<br />
-The love that oft-times woke the sweeter strain<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
-Shall turn to you always. And should you call<br />
-To pity it some day in those old places<br />
-Angels will covet the loud joy that fills it.<br />
-But thinking of the by-ways where your face is<br />
-Sunlight on other hearts&mdash;Ah! how it kills it.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a><br /><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>IN CAMP<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-CREWBAWN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-White clouds that change and pass,<br />
-And stars that shine awhile,<br />
-Dew water on the grass,<br />
-A fox upon a stile.<br />
-<br />
-A river broad and deep,<br />
-A slow boat on the waves,<br />
-My sad thoughts on the sleep<br />
-That hollows out the graves.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-EVENING IN ENGLAND<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-From its blue vase the rose of evening drops.<br />
-Upon the streams its petals float away.<br />
-The hills all blue with distance hide their tops<br />
-In the dim silence falling on the grey.<br />
-A little wind said "Hush!" and shook a spray<br />
-Heavy with May's white crop of opening bloom,<br />
-A silent bat went dipping up the gloom.<br />
-<br />
-Night tells her rosary of stars full soon,<br />
-They drop from out her dark hand to her knees.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
-Upon a silhouette of woods the moon<br />
-Leans on one horn as if beseeching ease<br />
-From all her changes which have stirred the seas.<br />
-Across the ears of Toil Rest throws her veil,<br />
-I and a marsh bird only make a wail.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a><br /><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a><br /><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
-AT SEA<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-CROCKNAHARNA<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-On the heights of Crocknaharna,<br />
-(Oh, the lure of Crocknaharna)<br />
-On a morning fair and early<br />
-Of a dear remembered May,<br />
-There I heard a colleen singing<br />
-In the brown rocks and the grey.<br />
-She, the pearl of Crocknaharna,<br />
-Crocknaharna, Crocknaharna,<br />
-Wild with girls is Crocknaharna<br />
-Twenty hundred miles away.<br />
-<br />
-On the heights of Crocknaharna,<br />
-(Oh, thy sorrow Crocknaharna)<br />
-On an evening dim and misty<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
-Of a cold November day,<br />
-There I heard a woman weeping<br />
-In the brown rocks and the grey.<br />
-Oh, the pearl of Crocknaharna<br />
-(Crocknaharna, Crocknaharna),<br />
-Black with grief is Crocknaharna<br />
-Twenty hundred miles away.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-IN THE MEDITERRANEAN&mdash;GOING TO THE WAR<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Lovely wings of gold and green<br />
-Flit about the sounds I hear,<br />
-On my window when I lean<br />
-To the shadows cool and clear.<br />
-<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">*&nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; *</span><br />
-<br />
-Roaming, I am listening still,<br />
-Bending, listening overlong,<br />
-In my soul a steadier will,<br />
-In my heart a newer song.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE GARDENER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Among the flowers, like flowers, her slow hands move<br />
-Easing a muffled bell or stooping low<br />
-To help sweet roses climb the stakes above,<br />
-Where pansies stare and seem to whisper "Lo!"<br />
-Like gaudy butterflies her sweet peas blow<br />
-Filling the garden with dim rustlings. Clear<br />
-On the sweet Book she reads how long ago<br />
-There was a garden to a woman dear.<br />
-<br />
-She makes her life one grand beatitude<br />
-Of Love and Peace, and with contented eyes<br />
-She sees not in the whole world mean or rude,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
-And her small lot she trebly multiplies.<br />
-And when the darkness muffles up the skies<br />
-Still to be happy is her sole desire,<br />
-She sings sweet songs about a great emprise,<br />
-And sees a garden blowing in the fire.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a><br /><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a><br /><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
-IN SERBIA<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AUTUMN EVENING IN SERBIA<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-All the thin shadows<br />
-Have closed on the grass,<br />
-With the drone on their dark wings<br />
-The night beetles pass.<br />
-Folded her eyelids,<br />
-A maiden asleep,<br />
-Day sees in her chamber<br />
-The pallid moon peep.<br />
-<br />
-From the bend of the briar<br />
-The roses are torn,<br />
-And the folds of the wood tops<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
-Are faded and worn.<br />
-A strange bird is singing<br />
-Sweet notes of the sun,<br />
-Tho' song time is over<br />
-And Autumn begun.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-NOCTURNE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The rim of the moon<br />
-Is over the corn.<br />
-The beetle's drone<br />
-Is above the thorn.<br />
-Grey days come soon<br />
-And I am alone;<br />
-Can you hear my moan<br />
-Where you rest, Aroon?<br />
-<br />
-When the wild tree bore<br />
-The deep blue cherry,<br />
-In night's deep hall<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
-Our love kissed merry.<br />
-But you come no more<br />
-Where its woodlands call,<br />
-And the grey days fall<br />
-On my grief, Astore!<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-SPRING AND AUTUMN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Green ripples singing down the corn,<br />
-With blossoms dumb the path I tread,<br />
-And in the music of the morn<br />
-One with wild roses on her head.<br />
-<br />
-Now the green ripples turn to gold<br />
-And all the paths are loud with rain,<br />
-I with desire am growing old<br />
-And full of winter pain.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a><br /><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a><br /><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-IN GREECE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE DEPARTURE OF PROSERPINE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Old mother Earth for me already grieves,<br />
-Her morns wake weeping and her noons are dim,<br />
-Silence has left her woods, and all the leaves<br />
-Dance in the windy shadows on the rim<br />
-Of the dull lake thro' which I soon shall pass<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">To my dark bridal bed</span><br />
-Down in the hollow chambers of the dead.<br />
-Will not the thunder hide me if I call,<br />
-Wrapt in the corner of some distant star<br />
-The gods have never known?<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Alas! alas!</span><br />
-My voice has left with the last wing, my fall<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
-Shall crush the flowery fields with gloom, as far<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">As swallows fly.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Would I might die</span><br />
