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THE  LIBRARY 

OF 

THE  UNIVERSITY 

OF  CALIFORNIA 

LOS  ANGELES 


Digitized  by  \he  Internet  Archive 

in  2007  with  funding  from 

IVIicrosoft  Corporation 


http://www.archive.org/details/foliagevariouspoOOdaviiala 


FOLIAGE 


By  the  Same  Writer 

THE  SOUL'S  DESTROYER  AND  OTHER 
POEMS 

Wrappers,  Ij.  nett ;  postage,  \d. 


NEW   POEMS 
Cloth,  IS.  6d.  nett  ;  postage,  xiJ. 

NATURE   POEMS,   AND    OTHERS 
Grey  Boards,  is.  nett;  postage,  lj</. 

FAREWELL  TO   POESY 
Grey  Boards,  is.  nett ;  postage,  lid. 

SONGS   OF  JOY 
2s.  Cd. 


FOLIAGE 

VARIOUS    POEMS 

BY 

WILLIAM    H.   DAVIES 


LONDON 

ELKIN   MATHEWS,   CORK  STREET 

1913 


v^^ 


The  Author  thanks  the  editors  of  the  folloTving  magazines 
for  permission  to  reprint  these  poems :  The  English 
Review,  Nation,  Westminster  Gazette,  New 
Statesman,  Nash's,  Vineyard  and  the  Odd 
Volume. 


860981 


^/T 

^  007 

J^ZSa 

CONTENTS                     ^ 

Vkgb. 
Thunderstorms 9 

Strong  Moments  . 

10 

A  Greeting  . 

II 

Sweet  Stay-at-Home   . 

12 

The  Starved 

14 

A  May  Morning  . 

15 

The  Lonely  Dreamer 

16 

Christmas    . 

17 

Laughing  Rose    . 

19 

Seeking  Joy 

20 

The  Old  Oak  Tree  •  . 

21 

Poor  Kings  . 

23 

Love  and  the  Muse    . 

24 

My  Youth    . 

25 

Smiles  . 

26 

Mad  Poll     . 

27 

Joy  Supreme 

28 

Francis  Thompson 

29 

The  Bird-Man 

31 

Winter's  Beauty 

32 

The  Church  Organ 

33 

Heigh  ho,  the  Rain 

33 

Love's  Inspiration 

34 

Night  Wanderers 

•        35 

Young  Beauty 

.        36 

CONTENTS 

Pack 

Who  I  Know 37 

Sweet  Birds,  I  Come   . 

38 

The  Two  Lives    . 

39 

Hidden  Love 

40 

Life  is  Jolly 

41 

The  Fog 

42 

A  Woman's  Charms 

43 

Dreams  of  the  Sea     . 

44 

The  Wonder-maker     . 

46 

The  Helpless 

47 

An  Early  Love   . 

48 

Dream  Tragedies 

49 

Children  at  Play 

50 

When  the  Cuckoo  Sings 

51 

Return  to  Nature 

52 

A  Strange  City  . 

59 

THUNDERSTORMS 

My  mind  has  thunderstorms, 
That  brood  for  heavy  hours  : 

Until  they  rain  me  words, 

My  thoughts  are  drooping  flowers 

And  sulking,  silent  birds. 

Yet  come,  dark  thunderstorms. 
And  brood  your  heavy  hours  ; 

For  when  you  rain  me  words, 
My  thoughts  are  dancing  flowers 

And  joyful  singing  birds. 


STRONG   MOMENTS 

Sometimes  I  hear  fine  ladies  sing, 

Sometimes  I  smoke  and  drink  with  men ; 

Sometimes  I  play  at  games  of  cards — 
Judge  me  to  be  no  strong  man  then. 

The  strongest  moment  of  my  life 
Is  when  I  think  about  the  poor ; 

When,  like  a  spring  that  rain  has  fed, 
My  pity  rises  more  and  more. 

The  flower  that  loves  the  warmth  and  light, 
Has  all  its  mornings  bathed  in  dew ; 

My  heart  has  moments  wet  with  tears, 
My  weakness  is  they  are  so  few. 


lO 


A  GREETING 

Good  morning,  Life — and  all 
Things  glad  and  beautiful. 
My  pockets  nothing  hold, 
But  he  that  owns  the  gold, 
The  Sun,  is  my  great  friend — • 
His  spending  has  no  end. 

Hail  to  the  morning  sky, 

Which  bright  clouds  measure  high ; 

Hail  to  you  birds  whose  throats 

Would  number  leaves  by  notes ; 

Hail  to  you  shady  bowers, 

And  you  green  fields  of  flowers. 

Hail  to  you  women  fair. 
That  make  a  show  so  rare 
In  cloth  as  white  as  milk — 
Be't  calico  or  silk  : 
Good  morning.  Life — and  all 
Things  glad  and  beautiful. 


II 


SWEET  STAY-AT-HOME 

Sweet  Stay-at-Home,  sweet  Well-content, 
Thou  knowest  of  no  strange  continent : 
Thou  hast  not  felt  thy  bosom  keep 
A  gentle  motion  with  the  deep ; 
Thou  hast  not  sailed  in  Indian  seas, 
Where  scent  comes  forth  in  every  breeze. 
Thou  hast  not  seen  the  rich  grape  grow 
For  miles,  as  far  as  eyes  can  go ; 
Thou  hast  not  seen  a  summer's  night 
When  maids  could  sew  by  a  worm's  light; 
Nor  the  North  Sea  in  spring  send  out 
Bright  hues  that  like  birds  flit  about 
In  solid  cages  of  white  ice — 
Sweet  Stay-at-Home,  sweet  Love-one-place. 
Thou  hast  not  seen  black  fingers  pick 
White  cotton  when  the  bloom  is  thick, 
Nor  heard  black  throats  in  harmony ; 
Nor  hast  thou  sat  on  stones  that  lie 
Flat  on  the  earth,  that  once  did  rise 
To  hide  proud  kings  from  common  eyes, 
Thou  hast  not  seen  plains  full  of  bloom 
Where  green  things  had  such  little  room 


SWEET  STAY-AT-HOME 

They  pleased  the  eye  like  fairer  flowers — 
Sweet  Stay-at-Home,  all  these  long  hours. 
Sweet  Well-content,  sweet  Love-one-place, 
Sweet,  simple  maid,  bless  thy  dear  face ; 
For  thou  hast  made  more  homely  stuff 
Nurture  thy  gentle  self  enough ; 
I  love  thee  for  a  heart  that's  kind — 
Not  for  the  knowledge  in  thy  mind. 


13 


THE    STARVED 

My  little  Lamb,  what  is  amiss  ? 
If  there  was  milk  in  mother's  kiss, 
You  would  not  look  as  white  as  this. 

The  wolf  of  Hunger,  it  is  he 
That  takes  away  thy  milk  from  me, 
And  I  have  much  to  do  for  thee. 
If  thou  couldst  live  on  love,  I  know 
No  babe  in  all  the  land  could  show 
More  rosy  cheeks  and  louder  crow. 

Thy  father's  dead,  Alas  for  thee  : 
I  cannot  keep  this  wolf  from  me, 
That  takes  thy  milk  so  bold  and  free. 

