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POEMS 

WILLIAM BELL SCOTT. 

BALLADS, STUDIES FROM NATURE, SONNETS, ETC. 

ILLUSTRATED BY SEyE^'TEE,N ETCHI.VGS 
BV THE AUTHOR *sd L. ALMA TAUIDMA 




LONDON 
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. 

187s 

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PUBLIC LIBRARY 

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A8T0R, LENOX AN» 

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1909 



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PREFACE. 



Excepting some of the Ballads at the beginning of 
the volume, and a number of the Sonnets, particularly 
those called *The Old Scotch House,' the poems now 
published have been written many years. This being 
the case, the author thinks he may indulge in the old- 
fashioned luxury of a Preface ; only a short one, how- 
ever, and merely to state certain circumstances re- 
lating to some of the pieces. 

In the present volume the writer has collected 
together the productions he wishes most to preserve, 
or at least the majority of these ; he has carefully 
revised them, and lovingly decorated them, with the 
assistance of a friend, as a duty to himself, and to 
place before the public in a permanent form his 
credentials to be considered a poet. For a number 
of years he has been urged to do something of this 
kind by friends whose judgment in matters poetic is 
not mere opinion : sweet is praise from the receivers 




vi PREFACE, 

of praise; and he has been contented without any 
appeal to the public. But there is a day for all 
things, and after a period of active work of very 
various kinds, obeying the maxim, 'What thy hand 
findeth to do, do it with all thy might,' he thinks the 
time has come for the pleasant task of putting his 
poetical house in order. 

A number of the following poems have indeed been 
various times printed before, although never very ac- 
cessibly to the public. Many of these he has freely 
revised, believing that the best word is not found 
even within the Horatian period sometimes, or at 
least that it depends on the nature of the man whether 
his first or last thought is the best. He has also 
restored one or two to their original MS. form. The 
rhapsody *To the Memory of P. B. Shelley' first 
appeared in * Tait's Edinburgh Magazine ' forty-two 
years ago, and the point of view taken by a student 
of that day adds some historical interest to the poem, 
warranting its reproduction here. Shelley's too-easily- 
uttered metaphysics, and jejune theories, political and 
moral, derived from and representative of the great 
French revolution with its three watchwords continually 
outraged, will never again be lauded in exactly the 
same manner. Two other pieces towards the end 



PREFACE, vii 

of this volume, * The Incantation of Hervor,' and 
*The Dance of Death/ were produced a year or 
two later in a little brochure called * The Edinburgh 
University Souvenir.' The latter poem has been re- 
vised. Others not given under the heading * Juvenile 
Poems' are equally ancient. One of these, * An- 
thony,' although first published in the * Fortnightly ' 
only a few years ago, is old enough to have been 
read in a somewhat longer form in MS. by John 
Wilson. The author remembers the amusement ex- 
pressed on the lion-like face of that genial literary 
partizan at the lines hear .the close of the poem, de- 
scribing the beggar who tried to strike the charitable 
with his crutch, finding in them a vivid picture of 
Christopher North ! 

Many others have appeared before in a small 
volume called * Poems by a Painter,' printed at a 
provincial press in a careless manner. This title 
was afterwards appropriated by Su: J. Noel Paton, a 
painter of sufficient power and invention to exonerate 
him from intentional transfer. That now called * The 
Music of the Spheres,' first saw the light in a very 
small volume in 1838 under the name of * Hades,' so 
that the resemblance that has been supposed to exist 
between it and the Roman Catholic production of 




viii PREFACE, 

Dr. Newman called 'The Dream of Gerontius' is 
accidental as far as the author knows. Other cases 
wherein a resemblance, either in motive or form, may 
be fancied to exist to any more modem work, it is 
not necessary to mention. Originality the writer 
takes some credit for; he has, moreover, left out 
some poems whose subjects or motives have been 
adopted by later poets, and realised in a more poeti- 
cal or completer manner, considering that the best, 
not the first, should stand alone. 

This concerns rather the author himself than his 
readers. No external or adventitious merits, nor 
even purely intellectual qualities, can altogether de- 
termine the value of poetry. It must affect us like 
music or wine, but it must certainly have Wisdom, like 
an instinct, directing it from within. Every excellent 
poetic work has a physiognomy of its own, an organic 
character of its own, the possession or non-possession 
of which the world will sooner or later sympathetically 
determine. So fully aware is he of this, and so care- 
less of immediate recognition has he been, that his 
earlier publications were issued in a way rather fitted 
to his convenience than to invite attention, and he 
never once asked their publishers or quasi-publishers 
for any account of results. The chances of sale for 



PREFACE, ix 

new poetical aspirants out of London were then very 
small indeed. His former little volumes are, how- 
ever, entirely unprocurable, he believes. 

With regard to the illustrations, the author-and- 
artist-in-one has given rather pictorial analogues to 
the sentiment and meaning of the poems than direct 
representations. He has also to acknowledge the 
kind aid of one of the most able painters of the age. 
The artist by natural endowment finds little difficulty, 
whatever instrument may be placed in his hand ; and 
the writer's friend, L. Alma Tadema, expressed him- 
self at once with the etching-point as if he had used 
it all his life. 





CONTENTS. 



Lady Janet, May Jean 
Kriemhild's Tryst . 
Woodstock Maze 
The Witches' Ballad . 
Saint Margaret . 



xii CONTENTS. 

PAGE 

The Rendezvous 37 

* i go to be cured at avilion ' .... 42 

Anthony 44 

Love's Calendar 60 

A Bridal Race 62 

Parting and Meeting Again (a Song) . . .64 

Love 65 

SONNETS, 

Outside the Temple 73 

Parted Love . . 90 

THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 

Part L 97 

Part II. . 105 



STUDIES FROM NA TURE, 

Sunday Morning Alone • 113 

Green Cherries 118 

Youth and Age 122 

An Artist's Birthplace 123 

Morning Sleep 127 

Monody 131 

The Duke's Funeral 134 

Midnight (written 1831) 138 

The Seashore. I. Mist 142 

„ ,, II. Sunshine .... 143 

Requiem 145 

The Venerable Bede in the Nineteenth Century 147 



CONTENTS. xiii 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 

PAGE 

The Sphinx 159 

A Dedication 166 

Rhyme of the Sun-dial 169 

In the Valley 171 

May 173 



SONNETS ON LITERARY SUBJECTS. 

On the Inscription, Keats's Gravestone, Rome . 179 

Wordsworth. 1 180 

II 181 

III 182 

To THE Artists called P.R.B. (1851) . . 183 

On Certain Critics, &c 184 

Epitaph of Hubert van Eyck . . .185 

Fragment of a Sonnet by Raphael . .186 

The Musician 187 

To my Brother, on Publishing his * Memoir' . 188 
Inscription on Albert Durer's Grave . . 189 



OCCASIONAL SONNETS. 

Pygmalion 193 

The Swan 194 

Spring Love 195 

An Anniversary 196 

The Midnight City 197 

Kisses. 1 198 

„ II 199 

The Traveller Lost 200 

The Nightingale Unheard 201 

In Rome, a.d. 150 (for a Picture) .... 202 



xiv CONTENTS. 

PAGE 

Coming and Going 203 

My Mother. 1 204 

Assistance Delayed 206 

Unworthy Ambition 207 

The Music of the Spheres 208 

JUVENILE POEMS. 

To THE Memory of P. B. Shelley . .221 

To the Memory of John Keats .... 226 

The Incantation of Hervor 231 

Fouji Acts of St. Cuthbert .... 237 

The Dance of Death 253 

A Fable 263 

Dedicatio Postica .271 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 

Love Originating Art . IV. B. Scoit. Title-page 

An Old Chest .... ,, /. xi 

Lady Janet . . . . Z. Alma Tadema . i 

Eric and the Water-witch. . ,, 7 

Fair Rosamund .... ,, 23 

Pax Vobiscum: A Satire (designed 

by D. Scott) . . . . W. B. Scott . 44 

The Way of Life. Whither? . ,, 71 

Penkill, Ayrshire ... ,, 95 

The Garden, Penkill ... ,, 105 

A Stuly from Nature ,, iii 

Design remembered from a Dream 
(from a sketch done on waking 

October 28, 1846) ... ,, 131 

The Great Sphinx . Z. Alnia Tadema. 159 

Keats' Grave, Rome . . W, B. Scott . 177 

Pygmalion ,, 191 

Recreating Genii . . . ,, 208 

The Author mi. 20 (painted by 

D. Scott) .... ,, 219 

Hervor (painted by Alice Boyd, 

Penkill) .... ,, 231 




LADY JANET, MAY JEAN. 

'TWEEN sleeping and waking, 'tween fever and fear, 

The lady Janet, May Jean, 
Felt her mothering hour draw near ; 
So wearily dreaming 'tween fever and fear ; 
The shards have cut Ike shoeless feet. 



2 LADV JANET, MAY JEAN, 

May Jean she was with the snood on her head, 
Lady Janet she would be were she wed, 
But she locked herself in on her lonely bed. 
The housel is borne along the street. 

Was it the wise-woman on the bower-stair 

From lady Janet, May Jean ? 
Wrapt in her thin arms what doth she bear 
Against her hard bosom ; why speeds she and where 

The wind is about in the crow's nest. 
It was the wise-woman no one knew 
Came down as the dark night mottled grew, 
And, groping her way, to the postern flew. 

The stream doth every cranny quest. 

To shoot back the bar and make no sound, 

O lady Janet, May Jean ! 
She laid down the fardel on the ground, 
And the in-rushing cold wind swept all round ; — 

Long willow leaves are white below. 
But the house dog 's near, his scent is keen, 
The fardel and wise-wife he ran between, 
He snatched and ran and was no more seen. 

Black are the berries of nightshade and sloe. 

On the carven bed in the lighted bower 

Turned lady Janet, May Jean, 
Waiting it seemed to her, hour on hour, 
Hearing the wind creak the vane on the tower ; — 
The tide-wave breathes by sink and swell. 



LADY JANET, MAY JEAN, 3 

Why is she watching with eye and ear, 
Shadowed and restless in fever and fear, 
When the bolt is drawn and no one near? 
Sees she or hears she anything 
Except the lamp's flame and the moth's wing? 
Sea-foam seethes the empty shelL 

Yes, yes, she hears now a small faint cry, 

Hears lady Janet, May Jean ; 
She sees on the hearth the fardel lie, 
And the shaggy-limbed house dog standing by ; — 

The brain swiuis when the hot winds blow. 
Her fair-tressed weak head she lifted then, 
And she cried, * I am lost, oh, never again 
Shall I know peace or be honoured of men ! ' 

The bare breast shrinks beneath the snoiv. 

Her fair hair swept the bolster white. 

The lady Janet's, May Jean's ; 
And faintly she called, * Old witch of the night. 
You have played me false, you've deceived me quite I ' 

The way to hell 'j- by stepping-stones. 
At once that wise-woman no one knew 
Out of the carven bedstead grew ; 
Like a real thing came she clear to view. 

The raven is over the dead Iambus bones, 

* The dog he followed me as I ran. 

My lady Janet, May Jean, 
And snatched it and stole it when I began 

B 



4 LADY JANET, MAY JEAN. 

To gather the dry leaves and finish our plan ;* — 
The eyes of the dying shine I know. 
* But hide it again, thou leman of Night, 
Wise-woman, witch-woman, make me right ; 
Hide it in safety before daylight ! ' 

The warning cock three times will croiv. 

They are gone, that wise-woman has the power ; 

And lady Janet, May Jean, 
Again is alone in that lone bower, 
Her whole soul listening beyond the tower ; — 

The dead are safe r their graves we say. 
AVhy is her life in her eye and ear, 
Writhing and striving in fever and fear, 
Wien the bolt is drawn and no one near ? 
Sees she or hears she anything 
Saving the lamp and the moth's quick wing ? 

They cannot leave till the judgment day. 

Yes, she hears again that cry ! 

Hears lady Janet, May Jean ; 
She sees by the bedside the fardel lie, 
AVith a gentle-faced grey ghost standing by ; — 

Are they not really gone who die ? 
She shakes back her tresses, she lifts her hand. 
For holy water she had at command. 
To scald the wicked like hot sand. 

There V no lamp-light where spirits lie. 

* Receive it back,' the grey ghost ^ied, 
* Sweet lady Janet, May Jean ! 



LADV JANET, MAY JEAN. 

I too, long ago, before I died, 
Threw the loud-tongued new life from my side ; ' — 
Once the dock strikes, nei>er more, 

* Begone ! ' sore troubled, she tried to say, 

* Sweet-tongued ghost- woman, hide it away. 
Hide it for ever before it is day ! ' 

Voices pass from shore to shore. 

Again she 's alone, and within that bower, 

The lady Janet, May Jean, 
Lays down her head for another hour. 
Listens and looks through the walls of the tower ; — 

The bell-ringer mounts t/ie spire-stair. 
Why is her heart in her eye and ear, 
Whence is the fever, and whence the fear. 
When the bolt is drawn and no one near ? 
Hears she or sees she anything ? 
The moth at last hath burned its wing : 

Clang 0* the matin is heard H the air. 

She hears still nearer that new-bom cry, 

Hears lady Janet, May Jean ; 
She sees close to her the fardel lie, 
With Mary the Blessbd May standing by, 

In an arbour of white lilies great and high ; — 
The light should burn bright on the altar. 
Then Mary the Blest bent down and undid 
The swathes of linen that were its bed, 
And took in her hand the small child's head 
Now the quire-leader opens the psalter, 

B 2 



8 KRIEMHILiyS TRYSTE, 

Childe Eric rides by the swift running beck, 

Its sound fills all the air ; 
It is warm in the midsummer weather ; 

It is noon, he will rest him there. 

He throws the rein of his good roan steed 

On the bough of a sycamore, 
And, dropping from brae to bank, he gains 

The linn-pooPs pebbly shore. 

He had travelled far from mom till noon. 
The fresh stream danced and sang. 

So to cast his surcoat and hose of mail 
He did not question lang. 

Then caroll'd he loud as the water, 

So bright, so fresh, so full ; 
His shapely waist and fair broad chest 

Flashed in the quivering pool. 

But scarcely had he stept three steps, 

He heard a low shrill call, 
And when he stept again there came 

A laugh from the waterfall. 

And he saw within the rainbow mist, 

Within the shimmering vail, 
A naked woman watching him, 

Breathless and rosy-pale. 



KRIEMHILD'S TRYSTE, 

Two heavy sheaves of golden hair 

About her round loins met, 
Yet, for all the waters falling, 

These thick locks were not wet 

Her great kind eyes, her wild sweet eyes. 
They smiled and loved him so, 

He shrank back in bewilderment, 
Yet had no wish to go. 

But he felt sure that bonnie brown quean 

Was none of Eve*s true kin : 
Naked and unabashed, straight and frank, 

Harboured within the linn. 

Silenced, with wandering wits he stood, 

His fair hmbs but half hid, 
Then stretched his hand from rock to rock, 

And backward sloped and slid. 

But suddenly to the waist he sank. 

And forward sprang the maid. 
Round either side his tingling waist 

Her arms a girdle made. 

Then breast to breast in the cool water 

Was warmly, blindly pressed, 
And heart to heart, as love is bom, — 

Her great clear eyes confessed 




lo KRIEMHILUS TRY ST E, 

An innocence and a childish joy, 
And hope's most flattering song, 

That he, as was his wont with maids, 
Was reassured and strong. 

At once he kissed her eager mouth — 
It was a quivering, wildering kiss — 

Tighter she strained him in her arms, 
And fixed devouring lips on his. 

And owned that she had waited long 
For him, Childe Eric, him alone ; 

But he must swear her troth, and be, 
As Holy Writ says, bone of bone. 

As she had heard the priest declare, 
When she hid by the chapel door. 

And he told them all of Adam and Eve — 
The old priest of Felsenore. 

' I'll bring you luck, you'll bring me grace. 

And well be marrows, you and me ; 
A wife and a mother, my long hair coiffed. 
Clad in long-lawn and cramoisie.' 

Yes, yes, his troth — as he had done 
In eastern lands before, 

To dark eyes and brown jewelled ears- 
He pledged it o'er and o'er. 




KRIEMHILHS TRYSTE, ii 

* Oh, then baptise me, Childe Delight ! 

Madonna Mary, christen me ! * — 
The water now wet her sheaves of hair, 

And he laughed at her pietib. 

For he trusted in magic, and had come 

Through Rome, that evil vale, 
Where with the false pope Archimed 

He had quaffed from the Holy Graal. 

He laughed — ^but is not that his hound's 

Long howl above the brae ? 
And is not that his good roan steed — 

What maketh it stamp and neigh ? 

Oh, she was lissom and fond and strong. 

Guileless and wild and free ; 
Nor had she even a thought uncouth 

Lying under the rowan tree. 

He was Eric the tall, from Mickle-garth, 

Her husband and paramour ; 
And she was a wife now, body and soul, 

So thoughtful and demure. 

The manyfold kisses, and new sweet speech, 

That four lips feel like fire ; 
The thirsting heart and the hungry eyes, 

Why must they ever tire ? 




12 KRIEMHILDS TRYSTE. 

But all things else, all fair things else, 

The sun and his fruits also, 
The birds and leaves, the flowers and sheaves, 

They change, and they may go. 

Into that warm nest, filled with song 
By the lark and the murmuring linn. 

Nought living came ; but the pensive eye 
Of a white doe once looked in. 

They slept, I think, till all at once 

He rose with a-start and stare. 
Like a man who knew not where he was, 

Nor how he had come there, 
And climbed the bank and foimd his steed 

Had cropped all round it bare. 

Sadly it turned its proud arched neck, 

And tried to lick his hand, 
So he mounted in haste, and gallop'd away 

To the lady Kriemhild's land. 

But he had sworn he would return. 

Return to the May, had he. 
With a ring, and a necklace, and girdle-gold. 

And long-lawn and cramoisie. 



KRIEMHILJyS TRYSTE. J3 



II 

Beyond the sound of the widening beck 

He rode to the river strand, 
And at her bower-door on the island 

He saw the good Kriemhild stand. 

Behind her too, on either side, 

Her bower-maids, a sister pair, 
Clad both the same in sea-green serge, 

Trimmed with the minnevair. 

But her long waist was in white say, 
Looped up with knops of gold ; 

For she was the heiress of the land, 
And towns with garth and wold. 

Along yon further shore you see 

Her castle walls and tower ; 
But she had planned the tryste to be 

Within her island-bower. 

So these green-kirtled serving-maids. 
They ferried him o'er the tide ; — 

As he leaned and looked in the tangled deep, 
What was it he descried ? 




14 KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE. 

What was it ? for he backward shrank, 
And made the light bark sway, 

Till it grated against the landing steps, — 
He seemed to have lost his way. 

The lady then came stepping down 

Towards him in surprise ; 
Sudden he seized her two white hands, 

And bowed to hide his eyes. 

With that the distant warder blew 
A note from the highest tower ; 

Startled, he kissed her two white hands, 
And they passed within the bower. 

' I wonder much,* quoth fair Joanne 

To her sister Claribee, 
* What made him wince when that great fish 

Swam up so bonnily ? * 

Each side the door then sat they down. 

With lutes of cedar wood ; 
Joan sang this song, and Claribee, 

She made the refrain good. 

Quoth the wanderer, I have journeyed far, 
Oh, give me wine and bread ! 

Is the popinjay merry ? 



KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE, 

I have broken the bread and drank the wine, 
I prithee now make my bed ; 

The heart is as cold as stone. 
For, alas ! I am wounded deep and sore, 
And you must salve my wound : 

Is the popinjay merry ? 
With her balsam sweet that lady-leech 
She made him whole and sound. 

The heart is as cold as stone. 
Anon, when again he was whole and well, 
He said she must marry him ; 

Is the popinjay merry ? 
And so it fell out that she called the priest. 
All in the twilight dim. 

The heart is as cold as stone. 
But when the wedding-ring touched her hand, 
I must leave you, love, quoth he ; 

Is the popinjay merry t 
For I have a wife in a far-off town. 
Across the weary sea. 

The heart is as cold as stone. 
But she would not now by wind or wave 
That he should go away ; 

Is the popinjay merry ? 
So she made Sir Merlin weave a spell, 
He could not choose but stay. 

The heart is as cold as stone. 




1 6 KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE, 

Nor could he remember ever more, 
Though he strove with might and main ; 

Is the popinjay merry ? 
The wife he had left in the far-off land 
He never would see again. 

T/ie heart is as cold as stone. 

Scarce ended they, a quivering flame 

Winnowed the sultry air, 
And a surf running up as from sea- wind 

Lapped the green margin there. 

The damsels laughed at the silvery foam 
That ran back again as fast ; 

Then tightened the cords of their gittems, 
And sang against the blast : 

But as they sang a darkness fell, 
And hail-stones rattled past. 

HiEC. 

Rest ye now from all your pain. 
My heart's delight, my found-ag 



-again. 



ILLE. 

Found again, but full of pyne 
Thou art also, mistress mine. 

Yea, but now we'll make amend ; 

The years of tears have reached their end. 



KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE. 17 



ILLE. 

Tears and years — oh, many a one 
Since my wanderings were begun ! 

HiEC 

Wanderings here and there away, 
Never done at close of day. 

ILLE. 

Never done, but hankering still 
For the old days of wild freewill. 

UMC, 

Childish days when, ages gone, 
We foster-children lived alone. 

ILLE. 

Lived and loved, for then we knew 
Where the sweetest apple grew. 

HiEC. 

But once, alas ! you plucked it down. 
And wrapt it in my guiltless gown. 

ILLE. 

Plucked and shared it, rind and core ; 
Yet the sun set as before. 




1 8 KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE, 

HiEC. 

The sun set, but it rose no more ; 
It went down, and life shut the door. 

ILLE. 

Shut, but we shall entrance gain ; — 
Behold ! the sun wakes up again. 

HiEC. 

Another sweet apple upon the tree — 
Lovers in dead years, can they see ? 

ILLE. 

See and pluck, rind, core, and pips. 
Part and share with hungry lips. 

HiEC. 

Part and share, but alas ! it drips — 
Drips with blood, — My hearths delight ! 
Our hearts are torn in mirk midnight. 



Ill 



Therewith a cry shot over them, 
As it came from out the sea — 

The cry of a woman in sharp despite, 
Crying, * Ai, woe is me ! * 



KRJEMHILD'S TRYSTE. uj 

The hail it flashed on bench and board, 

By a loud wind borne along ; 
The singers fled within the bower, 

And thrust the bolt so strong. 

And there the lady Kriemhild sat, 

Childe Eric by her side, — 
Together sat they hand in hand, 

But their eyes were turned aside. 

And the damsels knew as she sat so still, 

With never a welcome word, 
Their ditty had sliom between them 

As it had been a sword. 

They too were foster-children once, 
Their love too had been strong, — 

Can what hath passed return again 
Like the burden of a song ? 

For Love descends with a great surprise. 

An angel on our cold floor ; 
And he never should leave us, never again. 

For we're colder than before. 

Was this the boy she played with once 
Come from the great war's game. 

More learned too than a priest, 'twas said, — 
While she remained the same ? 