-And in a solitude of roses lie<br />
-As the last bud's outblown.<br />
-Then nevermore Demeter would be heard<br />
-Wail in the blowing rain, but every shower<br />
-Would come bound up with rainbows to the birds<br />
-Wrapt in a dusty wing, and the dry flower<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Hanging a shrivelled lip.</span><br />
-This weary change from light to darkness fills<br />
-My heart with twilight, and my brightest day<br />
-Dawns over thunder and in thunder spills<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Its urn of gladness</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">With a sadness</span><br />
-Through which the slow dews drip<br />
-And the bat goes over on a thorny wing.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
-Is it a dream that once I used to sing<br />
-From Ćgean shores across her rocky isles,<br />
-Making the bells of Babylon to ring<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Over the wiles</span><br />
-That lifted me from darkness to the Spring<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">And the King</span><br />
-Seeing his wine in blossom on the tree<br />
-Danced with the queen a merry roundelay,<br />
-And all the blue circumference of the day<br />
-Was loud with flying song.&mdash;&mdash;<br />
-&mdash;But let me pass along:<br />
-What brooks it the unfree to thus delay?<br />
-No secret turning leads from the gods' way.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE HOMECOMING OF THE SHEEP<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The sheep are coming home in Greece,<br />
-Hark the bells on every hill!<br />
-Flock by flock, and fleece by fleece,<br />
-Wandering wide a little piece<br />
-Thro' the evening red and still,<br />
-Stopping where the pathways cease,<br />
-Cropping with a hurried will.<br />
-<br />
-Thro' the cotton-bushes low<br />
-Merry boys with shouldered crooks<br />
-Close them in a single row,<br />
-Shout among them as they go<br />
-With one bell-ring o'er the brooks.<br />
-Such delight you never know<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
-Reading it from gilded books.<br />
-<br />
-Before the early stars are bright<br />
-Cormorants and sea-gulls call,<br />
-And the moon comes large and white<br />
-Filling with a lovely light<br />
-The ferny curtained waterfall.<br />
-Then sleep wraps every bell up tight<br />
-And the climbing moon grows small.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-WHEN LOVE AND BEAUTY WANDER AWAY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When Love and Beauty wander away,<br />
-And there's no more hearts to be sought and won,<br />
-When the old earth limps thro' the dreary day,<br />
-And the work of the Seasons cry undone:<br />
-Ah! what shall we do for a song to sing,<br />
-Who have known Beauty, and Love, and Spring?<br />
-<br />
-When Love and Beauty wander away,<br />
-And a pale fear lies on the cheeks of youth,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-When there's no more goal to strive for and pray,<br />
-And we live at the end of the world's untruth:<br />
-Ah! what shall we do for a heart to prove,<br />
-Who have known Beauty, and Spring, and Love?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a><br /><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
-IN HOSPITAL IN EGYPT<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-MY MOTHER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-God made my mother on an April day,<br />
-From sorrow and the mist along the sea,<br />
-Lost birds' and wanderers' songs and ocean spray<br />
-And the moon loved her wandering jealously.<br />
-<br />
-Beside the ocean's din she combed her hair,<br />
-Singing the nocturne of the passing ships,<br />
-Before her earthly lover found her there<br />
-And kissed away the music from her lips.<br />
-<br />
-She came unto the hills and saw the change<br />
-That brings the swallow and the geese in turns.<br />
-But there was not a grief she deeméd strange,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
-For there is that in her which always mourns.<br />
-<br />
-Kind heart she has for all on hill or wave<br />
-Whose hopes grew wings like ants to fly away.<br />
-I bless the God Who such a mother gave<br />
-This poor bird-hearted singer of a day.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-SONG<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Nothing but sweet music wakes<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My Beloved, my Beloved.</span><br />
-Sleeping by the blue lakes,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My own Beloved!</span><br />
-<br />
-Song of lark and song of thrush,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My Beloved! my Beloved!</span><br />
-Sing in morning's rosy bush,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My own Beloved!</span><br />
-<br />
-When your eyes dawn blue and clear,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My Beloved! my Beloved!</span><br />
-You will find me waiting here,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My own Beloved!</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO ONE DEAD<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A blackbird singing<br />
-On a moss upholstered stone,<br />
-Bluebells swinging,<br />
-Shadows wildly blown,<br />
-A song in the wood,<br />
-A ship on the sea.<br />
-The song was for you<br />
-And the ship was for me.<br />
-<br />
-A blackbird singing<br />
-I hear in my troubled mind,<br />
-Bluebells swinging<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
-I see in a distant wind.<br />
-But sorrow and silence<br />
-Are the wood's threnody,<br />
-The silence for you<br />
-And the sorrow for me.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE RESURRECTION<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-My true love still is all that's fair,<br />
-She is flower and blossom blowing free,<br />
-For all her silence lying there<br />
-She sings a spirit song to me.<br />
-<br />
-New lovers seek her in her bower,<br />
-The rain, the dew, the flying wind,<br />
-And tempt her out to be a flower,<br />
-Which throws a shadow on my mind.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE SHADOW PEOPLE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Old lame Bridget doesn't hear<br />
-Fairy music in the grass<br />
-When the gloaming's on the mere<br />
-And the shadow people pass:<br />
-Never hears their slow grey feet<br />
-Coming from the village street<br />
-Just beyond the parson's wall,<br />
-Where the clover globes are sweet<br />
-And the mushroom's parasol<br />
-Opens in the moonlit rain.<br />
-Every night I hear them call<br />
-From their long and merry train.<br />
-Old lame Bridget says to me,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
-"It is just your fancy, child,"<br />
-She cannot believe I see<br />
-Laughing faces in the wild,<br />
-Hands that twinkle in the sedge<br />
-Bowing at the water's edge<br />
-Where the finny minnows quiver,<br />
-Shaping on a blue wave's ledge<br />
-Bubble foam to sail the river.<br />
-And the sunny hands to me<br />
-Beckon ever, beckon ever.<br />