If  thy  dear  father  lived,  he'd  drive 

Away  this  beast  with  whom  I  strive, 

And  thou,  my  pretty  Lamb,  wouldst  thrive. 

Ah,  my  poor  babe,  my  love's  so  great 
I'd  swallow  common  rags  for  meat — 
If  they  could  make  milk  rich  and  sweet. 

My  little  Lamb,  what  is  amiss  ? 
Come,  I  must  wake  thee  with  a  kiss, 
For  Death  would  own  a  sleep  like  this. 
14 


A  MAY  MORNING 

The  sky  is  clear, 
The  sun  is  bright ; 

The  cows  are  red, 
The  sheep  are  white ; 

Trees  in  the  meadows 

Make  happy  shadows. 

Birds  in  the  hedge 

Are  perched  and  sing  ; 
Swallows  and  larks 

Are  on  the  wing  : 
Two  merry  cuckoos 
Are  making  echoes. 

Bird  and  the  beast 
Have  the  dew  yet ; 

My  road  shines  dry. 
Theirs  bright  and  wet : 

Death  gives  no  warning, 

On  this  May  morning. 

I  see  no  Christ 

Nailed  on  a  tree, 
Dying  for  sin ; 

No  sin  I  see : 
No  thoughts  for  sadness, 
All  thoui;,hts  for  gladness. 

15 


THE  LONELY  DREAMER 

He  lives  his  lonely  life,  and  when  he  dies 
A  thousand  hearts  maybe  will  utter  sighs ; 
Because  they  liked  his  songs,  and  now  their  bird 
Sleeps  with  his  head  beneath  his  wing,  unheard. 

But  what  kind  hand  will  tend  his  grave,  and 

bring 
Those  blossoms  there,  of  which  he  used  to  sing  ? 
Who'll  kiss  his  mound,  and  wish  the  time  would 

come 
To  lie  with  him  inside  that  silent  tomb  ? 

And  who'll  forget  the  dreamer's  skill,  and  shed 
A  tear  because  a  loving  heart  is  dead  ? 
Heigh  ho  for  gossip  then,  and  common  sighs — 
And  let  his  death  bring  tears  in  no  one's  eyes. 


i6 


CHRISTMAS 

Christmas  has  come,  let's  eat  and  drink — 
This  is  no  time  to  sit  and  think  ; 
Farewell  to  study,  books  and  pen. 
And  welcome  to  all  kinds  of  men. 
Let  all  men  now  get  rid  of  care. 
And  what  one  has  let  others  share  ; 
Then  'tis  the  same,  no  matter  which 
Of  us  is  poor,  or  which  is  rich. 
Let  each  man  have  enough  this  day. 
Since  those  that  can  are  glad  to  pay ; 
There's  nothing  now  too  rich  or  good 
For  poor  men,  not  the  King's  own  food. 
Now  like  a  singing  bird  my  feet 
Touch  earth,  and  I  must  drink  and  eat. 
Welcome  to  all  men  :  I'll  not  care 
What  any  of  my  fellows  wear ; 
We'll  not  let  cloth  divide  our  souls. 
They'll  swim  stark  naked  in  the  bowls. 
Welcome,  poor  beggar  :  I'll  not  see 
That  hand  of  yours  dislodge  a  flea, — - 
While  you  sit  at  my  side  and  beg. 
Or  right  foot  scratching  your  left  leg. 
Farewell  restraint :  we  will  not  now 

17  c 


CHRISTMAS 

Measure  the  ale  our  brains  allow, 

But  drink  as  much  as  we  can  hold. 

We'll  count  no  change  when  we  spend  gold ; 

This  is  no  time  to  save,  but  spend. 

To  give  for  nothing,  not  to  lend. 

Let  foes  make  friends :  let  them  forget 

The  mischief-making  dead  that  fret 

The  living  with  complaint  like  this  — 

"  He  wronged  us  once,  hate  him  and  his." 

Christmas  has  come  ;  let  every  man 

Eat,  drink,  be  merry  all  he  can. 

Ale's  my  best  mark,  but  if  port  wine 

Or  whisky's  yours — let  it  be  mine ; 

No  matter  what  lies  in  the  bowls, 

We'll  make  it  rich  with  our  own  souls. 

Farewell  to  study,  books  and  pen, 

And  welcome  to  all  kinds  of  men. 


i8 


LAUGHING   ROSE 

If  I  were  gusty  April  now, 

How  I  would  blow  at  laughing  Rose ; 
I'd  make  her  ribbons  slip  their  knots, 

And  all  her  hair  come  loose. 

If  I  were  merry  April  now, 

How  I  would  pelt  her  cheeks  with  showers  ; 
I'd  make  carnations,  rich  and  warm. 

Of  her  vermilion  flowers. 

Since  she  will  laugh  in  April's  face, 
No  matter  how  he  rains  or  blows — 

Then  O  that  I  wild  April  were, 
To  play  with  laughing  Rose. 


19  c  2 


SEEKING  JOY 

Joy,  how  I  sought  thee  ! 

Silver  1  spent  and  gold, 

On  the  pleasures  of  this  world, 

In  splendid  garments  clad ; 
The  wine  I  drank  was  sweet, 
Rich  morsels  I  did  eat — 

Oh,  but  my  life  was  sad ! 
Joy,  how  I  sought  thee  ! 

Joy,  I  have  found  thee  ! 
Far  from  the  halls  of  Mirth, 
Back  to  the  soft  green  earth. 

Where  people  are  not  many  ; 
I  find  thee,  Joy,  in  hours 
With  clouds,  and  birds,  and  flowers- 

Thou  dost  not  charge  one  penny. 
Joy,  I  have  found  thee  ! 


THE   OLD   OAK  TREE 

I  SIT  beneath  your  leaves,  old  oak, 
You  mighty  one  of  all  the  trees ; 

Within  whose  hollow  trunk  a  man 
Could  stable  his  big  horse  with  ease. 

I  see  your  knuckles  hard  and  strong, 
But  have  no  fear  they'll  come  to  blows ; 

Your  life  is  long,  and  mine  is  short, 

But  which  has  known  the  greater  woes  ? 

Thou  has  not  seen  starved  women  here, 
Or  man  gone  mad  because  ill-fed — 

Who  stares  at  stones  in  city  streets. 
Mistaking  them  for  hunks  of  bread. 

Thou  hast  not  felt  the  shivering  backs 
Of  homeless  children  lying  down 

And  sleeping  in  the  cold,  night  air — 
Like  doors  and  walls  in  London  town. 

Knowing  thou  hast  not  known  such  shame. 
And  only  storms  have  come  thy  way, 

Methinks  I  could  in  comfort  spend 
My  summer  with  thee,  day  by  day. 

21 


THE  OLD  OAK  TREE 

To  lie  by  day  in  thy  green  shade, 
And  in  thy  hollow  rest  at  night ; 

And  through  the  open  doorway  see 
The  stars  turn  over  leaves  of  light. 


22 


POOR  KINGS 

God's  pity  on  poor  kings, 

They  know  no  gentle  rest ; 
The  North  and  South  cry  out, 

Cries  come  from  East  and  West — 
"  Come,  open  this  new  Dock, 

Building,  Bazaar  or  Fair." 
Lord,  what  a  wretched  life 

Such  men  must  bear. 