20 KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE. 

It seemed as she sat, long miles away 
Some wedding-bells rang out ; 

But whether for her or for some other bride, 
She mazed herself in doubt. 

Whose were they if they were not hers ? 

Some ,dream she would recall ; 
But the gathering thunder swept them out. 

And shook the wainscot wall. 

Then again that wild lamenting cry, 

' Ai, oh, woe is me ! ' 
Severed the air like a fiery lance ; — 

Nor could she choose but see 
It went right through him like his doom, — 

' Ai", oh, woe is me ! ' 

And with it rolled a surge of waves 

All round the bower outside ; 
A knocking smote the bolted door. 

The voice behind it cried : — 

* Come back to me, Eric ! I am now 

A woman with love in store ; — 
Why went you while I slept ? — my hair 
Is not now as heretofore. 

* It clings so heavy and cold and wet. 

Oh, hasten, and bring with thee 
The ring and the necklace and girdle-gold, 
The long-lawn and cramoisie ! 



KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE. 21 

* My guardian and my husband sworn, 

Return again to me, 
And these sea-waters will go back, 
Back safe into the sea. 

* The rain it runs down breast and thigh, — 

For thee I am so brave : 
I would not that mine ancient kin 
Shall make the floods thy grave ! ' 

The gentle Kriemhild and her maids 

Together stood quite still. 
Stood altogether listening 

To the voice so wild and shrill. 

* Childe Eric, oh my long-betrothed, 

Who is this calling so ? ' 

* Alas ! I know not nor can tell. 

And you must never know.' 

* My sweet bower-maidens, tell me true. 

Who is it calleth him ? ' 

* I see,' quoth Joan, * by the window-pane 

A brown sea-serpent swim * 

* But we must mount the topmost steps, 

The flood-waves rise so high,' — 

* I cannot move,' Childe Eric cries ; 

* I must remain to die.* 




-7 -> 



KRIEMHILUS TRYSTE. 

With that she fell upon his neck, 
She would not leave him there ; 

But her damsels raised her in their arms, 
And clomb the higher stair. 

And as they climbed they heard below 

The door wide open fly ; 
Then all at once the darkness broke 

Across the rending sky, 

And struggling strongly out, they saw. 

Amidst the coiling spray, 
A long-haired woman's shining arms, 

Wherein Childe Eric lay ! 

And faintly came again that cry, 

* Ai, oh, woe is me ! 
Where is the ring and the girdle-gold, 

The long-lawn and cramoisie ? ' 



^ 




WOODSTOCK MAZE. 



' NEVER shall anyone find you then ! ' 
Said he, merrily pinching her cheek ; 

' But why?' she asked, — he only laughed,— 
' Why shall it be thus, now speak I ' 



24 WOODSTOCK MAZE, 

' Because so like a bird art thou, 

Thou must hve withm green trees, 
With nightingales and thrushes and wrens, 
And the humming of wild bees.' 

Ok, the shower and the sunshine every day 
Pass and pass, be ye sad, be ye gay. 

* Nay, nay, you jest, no wren am I, 

Nor thrush nor nightingale. 
And rather would keep this arras and wall 

Tween me and the wind's assail. 
I like to hear little Minnie's gay laugh, 

And the whistle of Japes the page. 
Or to watch old Madge when her spindle twirls, 

And she tends it like a sage.' 

Oh, the leaves, brown, yellow, and red, still fall. 
Fall and fall over churchyard or hcUL 

' Yea, yea, but thou art the world's best Rose, 

And about thee flowers I'll twine, 
And wall thee round with holly and beech. 

Sweet-briar and jessamine.' 
' Nay, nay, sweet master, I'm no Rose, 

But a woman indeed, indeed, 
And love many things both great and small, 

And of many things more take heed.' 

Oh, the shower and the sunshine every day 
Pass and pass, be ye sad, be ye gay. 



WOODSTOCK MAZE. 25 

* Aye, sweetheart, sure thou sayest sooth, 

I think thou art even so ! 
But yet needs must I dibble the hedge. 

Close serried as hedge can grow. 
Then Minnie and Japes and Madge shall be 

Thy merry-mates all day long, 
And thou shalt hear my bugle-call 

For matin or even-song.' 

Ohy the leaves^ broiun, yellow^ a?id red, still fall, 
Fall and fall over churchyard or hall. 

Look yonder now, my blue-eyed bird, 

See'st thou aught by yon far stream ? 
There shalt thou find a more curious nest 

Than ever thou sawest in dream.' 
She followed his finger, she looked in vain, 

She saw neither cottage nor hall, 
But at his beck came a litter on wheels. 

Screened by a red silk caul ; 
He lifted her in by her lily-white hand, 

So left they the blythe sunny wall. 

Oh, the shower and the swishine every day 
Pass and pass, he ye sad, be ye gay. 

The gorse and ling are netted and strong. 

The conies leap everywhere. 
The wild briar-roses by runnels grow thick ; 

Seems never a pathway there. 

c 



26 ' WOODSTOCK MAZE, 

Then come the dwarf oaks knotted and wrung 

Breeding apples and mistletoe, 
And now tall elms from the wet mossed ground 
Straight up to the white clouds go. 

Oh^ the leaves^ hrown^ yellow^ and red, still fall^ 
Fall and fall over churchyard or halL 

* O weary hedge, O thorny hedge ! ' 

Quoth she in her lonesome bower, 

* Round and round it is all the same ; 

Days, weeks, have all one hour ; 
I hear the cushat far overhead. 

From the dark heart of that plane; 
Sudden rushes of wings I' hear, 
And silence as sudden again. 

Oh^ the shower ajid the sunshine e^ery day 
Pass and pass, be ye sad, be ye gay. 

* Maiden Minnie she mopes by the fire. 

Even now in the warmth of June ; 
I like not Madge to look in my face. 

Japes now hath never a tune. 
But, oh, he is so kingly strong. 

And, oh, he is kind and true ; 
Shall not my babe, if God cares for me. 
Be his pride and his joy too ? 

Oh, the leaves, brown, yellow, and red, still fall. 
Fall a?idfall oz'er churchy a?'d or hall. 



WOODSTOCK MAZE. 27 

I lean my faint heart against this tree 
"Whereon he hath carved my name, 
I hold me up by this fair bent bough, 

For he held once by the same ; 
But everything here is dank and cold, 

The daisies have sickly eyes, 
The clouds like ghosts down into my prison 
Look from the barred-out skies. 

Ohy the shower and the sunshine every day 
Pass and pass y be ye sad^ be ye gay, 

* I tune my lute and I straight forget 

What I minded to play, woe's me ! 
Till it feebly moans to the sharp short gusts 

Aye rushing from tree to tree. 
Often that single redbreast comes 

To the sill where my Jesu stands ; 
I speak to him as to a child ; he flies. 

Afraid of these poor thin hands ! 

Ohy the leaves, brown, yellow, and red, still fall. 
Fall and fall over churchyard or hall, 

' The golden evening burns right through 

My dark chamber windows twain : 
I listen, all round me is only a grave, 

Yet listen I ever again. 

Will he come ? I pluck the flower-leaves ofl", 

And at each, cry, yes, no, yes ! 

c 2 



28 WOODSTOCK MAZE, 

I blow the down from the dry hawkweed, 
Once, twice, ah ! it flyeth amiss ! 

Oh^ the shower and the sunshine every day 
Pass and pass ^ be ye sad^ be ye gay, 

* Hark ! he comes ! yet his footstep sounds 

As it sounded never before ! 
Perhaps he thinks to steal on me, 

But 111 hide behind the door/ 
She ran, she stopped, stood still as stone — 

It was Queen Eleanore ; 
And at once she felt that it was death 

The hungering she- wolf bore ! 

Ohy the leaves^ brown^ yellow^ and red, still fall. 
Fall and fall over churchyard or halL 






THE WITCH'S BALLAD. 

O, I HAE come from far away, 

From a warm land far away, 
A southern land across the sea. 
With sailor-lads about the mast, 
Merry and canny, and kind to me. 

And I hae been to yon town, 

To try my luck in yon town ; 
Nort, and Mysie, Elspie too. 
Right braw we were to pass the gate, 
Wi' gowden clasps on girdles blue. 

Mysie smiled wi' miminy mouth. 

Innocent mouth, miminy mouth ; 
Elspie wore her scarlet gown, 
Nort's grey eyes were unco' gleg. 
My Castile comb was like a crown. 

We walked abreast all up the street. 
Into the market up the street ; 
Our hair with marygolds was wound. 
Our bodices with love-knots laced, 
Our mercliandise with tansy bound. 



30 THE WITCH'S BALLAD. 

Nort had chickens, I had cocks, 

Gamesome cocks, loud-crowing cocks ; 
Mysie ducks, and Elspie drakes, — 
For a wee groat or a pound : 
We lost nae time wi' gives and takes. 

Lost nae time, for well we knew, 

In our sleeves full well we knew. 
When the gloaming came that night, 
Duck nor drake nor hen nor cock 
Would be found by candle-light. 

And when our chaffering all was done, 

All was paid for, sold and done. 
We drew a glove on ilka hand. 
We sweetly curtsied each to each, 
And deftly danced a saraband. 

The market lasses looked and laughed. 

Left their gear and looked and laughed ; 
They made as they would join the game. 
But soon their mithers, wild and wud, 
With whack and screech they stopped the same. 

Sae loud the tongues o' randies grew. 
The flitin' and the skirlin* grew. 
At all the windows in the place, 
Wi' spoons or knives, wi* needle or awl, 
Was thrust out every hand and face. 



THE WITCH'S BALLAD. 31 

And down each stair they thronged anon, 

Gentle, semple, thronged anon \ 
Souter and tailor, frowsy Nan, 
The ancient widow young again, 
Simpering behind her fan. 

Without a choice, against their will, 

Doited, dazed, against their will, 
The market lassie and her mither, 
The farmer and his husbandman. 
Hand in hand dance a' thegether. 

Slow at first, but faster soon, 

Still increasing wild and fast, 
Hoods and mantles, hats and hose. 
Blindly doffed and cast away, 
Left them naked, heads and toes. 

They would have torn us limb from limb, 

Dainty limb from dainty limb ; 
But never one of them could win 
Across the line that 1 had drawn 
With bleeding thumb a-widdershin. 

But there was Jeff the provost's son, 

Jeff the provost's only son ; 
There was Father Auld himseP, 
The Lombard frae the hostelry, 
And the lawyer Peter Fell 



32 THE WITCH'S BALLAD. 

All goodly men we singled out, 

Waled them well, and singled out, 
And drew them by the left hand in ; 
Mysie the priest, and Elspie won 
The Lombard, Nort the lawyer carle, 
I myser the provost's son. 

Then, with cantrip kisses seven. 

Three times round with kisses seven. 
Warped and woven there spun we. 
Arms and legs and flaming hair. 
Like a whirlwind on the sea. 

Like the wind that sucks the sea. 
Over and in and on the sea, 
Good sooth it was a mad delight ; 
And every man of all the four 
Shut his eyes and laughed outright. 

Laughed as long as they had breath, 

Laughed while they had sense or breath ; 
And close about us coiled a mist 
Of gnats and midges, wasps and flies. 
Like the whirlwind shaft it rist. 

Drawn up I was right off my feet, 

Into the mist and off my feet ; 
And, dancing on each chimney-top, 
I saw a thousand darling imps 
Keeping time with skip and hop. 



THE WITCH'S BALLAD, 33 

And on the provost's brave ridge-tile, 
On the provost's grand ridge-tile, 
The Blackamoor first to master me 
I saw, — I saw that winsome smile, 
The mouth that did my heart beguile, 
And spoke the great Word over me. 
In the land beyond the sea. 

1 called his name, I called aloud, 
Alas ! I called on him aloud ; 
And then he filled his hand with stour. 
And threw it towards me in the air ; 
My mouse flew out, I lost my pow'r ! 

My lusty strength, my power, were gone ; 

Power was gone, and all was gone. 
He will not let me love him more ! 
Of bell and whip and horse's tail 
He cares not if I find a store. 

But I am proud if he is fierce ! 

I am as proud as he is fierce ; 
I'll turn about and backward go, 
If I meet again that Blackamoor, 
And he'll help us then, for he shall know 
I seek another paramour. 




34 THE WITCH'S BALLAD. 

And we'll gang once more to yon town, 

Wi* better luck to yon town ; 
We'll walk in silk and cramoisie, 
And I shall wed the provost's son; 
My-lady of the town I'll be ! 

For I was born a crowned king's child, 

Bom and nursed a king's child, 
King o' a land ayont the sea, 
Where the Blackamoor kissed me first, 
And taught me art and glamourie. 

Each one in her wame shall hide 

Her hairy mouse, her wary mouse. 
Fed on madwort and agramie, — 
Wear amber beads between her breasts. 
And blind-worm's skin about her knee. 

The Lombard shall be Elspie's man, 
Elspie's gowden husband-man ; 
Nort shall take the lawyer's hand ; 
The priest shall swear another vow : 
We'll dance again the saraband ! 



k 



35 



SAINT MARGARET, 

The wan lights freeze on the dark cold floor, 
Witch lights and green the high windows adorn ; 
The cresset is gone out the altar before, 
She knows her long hour of life's nigh worn, 
And she kneels here waiting to be re-bom, 

On the stones of the chancel. 

* That door darkly golden, that noiseless door. 
Through which I can see sometimes,' said she, 

* Will it ever be opened to close no more ; 
Will those wet clouds cease pressing on me; 
Shall I cease to hear the sound of the sea?* 

Her handmaids miss her and rise. 

* IVe gerved in life's prison-house long,' she said, 

* Where silver and gold are heavy and bright, 
Where children wail and where maidens wed. 
Where the day is wearier than the night, 
And each would be master if he might' 

Margaret ! they seek thee. 




36 • SAINT MARGARET, 

The night waxed darker than before ; 
Scarce could the windows be traced at all, 
Only the sharp rain was heard rushing o'er; 
A sick sleeper moaned through the cloister wall, 
And a horse neighed shrill from a distant stall, 

And the sea sounded on. 

* Are all the dear holy ones shut within, 
That none descend in my strait ? ' said she ; 

* Their songs are afar off, far off and thin, 
The terrible sounds of the prison-house flee 
About me, and the sound of the sea/ 

Lights gleam from room to room. 

Slowly a moonshine breaks over the glass, 
The black and green witchcraft is there no more ; 
It spreads and it brightens, and out of it pass 
Four angels with glorified hair, — all four 
With lutes ; and our Lord is in heaven's door. 

Margaret ! they hail thee. 

Her eyes are a-wide to the hallowed light. 
Her head is cast backward, her bosom is clad 
With the flickering moonlight pale purple and 

white ; 
Away to the angels her spirit hath fled, 
While her body still kneels, — but is it not dead? 

She is safe, she is well ! 




37 



THE RENDEZVOUS, 

* Lay my head upon thy neck, 

My sister, ever so dear to me ; 
Thy cool cheek on my burning brow, 
And if I weep, you may not see. 
The wind it lies i* the sedges. 

* In this low shieling down so far, 

Below the bower where we were born, 
He knows Til wait to hear again 
The sound o' his blythe bugle-horn. 
The wind it sighs V the sedges. 

' I hold him blameless now as then. 
For love must bide with confidence. 

And truth with trust I surely think, 
Withouten question or defence. 
The wind it sings /' the sedges. 

* Here, sheltered in the thick green shaw, 

The day is long, the night is drear ; 
But days and nights wear on until 
The joy of his return is near. 

The wind it clings to the sedges. 



38 THE RENDEZVOUS, 

' As I stood on the wrinkled shore 
The waves they sang of him to rae, 

Here-away, there-away, wandering 
On the far side of the sea. 

Butterflies light on the sedges, 

* They said his dark days all were done, 

And that his ship was in full sail, 
With men on the deck and wealth below. 
And braws for me, the pick and wale. 
The lily is bright in the sedges, 

* So here I've come to this dear place, 

And yestere'en the high window, 
Where we in one bed children slept, 
I saw it shining in the glow. 

The small fish darts V the sedges, 

* It seemed in fancy I discerned 

The place where once our two heads lay, 
And I thought how oft you combed my hair. 
And dressed me many a day. 

The bittern starts i* the sedges, 

* For thou wert ever a mother to me; 

I, weak and wayward, scarce can tell 
How good thou wert, — and yet I went 
That dreadful night without farewell. 
The badger rattles the sedges. 



THE RENDEZVOUS. 39 

* But 1 so feared our father, Maud ; 

Love-wildered, I had lost my head : 
I feared still more that false Delue 
My father meant that I should wed.' 
The bifid-weed wattles the sedges, 

' Ah, well- a-day ! my sister May, 
I shrink from him as then you did ; 

For now he is to husband me. 
If I conform, as I am bid/ 

The adder it hides i^ the sedges, 

' But that must never, never be ; 

Wise sister Maud, it shall not be : 
For, hark ! my true love's bugle-note — 

I know it brings good cheer to me ! ' 
Sunlight glides through the sedges, 

* Nay, 'tis but father's hunting-horn. 

With horses, dogs, and false Delue ! ' 

* They also ! but by yon cross road 

There comes my love, and his men too ! 
The wind again breaks /*' the sedges, 

* And now I know the hour shall strike, 

^Cast out my child and I shall be ; 
Or false Delue's last game is played ; — 
We'll part no more, my love and me ! 
The spring it awakes ^ the sedges. 




40 THE RENDEZVOUS. 

' Now they parley, man to man, — 

Short speech, alas ! for they must fight : 
My Lionel and Delue, — at once 
They draw their swords, so long and bright. 
The fisherman watches the sedges, 

' My father and that stranger lord 

Draw back the men each side the way, 

Some here, some there, they stand in line, 
Stand to look, as it were play ! 

The hurricane catches the sedges, 

* My sister Maud, now hold me up ; 

I must stand here, I must look on, — 
Holy Mary, soothe my child 
Until this mortal strife be done ! 

The storm wind weighs on the sedges. 

' I must look on, — fear not for me ; 

Full well I know his arm is strong : 
I must look on, — full well I know 

The struggle will not hold them long. 
The wild wind lays doum the sedges. 

* My child, my child ! so loud it cries, 

I pressed it all too close to me ; 
He hears it, and he turns this way. 
His hand drops down beside his knee. 
The lightfiing shatters the sedges. 



THE RENDEZVOUS, 41 

* Delue is closing on him now ; — 

My true, true love, it never can be ! 
Take me, sister, in your arms ; 
I cannot hear, I cannot see/ 

The flood-tide scatters the sedges. 

* Lie down, lie down 1 and let me watch : 

Delue goes back with deadly wound ; 
He tries in vain to lift his arm, — 
He falls — falls flat upon the ground. 
The rain it spurns the sedges. 

* Hear you, sister, what I say ? 

Shouts and steps approach the door : 
'Tis Lionel himself who lifts you, 
Gently lifts you from the floor ! ' 
Sunshine returns to the sedges. 



D 



42 



/ GO TO BE CURED AT AVILION: 
(To a Picture painted 1847.) 

Silently, swiftly the funeral barge 

Homeward bears the brave and good, 

His wide pall sweeping the murmuring marge, 

Flowing to the end of the world, 
Ki^ngs' daughters watching round his head, 
His brazen breastplate wet with blood 
And tears by these kings' daughters shed, 
Watching to the end of the world. 

A cresset of spices and sandal- wood 
Fills the wake with an odour rare ; 
Two swans lead dimly athwart the flood, 

Lead on to the end of the world. 
From the distant wold what brings the blast ? 
The trump's recall, the watch-fire's glare, — 
Oh ! let these fade into the past. 

As he fares to the end of the world. 



'I GO TO BE CURED AT AVI LION: 43 

From the misty woods a holier sound — 
For the monks are singing their evensong — 
Swoons faintly o'er the harvest-ground, 

As they pass to the end of the world. 
From the minster where the steep roofs are, 
The passing bell, that voice supreme. 
Sends a farewell faintly far, 

As they fade to the end of the world. 

It is gone, it is closed, the last red gleam, 
Darkness shuts the fiery day ; 
Over the windless, boatless stream 
The odours and embers have died away : 
They are gone to the end of the world. 




' And the Lord said unto Sata.n, Behold, he is in thy hand.' 
Job ii. 6. 
'Father, my quiet life hath lain 
In the hollows where the dews and rain 
From one day into another remain. 
Cold and green. One sin alone 
Up through my peace like a thorn hath grown : 



ANTHONY. 45 

I have tried to be humble in vain ; I've thought 
More of my gifts than a poor child ought ; 
I have believed to me was given 
The powers of the Saints — of miracles even ; 
And I fear me Jesu hath sent his leven 
To burn away the crown of pride 
That, try as I might, I never could hide. 
And to bear the great God's chastening, 
With the bodily sense, is a fearful thing ! 

* Father dear, last night I woke 

As a hand was gently laid on me. 

And a soft voice close beside me spoke : 

" Good brother, brother Anthony, 

A king is dying here close by, 

Aud wants thy ghostly aid." I rose 

Upon mine elbow 'mazedly ; 

This beggar-voice, whose could it be ? 

Who could have come where no path goes. 

Among the shingle and birks that close 

My cell about ? A faint light made 

By the moon there was, and across it a shade 

Moved ; from behind me a face right fair 

Suddenly stooped, half hid by its hair, 

Yet round the white brow might be seen 

A fretted gold thread. " Come, brother," quoth he, 

" Or death before us may have been " 

" Nay, I ween it must not be : 

D 2 



46 ANTHONY. 

To deal out God's body to the dying, 

To sain the soul through the dark night flying, 

I'm powerless. I'm no priest : go round 

To the Clerk of Isenford." " That ground 

I travelled now ; but it is said 

That yesternight the clerk is dead." 

" Then mount ye the hill to the cenoby." 

" Time is too short/' he made reply ; 

And got the better of me then, 

I thought myself singled out among men, 

Appointed by the Saints to do 

This holy thing : I rise and go ; 

The pax ye left last yule with me 

I put in my bosom hastily ; 

I follow him along by the river. Anon 

He opened a door in a garden wall, 

And muttered some words I can't recall. 

Then stept we down long steps of stone. 

Still down and evermore downwards — dark 

It was, and yet I heard, by chance, 

As we spoke together, the early lark ; 

Anon it seemed as if I must dance. 

Not walk, so giddy and light was I ; 

And then there seemed to be houses round, 

Unsteadily resting on the ground. 

As if they but seemed, and might change or fly ; 

With pictures were they painted o'er, 

And settles stood by every door. 



ANTHONY. 47 

Past these we went, I following him, 

The heavy heat making my head to swim 

As if I were drunken. Then came a sound, 

The regular chaunt of a litany — 

Doubtless to Hecat or Venus — and they 

Who chanted it were seen nowhere, 

Neither on ground nor in the air : 

Nor was there green field or blue sky, 

Or tree or stream, but all was brown. 

And flames like lamps leapt up and down : 

Nor saw I aught living in doublet or gown. 

Till we came to the market-place, where stood, 

Instead of a cross, an image of wood, 

A huge-faced image, with ass's ears. 

And horns and a tongue and eyes full of leers, 

Bodyless, only a block, whence grew 

Lopped arms and shameless parts — before 

The image flickered a flame dark blue. 