-Oh! I would be wild and free<br />
-And with the shadow people be.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a><br /><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
-IN BARRACKS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AN OLD DESIRE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I searched thro' memory's lumber-room<br />
-And there I found an old desire,<br />
-I took it gently from the gloom<br />
-To cherish by my scanty tire.<br />
-<br />
-And all the night a sweet-voiced one,<br />
-Sang of the place my loves abide,<br />
-Til Earth leaned over from the dawn<br />
-And hid the last star in her side.<br />
-<br />
-And often since, when most alone,<br />
-I ponder on my old desire,<br />
-But never hear the sweet-voiced one,<br />
-And there are ruins in my fire.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THOMAS McDONAGH<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-He shall not hear the bittern cry<br />
-In the wild sky, where he is lain,<br />
-Nor voices of the sweeter birds<br />
-Above the wailing of the rain.<br />
-<br />
-Nor shall he know when loud March blows<br />
-Thro' slanting snows her fanfare shrill,<br />
-Blowing to flame the golden cup<br />
-Of many an upset daffodil.<br />
-<br />
-But when the Dark Cow leaves the moor,<br />
-And pastures poor with greedy weeds,<br />
-Perhaps he'll hear her low at morn<br />
-Lifting her horn in pleasant meads.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE WEDDING MORNING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Spread the feast, and let there be<br />
-Such music heard as best beseems<br />
-A king's son coming from the sea<br />
-To wed a maiden of the streams.<br />
-<br />
-Poets, pale for long ago,<br />
-Bring sweet sounds from rock and flood,<br />
-You by echo's accent know<br />
-Where the water is and wood.<br />
-<br />
-Harpers whom the moths of Time<br />
-Bent and wrinkled dusty brown,<br />
-Her chains are falling with a chime,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-Sweet as bells in Heaven town.<br />
-<br />
-But, harpers, leave your harps aside,<br />
-And, poets, leave awhile your dreams.<br />
-The storm has come upon the tide<br />
-And Cathleen weeps among her streams.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE BLACKBIRDS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I heard the Poor Old Woman say:<br />
-"At break of day the fowler came,<br />
-And took my blackbirds from their songs<br />
-Who loved me well thro shame and blame.<br />
-<br />
-No more from lovely distances<br />
-Their songs shall bless me mile by mile,<br />
-Nor to white Ashbourne call me down<br />
-To wear my crown another while.<br />
-<br />
-With bended flowers the angels mark<br />
-For the skylark the place they lie,<br />
-From there its little family<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
-Shall dip their wings first in the sky.<br />
-<br />
-And when the first surprise of flight<br />
-Sweet songs excite, from the far dawn<br />
-Shall there come blackbirds loud with love,<br />
-Sweet echoes of the singers gone.<br />
-<br />
-But in the lonely hush of eve<br />
-Weeping I grieve the silent bills."<br />
-I heard the Poor Old Woman say<br />
-In Derry of the little hills.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE LURE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I saw night leave her halos down<br />
-On Mitylene's dark mountain isle,<br />
-The silhouette of one fair town<br />
-Like broken shadows in a pile.<br />
-And in the farther dawn I heard<br />
-The music of a foreign bird.<br />
-<br />
-In fields of shady angles now<br />
-I stand and dream in the half dark:<br />
-The thrush is on the blossomed bough,<br />
-Above the echoes sings the lark,<br />
-And little rivers drop between<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
-Hills fairer than dark Mitylene.<br />
-<br />
-Yet something calls me with no voice<br />
-And wakes sweet echoes in my mind;<br />
-In the fair country of my choice<br />
-Nor Peace nor Love again I find,<br />
-Nor anything of rest I know<br />
-When south-east winds are blowing low.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THRO' BOGAC BAN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I met the Silent Wandering Man,<br />
-Thro' Bogac Ban he made his way,<br />
-Humming a slow old Irish tune,<br />
-On Joseph Plunkett's wedding day.<br />
-<br />
-And all the little whispering things<br />
-That love the springs of Bogac Ban,<br />
-Spread some new rumour round the dark<br />
-And turned their faces from the dawn.<br />
-<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">*&nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; *&nbsp; &nbsp; *</span><br />
-<br />
-My hand upon my harp I lay,<br />
-I cannot say what things I know;<br />
-To meet the Silent Wandering Man<br />
-Of Bogac Ban once more I go.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-FATE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Lugh made a stir in the air<br />
-With his sword of cries,<br />
-And fairies thro' hidden ways<br />
-Came from the skies,<br />
-And their spells withered up the fair<br />
-And vanquished the wise.<br />
-<br />
-And old lame Balor came down<br />
-With his gorgon eye<br />
-Hidden behind its lid,<br />
-Old, withered and dry.<br />
-He looked on the wattle town,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
-And the town passed by.<br />
-<br />
-These things I know in my dreams,<br />
-The crying sword of Lugh,<br />
-And Balor's ancient eye<br />
-Searching me through,<br />
-Withering up my songs<br />
-And my pipe yet new.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-EVENING CLOUDS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A little flock of clouds go down to rest<br />
-In some blue corner off the moon's highway,<br />
-With shepherd winds that shook them in the West<br />
-To borrowed shapes of earth, in bright array,<br />
-Perhaps to weave a rainbow's gay festoons<br />
-Around the lonesome isle which Brooke has made<br />
-A little England full of lovely noons,<br />
-Or dot it with his country's mountain shade.<br />
-<br />
-Ah, little wanderers, when you reach that isle<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
-Tell him, with dripping dew, they have not failed,<br />
-What he loved most; for late I roamed awhile<br />
-Thro' English fields and down her rivers sailed;<br />
-And they remember him with beauty caught<br />
-From old desires of Oriental Spring<br />
-Heard in his heart with singing overwrought;<br />
-And still on Purley Common gooseboys sing.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-SONG<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The winds are scented with woods after rain,<br />
-And a raindrop shines in the daisy's eye.<br />
-Shall we follow the swallow again, again,<br />
-Ah! little yearning thing, you and I?<br />
-<br />
-You and I to the South again,<br />
-And heart! Oh, heart, how you shall sigh,<br />
-For the kind soft wind that follows the rain,<br />
-And the raindrop shed from the daisy's eye.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE HERONS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-As I was climbing Ardan Mor<br />
-From the shore of Sheelan lake,<br />