They're  followed,  watched  and  spied. 

No  liberty  they  know ; 
Some  eye  will  watch  them  still, 

No  matter  where  they  go. 
When  in  green  lanes  I  muse. 

Alone,  and  hear  birds  sing, 
God's  pity  then,  say  I, 

On  some  poor  king. 


23 


LOVE   AND   THE   MUSE 

My  back  is  turned  on  Spring  and  all  her  flowers, 
The  birds  no  longer  charm  from  tree  to  tree ; 

The  cuckoo  had  his  home  in  this  green  world 
Ten  days  before  his  voice  was  heard  by  me. 

Had  I  an  answer  from  a  dear  one's  lips, 

My  love  of  life  would  soon  regain  its  power  ; 

And  suckle  my  sweet  dreams,  that  tug  my  heart. 
And  whimper  to  be  nourished  every  hour. 

Give  me  that  answer  now,  and  then  my  Muse, 
That  for  my  sweet  life's  sake  must  never  die, 

Will  rise  like  that  great  wave  that  leaps  and 
hangs 
The  sea-weed  on  a  vessel's  mast-top  high. 


24 


MY  YOUTH 

My  youth  was  my  old  age, 

Weary  and  long ; 
It  had  too  many  cares 

To  think  of  song  ; 
My  moulting  days  all  came 

When  I  was  young. 

Now,  in  life's  prime,  my  soul 
Comes  out  in  flower ; 

Late,  as  with  Robin,  comes 
My  singing  power ; 

I  was  not  born  to  joy 
Till  this  late  hour. 


■^5 


SMILES 

I  SAW  a  black  girl  once, 

As  black  as  winter's  night ; 
Till  through  her  parted  lips 

There  came  a  flood  of  light ; 
It  was  the  milky  way 

Across  her  face  so  black  : 
Her  two  lips  closed  again, 

And  night  came  back. 

I  see  a  maiden  now, 

Fair  as  a  summer's  day  ; 
Yet  through  her  parted  lips 

I  see  the  milky  way ; 
It  makes  the  broad  daylight 

In  summer  time  look  black : 
Her  two  lips  close  again, 

And  night  comes  back. 


26 


MAD   POLL 

There  goes  mad  Poll,  dressed  in  wild  flowers, 
Poor,  crazy  Poll,  now  old  and  wan  ; 

Her  hair  all  down,  like  any  child  : 
She  swings  her  two  arms  like  a  man. 

Poor,  crazy  Poll  is  never  sad. 

She  never  misses  one  that  dies ; 
When  neighbours  show  their  new-bom  babes, 

They  seem  familiar  to  her  eyes. 

Her  bonnet's  always  in  her  hand. 
Or  on  the  ground,  and  lying  near ; 

She  thinks  it  is  a  thing  for  play. 
Or  pretty  show,  and  not  to  wear. 

She  gives  the  sick  no  sympathy. 

She  never  soothes  a  child  that  cries  ; 

She  never  whimpers,  night  or  day. 

She  makes  no  moans,  she  makes  no  sighs. 

She  talks  about  some  battle  old. 
Fought  many  a  day  from  yesterday ; 

And  when  that  war  is  done,  her  love — 
•*  Ha,  ha !  "  Poll  laughs,  and  skips  away. 
27 


JOY  SUPREME 

The  birds  are  pirates  of  her  notes, 

The  blossoms  steal  her  face's  light ; 
The  stars  in  ambush  lie  all  day, 

To  take  her  glances  for  the  night. 
Her  voice  can  shame  rain-pelted  leaves  ; 

Young  robin  has  no  notes  as  sweet 
In  autumn,  when  the  air  is  still. 

And  all  the  other  birds  are  mute. 

When  I  set  eyes  on  ripe,  red  plums 

That  seem  a  sin  and  shame  to  bite. 
Such  are  her  lips,  which  I  would  kiss, 

And  still  would  keep  before  my  sight. 
When  I  behold  proud  gossamer 

Make  silent  billows  in  the  air, 
Then  think  I  of  her  head's  fine  stuff, 

Finer  than  gossamer's,  I  swear. 

The  miser  has  his  joy,  with  gold 

Beneath  his  pillow  in  the  night ; 
My  head  shall  lie  on  soft  warm  hair, 

And  miser's  know  not  that  delight. 
Captains  that  own  their  ships  can  boast 

Their  joy  to  feel  the  rolling  brine — 
But  I  shall  lie  near  her,  and  feel 

Her  soft  warm  bosom  swell  on  mine 
28 


FRANCIS  THOMPSON 

Thou  hadst  no  home,  and  thou  couldst  see 
In  every  street  the  windows'  light : 
Dragging  thy  limbs  about  all  night, 

No  window  kept  a  light  for  thee. 

However  much  thou  wert  distressed, 
Or  tired  of  moving,  and  felt  sick, 
Thy  life  was  on  the  open  deck — • 

Thou  hadst  no  cabin  for  thy  rest. 

Thy  barque  was  helpless  'neath  the  sky, 
No  pilot  thought  thee  worth  his  pains 
To  guide  for  love  or  money  gains — 

Like  phantom  ships  the  rich  sailed  by. 

Thy  shadow  mocked  thee  night  and  day. 

Thy  life's  companion,  it  alone; 

It  did  not  sigh,  it  did  not  moan, 
But  mocked  tliy  moves  in  every  way. 

In  spite  of  all,  the  mind  had  force, 
And,  like  a  stream  whose  surface  flows 
The  wrong  way  when  a  strong  wind  blows 

It  underneath  maintained  its  course. 
29 


FRANCIS   THOMPSON 

Oft  didst  thou  think  thy  mind  would  flower 
Too  late  for  good,  as  some  bruised  tree 
That  blooms  in  Autumn,  and  we  see 

Fruit  not  worth  picking,  hard  and  sour. 

Some  poets  feign  their  wounds  and  scars. 
If  they  had  known  real  suffering  hours, 
They'd  show,  in  place  of  Fancy's  flowers. 

More  of  Imagination's  stars. 

So,  if  thy  fruits  of  Poesy 
Are  rich,  it  is  at  this  dear  cost — 
That  they  were  nipt  by  Sorrow's  frost, 

In  nights  of  homeless  misery. 


30 


THE  BIRD-MAN 

Man  is  a  bird  : 

He  rises  on  fine  wings 
Into  the  Heaven's  clear  light ; 

He  flies  away  and  sings — 
There's  music  in  his  flight. 

Man  is  a  bird  : 

In  swiftest  speed  he  burns, 
With  twist  and  dive  and  leap ; 

A  bird  whose  sudden  turns 
Can  drive  the  frightened  sheep. 

Man  is  a  bird  : 

Over  the  mountain  high, 
Whose  head  is  in  the  skies, 

Cut  from  its  shoulder  by 
A  cloud — the  bird-man  flies. 