And round it, hand in hand, a score 

Of dark brown men and women ran. 

Naked as devils : I tried to ban ; 

I had no book or cross, but the pax. 

With the blessed body sealed in silver and wax ! 

The pax was gone, and that was how 

They gained such power upon me now. 

My winsome guide laid hold on me. 

Capering as if his bare feet were on thorns ; 

But the beauty, I trow, was quite gone now — 



48 ANTHONY 

I saw he too had horns ! 

Oh, had I at the first but seen 

The fire in his eyen — oh, well had it been ! 

Alas ! how they did pierce and play 

About me and into me, into my heart ! 

And the place wherever he made them dart 

Was lit up by a quivering gleam, 

Like that from sunlit glass or stream. 

I turned and ran ; but round and round 

Still danced the fiends till I fell in a swound, 

xA.nd I woke anon where about me, I trow, 

Was kingly ornament enow : 

On a couch of gold, on a tiger*s hide, 

I lay, and a creature meek and mild, 

Wimpled like a sister of Transatide, 

Smoothed my hair down like a child. 

And laid my face against her side. 

Oh, but it was strange and new, 

The unrest that within me grew : 

I believed her a sister — some glamour, 

Some smoke of the pit, some nameless power, 

Was there ; but I prevailed at last ! 

Her arms about my head she cast ; 

" I am a princess," the serpent said. 

Ere you arrived was my father dead ; 

And you must now rule here, for I 

Can give you knowledge and sovereignty, 

With a crown to cover your tonsured head." 



ANTHONY. 49 

Woe's me ! I listened, sorry and sad 

That she was a devil or I was mad : 

I lay still and listened, and then she drew 

From a small red distaff that stood by itself, 

And moved to her hand like a living elf, 

A fine green thread she cunningly threw 

Around me and round. Then a can of green flame 

Or of wine — I knew not whence it came — 

She called it wine — to my mouth she pressed, 

And whispered so softly, " Drink now, and rest." 

I was wearing to sleep, and my lips were dry ; 

A want, not of will, but of energy. 

Was saving me, till at last she sung — 

Thank thee, O thou foolish red tongue ! 

Is there a better place over the sky ? 

Is there a fairer race living on high ? 

Is there a hell, can any man tell ? 

For he knoweth nought when the shroud is wrought ; 

But I've heard it said by the midday breeze, 

In the churchyard trees, and by the grey seas. 

Upon midsummer night, when the moon is in flight. 

That Paradise is but a shade 

Made by the evening clouds in the air, 

A delusion and a snare. 

So brother dear, oh, harbour here. 

And live with me ; for a mortal year 

Will be nothing to thee, if thou wilt not tine 

The offer of my bright green wine. 



so ANTHONY, 

I tried right sore, but no word could say, 

While she touched me, that accursed May, 

With her thread and her wine, — I feared them now, 

And she knew the fear upon my brow ; 

I saw her trembling through her hair. 

And then at once I was aware 

That she was changed or gone ; for there, 

Instead of her, another stood. 

Also clad in a wimple and hood ; 

My book and my beads, with the little black rood, 

She held towards me, and she sung 

With a sharp clear voice, and a bright red tongue : 
Nay, look not so, for it grieves us mo' 
Than I can tell, and of heaven and hell, 
What they are made of, and where they lie, 
And how to find them by-and-by, 
Thou shalt teach, and we shall hear — 

I broke upon her silly song 

By grasping at the hallowed gear ; — 

Ah, when I found it in my grasp. 

The rood was changed into an asp. 

But the thread was broken, and I was strong. 

For I struggled up and out of her reach \ 

I found my voice, — that vile asp tried 

To get into my mouth, — but three times I cried 

Upon the name of Christ — the wall 

About me splits, and the devils fall 

And break like images of board, — 

Such is the power of the name of the Lord ! 



ANTHONY. 5 1 

* Long I threaded the streets about, 

That I might find some pathway out ; 

Nor could 1 tell the west from east : 

So I was lost. By many a door 

Fallen, and many a settle before, 

The naked creatures broken lay. 

Like sculptor's fragments cast away. 

And yet their eyes could follow me, 

Although they could not move or turn ; 

I stumbled over them ; I could spurn 

Their breasts and limbs, — but those wide-open eyes 1 

Ah, me ! at last I saw on high 

This hill against the morning sky;— 

Was it not hard from thence to see 

This chapel at hand, and between it and me — 

Enchantment — like a wall of glass, 

It seemed I never, never could pass ? 

Then I remembered the spell whereby 

The possessed wherever they list can fly ; 

That spell brother Lupus, cursed be he ! 

Brought from the pagans of Sicily : 

And I was lifted from the ground, 

fiats and ribbed things clipping me round, 

And thrown down ; then, oh ! such a race 

I ran, — ^for everything gave me chase, 

Wolves, moles, birds, stones, hosts of flies ; 

And the faces of women and men 1 know 

Died many and many a year ago, 




52 ANTHONY, 

Kept up with me, their white, light eyes 

Close to my face ; all vampires, so 

They bit my neck, they sucked my blood. 

They caught my ankles, they twisted my hood, 

And at last — at last they stole 

My senses ; without sense I ran, 

Like a jointed frame without a soul ; 

Yet I knew the joints, alas ! began 

To double and crack ; — but oh ! God*s bliss ! 

About my feet a stream doth hiss. 

The cold, running stream, and I am free, 

With daylight, father, and with thee ! ' 



II 

When the stricken child had thus confessed, 
Humbly he crossed his hands on his breast. 
Waiting. The abbot raised his eyen, 
That closed this half-hour had been, 
And answered : * Thy name, Anthony, 
Was once borne by a Saint ; if so 
It be with thee as with him, and mo'. 
Whom Jesu put in Satan's power 
To bait them for a day and hour, 
It doth behove thee back to go 
Into thy hermitage again ; 
And if from grace thou art astray, 
Anthony, gird thyself amain 



ANTHONY. 53 

With prayer and fast ; this penance do, 
And when thou vanquishest the foe, 
Thou shalt rule, and I obey ! ' 

He turned about, but the kneehng man 

Caught the skirt of his camlet and began 

To wail like the stork in the fowler's hand : 

' Father ! aught but this demand 

Let me but live in the cenoby, 

And penance day and night Til dree ; 

Send me not to live alone ' 

* The will of God, my will be done ! ' 
Querulously the old man cried. 
And thrust the penitent aside. 



Ill 

The sound of their parting steps is gone, 

His heart sinks like his knees on the stone, 

The asperging drops still shine on his head, 

The smoke of the censer scarce is shed ; 

For they brought him hither with chant and bell, 

Relics and incense-pot as well. 

His long thin hands together are prest. 

Finger to finger before his breast 

Through their closed lids you may see 

His eyeballs moving resdessly, 




54 ANTHONY. 

As if he listened with shut eyes, 
For thus the senses sympathise ! 
And now he sings, but far to find 
Is every rhyme he would unwind : 

Thou wood of the cross of the agony. 
Ye nails that fixed Him to the tree, 
Sponge that held the last bitter draught, 
Lift, support, and strengthen me ! 

Drops of His sweating that eased His pain, 
Drops of blood, the parched world's rain. 
Tears that brought us man's second spring, 
Cleanse, absolve, absolve, and sain ! 

Mary's most holy eyes then lifted up. 
Angels most holy hands holding the cup, 
And Spirit most holy that then came down, 
Make my soul with ye to sup ! 

He stops, forgetting the rest ; the lamp 
Through its misty nimbus crackles ; a tramp 
Is heard without, a laugh and a call ; — 
He answers not : against the wall 
All round the bigging the knocking goes. 
From west to east as a witch-dance flows : 
Then up on the thatch it begins to scratch ; 
There's a long thin line seen crossing the shrine, 
Mistier still in the thickening damp; 



ANTHONY, 55 

By its dainty thread right over his head, 
A spider spins, for a moment it stops, 
Then right upon his bald head drops. 
Ah ! he comes as he came before, — 
Only since they sprinkled the latch, 
And set that cross upon the door. 
He must enter by the thatch ! 
Anthony fell like a murdered man. 
And that long-legged imp-spiderling ran 
Over his face : now raised on his hands 
He stares about, the hour-glass stands 
Right upon end with its drizzling sands, 
And the friendly mort-head, round and round 
Rolls about with a crazy sound, 
A gasping creak, it tries to speak, 
Eyeballs from its caves gleam out ! 
The horns — the horns begin to sprout ! 

Next mom betimes they came to see 
How fared their young brother Anthony, 
But he was gone, nor could they trace 
His footsteps nor his resting-place. 

IV 

'Tis well to spend the wintry day 
Of age from tumults quite away : 
When love is past, and we leave off strife. 
Having long borne our lots in life. 



56 ANTHONY. 

Answering the daily need, 

With brand and buckler to conquer or bleed ; 

Or for the burgher's watch so drear, 

Filling the wallet with good cheer, 

Or in the booth or market-stand 

Where moil befits both tongue and hand : 

But work is heavy from morn to eve, 

With sorrow still watching behind like a reeve, 

And the only shelter sure and fair 

Is the cloister and cowl to the man of care. 

To the man upon whom the great black hand 

Of chastening waxeth tight, whose head 

Is bowed, so he no more can stand 

In the guild-hall he aforetime led. 

Nor less to him who wickedly 

Seeketh temptations, the lusts of the eye 

And the pride of life ; for surely God 

Lends the heart a worm, the back a rod, 

To punish those forgetting Him ; 

And His punishments are grim !. 

Abasing the haughty in velvet and fur. 

Who hold their foreheads against the thunder. 

And laugh to see the patched poor wonder, 

Who travel with riders before and behind. 

Riding over the halt and blind. 

Who empty the stoup with the wassailer, 

Over the chamber of the dying, — 

Who wear the night with dice and lying. 



ANTHONY. 57 

Lying and cursing over the dice, 
And to the chirp of the violette, 
With a headless amorette 
Dance until the cock crows thrice. 

There was a time when Saints were rife, 
Whose cross was ever their staff of life ; 
From Camelot to Egypt's river, 
Blessings fell from Gabriers quiver ; 
Nor was it wonderful to see 
The holy rood stoop down to greet 
The worshipper whose heart was sweet, 
Whose deeds and thoughts did well agree, — 
Who never dropt his beads to scratch, 
Though his cassock was as coarse as thatch : 
This age was likened to the sun 
Upholding life since time begun. 

Then glorious still, though glorious less, 
The second age of holiness. 

Was likened to the harvest-moon, 

« 

Whose sweet white face doth wane so soon. 

Then came the third last age of light; 
Darker it was, yet grand and bright, 
Like the company of stars by night. 

But sun, and moon, and stars are gone. 
And we the watchers left alone 




58 ANTHONY, 

With no more cheer than candlewick 
Through a horn lantern, yellow and thick. 
So now in the race, for one who wins, 
Six shall stumble with wounded shins ; 
For the rood is stifif whoever kneels, 
And God never stops His chariot wheels. 
Nor looks out of His narrow window, 
Over the drifts and steeps of snow; 
But Satan for a thousand years 
Has gotten a lease of our hopes and fears — 
To catch men's souls by their eyes and ears. 
Let us everyone beware 
Little faith or overcaring. 
Pride of heart or overdaring, 
Lest we come within his snare. 

In after years on that spot grew 

Cloisters of stone all fair and new : 

And Camaldules at least five-score 

Lived where these few had housed before ; 

Then in the guest-hall oft was told 

This story of the times of old. 

And of a beggar-man, who lay 

With crutch and cup by night and day. 

Begging and muttering before 

Saint Peter's great west door. 

This beggar, when aught was flung in his cup. 

If 'twas not silver would grumble and grutch. 



ANTHONY, 59 

And strive to raise his body up, 

To reach the almoner with his crutch ! 

Then as the midnight struck, they said. 

He lay stretched out as if he were dead, 

When a hornbd stranger, strong and grim, 

Through the locked city-gate came toward him. 

And took his daily spoils away. 

Some thought him a Saint, and gave him food 

Day by day, as Christians should ; 

But others averred that Satan had 

Sworn him his slave and driven him mid, 

And that his name was Anthony. 

But whether he was the same who fled 

From his cell that night can never be said. 




6o 



LOVES CALENDAR, 

That gusty spring, each afternoon 

By the ivied cot I passed, 
And noted at that lattice soon 

Her fair face downward cast ; 
Still in the same place seated there, 
So diligent, so very fair. 

Oft-times I said I knew her not, 
Yet that way round would go. 

Until, when evenings lengthened out, 
And bloomed the may-hedge row, 

I met her by the wayside well. 

Whose waters, maybe, broke the spell. 

For, leaning on her pail she prayed 

I'd lift it to her head. 
So did I ; but I'm much afraid 

Some wasteful drops were shed. 
And that we blushed, as face to face 
Needs must we stand the shortest space. 



LOVE'S CALENDAR, 6i 

Then when the sunset mellowed through 

The ears of rustling grain, 
When lattices wide open flew, 

When ash-leaves fell like rain. 
As well as I she knew the hour 
At mom or eve I neared her bower. 

And now that snow overlays the thatch, 

Each starlit eve within 
The door she waits, I raise the latch, 

And kiss her lifted chin ; 
Nor do I think weVe blushed again, 
For Love hath made but one of twain. 




62 



A BRIDAL RACE. 

Sir Hubert mounted his little brown barb, 
Her jennette of Spain his bride ; 

* My winsome Isabelle, my wife,' 

Quoth he, * let's a wager ride ! * 

Quoth he, ' Sweet wife, let us ride a race. 

And this shall be the play, 
Whoever wins first to yon haw-tree, 

Shall do even as they may. 

* And whether we live in the country, 

Or in town as I would still, 
Whoever wins first to yon haw-tree 
Shall have it as they will.' 

* Done ! ' said she with a light high laugh, 

* I'm pleased with such as this ; 
Let us sign the 'pact ! ' She leant across. 
As if she meant to kiss. 



A BRIDAL RACE. ^ 63 

He thought to catch her Hmber waist, 

And really a kiss repay, 
But she gave her jennette the rein at once ; 

She was off, she was away. 

The little brown barb he shied aside, 

On galloped she merrilie, 
The race was short and she was the first, 

First by the red haw-tree. 

* Now fie upon you, winsome wife ! ' 

Cried he, * you ride unfair, 
For with that feint, that start too soon. 
You took me unaware.' 

* What's fair,' quoth she with her light high laugh, 

* I do not care three straws ! 
Oh, I shall rule, yes, I shall rule, 
But you, love, shall make the laws ! * 



K 2 




64 



PARTING AND MEETING AGAIN, 

Last time I parted from my dear 
The linnet sang from the briar-bush, 

The throstle from the dell ; 
The stream too carolled full and clear, 
It was the spring-time of the year, 
And both the linnet and the thrush 

I love them well, 
Since last I parted from my dear. 

But when he came again to me 
The barley rustled high and low, 

Linnet and thrush were still ; 
Yellowed the apple on the tree, 
'Twas autumn merry as it could be, 
What time the white ships come and go 

Under the hill ; 
They brought him back again to me. 
Brought him safely o'er the sea. 



65 



LOVE. 

I LEFT the city gates. Through paths of sward, 
Where never cloud of dust had fallen, I reached 
An opening in a wall of sapling boughs ; 
I entered, and within more still and cool 
It was, and freshness through the air exhaled 
From the green ground. Half dusk it was, for round 
And round the branches wove a screen from heaven 
Of darkest green and varied leaf, *neath which 
Flies thickly humming danced. Sometimes a bird 
Flew straightway through, and as its wing might brush 
The leaves about your head, it seemed to fear 
That it had missed its way. Flowers too were there. 
Sprinkled about amidst the grass which grows 
Hair-like and thin beneath the shade ; bluebells 
Tinkling to the small breeze a bee might cause. 
And violets, and poppies red and rough 
In stem. I passed still deeper through the wood 
By this cool path : a wood more kindly cool. 
Or harmless of dank poisons or vile beasts 
That creep, there cannot be, and yet so wild 
And uncouth. Bushes of dusk fruit beside 




66 LOVE, 

The pathway from the ground piled up two walls 

Of leaves and berries, from which flocked the birds 

As I passed on, or lingered with dyed hands 

Plucking them listless, and with profuse waste 

Pressing their juice out. Other trees were there 

Blossoming for a later month. And now. 

As from the populous harvest field came sounds 

Of hearty laughter, till by distance lost. 

And then again heard, as the reapers turned, 

A snatch of song, a very pleasant sound. 

Beneath a clear sky and thick boughs, a sound 

Right happy. So I also sang. The sun 

Then found an opening through the stems, to fall 

Upon my path ; and as I walked across 

The flowers upon my right my shadow passed. 

A butterfly with purple-velvet wings, 

Invested with two lines of dusky gold 

And spotted with red spots, upon these flowers 

Was feeding, and anon as my shade fell 

Upon it, it flew up and went before. 

Lighting again until I passed : and so 

Continued it. The space more closed and closed 

Became, and all between the trees were warped, 

Hop-twigs and bindweed running far. Beneath, 

A slow stream likewise glent, and secretly 

Fed spreading water-lilies, and long reeds 

Heavy with seed, which might have made fair pipes, 



LOVE. 67 

Cut nicely by the joints, from whence a leaf 

Depended. But I thought not of the task, 

Watching my guide's dark wings, until the path 

Seemed stayed by dense convolvulus and may, 

(Largely o'ergrown without the pruner's hands) 

And wild white rose. But the dark sphynx-fiy lowered 

Its flight till nigh the ground, and passed into 

The mass of greenery by an interspace 

Unseen before ; with both my hands I raised, 

And parted with my head, full lazily. 

The luscious screen at this same interspace. 

Behold ! beneath a peristyle I stand 

Of short columnar palms, before me steps 

Of fine-shorn grass descend unto a space 

Carpeted, curtained, looped with garlands too, 

And set all round with woven seats of boughs 

Cut roughly from the forest, over which 

Uptangling richly to the highest trees, 

And waving then even into the air, 

Were rare and unknown flowers, and round a fount 

(Of which a marble girl, with green feet through 

The water and white head, seemed Nymph) bright 

heaps 
Of lily blooms were strewn. But all these things 
After the first delight were nought to me ; 
I was aware of some one near, whose life 
The whole seemed imitative of, whose smile 



68 LOVE. 

The light seemed intimating to the flowers, 

Whose graciousness all round seemed fashioned by. 

Quite passively I stretched upon the sward, 

Mazed by this unknown beauty, and the swanas 

Of moths like that which here had guided me. 

And then the influence became more clear, 

More fixed, and I beheld a Lady. Round 

Her hand, which held some sweet, the insects thronged, 

And lighted on her hair. I did not start 

With rapture nor surprise, nor did I deem 

Myself unworthy of this gardened love. 

This goddess-girl, nor said she aught to me ; 

But by her eyes, which never looked on me, 

/ said she was the spirit of my life, 

And tho' I had not seen her until now, 

I still had known her. 

She bent down beside 
The sward I pressed ; she leant on the rude seat 
Over me ; but I knew not from that hour, 
AVhether it was myse f I gazed upon, 
Or whether I beheld with love intense 
And sympathy some higher beings, both 
Worthy of each. And she began to sing ; 
A language which was song was hers, — she sang ; 
A fragile lute upon her knees she placed. 
And, balanced from her neck by cord of silk. 
Her fingers gave it speech, yet touched it not, 



LOVE. 69 

But her hands hovered o*er it like two birds 

With wings still fluttering to descend, — she played. 

Soft as the fine tints of a rainbow bound 

About a shower that fell not : first her voice 

Came on my sense, but scarce articulate ; 

Then, waxing louder, it ascended heaven 

With all its colours brightening. My heart 

Is stilled to sleep as a maid stills a child 

That murmurs not, but looks still upward on 

The watching smile, till its eyes close at last 

Unconsciously. But suddenly the notes 

Began to whirl together as a flight 

Of swallows, and then louder still became, 

Happy beyond all words ; fair spirits seemed 

Clamorous and clapping of their hands for joy ! 

Too happy beyond words, I would have wept 

Had I been in the actual world, where tears 

Are bred by stranger sympathy; but here, 

^Vhere sympathy was life, I did not weep. 

Lady and child at once ! I could weep now ! 

But then the dark hair of thy song fell down. 

The eyelid of thy music dropt : it plained 

Faintly, and saturated with sweet pain. 

Carried my soul into a void grey realm 

Of everlasting melancholy. Maid ! 

Who moumest for thy lover, hear the lay 

And be not comforted, but mourn no more 

As you have mourned. Youth ! whose thirsting love 

B 




70 LOVE. 

Has conjured an ideal from the land 
Of Vision, listen with a joyous hope 
And mourn not with the bitterness that thou 
Hast mourned. 

A louder chord is struck ! let grief at once 

Be wept out like a thunder-rain, and pride 

Go up triumphant with a purple flush, 

And warn of trump — the golden crown doth press 

The spirit^s forehead who hath conquered all ! — 

— O Lady, thou art wondrous fair and good ! 

The earth is filled, oh ! filled with gracious things. 

Slowly again to life descends thy strain, 

An odour as of rose-leaves seems to fall 

Upon me, and a pearly light : behold ! 

Art thou not as a goddess over me ? 

Oh, intermit thy strong- linked power — oh, cease ! 

And let me drink a silence short and deep, 

Then die into the Life that thou dost live. 



^ 




OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 

SONNETS. 



PUBLIC LIBRARYI 







73 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



BIRTH. 

I STOOD before the vail of the Unknown, 
And round me in this life's dim theatre 
Was gathered a whole townsfolk, all astir 

With various interludes : I watched alone, 

And saw a great hand lift the vail, then shone, 
Descending from the innermost expanse, 
A goddess to whose eyes my heart at once 

Flew up with awe and love, a love full-blown. 

Naked and white she was, her fire-girt hair 
Eddied on either side her straight high head, 
Swaddled within her arms in lambent flame, 
An unborn life, a child-soul, did she bear, 
And laid it on a young wife's breast and fled. 
Yet no one wondered whence the strange gift 
came ! 




74 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



TI 



DEA TH, 



Again that stage was vacant, that dusk crowd 
Was murmuring as before : again that hand 
Gathered the curtain ; I saw rise and stand 

Against the inmost blackness like a cloud, 

No feature seen, but o*er his brows a proud 
Spiked crown that held the thick mist clothing him, 
A strong imperious creature, tall and slim. 

And hateful too, thus hid within that shroud. 

Stooping he raised within his long thin arms 

A scared old man and rolled him up, and fled : 
And all the crowd shrieked out, and muttering charms, 
Threw down their fiddle-bows and merchandise, — 
Around the stark corpse knelt with suppliant cries, 
Nor ceased still wondering where was gone — the 
dead ! 



75 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



Ill 



LIFE. 



Young men and maidens, darkling, pair by pair, 
Travelled a road cut through an ancient wood : 
It was a twilight in a warm land, good 

To dwell in ; the path rose up like a stair, 

And yet they never ceased, nor sat down there ; 
Above them shone brief glimpses of blue sky, 
Between the black boughs plumed funereally, 

Before them was a faint light, faint but fair. 