-I met the herons coming down<br />
-Before the water's wake.<br />
-<br />
-And they were talking in their flight<br />
-Of dreamy ways the herons go<br />
-When all the hills are withered up<br />
-Nor any waters flow.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-IN THE SHADOWS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The silent music of the flowers<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wind-mingled shall not fail to cheer</span><br />
-The lonely hours<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When I no more am here.</span><br />
-<br />
-Then in some shady willow place<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Take up the book my heart has made,</span><br />
-And hide your face<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Against my name which was a shade.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-THE SHIPS OF ARCADY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Thro' the faintest filigree<br />
-Over the dim waters go<br />
-Little ships of Arcady<br />
-When the morning moon is low.<br />
-<br />
-I can hear the sailors' song<br />
-From the blue edge of the sea,<br />
-Passing like the lights along<br />
-Thro' the dusky filigree.<br />
-<br />
-Then where moon and waters meet<br />
-Sail by sail they pass away,<br />
-With little friendly winds replete<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
-Blowing from the breaking day.<br />
-<br />
-And when the little ships have flown,<br />
-Dreaming still of Arcady<br />
-I look across the waves, alone<br />
-In the misty filigree.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AFTER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-And in the after silences<br />
-Of flower-lit distances I'll be,<br />
-And who would find me travels far<br />
-In lands unsung of minstrelsy.<br />
-Strong winds shall cross my secret way,<br />
-And planet mountains hide my goal,<br />
-I shall go on from pass to pass,<br />
-By monstrous rocks, a lonely soul.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO ONE WEEPING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Maiden, these are sacred tears,<br />
-Let me not disturb your grief!<br />
-Had I but your bosom's fears<br />
-I should weep, nor seek relief.<br />
-<br />
-My woe is a silent woe<br />
-'Til I give it measured rhyme,<br />
-When the blackbird's flute is low<br />
-In my heart at singing time.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A DREAM DANCE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Maeve held a ball on the dún,<br />
-Cuculain and Eimer were there,<br />
-In the light of an old broken moon<br />
-I was dancing with Deirdre the fair.<br />
-<br />
-How loud was the laughter of Finn<br />
-As he blundered about thro' a reel,<br />
-Tripping up Caoilte the thin,<br />
-Or jostling the dreamy Aleel.<br />
-<br />
-And when the dance ceased for a song,<br />
-How sweet was the singing of Fand,<br />
-We could hear her far, wandering along,<br />
-My hand in that beautiful hand.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-BY FAUGHAN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-For hills and woods and streams unsung<br />
-I pipe above a rippled cove.<br />
-And here the weaver autumn hung<br />
-Between the hills a wind she wove<br />
-From sounds the hills remember yet<br />
-Of purple days and violet.<br />
-<br />
-The hills stand up to trip the sky,<br />
-Sea-misted, and along the tops<br />
-Wing after wing goes summer by,<br />
-And many a little roadway stops<br />
-And starts, and struggles to the sea,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
-Cutting them up in filigree.<br />
-<br />
-Twixt wind and silence Faughan flows,<br />
-In music broken over rocks,<br />
-Like mingled bells the poet knows<br />
-Ring in the fields of Eastern flocks.<br />
-And here this song for you I find<br />
-Between the silence and the wind.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-IN SEPTEMBER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Still are the meadowlands, and still<br />
-Ripens the upland corn,<br />
-And over the brown gradual hill<br />
-The moon has dipped a horn.<br />
-<br />
-The voices of the dear unknown<br />
-With silent hearts now call,<br />
-My rose of youth is overblown<br />
-And trembles to the fall.<br />
-<br />
-My song forsakes me like the birds<br />
-That leave the rain and grey,<br />
-I hear the music of the words<br />
-My lute can never say.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a><br /><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
-LAST SONGS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO AN OLD QUILL OF LORD DUNSANY'S<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Before you leave my hands' abuses<br />
-To lie where many odd things meet you,<br />
-Neglected darkling of the Muses,<br />
-I, the last of singers, greet you.<br />
-<br />
-Snug in some white wing they found you,<br />
-On the Common bleak and muddy,<br />
-Noisy goslings gobbling round you<br />
-In the pools of sunset, ruddy.<br />
-<br />
-Have you sighed in wings untravelled<br />
-For the heights where others view the<br />
-Bluer widths of heaven, and marvelled<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
-At the utmost top of Beauty?<br />
-<br />
-No! it cannot be; the soul you<br />
-Sigh with craves nor begs of us.<br />
-From such heights a poet stole you<br />
-From a wing of Pegasus.<br />
-<br />
-You have been where gods were sleeping<br />
-In the dawn of new creations,<br />
-Ere they woke to woman's weeping<br />
-At the broken thrones of nations.<br />
-<br />
-You have seen this old world shattered<br />
-By old gods it disappointed,<br />
-Lying up in darkness, battered<br />
-By wild comets, unanointed.<br />
-<br />
-But for Beauty unmolested<br />
-Have you still the sighing olden?<br />
-I know mountains heather-crested,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
-Waters white, and waters golden.<br />
-<br />
-There I'd keep you, in the lowly<br />
-Beauty-haunts of bird and poet,<br />
-Sailing in a wing, the holy<br />
-Silences of lakes below it.<br />
-<br />
-But I leave you by where no man<br />
-Finds you, when I too be gone<br />
-From the puddles on this common<br />
-Over the dark Rubicon.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Londonderry,</i><br />
-<i>September 18th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-TO A SPARROW<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Because you have no fear to mingle<br />
-Wings with those of greater part,<br />
-So like me, with song I single<br />
-Your sweet impudence of heart.<br />
-<br />
-And when prouder feathers go where<br />
-Summer holds her leafy show,<br />
-You still come to us from nowhere<br />
-Like grey leaves across the snow.<br />
-<br />
-In back ways where odd and end go<br />
-To your meals you drop down sure,<br />
-Knowing every broken window<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
-Of the hospitable poor.<br />
-<br />
-There is no bird half so harmless,<br />
-None so sweetly rude as you,<br />
-None so common and so charmless,<br />
-None of virtues nude as you.<br />
-<br />
-But for all your faults I love you,<br />
-For you linger with us still,<br />
-Though the wintry winds reprove you<br />