Man  is  a  bird : 

Eagles  from  mountain  crag 
Swooped  down  to  prove  his  worth ; 

But  now  they  rise  to  drag 
Him  down  from  Heaven  to  earth  ! 
31 


WINTER'S   BEAUTY 

Is  it  not  fine  to  walk  in  spring, 
When  leaves  are  born,  and  hear  birds  sing  ? 
And  when  they  lose  their  singing  powers, 
In  summer,  watch  the  bees  at  flowers  ? 
Is  it  not  fine,  when  summer's  past, 
To  have  the  leaves,  no  longer  fast, 
Biting  my  heel  where'er  I  go. 
Or  dancing  lightly  on  my  toe? 
Now  winter's  here  and  rivers  freeze ; 
As  I  walk  out  I  see  the  trees, 
Wherein  the  pretty  squirrels  sleep. 
All  standing  in  the  snow  so  deep : 
And  every  twig,  however  small. 
Is  blossomed  white  and  beautiful. 
Then  welcome,  winter,  with  thy  power 
To  make  this  tree  a  big  white  flower ; 
To  make  this  tree  a  lovely  sight, 
With  fifty  brown  arms  draped  in  white. 
While  thousands  of  siuall  fingers  show 
In  soft  white  gloves  of  purest  snow. 


32 


THE  CHURCH  ORGAN 

The  homeless  man  has  heard  thy  voice, 
Its  sound  doth  move  his  memory  deep ; 

He  stares  bewildered,  as  a  man 

That's  shook  by  earthquake  in  his  sleep. 

Thy  solemn  voice  doth  bring  to  mind 
The  days  that  are  forever  gone  : 

Thou  bringest  to  mind  our  early  days. 
Ere  we  made  second  homes  or  none. 


HEIGH   HO,   THE   RAIN 

The  Lark  that  in  heaven  dim 
Can  match  a  rainy  hour 
With  his  own  music's  shower, 

Can  make  me  sing  like  him — 
Heigh  ho  !     The  rain  ! 

Sing — when  a  Nightingale 

Pours  forth  her  own  sweet  soul 
To  hear  dread  thunder  roll 

Into  a  tearful  tale — 
Heigh  ho  !     The  rain  ! 

33  D 


HEIGH   HO,   THE  RAIN 

Sing — when  a  Sparrow's  seen 

Trying  to  lie  at  rest 

By  pressing  his  warm  breast 
To  leaves  so  wet  and  green — 

Heigh  ho  !     The  rain  ! 


LOVE'S   INSPIRATION 

Give  me  the  chance,  and  I  will  make 

Thy  thoughts  of  me,  like  worms  this  day, 
Take  wings  and  change  to  butterflies 

That  in  the  golden  light  shall  play ; 
Thy  cold,  clear  heart — the  quiet  pool 

That  never  heard  Love's  nightingale — 
Shall  hear  his  music  night  and  day, 

And  in  no  seasons  shall  it  fail. 

I'll  make  thy  happy  heart  my  port, 

\\Tiere  all  my  thoughts  are  anchored  fast ; 
Thy  meditations,  full  of  praise, 

The  flags  of  glory  on  each  mast. 
I'll  make  my  Soul  thy  shepherd  soon. 

With  all  thy  thoughts  my  grateful  flock  ; 
And  thou  shalt  say,  each  time  I  go — 

How  long,  my  Love,  ere  thou'lt  come  back  ? 
34 


NIGHT  WANDERERS 

They  hear  the  bell  of  midnight  toll, 
And  shiver  in  their  flesh  and  soul ; 
They  lie  on  hard,  cold  wood  or  stone, 
Iron,  and  ache  in  every  bone ; 
They  hate  the  night :  they  see  no  eyes 
Of  loved  ones  in  the  starlit  skies. 
They  see  the  cold,  dark  water  near ; 
They  dare  not  take  long  looks  for  fear 
They'll  fall  like  those  poor  birds  that  see 
A  snake's  eyes  staring  at  their  tree. 
Some  of  them  laugh,  half-mad  ;  and  some 
All  through  the  chilly  night  are  dumb ; 
Like  poor,  weak  infants  some  converse, 
And  cough  like  giants,  deep  and  hoarse. 


35  D  2 


YOUNG   BEAUTY 

When  at  each  door  the  ruffian  winds 
Have  laid  a  dying  man  to  groan, 

And  filled  the  air  on  winter  nights 
With  cries  of  infants  left  alone ; 

And  every  thing  that  has  a  bed 

Will  sigh  for  others  that  have  none  : 

On  such  a  night,  when  bitter  cold. 

Young  Beauty,  full  of  love  thoughts  sweet. 

Can  redden  in  her  looking-glass ; 
With  but  one  gown  on,  in  bare  feet, 

She  from  her  own  reflected  charms 
Can  feel  the  joy  of  summer's  heat. 


36 


WHO   I    KNOW 

I  DO  not  know  his  grace  the  Duke, 
Outside  whose  gilded  gate  there  died 

Of  want  a  feeble,  poor  old  man. 
With  but  his  shadow  at  his  side. 

I  do  not  know  his  Lady  fair, 

Who  in  a  bath  of  milk  doth  lie ; 
More  milk  than  could  feed  fifty  babes, 

That  for  the  want  of  it  must  die. 

But  well  I  know  the  mother  poor. 

Three  pounds  of  flesh  wrapped  in  her  shawl 
A  puny  babe  that,  stripped  at  home. 

Looks  like  a  rabbit  skinned,  so  small. 

And  well  I  know  the  homeless  waif, 

Fed  by  the  poorest  of  the  poor ; 
Since  I  have  seen  that  child  alone, 

Crying  against  a  bolted  door. 


37 


SWEET  BIRDS,   I   COME 

The  bird  that  now 

On  bush  and  tree, 
Near  leaves  so  green 

Looks  down  to  see 
Flowers  looking  up — 

He  either  sings 
In  ecstasy 

Or  claps  his  wings. 

Why  should  I  slave 

For  finer  dress 
Or  ornaments ; 

Will  flowers  smile  less 
For  rags  than  silk  ? 

Are  birds  less  dumb 
For  tramp  than  squire  ? 

Sweet  birds,  I  come. 


3S 


THE  TWO   LIVES 

Now  how  could  I,  with  gold  to  spare, 
Who  know  the  harlot's  arms,  and  wine, 

Sit  in  this  green  field  all  alone, 
If  Nature  was  not  truly  mine  ? 

That  Pleasure  life  wakes  stale  at  morn. 
From  heavy  sleep  that  no  rest  brings : 

This  life  of  quiet  joy  wakes  fresh, 

And  claps  its  wings  at  mom,  and  sings. 

So  here  sit  I,  alone  till  noon. 

In  one  long  dream  of  quiet  bliss ; 

I  hear  the  lark  and  share  his  joy, 

With  no  more  winedrops  than  were  his. 

Such,  Nature,  is  thy  charm  and  power — 
Since  I  have  made  the  Muse  my  wife — • 

To  keep  me  from  the  harlot's  arms. 
And  save  me  from  a  drunkard's  life. 