Onward they walked, onward I with them went, 
Expecting some thrice-welcome home would show 
A hospitable board, and baths and rest ; 
But still we looked in vain, all hopes were spent. 
No home appeared ; and still they onward go, 
I too, footweary traveller, toward the West. 



76 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



IV 



GAIN AND LOSS. 



Oft-times we consummate our fond desires, 
Nor seldom does the strong man seize his prize, 
But ere that day comes expectation dies ; 

Fruition is not like what Hope inspires. 

No more than are the ashes like the fires 
That shed them : when we start upon the road, 
Arcadia blooms somewhere, the blest abode 

Of nymphs and perfect men, till, by surprise, 

Noon strikes the bell, and all around remains 
The same sad commonplace ; nor are we grieved, 

Our staff unworn, our scrip with numerous gains 
Refilled, — with Patience, cleansed eyes undeceived, 

Silence of heart, meekness lo match our fate ; 

Experience guides us on, but shuts the golden gate. 




11 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



LOOKING FORWARD. 

How very strangely are these travellers made ! 
Happily with no choice but still to live, 

Weaving and shaping, so to be arrayed, 
Crying to nature, Stay ! to fate. Give, give ! 

Still hastening towards to-morrow, when to-day 
Fails to bring forth, from its too numerous toils 
And manifold emotions, those great spoils 

Wherewith to build a tower of strength and stay 

Reaching to heaven. Alas ! we only find 
To-morrow like to-day, with the same sky, 
Silent and blue, silent and dark and high \ 

The only changes, thunder, storm, and wind : 
And round us rise still, darkening all the air, 
Groves we have reared, that only blossoms bear. 



78 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



VI 



HOPE DEFERRED. 



Courage of heart and hand, Faith first of all : 

Such is the prayer of the perplexed man, 
As the storm-scattered blossoms round him fall. 

And shrinking from the rod and from the ban 
Of starless chance. Prayer prompted by desires 

For mastery and godhead sense denies. 
And by sky-pointing mediaeval spires, 

Symbols of creeds the beaten hound still tries 
To shelter under in this pilgrimage. 

Passing from birth to death. But let us hear 
What Nature, cruel mother ! says so sage, — 

Still listening if perchance gods interfere — 
* Gain faith and courage through self-harmony, 
And live your lives, nor only live to die.' 



79 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



VII 



FAITH, 



* Follow Me,' Jesus said ; and they uprose, 
Peter and Andrew rose and followed Him, 
Followed Him even to heaven through death most 
grim, 

And through a long hard life without repose, 

Save in the grand ideal of its close. 

* Take up your cross and come with Me,' He said ; 
And the world listens yet through all her dead. 

And still would answer had we faith like those. 

But who can light again such beacon-fire ! 
With gladsome haste and with rejoicing souls — 
How would men gird themselves for the emprise ? 
Leaving their black boats by the dead lake's mire. 
Leaving their slimy nets by the cold shoals, 
Leaving their old oars, nor once turn their eyes. 




So 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



VIII 



AT PRESENT, 



But what have we instead ? Shelves, miles on miles 
Of books, in all the tongues, from all the years 
Since fabulous Babel's topless tower appears 

Through the heroic mist : Museums, piles 

Of fragments, dead faiths' and dead learnings' spoils : 
And in the study, victory crowns the hair 
Of our new Hercules, the young, the fair. 

Analysis, untired for all his toils. 

And what besides ? the church bells ring at one 
With custom as respect requires at home ; 

Abroad, in cap-and-bells their long ears pent. 
Fools go on pilgrimage with knaves ; at Rome 
A blind, self-styled Infallible, old man, 

Coaxes * God's mother ' with a monument ! 




8i 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 

IX 

SELF-DECEPTION. 

There's a Seer's peak on Ararat, they say, 
From which we can descry the better world ; 
Not that supernal kingdom whence were hurled 

The rebel-angels ere Creation's day, 

But Eden-garden, Adam's first array. 

Round which the Flood-waves stood back like a wall, 
And whither still are sent the souls of all 

The good dead, where the cherubim sing and play. 

Dear lovely land we wait for and desire, 
Whence fondly-loved lost faces look back still, 
Waiting for us, so distant and apart ; 
But from the depth between what mists aspire — 
What wrinkled sea rolls severing hill from hill — 
Vision ! 'tis but a reflex of the heart ! 




82 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



CONTENTMENT IN THE DARK, 

We asked not to be born : *tis not by will 

That we are here beneath the battle- smoke, 
Without escape ; by good things as by ill, 

By facts and mysteries enchained : no cloak 
Of an Elijah, no stairs whereupon 

Angels ascending and descending shine 
Over the head here pillowed on a stone, 

Anywhere found ; — so say they who repine. 
But each year hath its harvest, every hour 

Some melody, child-laughter, strengthening strife, 
For mother Earth still gives her child his dower. 

And loves like doves sit on the boughs of life. 

Ought we to have whatever we want, in sooth ? 

To build heaven-reaching towers, find Jacob's stair ; 
Alchemists' treasures, everlasting youth, 

Or aught that may not stand our piercing air? 



Jr. 



CONTENTMENT IN THE DARK. ^^ 

Nay, even these are ours, but only found 

By Poet in those fabulous vales, due east. 
Where grows the amaranth in charmed ground ; 

And he it was thenceforth became the Priest, 
And raised Jove's altar when the world was young : 

He too it was, in Prophet's vesture stoled. 
Spake not but sang until life's roof-tree rung, 

And we who hear him still are crowned with gold. 



F 2 




84 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



XI 



THE UNIVERSE VOID, 

Revolving worlds, revolving systems, yea, 
Revolving firmaments, nor there we end : 

Systems of firmaments revolving, send 

Our thought across the Infinite astray, 

Gasping and lost and terrified, the day 

Of life, the goodly interests of home. 

Shrivelled to nothing ; that unbounded dome 

Pealing still on, in blind fatality. 

No rest is there for our souFs wingfed feet, 
She must return for shelter to her ark — 

The body, fair, frail, death-bom, incomplete, 
And let her bring this truth back from the dark 

Life is self-centred, man is nature's god ; 

Space, time, are but the walls of his abode. 




35 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 

XII 

SPIRITUAL LONGINGS UNANSWERED. 

Self-centred, self-illumined, from our eyes 
Life shines out on the spheres of other lives ; 
Giving, exchanging, filling sweet-celled hives 

Of memory ; sense transformed in heavenly wise 

And made divine ; do we not formalise 
The Beautiful, the Good, the Just ? and so 
The flower-crowned loves and friendships round us 
grow, 

Whose choral voices echo to the skies. 

But still the questing beast goes forth, we cry 

Whence came we at the first? from what soil grew 

This endless Reason that aspires so high ? 

AVhere go we ? useless questions these appear. 
For we know nought of that dark sun, the True, 

Whose latent heats create our spiritual year. 



86 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 

XIII 

DEVELOPMENT IN NATURE. 

Walled up in sense, we know no general plan : 
^ons long past creative power went on, 
Evolving lights and forces round the throne. 

And in the ordered nucleus of the plan 

Blossomed and brightened the umbrageous span 
Of this our world, beneath the Fates' fell care, 
The Tree of Life outspreading everywhere. 

And seedling fruits from short-lived blooms began. 

Have these old mysteries ceased ? from fiery steeps. 
From deepening swamps the mute snake writhed 
along ; 

Anon the bird screamed — theii the furred beast creeps 
Growling ; then Adam speaks erect and strong. 

Shall there not rise again from Nature's de<*ps 
One more, whose voice shall be the perfect song ? 




87 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



XIV 



SCIENCE ABORTIVE, 



With what vain speculations do we slake 

The mental thirst ! What matter, cycles hence, 
If higher creatures at mankind's expense 

Start into life with senses broad awake 

To truths we only dream of; hands to shake 
The pillars of the temple we but grope 
Feebly about, who will gain entrance, cope 

With the daemon, and all prison-fetters break? 

The churchyard dust a thousand times blown wide 
Would see them, hear them not ; the question men 
Ten hundred various creeds and gods have raised 
To answer, by Death's door we must abide ; 
Blinded by life itself, by fears half-crazed. 
We raise another god and ask again ! 




88 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 

XV 

ONENESS OF ALL. 

(PEBBLES IN THE STREAM.) 

Upon this rustic bridge on this warm day 
We rest from our too-thoughtful devious walk ; 
Over our shadows its melodious talk 

The stream continues, while oft-times a stray 

Dry leaf drops down where these bright waters play 
In endless eddies, through whose clear brown deep 
The gorgeous pebbles quiver in their sleep ; 

The stream still flows, but cannot flow away. 

Could I but find the words that would reveal 

The unity in multiplicity, 
And the profound strange harmony I feel 

With these dead things, God's garments of to-day ; 
The listener's soul with mine they would anneal, 
And make us one within eternity. 




89 



OUTSIDE THE TEMPLE. 



XVI 



A SYMBOL. 



At early mom I watched, scarce consciously, 

Through the half-opened casement the high screen 
Of our trees touched now by the brightening sheen 

Of the ascending sun : the room was grey 

And dim, with old things filled this many a day, 
Closing me in, but those thick folds of trees 
Shone in the fresh light, trembled in the breeze : 

A shadow crossed them on its arrowy way 
Cast by a flying bird I could not see ; 

Then called a voice far off that seemed to say. 
Come, we are here 1 Such might or might not be 
What the voice called, but then methought I knew 

I was a soul new-bom in death's dark clay. 
Awakening to another life more true. 



END. 



90 



PARTED LOVE. 



THE PAST, 

Methinks I have passed through some dreadful door, 
Shutting off summer and its sunniest glades 
From a dank waste of marsh and ruinous shades : 

And in that sunlit past, one day before 

All other days is crimson to the core ; 

That day of days when hand in hand became 
Encircling arms, and with an effluent flame 

Of terrible surprise, we knew love's lore. 

The rose-red ear that then my hand caressed, 
Those smiles bewildered, that low voice so sweet, 
The truant threads of silk about the brow 
Dishevelled, when our burning lips were pressed 
Together, and the temple-pulses beat ! 
All gone now— where am I, and where art thou ? 




91 



PARTED LOVE. 



II 



THE PRESENT, 



No cypress- wreath nor outward signs of grief ; 
But I may cry unto the mom, and flee 
After the god whose back is turned to me, 

And touch his wings and plead for some relief ; 

Draw, it may be, a black shaft from his sheaf :— 
For now I know his quiver harbom^ those 
Death mixed with his, as the old fable shows. 

When he slept heedless on the red rose leaf. 

And I may open Memory's chamber-door 

To grope my way around its noiseless floor, 
Now that, alas ! its windows give no light, 

Nor gentle voice invites me any more ; 
For she is but a picture faintly bright 
Hung dimly high against the walls of night. 




92 



PARTED LOVE. 

Ill 
MORNING, 

Last night, — it must have been a ghost at best, — 
I did believe the lost one's slumbering head 
Filled the white hollows of the curtained bed, 

And happily sank again to soimd sweet rest, 

As in times past with sleep my nightly guest, 
A guest that left me only when the day 
Showed me a fairer than Euphrosyne, — 

Day that now shows me but the unfilled nest. 

O night ! thou wert our mother at the first, 

Thy silent chambers are our homes at last ; 

And even now thou art our bath of life. 
Come back ! the hot sun makes our lips athirst ; 

Come back ! thy dreams may recreate the past ; 

Come back ! and smooth again this heart's long strife. 




93 



PARTED LOVE. 



IV 



BY THE SEA-SIDE. 



Rest here, my heart, nor let us further creep ; 
Rest for an hour, I shall again be strong, 
And make for thee another little song : 

Rest here, and look down on the tremulous deep 

Where sea-weeds like dead msenad's long locks sweep 
Over that dreadful floor of stagnant green, 
Stewed with the bones of lovers that have been. 

Nor even yet can scarce be said to sleep. 

Beyond that sea, far o'er that wasteful sea, 
The sunset she so oft hath seen with me 

Flames up with all the arrogances of gold. 
Scarlet and purple, while the west-wind falls 

Upon us with its deadliest winter-cold ; — 
Shall we slide down ? I think the dear one calls ! 




94 



PARTED LOVE. 



EVENING. 

As in a glass at evening, dusky-grey, 

The faces of those passing through the room 
Seem hke ghost-transits thwart reflected gloom, 

Thus, darling image ! thou, so long away, 

Visitest sometimes my darkening day : 

Other friends come ; the toy of life turns round, 
The glittering beads change with their tinkling 
sound, 

Whilst thou in endless youth sit'st silently. 

How vain to call time back, to think these arms 
Again may touch, may shield, those shoulders soft 
And solid, never more my eyes can see : 

But yet, perchance — (speak low) — ^beyond all harms, 
I may walk with thee in God's other croft. 
When this world shall the darkling mirror be. 





THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE 

(PENKILL, AYRSHIRE). 






i . '••"*n*. I. 



ii-T'L 



ENOX AND 



CUV3AT/0N«, 




97 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



THE BOWER, 

In the old house there is a chamber high, 
Diapered with wind-scattered plane- tree leaves ; 
And o'er one corbelled window that receives 

The sunrise weVe inscribed right daintily, 

* Come, O fair Morn, fulfilling prophecy ! ' 
Over another, western watch doth keep, 
Is writ, * O Eve, bring thou the nursling Sleep ! ' 

Adorning the old walls as best we may. 

For up this bower-stair, in long-vanished years, 
The bridegroom brought his bride and shut the door ; 

Here, too, closed weary eyes with kindred tears. 
While mourners* feet were hushed upon the floor ; 

And still it seems these old trees and brown hills 

Remember also our past joys and ills. 




98 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



II 



A SPRING MORNING, 



Vaguely at dawn within the temperate clime 
Of glimmering half-sleep, in this chamber high, 
I heard the jackdaws in their loopholes nigh. 

Fitfully stir : as yet it scarce was time 

Of dawning, but the nestlings' hungry chime 
Awoke me, and the old birds soon had flown ; 
Then was a perfect lull, and I went down 

Into deep slumber beneath dreams or rhyme. 

But, suddenly renewed, the clamouring grows. 
The callow beaklings clamouring every one. 
The grey-heads had returned with worm and fly ; 
I looked up and the room was like a rose. 
Above the hill-top was the brave young sun, 
The world was still as in an ecstasy. 




99 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



Ill 



MOTTOES, 



There is a motto painted on each beam 

That holds the roof-tree up from wall to wall, 
'Neath which we pass the pleasantest hours of all 
And round the cornice is a frieze where teem 
Numberless naked children, who, 'twould seem, 
Can do all kinds of work, and, strange to say, 
Can do it all as if it were but play : 
These are among the mottoes, Love the theme : — 
* Dan Cupid's wisdom keeps pace with his wealth ; ' 
Because his wealth is wisdom, says the dear : 

* Dan Cupid like all gods can disappear ; ' 
But this was quite effaced one night by stealth : 

* Dan Cupid flies while Hercules can but run ; ' 
And this my lady's damsels call great fun. 







lOO 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



IV 



BELOW THE OLD HOUSE, 

Beneath those buttressed walls with lichens grey, 
Beneath the slopes of trees whose flickering shade 
Darkens the pools by dun green velvetted, 

The stream leaps like a living thing at play, — 

In haste it seems ; it cannot, cannot stay ! 
The great boughs changing there from year to year. 
And the high jackdaw-haunted eves, still hear 

The burden of the rivulet — Passing away ! 

And some time certainly that oak no more 
Will keep the winds in check ; his breadth of beam 

Will go to rib some ship for some far shore ; 
Those quoins and eves will crumble, while that stream 

Will still run whispering, whispering night and day, 

That over- song of father Time — Passing away ! 




lOI 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



THE MOON, 

How often and how vainly do we try 
To paint in words the dying of the day ! 
Coming repose ennobling us, the play 

Of fretted fire and gold afar and nigh. 

This night seen firom that western casement high, 
It was so terribly fair with cloudlet-sheaves, 
Amber and ruby burning through the leaves, 

I said once more, It must not pass me by ! 

But when another hour the clock had told, 
I went to look again, and saw framed there. 
By fringing ivy like carved jet, the sky. 
The void sky, silver-bright, so vast, so cold. 
The faint moon round as is Eternity, — 
I quite forgot the sunset's splendid glare. 



I02 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



VI 



THE GARDEN, 



The old house garden grows old-fashioned flowers, 
Sheltered by hedges of the close yew-tree, 
Through which, as Chaucer says, no wight may see ; 
The sunflowers rise aloft like beacon towers. 
Their large discs fringed with flames; and corner 
bowers 
There are of mountain-ash, and the wild rose 
Short-lived, blue star-flowers that at evening close 
Spring there ; sweet herbs and marigolds in showers ; 

Gilly-flowers too, dark crimson and nigh white ; 
Pied poppies, and the striped grass, differing still 
In each long leaf, though children ever will 
Believe in finding two shall match aright. 
The paths are edged with box grown broad and high. 
At evening sheltering moths of various dye. 




I03 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



VII 



IN THE GARDEN, 



This afterglow of summer wears away : 

Russet and yellowing boughs bend everywhere, 
Languid in noontide, and the rose-trees bear 

Buds that will never open j this long day 

Hath been so still, so warm, so lucidly 

White, like shadowless days in heaven I ween, 
A moment by God lengthened it hath been, — 

As Time shall be no more at last, they say. 

Let us sit here ! there is no bird to sing; 

Not even the aspen quivers ; faintly brown. 
The great trees hang around us in a ring ; 

Never shall snow or storm again come down. 
And never shall we be again footsore, 
But live in this enchantment ever more. 



G 2 



I04 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 

VIII 

IN THE GARDEN. 

II 

Happiness sometimes hath a tinge of dread, 
Perfection unconditioned, strange indeed. 
As if at once the green leaf, flower, and seed. 

Let the sun shine thus on thy nut-brown head, 

So lovely flecked with little shadows, shed 
Through the close trellis as I see it now, 
And on thy neck and on thy thoughtful brow : 

Look up, so thought by thought be answered. 

And let the dead leaves fall whene'er they may, 
Dropping like Danae's gold-shower from on high, 
Rare jewels gathered in thy lap they'll lie : 

This day hath been a sacred festa-day. 
We'll lock it fast within our treasure-store, 
And live in its enchantment ever more. 





THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE, PART 11. 



AUTUMN SUNSHINE. 
Now week by week the scattering leaves 

Drift down the sheltered lane, 
And week by week the sharp wind grieves 

The tree-tops with the rain. 



io6 AUTUMN SUNSHINE, 

But clouds to-day have cleared away, 
The sun shines warm and strong 

On cot and farm, on hedge and way, — 
Tis a holiday worth a song. 

The air is bland on face and hand. 
Returned the mid-year hath ; 

The saddened flowers their hearts expand, 
Simmers the garden-path. 

The spotted emperor, seldom seen. 
Is the sunflower's bosom friend ; 

The dragon-flies flicker across the sheen, 
Where the yellow flag-leaves bend. 

But the shooter is heard upon the hill, 

The robin is by the door. 
The curlew cries overhead so shrill, 

The swallows are seen no more. 

And this is the last last crimson day 
The exhausted sun can send ; 

The evening falls, our foot-path way 
Turns homeward towards the end. 



% 



I07 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



THE ROBIN'S OCTOBER SONG, 

That carol to the cold and misty mom, 
That ending autumn-song, that short-lived song, 
O robin ! I know well, so sharp and strong. 

As do those trembling gioves already shorn 

And yellowing. O brief sweet song ! so lorn 
Of gladness \ all these leaves, from twig to stem, 
Tremble as if dead fingers counted them ; 

To sing such song men too were surely born. 

And this it is : the most desired of Gods 
Is waxen weak, and all his children too, 

Even the sun ; that wide-winged spectre flew 
Faster, and now hath caught him by the hair. 

Let us contend no more against the rods, 
But sing our last song, and descend the stair. 




io8 



THE OLD SCOTCH HOUSE. 



XI 



WINTER COMING, 

The strong wind blows from o'er the sea, 

Foam- freckled far and near; 
Within the casement closed we say, 

Winter at last is here. 

The long boughs of the old trees creak. 

And strike against the rain; 
The dead leaves and the little birds 

Are thrown on the window pane. 

From room to room the careful dame 
Each bolt and latch doth try ; 

The storm-sprite on the winding stair 
Sings to her mournfully. 

The sound of fast-running waters fills 

The air both night and day, 
And mists like ghosts from all the glens 

Rise and are driven away. 



WINTER COMING. 109 

Sad is the rushing of railing rain, 

And swollen streams wailing low ; 
And the fitful wind, like a slave pursued 

By the fast gathering snow. 

From the flower-beds the rank heaps fall 

Across the bordered walk ; 
The sunflower props like beggars slant 

In rags of leaves and stalk. 

The farmer drives his horses home. 

The cows are in the byre ; 
The frost is come, and the ploughman sits 

Idle beside the fire. 

Away to the South like the swallows 

We turn our eyes again. 
To be lost once more in the labyrinths 

And multitudes of men. 





STUDIES FROM NATURE. 



r 



PUBLIC LI BRARYj 






113 



SUNDA V MORNING ALONE. 

Morning and noon and evening, week by week 
And month by month and year by year, return, 
The never-ending harmonies of this world, 
Without an end or pause. The mill-stream flows 
Continuous ; the industrious wheel turns round ; 
The heavy stones grind on, yet all that flows 
Into the watchful hopper-sack 's no more 
Than needful for each day's void kneading-trough. 
The garments cast last night next mom we don, 
And still, for gains to spend, our lives biun down, 
Until the vintage-time of life's year comes ; 
For still some guest, unanswered and unbid, 
In our soul's prison waits with lidless eyes 
Turned we know not wherefore towards the Future. 

Here sit I now this bright noonday with hands 
And thoughts all free and unclaimed, like some fool 
On whom hath fallen good fortune ; and behold ! 
The Conscience questions and almost disowns 
Right to this freedom and this idleness. 
Why is the wheel still now ? it asks,— the stream, 




1 1 4 SUNDA Y MORNING ALONE. 

Why sleeps it locked and limpid in the sun ? 
For custom's yoke so marks the neck it clothes, 
Its absence becomes irksome, and the Law, 
Blessed or accursed we say not, seems for man 
A thunder-call to Action \ — seems indeed, 
As much else seems, but is not. Let us rest. 
Now and then rest, and make Time wait on us — 
Holily rest, the flowers o' the field and we. 
Being again twin-brothers as of old 
'Neath Eden's cedar shades. 

This sabbath morn 
The wan sun coldly shines, yet fields and roads, 
The young math springing through the hard black soil. 
The market-cart half shedded, and the stack 
Of hay now cut short like the poor man's bread, 
Cheerily glisten. In this small dull room 
Steadily beats the red fire, while the dog 
Winks listlessly before it ; winks and dreams, 
And suddenly looks round him like churched boys 
Ashamed to nod. Upon this window-sill 
The sparrows light for crumbs laid duly there ; 
Upon the topmost withy of that hedge, 
Leafless and sharp as wire-work, whistling clear, 
A half-hour since a blackbird perched : I turned. 
Startled by song, too sudden turned ! Within 
The village church the household every one 
Have shut themselves, and I alone remain 
Idle and free. 