-And the snow is on the hill.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Londonderry,</i><br />
-<i>September 20th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-OLD CLO'<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I was just coming in from the garden,<br />
-Or about to go fishing for eels,<br />
-And, smiling, I asked you to pardon<br />
-My boots very low at the heels.<br />
-And I thought that you never would go,<br />
-As you stood in the doorway ajar,<br />
-For my heart would keep saying, "Old Clo',<br />
-You're found out at last as you are."<br />
-<br />
-I was almost ashamed to acknowledge<br />
-That I was the quarry you sought,<br />
-For was I not bred in a college<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
-And reared in a mansion, you thought.<br />
-And now in the latest style cut<br />
-With fortune more kinder I go<br />
-To welcome you half-ways. Ah! but<br />
-I was nearer the gods when "Old Clo'."<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-YOUTH<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-She paved the way with perfume sweet<br />
-Of flowers that moved like winds alight,<br />
-And never weary grew my feet<br />
-Wandering through the spring's delight.<br />
-<br />
-She dropped her sweet fife to her lips<br />
-And lured me with her melodies,<br />
-To where the great big wandering ships<br />
-Put out into the peaceful seas.<br />
-<br />
-But when the year grew chill and brown,<br />
-And all the wings of Summer flown,<br />
-Within the tumult of a town<br />
-She left me to grow old alone.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-THE LITTLE CHILDREN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Hunger points a bony finger<br />
-To the workhouse on the hill,<br />
-But the little children linger<br />
-While there's flowers to gather still<br />
-For my sunny window sill.<br />
-<br />
-In my hands I take their faces,<br />
-Smiling to my smiles they run.<br />
-Would that I could take their places<br />
-Where the murky bye-ways shun<br />
-The benedictions of the sun.<br />
-<br />
-How they laugh and sing returning<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
-Lightly on their secret way.<br />
-While I listen in my yearning<br />
-Their laughter fills the windy day<br />
-With gladness, youth and May.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-AUTUMN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Now leafy winds are blowing cold,<br />
-And South by West the sun goes down,<br />
-A quiet huddles up the fold<br />
-In sheltered corners of the brown.<br />
-<br />
-Like scattered fire the wild fruit strews<br />
-The ground beneath the blowing tree,<br />
-And there the busy squirrel hews<br />
-His deep and secret granary.<br />
-<br />
-And when the night comes starry clear,<br />
-The lonely quail complains beside<br />
-The glistening waters on the mere<br />
-Where widowed Beauties yet abide.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
-<br />
-And I, too, make my own complaint<br />
-Upon a reed I plucked in June,<br />
-And love to hear it echoed faint<br />
-Upon another heart in tune.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Londonderry,</i><br />
-<i>September 29th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-IRELAND<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I called you by sweet names by wood and linn,<br />
-You answered not because my voice was new,<br />
-And you were listening for the hounds of Finn<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the long hosts of Lugh.</span><br />
-<br />
-And so, I came unto a windy height<br />
-And cried my sorrow, but you heard no wind,<br />
-For you were listening to small ships in flight,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And the wail on hills behind.</span><br />
-<br />
-And then I left you, wandering the war<br />
-Armed with will, from distant goal to goal,<br />
-To find you at the last free as of yore,<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 2em;">
-Or die to save your soul.</span><br />
-<br />
-And then you called to us from far and near<br />
-To bring your crown from out the deeps of time,<br />
-It is my grief your voice I couldn't hear<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In such a distant clime.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-LADY FAIR<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Lady fair, have we not met<br />
-In our lives elsewhere?<br />
-Darkling in my mind to-night<br />
-Faint fair faces dare<br />
-Memory's old unfaithfulness<br />
-To what was true and fair.<br />
-Long of memory is Regret,<br />
-But what Regret has taken flight<br />
-Through my memory's silences?<br />
-Lo! I turn it to the light.<br />
-'Twas but a pleasure in distress,<br />
-Too faint and far off for redress.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
-But some light glancing in your hair<br />
-And in the liquid of your eyes<br />
-Seem to murmur old good-byes<br />
-In our lives elsewhere.<br />
-Have we not met, Lady fair?<br />
-<br />
-<i>Londonderry,</i><br />
-<i>October 27th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AT A POET'S GRAVE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When I leave down this pipe my friend<br />
-And sleep with flowers I loved, apart,<br />
-My songs shall rise in wilding things<br />
-Whose roots are in my heart.<br />
-<br />
-And here where that sweet poet sleeps<br />
-I hear the songs he left unsung,<br />
-When winds are fluttering the flowers<br />
-And summer-bells are rung.<br />
-<br />
-<i>November, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-AFTER COURT MARTIAL<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-My mind is not my mind, therefore<br />
-I take no heed of what men say,<br />
-I lived ten thousand years before<br />
-God cursed the town of Nineveh.<br />
-<br />
-The Present is a dream I see<br />
-Of horror and loud sufferings,<br />
-At dawn a bird will waken me<br />
-Unto my place among the kings.<br />
-<br />
-And though men called me a vile name,<br />
-And all my dream companions gone,<br />
-'Tis I the soldier bears the shame.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Not I the king of Babylon.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A MOTHER'S SONG<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Little ships of whitest pearl<br />
-With sailors who were ancient kings,<br />
-Come over the sea when my little girl<br />
-Sings.<br />
-<br />
-And if my little girl should weep,<br />
-Little ships with torn sails<br />
-Go headlong down among the deep<br />
-Whales.<br />
-<br />
-<i>November, 1916.</i><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-AT CURRABWEE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Every night at Currabwee<br />
-Little men with leather hats<br />
-Mend the boots of Faery<br />
-From the tough wings of the bats.<br />
-So my mother told to me,<br />
-And she is wise you will agree.<br />
-<br />
-Louder than a cricket's wing<br />
-All night long their hammer's glee<br />
-Times the merry songs they sing<br />
-Of Ireland glorious and free.<br />
-So I heard Joseph Plunkett say,<br />
-You know he heard them but last May.<br />
-<br />
-And when the night is very cold<br />