39 


HIDDEN   LOVE 

The  bird  of  Fortune  sings  when  free, 
But  captured,  soon  grows  dumb  ;  and  we. 
To  hear  his  fast  declining  powers, 
Must  soon  forget  that  he  is  ours. 
So,  when  I  win  that  maid,  no  doubt 
Love  soon  will  seem  to  be  half  out ; 
Like  bhghted  leaves  drooped  to  the  ground, 
Whose  roots  are  still  untouched  and  sound. 
So  will  our  love's  root  still  be  strong 
When  others  think  the  leaves  go  wrong. 
Though  we  may  quarrel,  'twill  not  prove 
That  she  and  I  are  less  in  love  ; 
The  parrot,  though  he  mocked  the  dove, 
Died  when  she  died,  and  proved  his  love. 
When  merry  springtime  comes,  we  hear 
How  all  things  into  love  must  stir ; 
How  birds  would  rather  sing  than  eat. 
How  joyful  sheep  would  rather  bleat : 
And  daffodils  nod  heads  of  gold. 
And  dance  in  April's  sparkling  cold. 
So  in  our  early  love  did  we 
Dance  much  and  skip,  and  laugh  with  glee : 
But  let  none  think  our  love  is  flown 
If,  when  we're  married,  little's  shown  : 
E'en  though  our  lips  be  dumb  of  song, 
Our  hearts  can  still  be  singing  strong. 
40 


LIFE  IS  JOLLY 

This  life  is  jolly,  O  ! 

I  envy  no  man's  lot ; 
My  eyes  can  much  admire, 

And  still  my  heart  crave  not ; 
There's  no  true  joy  in  gold. 

It  breeds  desire  for  more ; 
Whatever  wealth  man  has, 

Desire  can  keep  him  poor. 

This  life  is  jolly,  O  ! 

Power  has  his  fawning  slaves, 
But  if  he  rests  his  mind. 

Those  wretches  turn  bold  knaves. 
Fame's  field  is  full  of  flowers, 

It  dazzles  as  we  pass. 
But  men  who  walk  that  field 

Starve  for  the  common  grass. 

This  life  is  jolly,  O  ! 

I^et  others  know  they  die, 
Enough  to  know  I  live. 

And  make  no  question  why ; 
I  care  not  whence  I  came, 

Nor  whither  I  shall  go ; 
Let  others  think  of  these — 

This  life  is  jolly,  O  ! 
41 


THE   FOG 

I  SAW  the  fog  grow  thick, 

Which  soon  made  blind  my  ken  ; 
It  made  tall  men  of  boys, 

And  giants  of  tall  men. 

It  clutched  my  throat,  I  coughed ; 

Nothing  was  in  my  head 
Except  two  heavy  eyes 

Like  balls  of  burning  lead. 

And  when  it  grew  so  black 
That  I  could  know  no  place, 

I  lost  all  judgment  then, 
Of  distance  and  of  space. 

The  street  lamps,  and  the  lights 

Upon  the  halted  cars. 
Could  either  be  on  earth 

Or  be  the  heavenly  stars. 

A  man  passed  by  me  close, 

I  asked  my  way,  he  said, 
"  Come,  follow  me,  my  friend  " — 

I  followed  where  he  led. 

He  rapped  the  stones  in  front, 

"  Trust  me,"  he  said,  "  and  come  " ; 

I  followed  like  a  child — 
A  blind  man  led  me  home. 

42 


A  WOMAN'S   CHARMS 

My  purse  is  yours,  Sweet  Heart,  for  I 
Can  count  no  coins  with  you  close  by ; 
I  scorn  like  sailors  them,  when  they 
Have  drawn  on  shore  their  deep-sea  pay ; 
Only  my  thoughts  I  value  now, 
Which,  like  the  simple  glowworms,  throw 
Their  beams  to  greet  thee  bravely,  I.ove — 
Their  glorious  light  in  Heaven  above. 
Since  I  have  felt  thy  waves  of  light. 
Beating  against  my  soul,  the  sight 
Of  gems  from  Afric's  continent 
Move  me  to  no  great  wonderment. 
Since  I,  Sweet  Heart,  have  known  thine  hair. 
The  fur  of  ermine,  sable,  bear, 
Or  silver  fox,  for  me  can  keep 
No  more  to  praise  than  common  sheep. 
Though  ten  Isaiahs'  souls  were  mine, 
They  could  not  sing  such  charms  as  thine. 
Two  little  hands  that  show  wiih  pride. 
Two  timid,  little  feet  that  hide ; 
Two  eyes  no  dark  Senoras  show 
Their  burning  like  in  Mexico ; 
Two  coral  gates  wherein  is  shown 
43 


A  woman's  charms 

Your  queen  of  charms,  on  a  white  throne ; 
Your  queen  of  charms,  the  lovely  smile 
That  on  its  white  throne  could  beguile 
The  mastiff  from  his  gates  in  hell ; 
Who  by  no  whine  or  bark  could  tell 
His  masters  what  thing  made  him  go — 
And  countless  other  charms  I  know. 
October's  hedge  has  far  less  hues 
Than  thou  hast  charms  from  which  to  choose. 


DREAMS   OF  THE  SEA 

I  KNOW  not  why  I  yearn  for  thee  again. 
To  sail  once  more  upon  thy  fickle  flood  ; 

I'll  hear  thy  waves  wash  under  my  death-bed, 
Thy  salt  is  lodged  forever  in  my  blood. 

Yet  I  have  seen  thee  lash  the  vessel's  sides 
In  fury,  with  thy  many  tailed  whip; 

And  I  have  seen  thee,  too,  like  Galilee, 

When  Jesus  walked  in  peace  to  Simon's  ship 

And  I  have  seen  thy  gentle  breeze  as  soft 
As  summer's,  when  it  makes   the  cornfields 
run; 
And  I  have  seen  thy  rude  and  lusty  gale 

Make  ships  show  half  their  bellies  to  the  sun. 
44 


DREAMS   OF   THE   SEA 

Thou  knowest  the  way  to  tame  the  wildest  life, 
Thou  knowest  the  way  to  bend  the  great  and 
proud  : 
I  think  of  that  Armada  whose  puffed  sails, 
Greedy   and   large,   came   swallowing   every 
cloud. 

But    I    have    seen    the    sea-boy,    young    and 
drowned, 

Lying  on  shore  and,  by  thy  cruel  hand, 
A  seaweed  beard  was  on  his  tender  chin, 

His     heaven-blue     eyes     were     filled     with 
common  sand. 
And  yet,  for  all,  I  yearn  for  thee  again, 

To  sail  once  more  upon  thy  fickle  flood  : 
I'll  hear  thy  waves  wash  under  my  death-bed, 

Thy  salt  is  lodged  forever  in  my  blood. 


45 


THE  WONDER  MAKER 

Come,  if  thou'rt  cold  to  Summer's  charms, 
Her  clouds  of  green,  her  starry  flowers, 

And  let  this  bird,  this  wandering  bird. 
Make  his  fine  wonder  yours ; 

He,  hiding  in  the  leaves  so  green. 

When  sampling  this  fair  world  of  ours, 

Cries  cuckoo,  clear ;  and  like  Lot's  wife, 

I  look,  though  it  should  cost  my  Ufe. 

When  I  can  hear  that  charmed  one's  voice, 

I  taste  of  immortality ; 
My  joy's  so  great  that  on  my  heart 

Doth  lie  eternity. 
As  light  as  any  little  flower — 

So  strong  a  wonder  works  in  me ; 
Cuckoo  !  he  cries,  and  fills  my  soul 
With  all  that's  rich  and  beautiful. 