SUNDAY MORNING ALONE, 115 

The house clock throbs, still throbs, 
Heard or unheard it throbs. 'Tween soul and sense, 
Peace like Death's angel comes : fresh powers awake, 
Freed from the straining tendons of the world. 
As one whose master sleeps, may dare to think 
Of liberty and thereof sing, this new 
Interior life Itself sees without wonder, 
And hears its own thoughts whispering thus, * Behold ! 
Eternity's sonorous shores, and I 
Am here.* The present is withdrawn, the Real 
Is round us inexpressibly : it seems 
That the breath ceases and the heart stands still, 
Or as in trance we were removed from them, 
And thereupon the Soul's white eyes unclose 
Upon the sunless ether. 

Such a glimpse 
Of immaterial things men oft-times feel 
In silence, mental stillness, nerve-repose, 
And conscience undisturbed. It flows and ebbs, 
Ebbs utterly away. Could we but press 
Right through these crypts unlit of Consciousness, 
Seek out the sanctum whose ineffable flame 
Cannot by mortal eyes be borne, and rend 
The sensuous veils that shelter us from God ! 
Could we but press 

The adventure through soul instincts such as these. 
Both eye and ear, it might be, would wake up 



ii6 SUNDAY MORNING ALONE, 

To an unspeakable energy, and heaven 
Open as to the dying ! 

But yet why, 
Thus hastening sunwards, drop the priceless threads 
Our dear earth-bom Arachne weaves for us ? 
One great tent-curtain all enfolds ; this world 
All other worlds, this life all other lives. 
Like echoes answer each to each. The stars 
Are seen but in the dark, Force hides herself 
In the inert on all sides ; nor can we 
Breathe but while death conspires ; and only here, 
Here where black earth bears heartsease, human eyes 
Converse, and passions cling with burning lips. 
Dying together ; here where autumn suns 
Bronze the bread-yielding sheaves and leaves of trees 
Drop to the evening breezes, while the brows 
Of the strong reapers melt, or their hands chill. 
Bearing the moonlit scythe or sickle home. 

All things are types and symbols : earth and heaven 

Each other interpenetrate : all creeds 

And churches crowning the hill-tops of time, — 

Pillars of fire by night, of cloud by day. 

Are but attempts to touch the symbolized. 

But now cnc village tongue hath been let loose, 
The village church resigns its worshippers : 
Staid ancient couples maunder past ; they skirt 



% 



SUNDAY MORNING ALONE, 117 

The well-known fields by pathways ; now and then 
Men call and latches clink, and childhood's din 
Rings here and there. The winking dog starts up, 
And by the door stands with fixed eyes and ears ; 
Approaching steps are heard ; the tingling rain 
Of female voices o'er the threshold falls ! 
— Ah, there you sit ; just as, three hours ago. 
We left you. The old vicar preached, good soul ! 
Corinthians, fifteenth, fifty-first, that grand 
Wonderful verse — * Behold, a mystery ! 
We shall not all sleep, we shall all be changed.' 
A sparrow had got in ; from roof to roof 
It flew — oh, fifty times. The quire to-day 
Really did well, it did one good to hear, 
And like the text the singers sang, * Behold, 
We shall not all sleep, we shall all be changed.' 




ii8 



GREEN CHERRIES. 

The season had been late : Spring, lagging long, — 

Not like the rosy-cheeked lithe Columbine 

We see her pictured, but with frost-filled hair, 

And sad scared eyes, had cowered beneath the eaves 

From the sharp-biting blasts and drifting rains. 

Yet in the heart of nature the great change 

Had been effected, and one mom in June 

Suddenly all the clouds were carol filled, 

Every road dried and freckled with sunshine, 

Every flower full-blown, both by hedge and garth. 

Every tree heavy. So I said. This day 

Is the true May-day, and I straight went forth 

The nighest way unto the loneliest fields. 

Two hours or so it might be from the town. 

Before a thriving friend's well-built gateway, 

I found myself, and entered, though I knew 

That he would not be there ; unfortunate 

Son of dame Fortune he, who sits all day 

With wits repressed and sharp pen, gain and loss 

His nether lip developing. 



GREEN CHERRIES. 119 

I swung 
The gate and entered. All along the edge 
Of the bright gravel fallen lilac blooms 
Or young leaf-sheaths were scattered, and small groups 
Of coming toadstools showed where showers had lain. 
Under the wavering shades of trees I turned, 
Skirting the garden's boxwood bordered ways, 
Its rhododendrons bursting into flower, 
Flaming beneath the sunshine, and at length / 

Rested upon an orchard arbour seat. 

All over bench and table, ground and sward. 
The young green cherries lay, yet overhead, 
Glittering like beads, they still seemed thick as leaves 
Upon the boughs. And young green apples too, 
Scattered by prodigal winds, peeped here and there, 
Among the clover. Through the black boughs shone 
Clouds of a white heat, in the cold blue depths 
Poised steadily, and all about them rang 
Those songs of skylarks. Other sounds were there : 
The click mistimed of hedge-shears ; the brave bee 
Passing with trumpet gladness ; and the leaves 
Waving against each other. Soon this way 
Along the further hedge-tops came the shears ; 
Two wielding arms assiduous and a face 
The prickly screen disclosed. Far down the line 
By slow degrees went shears and arms, while I 




I20 GREEN CHERRIES. 

Marked the still toppling twigs, until at length 
They passed beyond the fruit-trees, and I turned 
To other themes. Above the flowering beds 
Of jonquil and chill iris rose the house, — 
There is the window of my host's small room, 
There Harriet's, vacant now, with casements thrown 
Wide open, their white curtains driven about ; — 
And see, within that other tightly closed. 
The old dame sits intent on stocking wires. 
I sat there ; on the seat beside me lay 
A cluster of three cherries on one stalk. 

A casual passing picture ! strange it bides 
Perennial with me yet ! This littie sprig 
Of three green cherries, what may it concern 
The universal heart ? Why all along 
The road of life do I remember still 
The three green cherries there ? 

And yet the eye 
Sees only what the mind perceives. The heart 
Hath its supreme perceptions. We retain 
Deepest impressions from most trivial things ; 
They are the daily food by which we grow ; 
Some future poet shall find fit airs for them 
And touch the nerve of life. For yet shall come 
The Poet, such an one as hath not yet 
Entered his sickle in those great corn-fields 




GREEN CHERRIES, 121 

Whence comes the spiritual bread. Not battle deaths, 
Nor mere adventures, nor rank passions moved 
By vulgar things shall he sing; nor shall prate 
With vague loose phrase of Nature : he shall see 
The inexorable step-dame as she is, — 
A teacher blind, whose task-work and closed door, 
Body and soul, we strive against ! O world ! 
The Poet of the future, welcome him ! 
When he appears. 

I left my reverie 
Within the arbour, threw the green fruit back. 
Crossed the scythed lawn and threshold, for the door 
Stood hospitably open ; none I met, 
Nor had I any errand maid or man 
Could answer : on the well-known table stood 
Bread cut in shives and wine. Then I put off 
My hat before this sacrament and ate, 
And called aloud that I might even perforce 
Be courteous and give thanks ; but no one came. 
So thence departing, said I, * Every home 
Is thus enchanted justly understood,' 
And fared right on for many miles that day. 
Picking up thoughts like wild-flowers by the path ; 
Some of them coarse and prickly, some sweet-breathed, 
But none of them were homeward borne save those, 
Now half expressed, I have writ here for thee ! 




1 23 



YOUTH AND AGE, 

Our night repast was ended : quietness 

Returned again : the boys were in their books ; 

The old man slept, and by him slept his dog : 

My thoughts were in the dream-land of to-morrow : 

A knock is heard, anon the maid brings in 

A black-sealed letter that some over-worked 

Late messenger leaves. Each one looks round and 

scans. 
But lifts it not, and I at last am told 
To read it. * Died here at his house this day ' — 
Some well-known name not needful here to print. 
Follows at length. Soon all return again 
1 o their first stillness, but the old man coughs. 
And cries, * Ah, he was always like the grave, 
And still he was but young ! ' while those who stand 
On life's green threshold smile within themselves. 
Thinking how very old he was to them, 
And what long years, what memorable deeds, 
Are theirs in prospect ! Little care have they 
What old man dies, what child is bom, indeed ; 
Their day is coming, and their sun shall shine ! 



123 



AN ARTIST'S BIRTHPLACE, 

(A CUMBERLAND SKETCH : THE ARTIST WAS BLACKLOCK THE 
LANDSCAPE-PAINTER, WHO DIED SHORTLY AFTER.) 

This is the stateftian's country : every man 

Hath his own steading, his own field, his garth. 

And share of common and of moss, wherefrom 

He cuts his winter's fuel, building up 

The russet stack above his gable thatch. 

Look through that straggling unpruned hedge, you'll 
see 

One of those sinewy Saxons, such an one, 

From sire to son, perhaps, hath till'd that mould. 

For these five hundred years ; that rough-hewn block 

Of timber plays the part of harrow here. 

And now we reach the turn I told you of. 
Close to our journey's end. The violets 
Are just as thick as ever, and beneath 
The rooty sand-bank those white embers show 
A gipsy's bivouac has but late been here. 
And there is this old village, with its wide 
Irregular path, its rattling streamlet bridged 




124 AN ARTISTS BIRTHPLACE. 

Before each cottage with loose planks or stones, 

And all the geese and ducks that have no fear 

Of strangers, the wide smith's shop, and the church 

"V^Tiose grey stone roof is within reach of hand. 

A fit place for an artist to be reared ; 

Not a great Master whose vast unshared toils. 

Add to the riches of the world, rebuild 

God's house, and clothe with Prophets walls and roof, 

Defending cities as a pastime — such 

We have not ! but the homelier heartier hand 

That gives us English landscapes year by year. 

There is his small ancestral home, so gay, 
With rosery and green wicket. We last met 
In London : IVe heard since he had returned 
Homeward less sound in health than when he reached 
That athlete's theatre, well termed the grave 
Of little reputations. Fresh again 
Let's hope to find him. 

Thus conversing stept 
Two travellers downward. The descending road 
Rough with loose pebbles left by floods of late : 
Straight through the wicket passed they, and in front 
The pent-roofed door stood knocking : all was still : 
Through the low parlour window books were seen 
Upon the little settle, and some pots 
With flowers, a birdcage hung too without song 
Close to the window ; round them noontide glowed 
So gladsomely, the leaves were every one 



AN ARTISTS BIRTHPLACE, 125 

Glistening and quivering, and the hosts of gnats 
Spun in the shadows ; but within seemed dark 
And dead. A quick light foot is heard, and there, 
Before them stood a maiden in the sun 
That fell upon her chestnut hair like fire. 

How winsome fair she was *tis hard to tell ! 
For she was strong and straight, like a young elm. 
And without fear, although she halted there 
Answering with coy eyes scarce turned to us. 
Yet not embarrassed, while she told the tale 
Of the sick man. Then felt the strangers free 
To look upon her : her tall neck was tinged 
With brown and bore her small head easily 
Like that of a giraffe ; her saffron jupe. 
Girt loosely round her long waist, fell in folds 
From her high bosom, — but, as hath been said, 
How winsome fair she was 'twas hard to tell — 
Untaught and strong, and conscious of no charm ; 
I might describe her from the head succinct. 
Even to the high-arched instep of her foot, 
And all in vain : the soul sincere, the full 
Yet homely harmony slie bore with her, 
Moved me like the first sight of the sea, 
And made me think of old queens, Guenevere, 
Or maid Rowena with her * waes-hail,* or 
Aslauga whom the Sea-king chanced upon, 

H 




126 AN ARIISrS BIRTHPLACE, 

Keeping her sheep beside Norse waves, the while 
She combed her hair out mirrored in the stream. 

The artist was not there to welcome them, 
That much was plain ; and, more, the life of home 
Was not for him ; Elspeth, the crazed beldame 
O* the village, shouted and sang by sometimes, 
And that he could not bear. This and much else, 
At the hedge ale-house, while the friends regaled 
By the wide chimney where the brown turf burned, 
And daylight glinted down, they heard. But still 
As of the damsel thought they most, one cried — 
* I could have ta'en her head between my hands 
And kissed her, — she's so wise and frank and kind, 
I'm sure she never would have thought it strange.' 



12/ 



MORNING SLEEP. 

Another day hath dawned 

Since, hastily and tired, I threw myself 

Into the dark lap of advancing sleep. 

Meanwhile, through the oblivion of the night 

The ponderous world its old course hath fulfilled ; 

And now the gradual sun begins to throw 

Its slanting glory on the heads of trees, 

And every bird stirs in its nest revealed, 

And shakes its dewy wings. 

A blessed gift 
Unto the weary hath been mine to-night — 
Slumber unbroken : now it floats away ; 
But whether 'twere not best to woo it still, 
The head thus comfortably posed, the eyes 
In a continual dawning, mingling lights 
And darks with vagrant fantasies, one hour, 
Yet for another hour ? I will not break 
The shining woof; I will not rudely leap 
Out of this golden atmosphere, through which 
I see the forms of immortalities. 
Verily, soon enough the labouring day, 

H2 




128 MORNING SLEEP. 

With its necessitous unmusical calls, 

Will force the indolent conscience into life. 

The tiresome moth upon the window-panes 
Hath ceased to flap, or traverse with blind whirr 
The room's dusk comers ; and the leaves without 
Vibrate upon their thin stems with the breeze 
Toward the light blowing. To an Eastern vale 
That light may now be waning, and across 
The tall reeds by the Ganges lotus-paved. 
Lengthening the shadows of the banyan- tree. 
The rice-fields are all silent in the glow. 
All silent the deep heaven without a cloud, 
Burning like molten gold. A red canoe 
Crosses with fan-like paddles and the sound 
Of feminine song, freighted with great-eyed maids 
Whose zoneless bosoms swell on the rich air ; 
A lamp is in each hand, each lamp a boat 
To take the chance, or sink or swim, such rite 
Of love-portent they try, and such may see 
Ibis or emu from their cocoa nooks, 
What time the granite sentinels that watch 
The mouths of cavern-temples hail the first 
Faint star, and feel the gradual darkness blend 
Their august lineaments ; what time Haroun 
Perambulated Bagdat, and none knew 
He was the Caliph who knocked soberly 
By Giafar's hand at their gates, sliut betimes ; . 



h 



MORNING SLEEP. 129 

What time Prince Assad sat on the high hill 

'Neath the pomegranate-tree, long wearying 

For his lost brother's step ; — what time, as now. 

Along our English sky, flame-furrows cleave 

And break the quiet of the cold blue clouds. 

And the first rays look in upon our roofs. 

Let the day come or go ; there is no let 

Or hindrance to the indolent wilfulness 

Of fantasy and dream-land. Place and time 

And bodily weight are for the wakeful only, 

Now they exist not : life is Uke that cloud, 

Floating, poised happily in mid-air, bathed 

In a sustaining halo, soft and warm. 

Voyaging on, though to no bourne ; all heaven 

Its own wide home alike ; earth far below 

Fading still further, further ; towers and towns 

Smoking with life, its roads with traffic thronged. 

And tedious travellers within iron cars ; 

Its rivers, and its fields with labouring hinds, 

To whose raised eyes, as, stretched upon the sward, 

They may enjoy some intervals of rest, 

That little cloud appears scarce worth a thought. 

There is an old and memorable tale 

Of some sound sleeper being borne away 

By banded faeries in the mottled hour, 

Before the cock-crow, through unknown weird woods 

And nameless forests, where the boughs and roots 

Opened before him, closed behind ; thenceforth 



I30 MORNING SLEEP, 

A wise man lived he all unchanged by years. 
Perchance again these fairies may return, 
And evermore shall I remain as now — 
A dreamer half awake, a wandering cloud ! — . 
Wandering no more, there are no faeries now; 
I hear domestic voices on the stair ! 




■ 






t"" 






^3 


1 


■>A 


%F^ 


^ 


i 



MONODV. 



Eternity is silent and serene, 

As the illimitable depth of heaven 

That presses round the earth on winter nights. 

Man comes and goes like the successive clouds 



132 MONODY. 

Over the moon, that come from the obscure, 
And are found only in the white queen's path, — 
One instant seen, then gone for evermore. 

He died — but while he lived, some laurelled muse 

Was ever his close friend : to me he came 

As a disciple^ what I could I gave. 

But he was richer : honey of the heart 

Was ever in his gift, and curious spells 

Of richest fantasy were his, and life 

Was all before him luminous in its hopes. 

How have they vanished ! but few weeks are gone 
Since here, at this same hour, his pleasant eyes 
Were raised to mine, the while he rhymed again 
The verses made that mom : alas ! the web 
Of gossamer hath drifted with the dew 
And disappeared before the fervid noon. 

With sad resolve I looked upon his face 
When the white sheet was round him. At his head 
His mother placed a light. My tears might well 
Excuse hers — heart-sick mother ! How those lips 
Were shrunk, the nostrils closed, the candid eyes 
Shut up within their caves ! I knew him not. 
It was no more the wild inspired young soul ; — 
Draw the sheet gently over him again — 
Alas ! he is more dreadful than before. 

He is gone truly : some few rhythmic staves, 
A broken pen, is all remains of him. 



MONODY. 133 

Strange thought comes o'er us when we trace the lines 
Writ by a hand that now is dust : we scarce 
Believe but that some monstrous trick were played, 
And it was not so, — only seemed to be ! 

Had he but lived, — oh, had a kind star smiled 
Upon his couch and made him well ! But, no ; 
'Tis childish to cry thus : the grasshopper 
Chirps in the turf, the dew is on the blades, 
The worm beneath, the butterfly above, 
And the great sun shines brightly all the same, — 
We are so little in the sum of things ! 

Yes, it is better ! penury's pinching hand 
Had claimed, even as it was, his transient span. 
'Tis well, for he was bom to fight strong foes : 
Tis well, the smoking flax is gone to dust, 
The sacrifice is made, the pains are past, — 
The white sheet covers him for evermore. 




134 



THE DUKES FUNERAL, 
November i8, 1852. 

So, SO, now let the great dead quietly 
Go to his mighty tomb, — go join the dust 
Of better and worse men : give not the dead 
What the dead valued not : those cannon-tongues 
Speak out more fitly, poets, than do thine. 
Leave ye this statesman-soldier unto Time, 
Who passes on the night- winds of God's law, 
Leaving the heroes stript for history's page. 
Cleansing the grave. Your polished lays, 'twould 

seem, 
Refreshen no man's throat, and he who lies 
Upon that cumbrous wain of bronze, unblessed 
By Christian symbol or cartouche of death. 
Would but have asked you what you meant, have given 
Short audience, and hoped you then would go ! 
There is false inspiration in the theme, 
It puts the lamp out : for myself, I fain 
Would have constrained a sonnet ; but not one 
Of all the fourteen twigs would bear green leaves, 
Much less fair flowers, ripe fruit. Still was he one 




THE DUKE'S FUNERAL, 135 

Of England's truest sons, and what he ought 

That did he worthily, and with strong will. 

By trade a warrior he ; and, like a lord 

Of cotton and consols, by wariest games. 

Venturing boldly when the market turns. 

Never despairing through stark bankruptcy, 

Increases on all sides until his name 

Is in kings* mouths, and by his bonds are held 

The necks of nations, so succeeded he. 

Genius beside him seemed a madman ; Truth 

Was but contingent, relative to him ; 

And heroism but a boyish phrase. 

This thing he had to do, and this did he. 

Depending both on sword and protocol. 

On blood and red-tape. Earth to him was but 

Leagues for a march, towns cannon'd walls, and men 

So many items to be match'd by others. 

Harder, steadier ; both to serve, to die, 

For those ordained to rule. To him the priest 

And constable were equals \ and our isle — 

For he was patriotic — furnished him 

Motive at once and commissariat, ruled 

His thought and action. Duty was his god, 

The Statesman's duty, duty to confirm 

The anointed cincture round the brow of kings, 

The people in their level, and the plough 

Straight in the furrow. Wherefore then should flowers 

Be strewn upon his bier, or chant be sung 




136 THE DUKE'S FUNERAL. 

By poet, requiem or organ-prayer 

Be uttered ? Let the drums beat and the boom 

Of sulphurous cannon o'er the house tops roll : 

Let him be lapt in costliest panoply, 

Painted all over with new heraldries. 

Give him for mourners all those youths who lived 

Rejoicing in the smiles of Regent George ; 

All honourable men, without faith, hope. 

Or charity, who generously strewed 

The ring and cockpit with unpaid champagne ; 

All handsome cavaliers, with well -hid sores ; — 

Give him for mourners all the timorous souls 

Who see no providence in coming years ; 

And give him all the enemies of France ; 

And those who reverence power ; and, more than all, 

Erect and foremost in this world-array. 

Men of firm hearts and regulated powers, 

Who call not unto Hercules, but set 

Their sinewy shoulders to the staggering wheels. 

And say, * Thus as we will it shall it be.' 

The day was won ! proud, jubilant, redeemed. 
Their thrones again set firm, as one may hope, 
All coached or centaur-wise like men of war, 
The princes reappeared : and France, perforce. 
Worn out with dear-bought glory, welcomed them^ 
Lighting her topmost windows. Sluggish Seine 
Hissed with the falling stars, night burst a-flame 



THE DUKEIS FUNERAL, 137 

With sputtering splendour over bridge and quay ; 
And in the new-gilt Tuileries once again, 
Propped on her swollen feet, stood Right Divine. 
The sharp thin nostril of the high-bom swelled, 
The diplomat rewoke all clothed in smiles, 
Tuftless attaches like stunned oxen stared 
At Hapsburgh, Bourbon, Guelph, and Romanoff; 
Europe was saved ! Once more, as in old times. 
The privileged worthies of the world could follow 
Each his vocation, — Mettemich trepan 
Unwary guests as customers for wine ; 
Talleyrand titillate his black brain with talk 
Of omelets, — good innocent old man. 

But these are gone like last year's pantomime, 
And Europe is again saved, — France again ; 
A new Napoleon, its last saviour, sweeps 
These old things out like cobwebs, sabreing both 
I^egitimist and red-republican. 
So wags the world, so history fills her stage. 
And he who with this mighty pomp beneath 
A nation's eyes goes tombward, leaves no mark 1 




138 



MIDNIGHT, 
1832 (revised). 

The lamp within winks yellow and old. 
The moon without stares blank and cold, 
Chequering all the boarded floor 
With frosted squares so chill and hoar. 
And dark Hnes from the casement sent, — 
The lamp-light, over the table spent, 
Makes every comer of the room 
Hide itself in hollow gloom ; 
Here and there shapes looming out. 
Bench or armour, clothes or mask, 
Mannikin in feathered casque. 
Like dwarfs and goblins all about, — 
Heads and elbows, eyes and wings, 
Mere misshapen hints of things. 
Close we now our book and lay 
Reluctant still the pen away. 
Lifting it sometimes again 
If any laggard thought constrain ; 
Laggard or roving, home too late. 
Knocking at the bolted gate. 