-They warm their hands against the light<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
-Of stars that make the waters gold<br />
-Where they are labouring all the night.<br />
-So Pearse said, and he knew the truth,<br />
-Among the stars he spent his youth.<br />
-<br />
-And I, myself, have often heard<br />
-Their singing as the stars went by,<br />
-For am I not of those who reared<br />
-The banner of old Ireland high,<br />
-From Dublin town to Turkey's shores,<br />
-And where the Vardar loudly roars?<br />
-<br />
-<i>December, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-SONG-TIME IS OVER<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I will come no more awhile,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">O Song-time is over.</span><br />
-A fire is burning in my heart,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I was ever a rover.</span><br />
-<br />
-You will hear me no more awhile,<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The birds are dumb,</span><br />
-And a voice in the distance calls<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Come," and "Come,"</span><br />
-<br />
-<i>December 13th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-UNA BAWN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Una Bawn, the days are long,<br />
-And the seas I cross are wide,<br />
-I must go when Ireland needs,<br />
-And you must bide.<br />
-<br />
-And should I not return to you<br />
-When the sails are on the tide,<br />
-'Tis you will find the days so long,<br />
-Una Bawn, and I must bide.<br />
-<br />
-<i>December 13th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-SPRING LOVE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I saw her coming through the flowery grass,<br />
-Round her swift ankles butterfly and bee<br />
-Blent loud and silent wings; I saw her pass<br />
-Where foam-bows shivered on the sunny sea.<br />
-<br />
-Then came the swallow crowding up the dawn,<br />
-And cuckoo-echoes filled the dewy South.<br />
-I left my love upon the hill, alone,<br />
-My last kiss burning on her lovely mouth.<br />
-<br />
-B.E.F.&mdash;<i>December 26th, 1916.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-SOLILOQUY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When I was young I had a care<br />
-Lest I should cheat me of my share<br />
-Of that which makes it sweet to strive<br />
-For life, and dying still survive,<br />
-A name in sunshine written higher<br />
-Than lark or poet dare aspire.<br />
-<br />
-But I grew weary doing well,<br />
-Besides, 'twas sweeter in that hell,<br />
-Down with the loud banditti people<br />
-Who robbed the orchards, climbed the steeple<br />
-For jackdaws' eggs and made the cock<br />
-Crow ere 'twas daylight on the clock.<br />
-I was so very bad the neighbours<br />
-Spoke of me at their daily labours.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
-<br />
-And now I'm drinking wine in France,<br />
-The helpless child of circumstance.<br />
-To-morrow will be loud with war,<br />
-How will I be accounted for?<br />
-<br />
-It is too late now to retrieve<br />
-A fallen dream, too late to grieve<br />
-A name unmade, but not too late<br />
-To thank the gods for what is great;<br />
-A keen-edged sword, a soldier's heart,<br />
-Is greater than a poet's art.<br />
-And greater than a poet's fame<br />
-A little grave that has no name.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-DAWN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Quiet miles of golden sky,<br />
-And in my heart a sudden flower.<br />
-I want to clap my hands and cry<br />
-For Beauty in her secret bower.<br />
-<br />
-Quiet golden miles of dawn&mdash;Smiling<br />
-all the East along;<br />
-And in my heart nigh fully blown<br />
-A little rose-bud of a song.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-CEOL SIDHE<a name="FNanchor_1_6" id="FNanchor_1_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_6" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When May is here, and every morn<br />
-Is dappled with pied bells,<br />
-And dewdrops glance along the thorn<br />
-And wings flash in the dells,<br />
-I take my pipe and play a tune<br />
-Of dreams, a whispered melody,<br />
-For feet that dance beneath the moon<br />
-In fairy jollity.<br />
-<br />
-And when the pastoral hills are grey<br />
-And the dim stars are spread,<br />
-A scamper fills the grass like play<br />
-Of feet where fairies tread.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
-And many a little whispering thing<br />
-Is calling to the Shee.<br />
-The dewy bells of evening ring,<br />
-And all is melody.<br />
-<br />
-<i>France,</i><br />
-<i>December 29th, 1916.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="p2"><a name="Footnote_1_6" id="Footnote_1_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_6"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Fairy music.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p></div>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="p6" style="margin-left: 10%;" >
-THE RUSHES<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The rushes nod by the river<br />
-As the winds on the loud waves go,<br />
-And the things they nod of are many,<br />
-For it's many the secret they know.<br />
-<br />
-And I think they are wise as the fairies<br />
-Who lived ere the hills were high,<br />
-They nod so grave by the river<br />
-To everyone passing by.<br />
-<br />
-If they would tell me their secrets<br />
-I would go by a hidden way,<br />
-To the rath when the moon retiring<br />
-Dips dim horns into the gray.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
-<br />
-And a fairy-girl out of Leinster<br />
-In a long dance I should meet,<br />
-My heart to her heart beating,<br />
-My feet in rhyme with her feet.<br />
-<br />
-<i>France,</i><br />
-<i>January 6th, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-THE DEAD KINGS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-All the dead kings came to me<br />
-At Rosnaree, where I was dreaming.<br />
-A few stars glimmered through the morn,<br />
-And down the thorn the dews were streaming.<br />
-<br />
-And every dead king had a story<br />
-Of ancient glory, sweetly told.<br />
-It was too early for the lark,<br />
-But the starry dark had tints of gold.<br />
-<br />
-I listened to the sorrows three<br />
-Of that Eirë passed into song.<br />
-A cock crowed near a hazel croft,<br />
-And up aloft dim larks winged strong.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
-<br />
-And I, too, told the kings a story<br />
-Of later glory, her fourth sorrow:<br />
-There was a sound like moving shields<br />
-In high green fields and the lowland furrow.<br />
-<br />
-And one said: "We who yet are kings<br />
-Have heard these things lamenting inly."<br />
-Sweet music flowed from many a bill<br />
-And on the hill the morn stood queenly.<br />
-<br />
-And one said: "Over is the singing,<br />
-And bell bough ringing, whence we come;<br />
-With heavy hearts we'll tread the shadows,<br />
-In honey meadows birds are dumb."<br />
-<br />
-And one said: "Since the poets perished<br />
-And all they cherished in the way,<br />
-Their thoughts unsung, like petal showers<br />
-Inflame the hours of blue and gray."<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