46 


THE  HELPLESS 

Those  poor,  heartbroken  wretches,  doomed 
To  hear  at  night  the  clocks*  hard  tones ; 

They  have  no  beds  to  warm  their  Hmbs, 

But  with  those  Hmbs  must  warm  cold  stones ; 

Those    poor   weak    men,   whose    coughs    and 
ailings 

Force  them  to  tear  at  iron  railings. 

Those  helpless  men  that  starve,  my  pity ; 

Whose  waking  day  is  never  done  ; 
Who,  save  for  their  own  shadows,  are 

Doomed  night  and  day  to  walk  alone  : 
They  know  no  bright  face  but  the  sun's, 
So  cold  and  dark  are  human  ones. 


47 


AN   EARLY   LOVE 

Ah,  sweet  young  blood,  that  makes  the  heart 

So  full  of  joy,  and  light, 
That  dying  children  dance  with  it 

From  early  morn  till  night. 

My  dreams  were  blossoms,  hers  the  fruit. 

She  was  my  dearest  care ; 
With  gentle  hand,  and  for  it,  I 

Made  playthings  of  her  hair. 

I  made  my  fingers  rings  of  gold, 

And  bangles  for  my  wrist ; 
You  should  have  felt  the  soft,  warm  thing 

I  made  to  glove  my  fist. 

And  she  should  have  a  crown,  I  swore. 

With  only  gold  enough 
To  keep  together  stones  more  rich 

Than  that  fine  metal  stuff. 

Her  golden  hair  gave  me  more  joy 

Than  Jason's  heart  could  hold, 
Wlien  all  his  men  cried  out — Ah,  look  ! 

He  has  the  Fleece  of  Gold  ! 
48 


DREAM   TRAGEDIES 

Thou  art  not  always  kind,  O  sleep  : 
What  awful  secrets  thou  dost  keep 
In  store,  and  ofttimes  make  us  know ; 
What  hero  has  not  fallen  low 
In  sleep  before  a  monster  grim, 
And  whined  for  mercy  unto  him  ; 
Knights,  constables,  and  men-at-arms 
Have  quailed  and  whined  in  sleep's  alarms. 
Thou  wert  not  kind  last  night  to  make 
Me  like  a  very  coward  shake — 
Shake  like  a  thin  red-currant  bush 
Robbed  of  its  fruit  by  a  strong  thrush. 
I  felt  this  earth  did  move ;  more  slow, 
And  slower  yet  began  to  go ; 
And  not  a  bird  was  heard  to  sing, 
Men  and  great  beasts  were  shivering ; 
All  living  things  knew  well  that  when 
This  earth  stood  still,  destruction  then 
Would  follow  with  a  mighty  crash. 
'Twas  then  I  broke  that  awful  hush : 
E'en  as  a  mother,  who  does  come 
Running  in  haste  back  to  her  home, 
And  looks  at  once,  and  lo,  the  child 
She  left  asleep  is  gone ;  and  wild 
She  shrieks  and  loud — so  did  I  break 
With  a  mad  cry  that  dream,  and  wake. 
49  E 


CHILDREN   AT   PLAY 

I  HEAR  a  merry  noise  indeed  : 

Is  it  the  geese  and  ducks  that  take 

Tlieir  first  plunge  in  a  quiet  pond 
That  into  scores  of  ripples  break — 

Or  children  make  this  merry  sound  ? 

I  see  an  oak  tree,  its  strong  back 

Could  not  be  bent  an  inch  though  all 

Its  leaves  were  stone,  or  iron  even  : 
A  boy,  with  many  a  lusty  call, 

Rides  on  a  bough  bareback  through  Heaven. 

I  see  two  children  dig  a  hole 

And  plant  in  it  a  cherry-stone  : 
"  We'll  come  to-morrow,"  one  child  said — 

"  And  then  the  tree  will  be  full  grown, 
And  all  its  boughs  have  clierries  red." 

Ah,  children,  what  a  life  to  lead  : 

You  love  the  flowers,  but  when  they're  past 
No  flowers  are  missed  by  your  bright  eyes  ; 

And  when  cold  winter  comes  at  last, 
Snowflakes  shall  be  your  butterflies. 
50 


WHEN   THE   CUCKOO   SINGS 

In  summer,  when  the  Cuckoo  sings, 

And  clouds  like  greater  moons  can  shine ; 
When  every  leafy  tree  doth  hold 

A  loving  heart  that  beats  with  mine  : 
Now,  when  the  Brook  has  cresses  green. 

As  well  as  stones,  to  check  his  pace ; 
And,  if  the  Owl  appears,  he's  forced 

By  small  birds  to  some  hiding-place  : 
Then,  like  red  Robin  in  the  spring, 

I  shun  those  haunts  where  men  are  found ; 
My  house  holds  little  joy  until 

Leaves  fall  and  birds  can  make  no  sound ; 
Let  none  invade  that  wilderness 

Into  whose  dark  green  depths  I  go — 
Save  some  fine  lady,  all  in  white, 

Comes  like  a  pillar  of  pure  snow 


K  2 


RETURN    TO   NATURE 

My  song  is  of  that  city  which 
Has  men  too  poor  and  men  too  rich ; 
Where  some  are  sick,  too  richly  fed, 
While  others  take  the  sparrows'  bread  : 
Where  some  have  beds  to  warm  their  bones, 
While  others  sleep  on  hard,  cold  stones 
That  suck  away  their  bodies'  heat. 
Where  men  are  drunk  in  every  street ; 
Men  full  of  poison,  like  those  flies 
That  still  attack  the  horses'  eyes. 
Where  some  men  freeze  for  want  of  cloth, 
While  others  show  their  jewels'  worth 
And  dress  in  satin,  fur  or  silk ; 
Where  fine  rich  ladies  wash  in  milk. 
While  starving  mothers  have  no  food 
To  make  them  fit  in  flesh  and  blood ; 
So  that  their  watery  breasts  can  give 
Their  babies  milk  and  make  them  live. 
Where  one  man  does  the  work  of  four. 
And  dies  worn  out  before  his  hour ; 
While  some  seek  work  in  vain,  and  grief 
Doth  make  their  fretful  lives  as  brief. 
Where  ragged  men  are  seen  to  wait 
52 


RETURN   TO   NATURE 

For  charity  that's  small  and  late ; 
While  others  haunt  in  idle  leisure, 
Theatre  doors  to  pay  for  pleasure. 
No  more  I'll  walk  those  crowded  places 
And  take  hot  dreams  from  harlots'  faces ; 
I'll  know  no  more  those  passions'  dreams, 
While  musing  near  these  quiet  streams ; 
That  biting  state  of  savage  lust 
Which,  true  love  absent,  burns  to  dust. 
Gold's  rattle  shall  not  rob  my  ears 
Of  this  sweet  music  of  the  spheres. 
I'll  walk  abroad  with  fancy  free ; 
Each  leafy,  summer's  morn  I'll  see 
The  trees,  all  legs  or  bodies,  when 
They  vary  in  their  shapes  like  men. 
I'll  walk  abroad  and  see  again 
How  quiet  pools  are  pricked  by  rain ; 
And  you  shall  hear  a  song  as  sweet 
As  when  green  leaves  and  raindrops  meet. 
I'll  hear  the  Nightingale's  fine  mood, 
Rattling  with  thunder  in  the  wood. 
Made  bolder  by  each  mighty  crash ; 
Who  drives  her  notes  with  every  flash 
Of  lightning  through  the  summer's  night. 
No  more  I'll  walk  in  that  pale  light 
That  shows  the  homeless  man  awake, 
Ragged  and  cold  ;  harlot  and  rake 
53 