MIDNIGHT, 139 

Turn the chair and fold the fingers, 

Coax the little fire that lingers, 

Coax it to a tingling glow, 

While the snell wind's northern game 

Is played out with the window frame, 

And through the key-hole sad and low. 

Let's have a cheerier parting word, 

Set the flask upon the board. 

Get the old kanaster out. 

And make the blue whiffs curl about. 

Let's try, the day's work ended now. 

To see Atlantes from the prow 

Of fancy's fearless barque shot far 

Beyond the breaker's plash and roar. 

Drifting without toil of oar. 

Sail or ballast, helm or star. 

Watching, lonely, half asleep. 

All round us becomes faint and rare. 

Like lighted ships in a misty air. 

Is that the bleating of far-oflf sheep ? 

— Is that a child at the window-pane, 

Or merely sighing gusts of rain ? 

By nature still we fear the dark, 

One's own shadow is strange and stark. 

And seems to move, though we keep still — 

And though we laugh each morning duly, 

We know so very little truly, 

That we fear against our will ! 




I40 MIDNIGHT. 

I remember long ago 
Waking at midnight, when the snow 
Was on the ground, and hearing far 
Away the sound of a guitar, 
And creeping darkly out of bed, 
I saw pass in the street below. 
Singing a sad song lovely and low, 
A lady in red with yard-long hair, 
A crown of leaves only on her head, 
Splendidly clothed, but her feet were bare. 
So passed she singing ; I heard her far 
Into the night with her small guitar ; 
And when I crept again to bed 
It seemed as if some one had said, — 
* That is your Life from street to street. 
Passing unheard with shoeless feet, 
Over the well-trod snow.' 
They tell me, with a smile or stare. 
That twenty years can have no care. 
Nor can it have a * long ago.' 
But well I know the past alone 
Is safely done with, sealed and gone. 
And at threescore most certainly 
We shall be lighter and more free ! 

Alack a day ! I'm wandering still 

By the wells o' Weary, the woods of Will, 



% 



MIDNIGHT, 141 

Hand in hand with cheerless themes 

Worse than dreams. 

So then to bed. The wind sings loud, 

The sharp moon presses against the cloud, 

And cuts its through : anon she seems 

Set in a ruff, and her great white face 

Looks silly and sad from the void blue space ; 

Vanward again the cloud-ridge streams, 

And we find her out only at intervals, 

As a drowning man looks up and calls. 

While here and there a star outpeeps, 

Cheerily a moment seen, 

Anon the wrack drives in between. 

And like Time's beard all oversweeps. 

To my dying lamp I turn, 

Turn I to my chamber door ; 

The embers now no longer bum. 

The casement-chequers have left the floor, 

Only my shadow so black and tall, 

Steps with me from wall to wall ! 



142 



THE SEA-SHORE. 
Two Pictures. 

I. MIST. 

Muffled and rime-laden, sombre and sad, 
In a limbo 'tween night and day, 

As if on an island we stand whose bounds 
Are shadowed and charmed away. 

We wander as in some other old world, 
Foot-printing the smooth brown sands, 

The snaky weeds shrieking beneath the heel 
That slides from their cellular bands. 

Flakes of foam are blown from the ebb, 

White runners along the beach, 
Where yesterday's margin of crab's green claws 

And stubble and starfish bleach. 

A filmy ship looms now and then 

From the point where the keen winds blow, 
Ghostlike it hangs in the air, then fades 

Where the unknown keen winds go. 




THE SEA SHORE. 143 

Wave after wave for ten thousand years 

Has furrowed the brown sand here, 
Wave after wave under clouds and stars 

Has. cried in the dead shore's ear. 

When Jesus was lifted on Calvary, 

And saints long buried arose, 
Through the black three hours the waves broke here, 

Continuous as do those ! 

Overhead shoots a querulous cry, — 

A sea-mew with long white breast 
Down on the water sweeps out and away, 

Pursuing its hungry quest. 

Old man, what find ye among the black pools ? 

Among the sea-hair what gain ? 
The fisherman lifts up his basket of bait. 

The wind and waves only remain. 



II. SUNSHINE. 



Through the wide-opened window shines this mom 

The sun with a steady breeze, 
The cottage smoke slants and hurrieb about, 

Golden against the blue seas. 




144 THE SEA SHORE, 

Imperiously the breakers shout, 

Imperiously they call, 
With dazzling crests and curved prows, 

Over each other they fall. 

The yellow flat glitters beneath the shine 
Like a flooring of priceless ware, 

Dimpled and dotted by showers and ridged 
Like a never-ascending stair. 

Our shadows outstepping before us go. 

Drawn out by the level disc, 
Each wet pebble, opal or ruby or green, 

Casts a shade like an obelisk. 

Merrily dancing and leaping alway, 

Hither, and everywhere ; 
The white young shrimps are merry as bees 

In a clover-field's warm air. 

Dogs bark and children's voices ring ; 

From the shelving rocks they see. 
The sunlit sail of the fisherman's boat 

Bearing home from the generous sea. 

From the high hou:e-door peers the dame, 
With her broad hand shading her eyes. 

Grimly she smiles as she shoulders her creel. 
And down the rough pathway hies ! 




us 



REQUIEM, 

(Four o'clock morning, 3rd of the month. David Scott died 

5th March, 1849.) 

The winds are wandering through the long night, 
Hushing and moaning round chimney and roof; 
The ashes fall white from the dull fire-light, 
The great shadows dance on the walls aloof, 
While the soul of my brother recedes. 

Fitfully crumble the embers away ; 
Abroad over all flies the roaring wind ; 
And the rain-clouds, through the obscurity, 
Hurry along the moon, silently kind, 

Like an opened window in heaven. 

The pitiless Norns are visible now 
Between the dim gateways of gold and horn ; 
For the nimbus of death is over his brow. 
And his cunning right hand lies feeble and worn, 
Never again to be strong. 

I 



146 REQUIEM. 

Go back, go back ! would the spirit fain say, 
To the in-pressing darkness and walls of stone ; 
For the eye of hope is as wide as day 
Through the impending infinity ; 
His short day's work is but half done. 

And still young the manifold heart. 

Come back, come back ! doth the world demand ; 
Come to the harvest, thou sower of seed ! 
And the kindred labourers on the strand 
Of this dear human region plead, 
'Go not ! of thee we have wondrous need,' 
And hail him with lifted arms. 

The black angel hears not ; the ages dead 
And the ages to come are one family. 
Under the All-Father's mantle hid ; 
Gains, even of art and of poetry, 

Are but chaff from the gamer of time. 

The blast is wandering through the long night ; 
Within the dark curtains the straight limbs lie ; 
Faintly flickers the last fire-light ; 
But hark, the cock crows ! for morning is nigh. 
Silently lifting the cold wet sky. 

While the soul of my brother recedes. 




147 



BEDE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY, 

BEING A MONOLOGUE OF THAT INDUSTRIOUS SCHOLAR, 
RESUSCITATED AT THE CALL OF CARDINAL WISEMAN, 
IN HIS DISCOURSE ON THE OPENING OF HARTLEPOOL 
R. C. CHURCH, AUGUST 185I. 



Ah, holy Christ ! who calls me now, 
Straining the skin back over this brow — 
Drawing and cording together the bones 
With strings of nerve among sand and stones ? 

He hears Ah, holy Christ! the cups of joints 
Some piercing ichor now anoints ; 
And, conjured from far parts, I feel, 

voice of Working hither like screws of steel, 

Fragments of hands and toes. Again 

^^^ The body of death, with its care and pain, 

^ ^. , Receives mc, and I strive to rise, 

Cardinal, 

To open ears and open eyes. 
I'm no more passive in God's hand. 
Lying straight in heaven-land. 

I 2 




148 



BEDE IN THE 



and thinks 
himself 
as he was 
when he 
died. 



Ah, holy Christ ! if it be thy law 

That I the blind life-senses draw 

Again upon me, — the lusts of the flesh, 

The lusts of the eye, and the weary mesh 

Of cogitating, learning, preaching, — 

Shed more unction on my teaching, 

Make me diligent ; not slow, 

Like Alfin, who could hear no crow 

Of morning cock, but started up 

At the first clang of the cook's tin cup. 

Oh, this wretched body of death ! 

I clutch about me scant of breath ; — 

That foot still swollen too ; — there's no lamp 

To find the balsam : — foul and damp 

Is all about me ; certainly 

Shrivelled will all the parchment be. 

But from that last dear task I'm free : 

Finished the Gospel was, clear writ 

In linguam vulgi ere the fit 

Came over me, and on the floor 

I swooned away — unlatch the door, 

Or I shall die outright ! Oh, God— 

I stand sun-smitten on the sod ! 

Kyrie eleison ! 




NINETEENTH CENTURY, 149 



II 

Where then is Jarrow, where the brave 
Stone church with its belfry o'er the nave ? 
Or the cloister all of smooth wrought stone 
He looks Outside ? Some weird hath overthrown 
The land ; I'm not myself, — that stream 

^n vain 

Is not the Tyne ! the wild Dane's gleam 
for old Of sword and fire must have shone here 

If this be Jarrow, this the dear 
Jarrow Candida casa, with broad roof-fall, 
Church ^^^ ^^^ S^^^s windows painted small 
And beautiful. Alas, for all 
The brethren ! for old Ulph who fought 
Hard with the psalter, yet could not 
Learn to read ; and Wulf who made 
My bed, good man ! and for long years laid 
My needfuls ready for me, so 
That I might all my cares bestow 
On making books. Alas and woe. 
For all the books ! the penitential 
Reading book, missal so essential. 
Singing book, numeral; all gone — 
Bare as a pagan I stand alone ! 
This very day may be Easter tide 
And I not know it : let ms hide 




ISO BEDE IN THE 

He thinks I* the grave again, for I have lost 

Count of days, yule, pentecost, — 

And fear I am no Christian ghost, 
himself till Not Bede, not Bede. 

But now I wake : behold the sky 

he sees -gj^^ ^^ -^ ^^^j. ^^g . |^|^g^ ^^^ ^^ \i\^ \ 

And great clouds lying all along the land 
Far back, and waves upon the' strand 
and th- Coming and going still. Everywhere 

Are life-sounds filling the milk-warm air \ 

sea. 

The spider's warps are hung out on each bough, 
Clear dew-pools light the hollows of large blades ; 
Surely the year is ripe to Autumn now, — 
An autumn seared o'er with the self-same shades 
Once knew I in the body ; and the sod 
Feels to the foot the same, each clod 
Troubling these poor toes torn by flints 
iVnd thorns, that oft-times left their prints 
Sea-filled on sands or in the marsh frozen black, 
Between Wearmouth and Jarrow, hastening back 
From Benedict to Ceolfred through the slack. 



Ill 



A thousand years, oh Father, in Thy sight 
Are as one day, one day without a night : 
The outward stream of things for ever flows ; 
Whatever lived or grew still lives and grows \ 



NINETEENTH CENTURY, 151 

The sensuous world still shines as erst it shone, 
And I am here to sing the antiphone. 
But what is man before Thee and his ways ; 
Yea, even the sanctuary and the shrine 
By which he clings and where-before he prays, 
Thereby to find some pass to the divine ! 
For here I fall back through a yeast of years, 
The expected day of Doom through all my tears 
I've seen not : Father Peter in the porch 
Of God's house nor the penitential scorch 
Have blessed me ; but I shiver as of old. 
Weak and half blind and cold. 

The great salt sea doth answer me alone, 

Like Tophet against heaven, its undertone 

Maintaining evermore against the song 

Of earth : the white foam blows along 

and the These unchanged sands. Ah, now I see 

The Tyne-mouth rock, and memory turns to me 
promontoiy ^^^ ^^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^ Jarrow, and again 

of Tyne- Take up the inkhom and that history 
Begun long since : how shall I gain 
Tidings of all the change gone by 
While I have slept ? — but patience wears 
The hardest stone through, toils and cares 
For learning's sake are treasury stairs. 
On I fare, — 
Utterly new things ever3rwhere. 



mouth. 




152 



BEDE IN THE 



He sees 



Newcastle- 



on-Tyne 



and enters 



the same. 



He hears 



a barrel- 



organ on 



the street; 



Lo I this must be Jerusalem, 
Or Rome whose sacred bulwarks stem 
The Tiber's waves ; among the cities this 
Must be the queen o' the world, to kiss 
Whose dust kings come, and I am thought 
Worthy to be miraculously brought 
Across the world to witness it. 
And to record the same. Here, as I sit, 
Long ships come sailing past on wheels, 
JBuming internally, with towers that smoke 
Furl out behind them ; hundreds of great keels 
Masted and banner'd broad moles choke 
With merchandise untold ; among 
Those tall glass-windowed houses throng 
Fair women, each more costly in her gear 
Than Benedict himself, whose mass-cloths dear 
To us from Rome came : on both hands 
Booths with raiments from all strands. 
Perfumes and spices, fruits and luxuries 
Unknown to me, splendours that blind the eyes, 
And make the heart ache with too much. Anon 
Ravishing music from the pavement-stone 
Springs up, but no musician I discern — 
Only a shrine-like hulch dragged by three hounds 
And a man grinding :— wonderous quern, 
From whence such wealth of goodliest sounds 
Are brought so fast ! Oh, would our quair 
Had known such help ! or is't the snare 



NINETEENTH CENTURY, 153 

Of Satan, — ear-delusion, vain 
As goblin-gold whose only gain 
Is a dry leaf? Now I wander o'er 
A wilderness of smiths, with store 
and now Qf reeking furnaces, and cells made bright 
By magic flames from brazen bars as white 

he sees 

As sunshine : faces mild, horned hands, 
smiths' shops Have these men ! Lo, through smoke-clouds black 
Behemoth comes, — alack, alack ! 
With red eyes glaring in the gloom, 
railway ^^^ many nostrils snorting spume ; 

Behind it chariots numberless, 
tram. Windowed and gilt and bound with brass ; 

Swift as a storm, they pant and blow 
Along their iron way ; now slow, — 
And docile they turn round ; they pause, 
And from each chariot's ample jaws 
Wells out a stream of folk. Can these 
Be children of the 'Cursed one, 
And this the land of Babylon 
Apocalyptic, mirth and ease, 
Gold and fine linen, mead and wine, 
The only goods ? I see no sign 
Of faithfiil souls, of holy shrine, 
Of learning, the priest's divining rod, 
And yet the folk seem blessed by God. 

But I am wrong ! right fortunate 
Hath been my sleep so long and late. 



154 BEDE IN THE 

And now my waking when the land 

Seems filled with power, when soul and hand 

Work equally, when God's ferule 

Seems placed within man's grasp, to school 

All nature, and with chains anneal'd 

By knowledge bind the world. Around, 

He enters From pillared vault unto the ground, 
Treasuries of fair books arise 
Before these greedy grave-cleansed eyes. 

of Books great and small, an ampler host 

Than pope or patriarch could boast 

England ^Ti the old time when Jarrow wall 
Rose as we thought so fair and tall, 
And I, while daylight lasted, wore 

Society's Thesc fingers, adding to our store 
Some five or six. Sure now I see 

library. 

Learning, the priest's divining rod, 
and Hath done the work, and, under God, 

Brought angels down to help and guide, 

sees ten 

Wrought miracles on wind and tide, 

thousand ^^ ^^^e by nccromantic lore 

Man hath multiplied his store, 

books. ^xA^ now forsaken and alone, 

Neither God nor saint doth own. 
Learning, the priest's rod no more. 
Is the common staff in every hand, — 
Evil, the tree of knowledge bore, 



NINETEENTH CENTURY, 



155 



And now bears good, by which men stand 
Kings over nature. 



He finds 

among 

them 

his own 

books 

printed. 
Also 

others 

about the 

modern 

ages, 

and about 

history, 

controversy 

and 

polemics. 



History 
Is here too, sending present day 
Back on the past : each ancient scribe 
Glozed and sifted by the tribe 
Of scholiasts ; for the flow of years, 
With all their dusty blank arrears, 
Have changed not humanity, 
Nor any law man liveth by. 
Ah, now I see my own poor name. 
My own books, saved from out the flame 
That tower and town wrecked, graven fair, 
Fairly and excellently there ; 
Now no transcriber's fingers soil 
The sheepskin or the Latin spoil ! 
And here I learn what time hath done 
Since my life ceased before the sun : 
How the Pagan's steel-scaled arm 
Strikes the land with deadly harm ; 
And Cuthbert's corse with weary hand 
Translate they to the Irish strand ; 
How soon again the Cross prevails. 
And the ship of the Church puts out her sails. 
Gladdening the prosperous centuries : — 
But read I right ? the people cries 



156 BEDE IN THE 

Against her ; she no more gives alms 
Of spiritual love-milk, but with shalms 
And pipings drinks the secular wine : — 
Read I right ? now clerk and lay 
Each other in God's name bum and slay, 
While o'er those foul fires rises still 
A light as of the judgment-day, — 
As of God's face behind a hill. 
Before which all else wanes away ; 
' Freedom of faith for every man, 
For God alone can bless or ban ; 
Right of private judgment' Nay, 
Were these not always just ? again — 
* Reason, this life's law, we'll maintain 
To be the law likewise between 
Man and his Maker : by the seen 
Measure we the unseen ' — These 
Are terrible words ; may Christ appease 
Such questions : yet all round I see 
The latest still is wisest in all gifts 
Experience brings amidst our strife. 
Siurely the perilous hill of Science lifts 
Us up above the ills of life : 
Surely by Excellence in my old dim day, 
And by its light the Church held sway, 
And certes if the clerk fall off 
Behind the laic, he becomes a scoff. 
Surely God's word is not as ours to hold 
One meaning only, soon effete and cold ; 



NINETEENTH CENTURY, 157 

But, shining with a heaven-lit flame, 
It must illuminate all times the same. 

He hears Sweet sounds of bclls ! oh, dearly loved, — 
Reproaching me that I have roved 

church XII f -1- •! 

Into the dangers of strange Liberty, 
bells and ^i^h duties Self- Sustained so dread and high. 

Let me be guided, goodly sounds of bells ! 
tries to Back like a child to these green wells 
enter St ^^^^eat its mother, its young heart yet calm, 

Taught it to drink from hollowed palm. 
Nicholas* Saintly sound ! I cheerfully. 

With all these princely people follow thee 

Parish 

Up those wide stretching steps. Beneath 
Church. This carveu porch I hold my breath 
In wonder less than thankfulness 
That I once more my God confess. 
The gathered thousands, each and all 
Hold our Lord's Book graven small 
In their right hands ; and all can read ! 
Let me rejoice that thus the seed 
I tried to sow hath borne so well. 
Despite the powers of earth and hell. 
Each man a clerk, perhaps a priest, — 
I enter to the sacred feast — 
I strive to enter, strive in vain : 
Some hidden girths my limbs restrain 1 




Cardinal 



calls 



hack 



158 BEDE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. 

But the Ah 1 Holy Christ, I faint and quail, 
As if under the wind of an iron flail. 
Holy Jesu, he calls again, 
Renewing that resurrection pain, 
Dispersing my so late-found gain, 

him Yoking me round with a strangling chain, 

Dragging me to him when I would fain 
Rise and press onward : against my will, 
As a staff" in an old man's hand am I 
Thrust about ingloriously, 
Perinde cadaver \- — recross I the hill. 
Back to the sea-shore forced to fly ; — 
Cardinal, master ! there he stands, 
With rosy face and large red hands. 
Clad all in scarlet 1 — Woe's me ! how 
Can I go back to my old cell now ! 
Man clad in scarlet, who art thou ? 
The whiff" of death comfes out of thee, 
And the poor ancient <:hildish' past . 

Returns around me like the sea, 
Drowning my new brave Life : I'm cast 
Mistily sinking — oh, my God ! 
Lay me again beneath the sod. 



MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. 




TO THE SPHINX 



The silence and the darkness of the night 
The busiest day doth follow ; moonless nights 



i6o TO THE SPHINX, 

And starless track Time's footsteps ; strongest things 

Still crumbling back into the cavemed past. 

But thou, the earliest legend wrought in stone, 

The rock-bound riddle of an infant world, 

Within that terrible darkness standest still, 

Questioning now as then. 

I shut my ears to this day's cares, and hear. 

Vaguely across the centuries, the clang 

Of Coptic hammers round thy half freed limbs : 

Slaves with their whip-armed masters see I there ; 

Thousands like ants ; and priests, with noiseless feet, 

Passing around them with a serpent-coil ; 

And kings in crowned hoods, with great sceptres 

borne 
Before them ; — red men, and brown-skinned, and 

swart. 
From Nubia or the Isles : what sad resolve, 
What fear or inspiration or despair. 
Drive on those hordes that know not what they do ? 



II 

Oracular, impassive, open-eyed, — 
Open-eyed without vision j answerless. 
Yet questioning for life or death, as hath 
In later days been fabled, — round thy rest 
The scarabee, the snake, the circle-winged. 
And other symbols dark were as thy food, 



TO THE SPHINX. i6i 

Prepared for thee with cnielest rites and oaths 

Of secresy ; innumerable gods 

Made life about thee slave to death, seared up 

Unchangeably, and in the grave wound in 

With undivailged negations of all hopes : 

So that the dead could only render back 

The sense of these dim-shadowed myths and creeds, 

That thou wert set to guard. Perhaps the bones 

Of Cheops in his firmest of all tombs 

Shook to disclose thy password from the dust 

And free man's heart by knowing he cannot know, — 

Shook when the priests* slow steps passed evermore 

Bearing another Pharaoh home, 

With baseless rites and fantasies of faiths. 

Devised like clashing symbols and loud drums 

To drown the victim's shrieks. 

And did not Cleopatra's eager blood 

Throb at the thought of thee, 

While her wide purple flaunted in the sun. 

And the white smoke of her fine perfumes spread 

From Cidnus to the unknown waste where now 

Ships pass uniting hemispheres by trade ? 

And yet, may be, she knew, because a queen, 

The riddle of thy birth and of thy watch 

Before the temple door. Her feverish brain 

Left her no heart except for Anthony. 

And then, as now. 

The winged seeds of autumn died amidst 



1 62 TO THE SPHINX. 

The whirling sand-waste. Not beneath thy shade 
The sower walked. Joy fled thee, and desire 
Passed thee and knelt upon the marble floor : 
And still the passionate heart believes, and thou,— 
Thou sittest voiceless, without priest or prayer, 
As if thou wert self- bom. 



Ill 

And yet to whom, O Sphinx ! 

Hast thou not ministered, and dost thou not. 

If we interpret rightly those blank eyes? 

Beside the Isis-gates, the gates of stone, 

Have blood>red heroes and the sons of gods 

Uncrowned to thee. Around thy great smooth feet 

The hands of wandering Homer may have groped 

In his old blindness, while his eloquent lips 

Smiled gravely saturnine, as sad high thoughts 

Lightened across the hill-tops of his soul. 

The lyre of Hermes may have rung to thee. 

Before Dodona's leaves shook prophecies 

On slumbering votaries ; ere the white shafts rose 

Fluted on Delphi, or Athenian streets 

Had heard the voice of Socrates, nor yet 

iVas there a Calvary in all the world. 