-<br />
-And one said: "A loud tramp of men<br />
-We'll hear again at Rosnaree."<br />
-A bomb burst near me where I lay.<br />
-I woke, 'twas day in Picardy.<br />
-<br />
-<i>France,</i><br />
-<i>January 7th, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-IN FRANCE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-The silence of maternal hills<br />
-Is round me in my evening dreams;<br />
-And round me music-making bills<br />
-And mingling waves of pastoral streams.<br />
-<br />
-Whatever way I turn I find<br />
-The path is old unto me still.<br />
-The hills of home are in my mind,<br />
-And there I wander as I will.<br />
-<br />
-<i>February 3rd, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-HAD I A GOLDEN POUND<br />
-<br />
-(AFTER THE IRISH)<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Had I a golden pound to spend,<br />
-My love should mend and sew no more.<br />
-And I would buy her a little quern,<br />
-Easy to turn on the kitchen floor.<br />
-<br />
-And for her windows curtains white,<br />
-With birds in flight and flowers in bloom,<br />
-To face with pride the road to town,<br />
-And mellow down her sunlit room.<br />
-<br />
-And with the silver change we'd prove<br />
-The truth of Love to life's own end,<br />
-With hearts the years could but embolden,<br />
-Had I a golden pound to spend.<br />
-<br />
-<i>February 5th, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-FAIRIES<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Maiden-poet, come with me<br />
-To the heaped up cairn of Maeve,<br />
-And there we'll dance a fairy dance<br />
-Upon a fairy's grave.<br />
-<br />
-In and out among the trees,<br />
-Filling all the night with sound,<br />
-The morning, strung upon her star,<br />
-Shall chase us round and round.<br />
-<br />
-What are we but fairies too,<br />
-Living but in dreams alone,<br />
-Or, at the most, but children still,<br />
-Innocent and overgrown?<br />
-<br />
-<i>February 6th,</i> 1917.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-IN A CAFÉ<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Kiss the maid and pass her round,<br />
-Lips like hers were made for many.<br />
-Our loves are far from us to-night,<br />
-But these red lips are sweet as any.<br />
-<br />
-Let no empty glass be seen<br />
-Aloof from our good table's sparkle,<br />
-At the acme of our cheer<br />
-Here are francs to keep the circle.<br />
-<br />
-They are far who miss us most&mdash;Sip<br />
-and kiss&mdash;how well we love them,<br />
-Battling through the world to keep<br />
-Their hearts at peace, their God above them.<br />
-<br />
-<i>February 11th, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-SPRING<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Once more the lark with song and speed<br />
-Cleaves through the dawn, his hurried bars<br />
-Fall, like the flute of Ganymede<br />
-Twirling and whistling from the stars.<br />
-<br />
-The primrose and the daffodil<br />
-Surprise the valleys, and wild thyme<br />
-Is sweet on every little hill,<br />
-When lambs come down at folding time.<br />
-<br />
-In every wild place now is heard<br />
-The magpie's noisy house, and through<br />
-The mingled tunes of many a bird<br />
-The ruffled wood-dove's gentle coo.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
-<br />
-Sweet by the river's noisy brink<br />
-The water-lily bursts her crown,<br />
-The kingfisher comes down to drink<br />
-Like rainbow jewels falling down.<br />
-<br />
-And when the blue and grey entwine<br />
-The daisy shuts her golden eye,<br />
-And peaces-wraps all those hills of mine<br />
-Safe in my dearest memory.<br />
-<br />
-<i>France,</i><br />
-<i>March 8th, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-PAN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-He knows the safe ways and unsafe<br />
-And he will lead the lambs to fold,<br />
-Gathering them with his merry pipe,<br />
-The gentle and the overbold.<br />
-<br />
-He counts them over one by one,<br />
-And leads them back by cliff and steep,<br />
-To grassy hills where dawn is wide,<br />
-And they may run and skip and leap.<br />
-<br />
-And just because he loves the lambs<br />
-He settles them for rest at noon,<br />
-And plays them on his oaten pipe<br />
-The very wonder of a tune.<br />
-<br />
-<i>France,</i><br />
-<i>March 11th, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-WITH FLOWERS<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-These have more language than my song,<br />
-Take them and let them speak for me.<br />
-I whispered them a secret thing<br />
-Down the green lanes of Allary.<br />
-<br />
-You shall remember quiet ways<br />
-Watching them fade, and quiet eyes,<br />
-And two hearts given up to love,<br />
-A foolish and an overwise.<br />
-<br />
-<i>France,</i><br />
-<i>April, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-THE FIND<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I took a reed and blew a tune,<br />
-And sweet it was and very clear<br />
-To be about a little thing<br />
-That only few hold dear.<br />
-<br />
-Three times the cuckoo named himself,<br />
-But nothing heard him on the hill,<br />
-Where I was piping like an elf<br />
-The air was very still.<br />
-<br />
-'Twas all about a little thing<br />
-I made a mystery of sound,<br />
-I found it in a fairy ring<br />
-Upon a fairy mound.<br />
-<br />
-<i>June 2nd, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-A FAIRY HUNT<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Who would hear the fairy horn<br />
-Calling all the hounds of Finn<br />
-Must be in a lark's nest born<br />
-When the moon is very thin.<br />
-<br />
-I who have the gift can hear<br />
-Hounds and horn and tally ho,<br />
-And the tongue of Bran as clear<br />
-As Christmas bells across the snow.<br />
-<br />
-And beside my secret place<br />
-Hurries by the fairy fox,<br />
-With the moonrise on his face,<br />
-Up and down the mossy rocks.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
-<br />
-Then the music of a horn<br />
-And the flash of scarlet men,<br />
-Thick as poppies in the corn<br />
-All across the dusky glen.<br />
-<br />
-Oh! the mad delight of chase!<br />
-Oh! the shouting and the cheer!<br />
-Many an owl doth leave his place<br />
-In the dusty tree to hear.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-TO ONE WHO COMES NOW AND THEN<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-When you come in, it seems a brighter fire<br />
-Crackles upon the hearth invitingly,<br />
-The household routine which was wont to tire<br />
-Grows full of novelty.<br />
-<br />
-You sit upon our home-upholstered chair<br />
-And talk of matters wonderful and strange,<br />
-Of books, and travel, customs old which dare<br />
-The gods of Time and Change.<br />
-<br />
-Till we with inner word our care refute<br />
-Laughing that this our bosoms yet assails,<br />
-While there are maidens dancing to a flute<br />
-In Andalusian vales.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
-<br />
-And sometimes from my shelf of poems you take<br />
-And secret meanings to our hearts disclose,<br />
-As when the winds of June the mid bush shake<br />
-We see the hidden rose.<br />
-<br />
-And when the shadows muster, and each tree<br />