RETURN   TO   NATURE 

That  have  their  hearts  in  rags,  and  die 
Before  that  poor  wretch  they  pass  by. 
Nay,  I  have  found  a  life  so  fine 
That  every  moment  seems  divine  ; 
By  shunning  all  those  pleasures  full, 
That  bring  repentance  cold  and  dull. 
Such  misery  seen  in  days  gone  by. 
That,  made  a  coward,  now  I  fly 
To  green  things,  like  a  bird.     Alas ! 
In  days  gone  by  I  could  not  pass 
Ten  men  but  what  the  eyes  of  one 
Would  burn  me  for  no  kindness  done ; 
And  wretched  women  I  passed  by 
Sent  after  me  a  moan  or  sigh. 
Ah,  wretched  days :  for  in  that  place 
My  soul's  leaves  sought  the  human  face, 
And  not  the  Sun's  for  warmth  and  light — 
And  so  was  never  free  from  blight. 
But  seek  me  now,  and  you  will  find 
Me  on  some  soft  green  bank  reclined  ; 
Watching  the  stately  deer  close  by. 
That  in  a  great  deep  hollow  lie 
Shaking  their  tails  with  all  the  ease 
That  lambs  can.     First,  look  for  the  trees. 
Then,  if  you  seek  me,  find  me  quick. 
Seek  me  no  more  where  men  are  thick, 
But  in  green  lanes  where  I  can  walk 
54 


RETURN   TO   NATURE 

A  mile,  and  still  no  human  folk 
Tread  on  my  shadow.     Seek  me  where 
The  strange  oak  tree  is,  that  can  bear 
One  white-leaved  branch  among  the  green- 
Which  many  a  woodman  has  not  seen. 
If  you  would  find  me,  go  where  cows 
And  sheep  stand  under  shady  boughs ; 
Where  furious  squirrels  shake  a  tree 
As  though  they'd  like  to  bury  me 
Under  a  leaf  shower  heavy,  and 
I  laugh  at  them  for  si)ite,  and  stand. 
Seek  me  no  more  in  human  ways — 
Who  am  a  coward  since  those  days 
My  mind  was  burned  by  poor  men's  eyes. 
And  frozen  by  poor  women's  sighs. 
Then  send  your  pearls  across  the  sea, 
Your  feathers,  scent  and  ivory. 
You  distant  lands — but  let  my  bales 
Be  brought  by  Cuckoos,  Nightingales, 
That  come  in  spring  from  your  far  shores ; 
Sweet  birds  that  carry  richer  stores 
Than  men  can  dream  of,  when  they  prize 
Fine  silks  and  pearls  for  merchandise ; 
And  dream  of  ships  that  take  the  floods 
Sunk  to  their  decks  with  such  vain  goods ; 
Bringing  that  traitor  silk,  whose  soft 
Smooth  tongue  persuades  the  poor  too  oft 
55 


RETURN   TO   NATURE 

From  sweet  content ;  and  pearls,  whose  fires 
Make  ashes  of  our  best  desires. 
For  I  have  heard  the  sighs  and  whines 
Of  rich  men  that  drink  costly  wines 
And  eat  the  best  of  fish  and  fowl ; 
Men  that  have  plenty,  and  still  growl 
Because  they  cannot  like  kings  live — 
"  Alas  ! "  they  whine,  "  we  cannot  save." 
Since  I  have  heard  those  rich  ones  sigh, 
Made  poor  by  their  desires  so  high, 
I  cherish  more  a  simple  mind ; 
That  I  am  well  content  to  find 
My  pictures  in  the  open  air, 
And  let  my  walls  and  floors  go  bare  ; 
That  I  with  lovely  things  can  fill 
My  rooms,  whene'er  sweet  Fancy  will. 
I  make  a  fallen  tree  my  chair. 
And  soon  forget  no  cushion's  there ; 
I  lie  upon  the  grass  or  straw. 
And  no  soft  down  do  I  sigh  for  ; 
For  with  me  all  the  time  I  keep 
Sweet  dreams  that,  do  I  wake  or  sleep, 
Shed  on  me  still  their  kindly  beams  ; 
Aye,  I  am  richer  with  my  dreams 
Than  banks  where  men  dull-eyed  and  cold 
Without  a  tremble  shovel  gold. 
A  happy  life  is  this.     I  walk 
56 


RETURN   TO   NATURE 

And  hear  more  birds  than  people  talk ; 
I  hear  the  birds  that  sing  unseen, 
On  boughs  now  smothered  with  leaves  green ; 
I  sit  and  watch  the  swallows  there, 
Making  a  circus  in  the  air  ; 
That  speed  around  straight-going  crow. 
As  sharks  around  a  ship  can  go ; 
I  hear  the  skylark  out  of  sight, 
Hid  perfectly  in  all  this  light. 
The  dappled  cows  in  fields  I  pass. 
Up  to  their  bosoms  in  deep  grass  ; 
Old  oak  trees,  with  their  bowels  gone, 
I  see  with  spring's  green  finery  on, 
I  watch  the  buzzing  bees  for  hours, 
To  see  them  rush  at  laughing  flowers — 
And  butterflies  that  lie  so  still. 
I  see  great  houses  on  the  hill, 
With  shining  roofs  ;  and  there  shines  one, 
It  seems  that  heaven  has  dropped  the  sun, 
I  see  yon  cloudlet  sail  the  skies, 
Racing  with  clouds  ten  times  its  size. 
I  walk  green  pathways,  where  love  waits 
To  talk  in  whispers  at  old  gates ; 
Past  stiles — on  which  I  lean,  alone — 
Carved  with  the  names  of  lovers  gone  ; 
I  stand  on  arches  whose  dark  stones 
Can  turn  the  wind's  soft  sighs  to  groans. 
57 


RETURN   TO   NATURE 

I  hear  the  Cuckoo  when  first  he 

Makes  this  green  world's  discovery, 

And  re-creates  it  in  my  mind, 

Proving  my  eyes  were  growing  blind. 

I  see  the  rainbow  come  forth  clear 

And  wave  her  coloured  scarf  to  cheer 

The  sun  long  swallowed  by  a  flood — 

So  do  I  live  in  lane  and  wood. 

Let  me  look  forward  to  each  spring 

As  eager  as  the  birds  that  sing ; 

And  feed  my  eyes  on  spring's  young  flowers 

Before  the  bees  by  many  hours, 

My  heart  to  leap  and  sing  her  praise 

Before  the  birds  by  many  days. 

Go  white  my  hair  and  skin  go  dry — • 

But  let  my  heart  a  dewdrop  lie 

Inside  those  leaves  when  they  go  wrong. 

As  fresh  as  when  my  life  was  young. 