TO THE SPHINX. 163 



IV 

The beacon-fire from Pharos shines to guide 

The beaked triremes with Sidon's wares 

And wine from Chios, and the Samian earth 

Transformed to gold by potters* artful hands : 

A while it shines and then the ships and wares 

Are changed : anon the stars are left again 

The only watchers. Temples and their shrines 

Before the Faith that brooks no rivals fall, 

And from the strife the conquering Christian shouts 

Against the demons, and the cenobite 

Hurries half naked by, 

Smiting thee with his crutch and palsied hand. 

In the far Thebaid's hermit- warren, weave 

Thy straws, blest cenobite ! for thou hast seen 

Bread brought to thee by ravens from heaven's 

board, — 
Souls carried upwards upon angels' wings ; 
And, like the red edge of averted thunder. 
Thou hast seen all the demons fall sheer down. 
Heaven waits for thee; thy life throbs up in prayer, 
Shedding joy-tears into the passion-cup ; 
For these old wickednesses passed away — 
Alas ! and he too has now passed the same — 
And through the deepening sand about thy flanks 
Even thou, before the face of heaven, 
Appealeth for like burial with thy kin. 



1 64 TO THE SPHINX, 



Crossing the dusky stream 

On the chance stepping-stones of time, 

Descending the uneven stairs of myths 

Into our nature's cavern-gloom, 

Nigh breathless we become, 

As if the blood fled backward in the veins ; 

'A nd when we turn again 

Into the even sunlight of to-day, 

The interests of the present seem no more 

Than fooPs-play, wind in trees, an even-song ; 

And all bur dear wise generation shrinks 

Into small grasshoppers, or clamouring storks 

That build frail nests on roofs of kingless towns, 

Uncenain as storm- scattered clouds, or leaves 

Heaped up as day shrinks coldly in. 

Yet art thou not, O Sphinx ! 

The mere child's bauble that the man disowns 

With loftier knowledge, weightier cares ? 

Ah, no ; for evermore 

The question comes again 

Which nature cannot answer, but which thou. 

Watcher by temple-doors. 

Thou mightest have solved to entering worshippers, 

Making them turn away, 

Earthward, not starwavd, searching for their home. 



TO THE SPHINX, 165 

Inward and not down beyond the tomb^ 
Nor over Styx for fairer days than ours ; 
For night is certain on the further shore. 
Watch then, O Sphinx ! watch on, 
Before the temple doors of all the gods. 



K 



1 66 



A DEDICATION, 
(On publishing a Poem called * The Year of the World.') 

1'hose sober morns of spring are gone whose light 

Made the leaves golden round the window-sill, 

While pleasantly my task advanced from hour 

To hour, until the last short page was full. 

The kindling influence of the year just then 

Had freed the butterfly, and the lightest breeze 

Twirled its vacant winter-shell, to me 

A sign and symbol, as I fondly deemed. 

Tis pleasant now in fair book-shape to see 

What these sweet moms accomplished ; be it small, 

Yet still a landmark in life's paths, an alms 

Saved from oblivion and an indolent past. 

Perhaps within its fabric not one thread 

Of gold is woven, and those thoughts that weighed 

Upon me as a duty weighs, till speech 

And action free the conscience from its claim, 

Will be to others uninformed and null : 

Perhaps the sheep may bleat, the small dogs bark, 

And not one man's voice answer me at all. 




A DEDICATION, 167 

So be it : on the waters cast I still 
My bread, remembering it hath been to me 
The bread of life according to my light, 
For one full concord, one just harmony 
Between the chords of lyre and heart rebuilds 
The temple of the soul. 

A labour still 
Of love it hath been. With the name of love 
It shall be sanctified, and unto thee, 
Hopefullest friend ! do I now send it : tliou 
Being the Mneme of past wandering years. 
And I the hero of mine own romance. 
Nor other reasons lack I, it may be, 
Although they might not sound so grand and grave. 
As this, a gentle critic wilt thou prove : 
Or this, if flowers but seldom deck the field, 
Thy love shall sow them broadcast. 

But, no more ; 
Eros is the great master, and his law 
It is we follow. Eros, child and God, 
With unshorn tresses that no crown confines. 
Teaches us much. This first ; that the great lamp ' 
Of Truth, whose naphtha needs no vestal's care, 
Shines not with holier splendours in the crypts 
Of book-philosophy and art-arcades. 
Wherein th' ambitious arm themselves for fame, 

K 2 




1 68 A DEDICATION. 

As the Athenian youths girt up their hair 

For the gymnasium, then in those dear bowers 

Of our humanity where amaranth grows 

With darnels, worts, and thistles. I have paused 

Oft-times midway in some laborious scheme, 

Asking myself the question, — What avails 

This strife, acquiring, losing, when to gain 

Or lose is non-essential, and but hangs 

Upon the outer husks of life ? Reply 

Hath reached me from beyond our continent ; 

It was not I who toiled, cast off to-day 

Yesterday's motives, stands unchanged the soul 

The same as heretofore. Thus have I learned 

To throw no dice with fortune ; to remain 

Spectator more than actor. Truth descends 

Without our prayers and labour. Knowledge stands 

Apart from throned wisdom. Trivial things 

Minister oft like miracles, and reveal 

The narrow path for which weVe searched in vain 

Through sleepless nights and over sloughs and seas. 




169 



A RHYME OF THE SUN-DIAL, 

The dial is dark, 'tis but half past-one : 
But the crow is abroad, and the day's begun. 

The dial is dim, 'tis but half-past two : 
Fit the small foot with its neat first shoe. 

The light gains fast, it is half-past three : 
Now the blossom appears all over the tree. 

The gnomon tells it is but half-past four : 
Shut upon him the old school-door. 

The sun is strong, it is half-past five : 
Through this and through that let him hustle 
and strive. 

Ha, thunder and rain ! it is half-past six : 
Hither and thither, go, wander and fix. 

The shadows are sharp, it is half past-seven : 
The Titan dares to scale even heaven ! 



I70 A RHYME OF THE SUN-DIAL, 

The rain soon dries, it is half-past eight : 
Time faster flies, but it is not late ! 

The sky now is clear, it is half- past nine : 
Draw all the threads and make them entwine. 

Clearer and calmer, 'tis half-past ten : 
Count we the gains ? not yet : try again. 

The shadows lengthen, half-past eleven : 
He looks back, alas ! let the man be shriven ! 

The mist falls cold, it is half-past twelve : 
Hark, the bell tolls ! up, sexton, and delve ! 




171 



IN THE VALLEY, 

Trusting lambs about the door, 
Entering sometimes on the floor ; 
Timid ewes with simple eyes, 
Looking for them in surprise. 

With sunny days and busy feet, 
Milkmaids' ditties sound so sweet, — 
Ditties of contented life, 
And love and hopes to be a wife. 

Through our valley goes the road 
To some prince's grand abode ; 
A slope of cattle-pasturing green 
Rises round, well hedged between. 

With fallow fields in spring-time gray, 
Past which winds the long highway ; 
Travellers' heads a mile or more 
Are seen descending to our door. 

Sometimes the goddess Poverty 
Greets us as she wanders by, 
And calls the little birds to come 
To pick from her thin hand the crumb. 



172 IN THE VALLEY, 

Sometimes Hope, the youngest Grace 
Our lord set up in his high place, 
Going to seek for work somewhere, 
Or get apprenticed to old Care. 

Sometimes Faith, with smile secure, 
Makes us feel we are not poor. 
To entertain such guests as these 
Upon our bench beneath the trees. 

Sometimes 'tis Charity herself, 
Little children all her pelf, 
An d our loved little ones run out 
To welcome hers with play and shout. 

Jesus then the white bread bears. 
And naked John the water shares 
In a white cup to every one 
Resting from the mid-day sun. 




173 



MAY. 

(IN A LONDON LODGING.) 

Doubtless now in Wetberel woods 

The white lady-garlic spreads, 
And young ferns hold their wise conclaves, 

All nodding their crozier-heads. 

There too the last year's bramble sweeps 

The P'.den's arrowy swell, 
And the cuckoo over the larches dark 

You'll hear if you listen well 

May is with us, and I am pent 

In the city's huge recess, 
But prison-bars nor walls of stone 

Can shut out spring's caress. 

Over the roofs from the fields far off 

Fresh influences hie. 
Shading the hair from the cool forehead, 

Touching it tenderly. 




174 ^Ay- 

Open the window, let the breeze 
About these brown books play, 
And, hark ! the caged bird opposite 
Knows well that it is May. 

Sing louder yet ! perhaps both thou 

And I enjoy it more 
Within this populous wilderness 

Than roaming wild woods o'er. 

Oh, welcome now to come and go. 
You early weak-winged bee ! 

My primrose pots and crocuses 
Are splendid, as you see. 

I fear your sturdy hopefulness 

Already hath gone astray; 
Or came you here to teach me sing 

A song to suit the day ? 

Yes, the summer's feast is spread. 
Her wine is poured out free ; — 

Mignon ! I could desire no more 
If I but shared with thee ! 

Where art thou now, — in hawthorn lane ? 

Or housed with some dull guest ? 
I'll think of thee, and some have said 

Our fancied joys are best. 



^ 



MAY, 



17 S 



But while the mavis sings above, 
And the cowslip dots the mead, 

If we together heard his song, 
Twere a pleasanter May indeed ! 




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ON LITERARY SUBJECTS. 



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179 



ON THE INSCRIPTION, KEA TS' 
TOMBSTONE. 

(ENGLISH CEMETERY, ROME.) 

Could we but see the Future ere it comes, 
As gods must see effects in causes hid, — 
How calmly could we wait till we were bid ! 

Heroes would hear their triumph's far-off drums, 

Would see Fame's splendours ere the threads and 
thrums 
Had formed them in to-morrow's living loom ; 
Would feel the honours round the future tomb, 

Across the sunless fosse where life succumbs. 

If it were so ! But wiser fates conspire 
That each shall bear his own lamp through the night, 
Showing but short way round its blood-red light, 
And find, by it alone, the herb that springs 
Fast by the wells of fathomless desire ; 

And of this healing herb the poet sings. 




i8o 



WORDSWORTH. 

(ON READING THE MEMOIRS BY DR. C. WORDSWORTH.) 

I. 

Too much of * Tours/ productive more or less ; 
Too much of * Nature,* meaning thereby hills, 
Trees, hedges, landscapes rich with woods and rills ; 

Too little of the dark divine recess 

Beneath the white shirt, — nothing of the press 
Of our own age so full of glorious cares. 
And men that call, new lamps for old ! good wares 

For potsherds given ! in this book I confess. 

Yet through it evermore appears in sight 
A poet travelling homeward who was still 
A poet every day, with common tread 
Who walked on common shoes up Life's high hill 

Self-center*d, God-directed, till the light 
Of this world and the next met round his head. 




i8i 



WORDSWORTH, 

II. 

Cumberland was the world to him and art 
Was landscape-gardening. Most sententiously 
A truism or a common-place could he 

Announce, and by his grave large voice impart 

Value thereto. Steered by the simplest heart 
Tis said he never doubted, but held on 
Bible o'erpowered : in these our days alone 

Of all sane men perhaps in learning's mart ! 

But he of all men planned his life with care : 
Fast by the wells of sadness walked he on 

O'er fortunate meads with chilly flowers made fair, 
Till on his right hand and his left were won 

The waving wheat ears of a just success ; 

A man whose praise rejoice we to express ! 




l82 



WORDSWORTH. 



III. 



Each medal hath its reverse ; every day 
Its cloud ; each house its skeleton ; so here, 
Sum up this philosophic poet*s year, 
And we shall find within his mental way, 
Few threads of vital poet- wisdom stray. 
Instead ; philanthropy with hand withheld, 
A caution selfward turned, the muse compelled 
To chew the cud, to sift the sand and clay 
Left by chance hill-winds, lest some grains of gold 

Without assiduous sieve might there be lost. 
A bald soul awkward with his lyre, both cold 

And over-anxious, find we to our cost : 
And this the moral of the whole ; that man 
Is great who simply doth the best he can. 




i83 



TO THE ARTISTS CALLED P. R. B. 

(1851.) 

I THANK you, brethren in Sincerity, — 

One who, within the temperate climes of Art, 
From the charmed circle humbly stands apart, 

Scornfully also, with a listless eye 

Watching old marionettes' vitality ; 

For you have shown, with youth's brave confidence, 
The honesty of true speech and the sense 

Uniting life with * nature,' earth with sky. 

In faithful hearts Art strikes its roots far down, 
And bears both flower and fruit with seeded core ; 
When Truth dies out, the fruit appears no more, 

But the flower hides a worm within its crown. 
God-speed you onward ! once again our way 
Shall be made odorous with fresh flowers of May. 




1 84 



ON CERTAIN CRITICS AT THE BEGINNING 

OF THE CENTURY. 

The p^et lives indeed. Within the schools 
He may or may not have tried on his arms, 
Or learnt their dextrous use : but free of harms 

He must have dived and braved the whirling pools 

Of his own heart, and o'er the heads of fools 
And unbelievers, teachers, priests, tipstaves, 
Or censors, held his own, breasting the waves 

Of martyrdom, smiling like one who rules. 

And here's the poet's judge ! whose learned speech 
Of tropes and classics, fixed authorities, 

Smells stale, whose outside confidences teach 
His fellow-philistines to dogmatise, 
Till vulgar scoffers even invade the skies — 

Turn, poet ! lift thy foot against his breech. 




i85 



THE EPITAPH OF HUBERT VAN EYCK. 

(CARVED ON THE SHIELD HELD BY A MARBLE SKELETON, 
CATHEDRAL OF ST. BAVON, GHENT.) 

Whoe'er thou art who walkest overhead, 
Behold thyself in stone : for I yestreen 
Was seemly and alert like thee : now dead, 
Nailed up and earthed, and for the last time green, 
The first spring greenness and the last decay, 
Am hidden here for ever from the day. 
I, Hubert Van Eyck, whom all Bruges hailed 
Worthy of lauds, am now with worms engrailed. 
My soul with many pangs by God constrained 
Fled in September when the com is wained. 
Just fourteen hundred years and twenty-six 
Since Christ Himself was our first crucifix. 
Lovers of Art, pray for me that I gain 
God's grace, nor find I've worked and lived in vain. 




1 86 



FRAGMENT OF A SONNET BY RAPHAEL, 

(FOUND WRITTEN ON THE BACK OF A SKETCH.) 

* As Paul when he descended from his trance 
Could utter nought of the divine arcane, — 
So hidden in my heart my joys remain 
Lovingly veiled from all unhallowed chance. 
How much I see, how much I do and bear, 
Clothing with placid smile the secret pain, 
Which I could just as easy change the hair 
Upon this brow as render up profane 

• • • • « • 

Thus far the master, the divine Raphael, 

Who died before his brown locks had uncurled. 

And left so much,— yet from whose hand we hail 

This fragment now across a changing world. 

Finish it, reader ! — genius, fortune, fame ! 

Thrice crowned, love's tangled skein remains the same. 




THE MUSICIAN. 

His sense transcends this world : the Muses' heaven 
Is where his soul was bom, a wondrous child ; 

Instinct above the intellect is given 
To the Musician ; wordless, unlearned, wild, 

Fancies of heart are his realities. 

And over us as o'er base things he flies 

Towards absorption in the harmonies 

Of spheres unknown. Alas, within the maze 

Of the actual world, hills, cattie, ships, and town. 

Knowledge accumulative, mace and gown. 
Wealth, science, law, he like a blind man strays ! 

Yet, wondrous child, be nevermore cast down, 
Men hear thy fiddle-bow, and lose their pains, — 
Compared to thee they are but serfs in chains. 




1 88 



TO MY BROTHER, 

ON PUBLISHING HIS * MEMOIR, ETC.* 

My brother, latest of so many, passed 

Across the unknown dark sea, where we all 
Must follow, as our days and hours are cast : 

I speak to thee, I touch the dreadful pall, 
To lay thine own bay-leaves upon thy bier. 

It may be in the arcane truths of God, 
Thou still dost feel this touch, dost feel and hear, 

And recognizest still the cold green sod, 
Immensely far yet infinitely near ! 

Thou who hast shown how much the steadfast soul 

Bears abnegation, how an ideal goal 
Robs life, how singleness of heart hopes long, 
And how, by suffering sanctified, the song 
From the inner shrine becomes more just and strong. 




1 89 



SANDRARrS INSCRIPTION, 

ON ALBERT DURER'S GRAVE, NURNBERG. 

Rest here, thou Prince of Painters, thou who wast 

better than great, 
In many arts unequalled in the old time or the late. 
Earth thou didst paint and garnish, and now, in thy 

new abode. 
Thou paintest the holy things overhead in the city of 

God. 
And we, as our patron saint, look up to thee ever 

will, 
And crown, with a laurel crown, the dust left here 

with us still. 




^ 


^ 1 


Mf 






-^ >v^Hi 











OCCASIONAL SONNETS. 



Iti^e nev yorkI 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



■^ '- = •'-••■ F'U"^:-T":OVT,. 






193 



PYGMALION, 

* Mistress of gods and men ! I have been thine 
From boy to man, and many a myrtle rod 
Have I made grow upon thy sacred sod, 

Nor ever have I passed thy white shafts nine 

Without some votive offering for the shrine, 

Carved beryl or chased bloodstone \ — aid me now, 
And I will live to fashion for thy brow 

Heart-breaking priceless things : oh, make her mine.' 

Venus inclined her ear, and through the Stone 

Forthwith slid warmth like spring through sapling- 
stems, 

And lo, the eyelid stirred, beneath had grown 
The tremulous light of life, and all the hems 

Of her zoned peplos shook — ^upon his breast. 

She sank by two dread gifts at once oppressed. 




194 



THE SWAN, 

With broad soft breast, with pliant neck and long 
To reach the small fish down among the reeds, 
Hitherward scattering the fresh water-beads 

The snowy beauty comes. O fair and strong, 

Thou Lais, queen of pleasure, with my song 
I would enrich thee were it worthier, 
And if it could be but the minister 

Of love, that to such goddess should belong. 

So I held out to her this page where lay 

Some dainty fiiiits, and flowers, a rare bouquet ; — 

Whereat she smote her ample wings abroad. 
Raised her black mouth from whence a bruised worm 

fell. 
And hissed, as good deeds may be hissed in hell : 

The spray fell over me upon the sod. 



i 



195 



SPRING LOVE, 

From mom to evening, this day, yesterday, 
We've walked within the garden'd paths of love, 
Till the moon rose the darkening woods above : 

We've seen the blossoming apple's crimson spray, 

And watched the hiving bees work lustily, 
As if their time was short as it was sweet : 
Along love's meadow-lands too, with glad feet. 

We've welcomed all the wild flowers come with May. 

Bend thy sweet head ; I've strung this long woodbine 
With primroses and cowslips — golden prize 
For golden hair, and flowers that best express 
The opening of the year, the mild sunshine. 
And the frank clearness of those trusting eyes, 
Through which there gleams scarce-trusted 
blessedness. 




196 



AN ANNIVERSARY. 

Madonna ! all the year's sweet flowers are dead ; 

Christmas is come, and now thou art mine own. 

When first I saw thee in thy girlhood's gown, 
Within the myrtle hedge of maidenhood, 
Waiting, your frank brow with its auburn snood. 

Like an enchanted tower girt round with fire, 

I thought, ah me ! how can I so aspire ; — 
And now for years our lives as one have sped. 

Since then what wild adventures we've essayed ; 
What jesting comedies our fates have played ! 

'Tis now long since I ceased to look on thee 
With wonder : that head lies by mine all night ; 

Thou art a book read three times o'er to me, 
And yet thy last words are quite infinite. 




197 



THE MIDNIGHT CITY. 

Past these tall houses and closed doors we wind, 
Nor ever any living thing we meet, 
Along each dimly lamp-lit, clean-swept street : 

Bolted and barred within, the human kind, 

Like Egypt's mummied dead, lie still and blind, 
Stretched out beneath the hands of sleep and night; — 
Will they indeed re- wake with morning's light ? 

An awful thing this lifeless town I find. 

Tis strange to think too, eons long ago. 

Ere any eyes or any hearts were here. 

These stars shone out the s^me — unnumbered, clear ; 
And at this moment where warm breezes blow. 

Filling the sails that left our quays last year. 

The sun lights up another hemisphere I 




198 



KISSES, 



I. 



Within her lips my mistress, then a child, 
Held up a crumb to her caged bird ; and I, 
A stripling, very awkwardly stood by, 

Ix)st in presentiment ; — was't but a mild 

Girl's coquetry, and was my heart beguiled ? 
Or was it earnest of the days to be. 
When I too, like that linnet, no more free, 

By those dear lips am fed and reconciled ? 

A crumb of bread sometimes — the bread of life. 
And sometimes but a worthless sugarplum. 
To her new slave those rounded lips present, 
Now very gently, then in well-feigned strife ; 
Beforehand I can't tell what next may come. 
So I look forward, very well content. 




199 



KISSES. 

II. 

Who can tell why Queen Venus raised the dove 
To be her bird? Why not the statelier swan, 
Seamew or albatross ? Our Queen began 

In sea sun-smitten, and the wave-foam wove 

Her only veil ; — ^What charioteer for Love 
Were better, and what lovelier thing is there 
Than swan full winged, and for the wilder pair, 

Do they not triumph tides and storms above ? 

I think it must have been the turtle's claim 
To the arcane invention of the kiss, 

That taught the Golden Age how first to woo ! 
But now-a-days we would be much to blame, 
Needing such lessons in love's lore as this ; 
So let us hope we are her love-birds too. 




20O 



THE TRAVELLER LOST 

That winding pathway on this windless day, 
With flowering turfs and pebbles here and there ; 
That hawthorn-hedge irregularly bare 

And blossoming \ the sky-lark far away ; — 

That very twig and leaf and clambering spray : 
And now behind me, from the unseen shore, 
A curlew !— Yes, I have been here before, 

And God hath brought me back another way. 

One instant ! the memorial sense has flown, 
Leaving all blank as the Atlantic tides 
Fronting Columbus : it was like the moon 
To the half awake, — as if I had gone down 

That fabulous well where Truth from mortals hides, 
And, looking up, beheld the stars at noon ! 




20I 



THE NIGHTINGALE UNHEARD. 

Is that the much-desired, the wondrous wail 
Of the brown bird by poets loved so long ? 
Nay, it is but the thrush's rich clear song 

Through the red sunset rung ; but down the vale, 

Beneath the starlight, never do we fail 

To hear the love-lorn singer : still and dark 
Above our heads the black boughs arch ; and, hark ! 

A wild short note — another — then a trail 

Of loud clear song is drawn athwart the glow, 
Filling the formless night with cheerfulness. 
But sure we know that melody full well, — 

The dear old blackbird ! Let's no further go ; 
There's no brown bird ; — Ye poets all, confess 
That Fancy only is your Philomel. 




202 



IN ROME, A.D. 150. 

(FOR A PICTURE.) 

Face against face the New Faith meets the Old : 
The New with its inspiring hopes of life 
Beyond the Agape and all earth-strife, 

God-guided through an alien worid, with cold 

Postponement of the triumph-crown of gold ; 
The Old irresolute and faint of heart, 
But loving all sweet things, and flowers, and art, 

That deifies nature's fashions manifold. 