-A moment flutters, full of shutting wings,<br />
-You take the fiddle and mysteriously<br />
-Wake wonders on the strings.<br />
-<br />
-And in my garden, grey with misty flowers,<br />
-Low echoes fainter than a beetle's horn<br />
-Fill all the corners with it, like sweet showers<br />
-Of bells, in the owl's morn.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
-<br />
-Come often, friend, with welcome and surprise<br />
-We'll greet you from the sea or from the town;<br />
-Come when you like and from whatever skies<br />
-Above you smile or frown.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Belgium,</i><br />
-<i>July 22nd, 1917</i>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-THE SYLPH<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I saw you and I named a flower<br />
-That lights with blue a woodland space,<br />
-I named a bird of the red hour<br />
-And a hidden fairy place.<br />
-<br />
-And then I saw you not, and knew<br />
-Dead leaves were whirling down the mist,<br />
-And something lost was crying through<br />
-An evening of amethyst.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-HOME<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-A burst of sudden wings at dawn,<br />
-Faint voices in a dreamy noon,<br />
-Evenings of mist and murmurings,<br />
-And nights with rainbows of the moon.<br />
-<br />
-And through these things a wood-way dim,<br />
-And waters dim, and slow sheep seen<br />
-On uphill paths that wind away<br />
-Through summer sounds and harvest green.<br />
-<br />
-This is a song a robin sang<br />
-This morning on a broken tree,<br />
-It was about the little fields<br />
-That call across the world to me.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Belgium,</i><br />
-<i>July, 1917.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
-<br />
-<br />
-THE LANAWN SHEE<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Powdered and perfumed the full bee<br />
-Winged heavily across the clover,<br />
-And where the hills were dim with dew,<br />
-Purple and blue the west leaned over.<br />
-<br />
-A willow spray dipped in the stream,<br />
-Moving a gleam of silver ringing,<br />
-And by a finny creek a maid<br />
-Filled all the shade with softest singing.<br />
-<br />
-Listening, my heart and soul at strife,<br />
-On the edge of life I seemed to hover,<br />
-For I knew my love had come at last,<br />
-That my joy was past and my gladness over.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
-<br />
-I tiptoed gently tip and stooped<br />
-Above her looped and shining tresses,<br />
-And asked her of her kin and name,<br />
-And why she came from fairy places.<br />
-<br />
-She told me of a sunny coast<br />
-Beyond the most adventurous sailor,<br />
-Where she had spent a thousand years<br />
-Out of the fears that now assail her.<br />
-<br />
-And there, she told me, honey drops<br />
-Out of the tops of ash and willow,<br />
-And in the mellow shadow Sleep<br />
-Doth sweetly keep her poppy pillow.<br />
-<br />
-Nor Autumn with her brown line marks<br />
-The time of larks, the length of roses,<br />
-But song-time there is over never<br />
-Nor flower-time ever, ever closes.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
-<br />
-And wildly through uncurling ferns<br />
-Fast water turns down valleys singing,<br />
-Filling with scented winds the dales,<br />
-Setting the bells of sleep a-ringing.<br />
-<br />
-And when the thin moon lowly sinks,<br />
-Through cloudy chinks a silver glory<br />
-Lingers upon the left of night<br />
-Till dawn delights the meadows hoary.<br />
-<br />
-And by the lakes the skies are white,<br />
-(Oh, the delight!) when swans are coming,<br />
-Among the flowers sweet joy-bells peal,<br />
-And quick bees wheel in drowsy humming.<br />
-<br />
-The squirrel leaves her dusty house<br />
-And in the boughs makes fearless gambol,<br />
-And, falling down in fire-drops, red,<br />
-The fruit is shed from every bramble.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
-<br />
-Then, gathered all about the trees<br />
-Glad galaxies of youth are dancing,<br />
-Treading the perfume of the flowers,<br />
-Filling the hours with mazy glancing.<br />
-<br />
-And when the dance is done, the trees<br />
-Are left to Peace and the brown woodpecker,<br />
-And on the western slopes of sky<br />
-The day's blue eye begins to flicker.<br />
-<br />
-But at the sighing of the leaves,<br />
-When all earth grieves for lights departed<br />
-An ancient and a sad desire<br />
-Steals in to tire the human-hearted.<br />
-<br />
-No fairy aid can save them now<br />
-Nor turn their prow upon the ocean,<br />
-The hundred years that missed each heart<br />
-Above them start their wheels in motion.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
-<br />
-And so our loves are lost, she sighed,<br />
-And far and wide we seek new treasure,<br />
-For who on Time or Timeless hills<br />
-Can live the ills of loveless leisure?<br />
-<br />
-("Fairer than Usna's youngest son,<br />
-O, my poor one, what flower-bed holds you?<br />
-Or, wrecked upon the shores of home,<br />
-What wave of foam with white enfolds you?<br />
-<br />
-"You rode with kings on hills of green,<br />
-And lovely queens have served you banquet,<br />
-Sweet wine from berries bruised they brought<br />
-And shyly sought the lips which drank it.<br />
-<br />
-"But in your dim grave of the sea<br />
-There shall not be a friend to love you.<br />
-And ever heedless of your loss<br />
-The earth ships cross the storms above you.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
-<br />
-"And still the chase goes on, and still<br />
-The wine shall spill, and vacant places<br />**
-Be given over to the new<br />
-As love untrue keeps changing faces.<br />
-<br />
-"And I must wander with my song<br />
-Far from the young till Love returning,<br />
-Brings me the beautiful reward<br />
-Of some heart stirred by my long yearning.")<br />
-<br />
-Friend, have you heard a bird lament<br />
-When sleet is sent for April weather?<br />
-As beautiful she told her grief,<br />
-As down through leaf and flower I led her.<br />
-<br />
-And friend, could I remain unstirred<br />
-Without a word for such a sorrow?<br />
-Say, can the lark forget the cloud<br />
-When poppies shroud the seeded furrow?<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
-<br />
-Like a poor widow whose late grief<br />
-Seeks for relief in lonely byeways,<br />
-The moon, companionless and dim,<br />
-Took her dull rim through starless highways.<br />
-<br />
-I was too weak with dreams to feel<br />
-Enchantment steal with guilt upon me,<br />
-She slipped, a flower upon the wind,<br />
-And laughed to find how she had won me.<br />
-<br />
-From hill to hill, from land to land,<br />
-Her lovely hand is beckoning for me,<br />
-I follow on through dangerous zones,<br />
-Cross dead men's bones and oceans stormy.<br />
-<br />
-Some day I know she'll wait at last<br />
-And lock me fast in white embraces,<br />
-And down mysterious ways of love<br />
-We two shall move to fairy places.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Belgium,</i><br />
-<i>July, 1917.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
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