58 


A  STRANGE  CITY 

A  WONDROUS  city,  that  had  temples  there 
More  rich  than  that  one  built  by  David's  son, 
Which  called  forth  Ophir's  gold,  when  Israel 
Made  Lebanon  half  naked  for  her  sake. 
I   saw  white   towers  where   so-called    traitors 

died — ■ 
True  men  whose  tongues  were  bells  to  honest 

hearts, 
And  rang  out  boldly  in  false  monarch's  ears. 
Saw    old    black    gateways,   on    whose    arches 

crouched 
Stone  lions  with  their  bodies  gnawed  by  age. 
I  looked  with  awe  on  iron  gates  that  could 
Tell  bloody  stories  if  they  had  our  tongues. 
I  saw  tall  mounted  spires  shine  in  the  sun, 
That  stood  amidst  their  army  of  low  streets. 
I  saw  in  buildings  pictures,  statues  rare. 
Made  in  those  days  when  Rome  was  young, 

and  new 
In  marble  quarried  from  Carrara's  hills ; 
Statues  by  sculptors  that  could  almost  make 
Fine    cobwebs    out    of    stone— so    light    they 

worked. 
Pictures  that  breathe  in  us  a  living  soul, 
59 


A  STRANGE  CITY 

Such  as  we  seldom  feel  come  from  that  life 
The  artist  copies.     Many  a  lovely  sight — 
Such  as  the  half  sunk  barge  with  bales  of  hay, 
Or   sparkling   coals — employed   my  wondering 

eyes. 
I  saw  old  Thames,  whose  ripples  swarmed  with 

stars 
Bred  by  the  sun  on  that  fine  summer's  day ; 
I  saw  in  fancy  fowl  and  green  banks  there, 
And  Liza's  barge  rowed  past  a  thousand  swans. 
I  walked  in  parks  and  heard  sweet  music  cry 
In  solemn  courtyards,  midst  the  men-at-arms; 
Which  suddenly  would  leap  those  stony  walls 
And  spring  up  with  loud  laughter  into  trees. 
I  walked  in  busy  streets  where  music  oft 
Went  on  the  march  with   men;  and   ofttimes 

heard 
The  organ  in  cathedral,  when  the  boys 
Like  nightingales  sang  in  that  thunderstorm  ; 
The  organ,  with  its  rich  and  solemn  tones — 
As  near  a  God's  voice  as  a  man  conceives  ; 
Nor  ever  dreamt  the  silent  misery 
That  solemn  organ  brought  to  homeless  men. 
I  heard  the  drums  and  soft  brass  instruments, 
Led  by  the  silver  cornets  clear  and  high — 
Whose  sounds  turned    playing    children   into 

stones. 

60 


A  STRANGE  CITY 

I  saw  at  night  the  City's  lights  shine  bright, 

A  greater  milky  way  ;  how  in  its  spell 

It  fascinated  with  ten  thousand  eyes ; 

Like  those  sweet  wiles  of  an  enchantress  who 

Would    still   detain  her  knight   gone   cold   in 

love; 
It  was  an  iceberg  with  long  arms  unseen,, 
That  felt  the  deep  for  vessels  far  away. 
All  things   seemed   strange,  I  stared  like  any 

child 
That  pores  on  some  old  face  and  sees  a  world 
Which  its  familiar  granddad  and  his  dame 
Hid  with  their  love  and  laughter  until  then. 
My  feet  had  not  yet  felt  the  cruel  rocks 
Beneath  the  pleasant  moss  I  seemed  to  tread. 
But  soon  my  ears  grew  weary  of  that  din, 
My  eyes  grew  tired  of  all  that  flesh  and  stone  ; 
And,  as  a  snail  that  crawls  on  a  smooth  stalk, 
Will    reach    the    end    and    find  a  sharpened 

thorn — 
So  did  I  reach  the  cruel  end  at  last. 
I  saw  the  starving  mother  and  her  child. 
Who  feared  that  Death  would  surely  end  its 

sleep. 
And    cursed    the   wolf    of    Hunger   with    her 

moans. 
A  nd  yet,  methought,  when  first  I  entered  there, 
6i 


A   STRANGE  CITY 

Into  that  city  with  my  wondering  mind, 
How  marvellous  its  many  sights  and  sounds ; 
The  traffic  with  its  sound  of  heavy  seas 
That  have  and  would  again  unseat  the  rocks. 
How  common  then  seemed  Nature's  hills  and 

fields 
Compared   with   these   high   domes   and   even 

streets, 
And  churches  with  white   towers   and   bodies 

black. 
The  traffic's  sound  was  music  to  my  ears ; 
A  sound  of  where  the  white  waves,  hour  by 

hour, 
Attack  a  reef  of  coral  rising  yet ; 
Or  where  a  mighty  warship  in  a  fog, 
Steams  into  a  large  fleet  of  little  boats. 
Aye,  and  that  fog  was  strange  and  wonderful, 
That  made  men  blind  and  grope  their  way  at 

noon. 
I  saw  that  City  with  fierce  human  surge, 
With  millions  of  dark  waves  that  still  spread 

out 
To  swallow  more  of  their  green  boundaries. 
Then  came  a  day  that  noise  so  stirred  my  soul, 
I  called  them  hellish  sounds,  and  thought  red 

war 
Was  better  far  than  peace  in  such  a  town. 
62 


A  STRANGE  CITY 

To  hear  that  din  all  day,  sometimes  my  mind 
Went  crazed,  and  it  seemed  strange,  as  I  were 

lost 
In  some  vast  forest  full  of  chattering  apes. 
How  sick  I  grew  to  hear  that  lasting  noise, 
And  all  those  people  forced  across  my  sight, 
Knowing  the  acres  of  green  fields  and  woods 
That  in  some  country  parts  outnumbered  men  ; 
In  half  an  hour  ten  thousand  men  I  passed — 
More  than   nine   thousand   should   have  been 

green  trees. 
There  on  a  summer's  day  I  saw  such  crowds 
That  where  there  was  no  man  man's  shadow 

was; 
Millions  all  cramped  together  in  one  hive, 
Storing,    methought,    more    bitter    stuff    than 

sweet. 
The  air  was  foul  and  stale ;  from  their  green 

homes 
Young  blood  had  brought  its  fresh  and  rosy 

cheeks. 
Which  soon  turned  colour,  like  blue  streams  in 

flood. 
Aye,  solitude,  black  solitude  indeed. 
To  meet  a  million  souls  and  know  not  one  ; 
This   world    must    soon    grow    stale    to    one 

compelled 

63 


A  STRANGE  CITY 

1  o  look  all  (lay  at  faces  strange  and  cold. 
Oft  full  of  smoke  that  town ;  its  summer's  day 
Was  darker  than  a  summer's  night  at  sea ; 
Poison  was  there,  and  still  men  rushed  for  it, 
Like  cows  for  acorns  that  have  made  them  sick. 
That  town  was  rich  and  old ;  man's  flesh  was 

cheap, 
But  common  earth  was  dear  to  buy  one  foot. 
If  I  must  be  fenced  in,  then  let  my  fence 
Be    some    green   hedgerow ;    under   its   green 

sprays. 
That  shake  suspended,  let  me  walk  in  joy — 
As  I  do  now,  in  these  dear  months  I  love. 


LONDON  :    PRINTED  BY  WILLIAM  CLOWES  AND  SONS,  LIMITED. 


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