Sceptre and wreath, they ask for : * Now, this hour 
Be kind to us, O Gods ; let us not dare 
And lose the prize ; let the sun shine to-day, 
The song be heard ! ' but gone is all their power ; 
Their eyes are dark ; a cry is in the air : 
* Awake ! arise, arise, and come away ! * 




COMING AND GOING. 

In the bright luaipn of the salt sea tide, 
Flooding the sands, his tiny shallop tries 
A boy, with new delights in his clear eyes ; 

Wading far in and watching it with pride 

Tacking, returning, as the wavelets guide ; 
Until the ebb set in unknown to him, 
And then across the seas into the dim 

Green waste he saw his Uttle frigate ride 1 

Will it sail on for ever and a day, 

Or will they hail it from some new strange land ? 
Why went it from me at the last away ? 
He asked, and empty-handed turned to go. 

And often wandering on life's wave-worn strand. 
Perplexed, he questions still that ebb and flow. 




OF ENEADOS. 



85 



10 



thou, of Troy the lemand lamp of lycht ! 

Troiane hoipe, mast ferme defence in fycht ! 

Quhat hes the taryit? quhi maid thou this delay, 

Hectour, quhame we desirit mony a day? 

Fro quhat cuntre this vise cumin art thou, 

That, eftir fell slauchter of thi freindis now. 

And of thi folkis and cietie eftir huge pane, 

Quhen we bene irkit, we se the heir aganel 

Quhat hard myschance filit so thi plesand face ? 

Or quhi se I thai fell woundis ? allace ! 

Onto thir wourdis he nane answeir maid, 

Nor to my woid demandis na thing said, 

Bot with ane hevy murmour, as it war draw 

Furtht of the bodum of his breist wele law : 

Allace ! allace ! thou goddes sone, quod he, 

Salf thi self fra this fyre, and fast thou fie ; 

Our enemyis hes thir worthy wallis tane ; 

Troy frome the top doun fallis, and all is gane. 

Eneucht hes lestit of Priamus the ryng. 

The faitis will na mair it enduryng. 

Geif Pergama, the Troiane wallis wycht, 

Mycht langar haue bene fendit into fycht, 

"With this rycht hand thai suld haue bene defendit : 

Adew ! fair wele ! for euir it is endit. 

In thi keiping committis Troy, but les, 

Hir kyndly goddis clepit Penates ; 

Tak thir in fallowschip of thi faitis all. 

And large wallis for thame seik thou sail, 

Quhilk at the last thi self sail beild wp hie, 

Eftir lang wandring and errour our the see. 30 

Thus said Hector, and schew fiirth in his handis 

The dreidfull valis, wympillis, and garlandis 



Hector 
desirys 
Eneas to 
depart and 
sane him- 
selfe, be- 
cause the 
wyl of the 
godis was to 
20 distroy the 
citie of 
Troy. 



{ 



205 



MV MOTHER. 

(PORTOBELLO, NEAR EDINBURGH, 1851.) 

II. 

There was a gathered stillness in the room, 
Only the breathing of the great sea rose 
From far off, aiding that profound repose, 

With regular pulse and pause within the gloom 

Of twilight, as if some impending doom 
Was now approaching ; — I sat moveless there, 
Watching with tears and thoughts that were like 
prayer, 

Till the hour struck, — the thread dropped from the 
loom j 
And the Bark passed in which freed souls are borne. 
The dear stilled face lay there ; that sound forlorn 

Continued ; I rose not, but long sat by : — 
And now my heart oft hears that sad seashore, 

When she is in the far-off land, and I 

Wait the dark sail returning yet once more. 



1871. 



u 




2o6 



ASSISTANCE DELAYED, 

Had that hand hailed me and that cheerful song, 

Had that good chance befallen me, while the blood 
Was juvenescent, and the vista long. 

And life's mid-year unbridged : while yet all-good 
Appeared the triumphs to be won, the men 

Who had attained, all gods, amidst the mist 
Blood-red o'er youth's long sunrise. Doubtless then 

Proudly had I leapt forth and dared the best, 
Either with tricks fantastic, or high faith 

And art, — the best that in this right arm lay ! 
But now the game seems boy's piay : keep your breath 

To cool your pottage, wise old proverbs say. 
The world still grudgingly unties her store : 
Fame and reward are ours when they are prized no 
more. 




207 



UNWORTHY AMBITION. 

(ON THE PORTRAITS OF LORDS BROUGHAM AND 

LYNDHURST.) 

To rise up step by step from hall to dais ; 
To take the best seat at the best repast, 
While adulating eyes are toward him cast 

By the upstanding hungry ; to have praise 

From those he scorns : to see the base hand raise 
The limp hat to him as he hastens by, 
Not deigning to return the courtesy ; 

To ride while others tramp the miry ways. 

These are the honours of a hot-breathed world, 
These the civilian honours, these the prize 

In church or bar. Behold that wig deep-curled, 
The symbol of a long life's toil, those eyes 

Below it like a tipstaffs ! — shut thine own, 

And think of Christ or of the sky star-sown ! 



m2 





MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 
(1837; REVISED 1872.) 
All things were created by numbers, and again it mus 



The Angel of Death through the dry earth slid, 

Like a mole to the Dervish Yan, 

Lying beneath the turf six feet, 

Till he reached the cofiin and smote its lid 



MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 209 

With his hammer that wakes the Mosleman ; 
And whispered thus through board and sheet, 
* Arise, that thy closed eye and ear 
The things tl>at Are may see and h^ar ! ' 
The Dervish turned him rounds and ro§e 
On his knees at. the sound of the three dread blows : 
He was alive and a man again, 
Yet he felt no earth,, nor of it thought, 
But rose without a strain. 

Friends wept aloud for the Dervish Yan, . 
And a wife she wept for a Christian man, 
A long train of mutes had but lately laid 
Under the sward in the cool green shade 
Of a sanctified wall whose stones divide 
I'he earth where heretic corses hide, 
From that set apart for the faithful alone, 
And over him carved his name on a stone ; 
But the dead man laughed as he woke below, 
For he rejoiced at wakening so, — 
' I am awake, awake and well; 

Am I myself indeed, and where ? — 

Here is no light, here is no air, 

Here is neither heaven nor hell/ 
The Angel of Death stooping clasped his hand. 
And silenced him, whispering, * I command 
The power whose song shall answer thee, — 
As it hath been, so shall it be.* 

M 




210 MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 

Beneath the head 

When the Jew is dead 

Is a clod of quick clay kneaden ; 

And as the mourners backward go, 

Three turfs, green turfs, to the grave they throw, 

Saying, * Thou shalt like these green turfs grow. 

May thy soul be buried in Eden.' 

Thus in the Levites* vault was laid 

A Rabbi, thus were the last rites paid. 

At the same time that the Summoner 

Made the two Gentile corses stir, 

And with a writhe like theirs, his eyes 

The Rabbi opening, tried to rise. 

' Have the demons power o'er me ? ' he cries, 

Dragging himself with painful toil 

From the mould which is the earth-worm's spoil, 

And trembled to hear the words * Follow thou too, 

Within the sphere of the melody 

That re-createth those who die ! ' 

And thus have these three mortals passed, 
Being dead, into the formless vast. 
Which we in life, expectant, still 
By creeds and myths and fancies, fill 
With hopes and fears like life on earth, — 
Things for the days 'tween death and birth, 
For which we care not any more 
Down upon the further shore. 




MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 211 

' By what uncertain sense we're led, 
Bom thus again — the body dead 
Our mother — the grave our nursing bed ! 

' Haunted still with hearth and home, 
Hammer in hand, sword, pen, and tome, 
Sun and moon and starry dome. 

' Mom till evening toil-in- vain, 
Market loss and market gain. 
Restless sea and wheaten plain. 

' Down the darkness go \s^ still. 
Go we without choice of will : 
From Gentile's scoff and scoraer*s rail, 
From worm and asp, from kiss and wail ; 
From master's whip, Muezzim's cry. 
Camel and rice, and blank white sky. 



* Carried or driven, through sea, through air, 
Carried sheer down by cloud or stair, 
Are we or are we not — ^whither away ? 
Phantom's of life's fever-day. 
Can we not return again. 
As leaves come after spring-time's rain ? 
The trumpet cannot call the dead, 
Yet I hear it overhead ; 
A madman's sleep is thick and brief ; 
The dawn would give us all relief! — 

M 2 




212 MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 

Ah, 'tis gone, and thou, the dearest ! 
Thou with moonlike light appearest ; 
Thou, mine own, beside the hearth, 
Assiduous with childish mirth — 
Dreams, only dreams ! the past doth ciy, 
In the throes of dissolving memory. 

brother spectres who have come 
Out of yourselves, — oh, can ye tell, 
Rise we or sink — to heaven or hell? 
But even now with my own old eyes 

1 saw the ghost of myself arise ; 
And then forthwith I was beguiled 
To think myself again a child. 
But what, alas ! are those below 
That to and fro 

Pass like men walking fast, and then 

Pass the very same again ? 

Alike they are, even every one. 

Not as men beneath the sun ; — 

Now they stalk our heads above, 

Now beneath our feet they move. 

Now they pass through us quite, as though 

Shadows with like shadows blent. 

Shadows from. some real things sent, 

We their shadows cannot know ! 

Gone, gone, gone ! a fiery wind 

Severs the vision, and mountain or flood. 

City or temple, or cedar-wood. 




MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 215 

Or rock-walls with their multitude 

Of caverns void and blind, 

Fragments of this baseless world, 

About us are flashed out and furled ; 

And phantoms without number vast, 

Interlace the insane dream. 

Hurtle together, and never get past : 

And a leprous light, a light and breath. 

Like the phosphor in the eyes of Death, 

Follows each phantom ; down they stream, 

Wingless, from above descending, 

Straight and stiff; nor is the hair 

On their rigid shoulders pending 

Stirred by any fitful air. 

Together they rush now, from near and far, 

As if around a central war. 

And now in circles whirl, while we — 

We cleave the whirlpool steadily. 

If any god still hears our wail, 

For an hour again 

Let us be men, 

Or now cease utterly and fail 

To know ourselves, to think and be ! 

' Hath our prayer been heard? Ah, no; 
Spectres that have never trod 
Earth with man or heaven with God 
Rise stark and slow ; 




214 MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 

Rings of gold 

About their corded locks are rolled, 

Dreadful symbols of dead creeds, 

And dripping brands 

Are in their hands ; — 

Naked giants ! how they hold 

By the nostrils monstrous steeds ! 

They meet, they rush together : now 

The furies of battle are over all, 

And some struggle upwards in pain, some fall 

Sheer through the seething gulf below ; — 

Allah el Allah, how are we 

In this collapsing death-strife free ? 

Oh, that we could dissolve at once 

To nothingness ; — advance, 

Ye barbed giants ! smoke and fire 

Lap us round till we expire, — 

Expire, cease utterly and fail 

To retract ourselves, to think and be ! 

Thus the dead men from the grave 
Wailed as they went ; but who can say 
How to paint the unknown way 
Within the wondrous door of death ? 
Or what the mysteries are that pave 
The path to New Life, when the breath 
And senses cease to be, as now, 
The guardians of our souls? The plough 



MUSIC OF THE SPHERES. 215 

Casts up bones where warriors trod, 
Belted, plumed, and iron-shod ; 
Those shreds the plough exhumes, I deem, 
Little like the warriors seem. 

Two lights, two haloed lights appear, 

Round like the moon at the fall of the year, 

When the sky is mantled o*er 

With a fleece of mist, and of all the store 

Of stars, not one can penetrate 

To the traveller's eye till the night be late. 

Two haloes slowly and steadily 

Advancing like a double day. 

Increasing in beauty more and more ; — 

Behold ! they are the tires of light 

On the heads of gods, and a golden sound, 

Swooning and recreating, wound 

From those two haloes, passed right round 

The dead men's hearts with a painful might. 

Would I could say 

Whose voices or whose harps were they. 

That had such vital force divine. 

Holy Spirit, like to thine ! 

But what was the song 

That bore along 

These weary ghosts with a power so strong? 

If we could repeat that lay 

In the light of upper day. 




2i6 MUSIC OF THE SPHERES, 

It might unravel warp and woof 

Of this prisoned conscious Life 

Tear all sensuous ties aloof: 

Of good and ill unwind the strife : 

Interweave it with amaranth again, 

Die it with nepenthe bloom, 

That we no more knew sin or pain, 

Nor feared the darks beyond the tomb ! 

But what was the song 

That bore along 

Those dead hearts with a power so strong ? 

Would I could repeat the lay 

In the dull light of this cold day ; 

Wean the soul from the thirst to know, 

By wisdom be as gods, that so 

The slave unmanacle his hand. 

The ploughshare rest upon the land. 

When the sound of the wires 

Of those holy lyres 

Had the dead men's lives remade, 

Did their shadows remain in the world of shade, 

Their flesh in the earth 

That gave it birth ? 

Then in what were they arrayed ? 

But the child just bom forgetteth quite 

Its ante-natal garments ; night 




MUSIC OF THE SPHERES, 217 

And utter change doth interpose, 

And when this life over the body doth close, 

And the freed Soul hears without ears the hymn, 

Sphere-music of God's cherubim, 

And sees the haloed powers below, — 

Utterly changeth it also ; 

And after the new birth again 

Forget the ante-natal gain ? 

We cannot know. 



M--3 





JUVENILE POEMS. 




, .r - r ^mmMmm>—m 



■■:■' YORKj 

!i:iRARY 






221 



TO THE MEMORY OF PERCY BYSSHE 

SHELLEY, 

(1831.) 

Where is Alastor gone, — 
The fairy queen's own latest bora, 

Where is he gone ? 
Has the far-scenting roe-buck at the time 
Appointed, shed his antlers ? does the pride 
Of the wide solitary forests lie 
Moss-overgrown in slimy lizard's nook ? 
Has the swift ostrich of the desert lost 
The long limb of her strength, and laid her down 
On the hard earth, which erewhile her feet spuraed, 

Where mole and burrowing owl, 

And red-eyed weazel, prowl ? 

Must he too die like other men, 
Who lived not like them ? He who knew no world 

Outside the heart ; — 
The spirit whose home was the adytum lit 
By phantasies as by the stars in their 
Blueness of wondrous height j each thought a world 




222 TO THE MEMORY OF SHELLEY, 

As are the stars, pursuant of its end 
Of being ; speculating, working, strong, 

Having its rayings wrought 

Around its brother thought. 

An earthless garden grew 
Around him, aromatic laurel boughs 

Waved twining there : 
Flowers of Arcadian nature strengthened there. 
Transplanted from the wizard's world of dream, 
Yea, the old wizard's wand itself did shoot 
Like the high priest's, and gave strange blossoming, 
And fruit intoxicating mightily. 
And a bright rainbow*d shower fell glitteringly 
From the most holy font of his clear soul, 

Upon this gardened plain 

Where Fancy held her reign. 

A shrine was in the midst 
Luxuriously bedecked in its own fire, 

As is the sun. 
And his heart beat, and his brain whirled, when he 
Turned to it ; and words leaped forth from his tongue 
As its light glorified him, Memnon-like ; 
And the words were, as pundit, sanscrit-leamed. 
Revivifies from times of demi-gods. 
Drawn from the deepest wells of consciousness, 
The world received not j but he proudly passed 




TO THE MEMORY OF SHELLEY, 223 

The world, and carol'd to 
Himself as prophets only do. 

The goddess of that shrine 
No man hath e'er held commune with, nor seen 

With mortal eye, 
But thou, wild wingless angel, didst not pause, 
But entered to the blaze where spirits alone 
Can worship ; and didst make libations till 
Thou wast so purified, men knew thee not 
Would I could trace thy footsteps up the porch 
And to the altar there, so that I too 

Would sacrifice in ruth 

To thee who worshipped truth. 

• ••••• 

Few mourners have appeared : 
And meet it is ; for he was ever grieved 

By others* grief: 
Few staves are lifted for the pilgrimage 
To follow him j few of the busy world 
Can go up to the realms where he did go ; 
Or breathe the atmosphere he breathed ; or cast 
The old shell off, and come forth cleansed as he ; 

Few, few have striven 

To make earth heaven. 

Men say that he fell blind 
By daring to approach this source of Light ; 
That he fell lame 




224 TO THE MEMORY OF SHELLEY, 

By travelling far in desperate paths : even so — 
Yet reverence we not the martyr ? None 
Are left us like him ; none are left to tune 
The cythera, as he did tune it o'er 
The white spring flowers on Adonais' grave : 
Lone Adonais and Alastor lone ! 
Their spirits went together j and their earths 
Resolved each to the elements they loved, — 
One to sunshine and storm, 
One flowers and fruits to form. 

Sage follows sage afar ; 
Dark lapse of time between, now marked alone 

By their advent 
As star by star arises on the night, 
Up through the shades of time past they appear 
In lambent haloes burning steadily. 
Revolving onward, the eternal wheel 
Circles ; and still a shine from these wan flames, 
God-kindled, follows on. Another flame, 

Subtle as lightning, 

Is added to the brightening. 

Still poets reappear, 
And still the glow doth thicken to the dawn. 

Redness of mom 
Gilds our horizon soon ! Alastor, thou 
Shalt be our guide into the unknown time ; 



106 THE SECUND BUIK 

Gif goddia likit Ijmth my life langar space, 

Thai wald haue salfit to me this litle place : 

It is aneuch, aneuch and mair, I wene, 

A destnictioun of Troy at we haue sene, 

Bemaning alife eftir the cietie tane. 

So, so, hald on, lefe this deid body allane. 

Say the last quenthing worde, adew to me. 

I sail my deith purchas thus, quod he, 

Quhen our enemyis seis me enarmit stafid, 

Sum saU haue reuth, and sla me with his brand, 10 

To get my spuil3e ; quhat of the body na cuir ; 

The corps is sone warpit in sepultuir. 

Hatit of the goddis, to all nedis wnhable, 

Thir mony 3eris I left inprofitable, 

Ay sen the fader of goddis and king of men 

With thunderis blast me smate, as that ^e ken. 

And with his fyry lewyne me wmberauch. 

That we intill our langage cleip fyirflauch. 

Eehersing this, fermly he did remane 
At his first purpose fixt, and we agane 20 

Eneas Furth 3etting teris, and our spous Crewsa, 
hys^ather to -A^c^nius 3ing, and all our men3ie alswa, 
departo. Besocht my fadir to salf his wery banis, 

And nocht be wilfiill to perische all at anis. 

And to escheif the chance as it was went. 

Plat he refusis, andherding to his entent. 

The first sentence balding euir ane. 

To stert to harnes I am compellit agane. 

And as mast wrachit and miserable catife, 

Deid I desyrit, and irkit of my life ; 30 

For by na wisdome, nor chance, persave I mycht 

We couth eschaip, nor 3it by force in fycht. 



226 



TO THE MEMORY OF JOHN KEATS, 

(1832 ; revised.) 

Thou dark-haired love-child, passed 
Beyond the censer's odour and its dust, 

Enamoured life, 
So weak and yet so beautiful thou wert, 
A reverential wish doth draw me thus 
To rise to thee with measured words, when now 
No one regards the poet's quivering string, 
Since thine was hushed, who brought the myrtle here 
From perfect Arcadie, whose verse 
Young earth's freshness could rehearse. 

Would that my tears were such 
As in the wakening morning, from its leaves 

That myrtle drops ; 
They might be worthy of thy sodded grave. 
And sympathetic strengthening afford 
To me, the mourner, bending over it, 
Until the modern world is rolled away, 
And all the splendours of the earlier time 
Come down upon this leaden life of ours. 



TO THE MEMORY OF JOHN KEATS. 227 

Through an unfolding sky, 
Trembling in melody. 

A bier for earth's beloved ! 
Trees of Dodona's murmuring prophesies, 

Scatter your leaves. 
Strewn on the wintry bareness of the clay ! 
Let the sharp blanching eddies of the storm 
Whirl them around the fossed wall where the dead, 
The heretic dead, repose beside the tombs 
Of ancient Romans, whose songs knew no blight 
Of horrors mediaeval, but were filled 
With blooms and odours from the golden age : 

Leaves of the cold last year 

Cover his wintry bier. 

Through the stripped pergola 
The wind wails low, the hard soil blackens round 

The dead flower-stem ; 
Sunk in wet weeds foul rottenness consumes 
The pleasant things that were, as it must be 
When the wheat falls, to be the bread for us ; 
And what the thresher leaves the night-wind sweeps : 
After the curfew comes the silent hoiu: : 

Night reigns most dark before 

Mom's breezes evermore. 

No eventide was thine, • 
But like the young athlete from the bath. 



i 



228 TO THE MEMORY OF JOHN KEATS. 

For one brief hour, 
You stood in the arena yet uncrowned, 
Doubtful, although beyond all venturers strong ; 
Yes, strong to guide Hyperion's coursers round 
The love-inscribbd zodiac of all time : 
Thou youth, who in the gardens Athenine, 
The noblest sage had leant upon with pride, 
And called thee Musagaetes, and thy lyre 

Wreathed with the bay 

Of the god of day. 

Not thus, not thus, indeed. 
The over-crowded noisy stage received 

Thy artful song ; 
But now the numerous voices have stilled down, 
The stage is filled with actors hailing thee, 
Hailing thee all too late : the winter's gone, 
The dreadful tears are dried that wet the couch 
Of thy farewell ; the flowers, the fruits, have come ; 

The firmament of fame 

Surrounds thee as with flame. 

And why should we lament 
The bitterness that marred not — nay, made pure 

And free of fear ? 
We do not think the Beautiful was soiled. 
The melody made less joj-ful to his ear ; 
And all else is gone past for evermore, 



TO THE MEMORY OF JOHN KEATS, 229 

Or hangs about him like a thin dark veil, 
Round the great lustrous limbs now deiiied : 

Suflfering is a hymn, 

Sung by the seraphim. 

But not for songs like his, — 
A mortal bound to earth by all the ties 

Of subtlest sense, 
And art unsatisfied, untamed, and force 
Beyond that known by fettered schoolmen's brains : 
Stronger than nimblest faun, behold him dance 
Before the wine-fed leopards ; hear him shout, 
lo lacche ! the meridian sun 
Browns his bare breast, — dead is he, or but gone 
Into the shade to rest his cymballed hands ? 

Bacchus hath but shed 

Slumber on his dark eyelid. 

He sleeps, and dreams perchance, — 
Still dreams, of kisses from the crescented 

Queen of the stars ; 
Or of the dolphin-like round waves that froth 
About the feet of Aphrodite, still 
In wonder at herself bom thus so fair ; 
Or of the dark heart of the forest shade, 
Where Pan, retired from gods* or mortals' ken, 

Utters his regular snore 

Day and night evermore. 




230 TO THE MEMORY OF JOHN KEATS, 

Fragrant, and cool, and calm : 
Numberless gnats upon the mellowing air 

Of sunset spin. 
The old boughs reach up to the darkening heaven, 
The nightingale makes paradise of pain. 
And fills obscurity with loveliness : 
Or, yet again— a green hill whence is seen 
The far strand strewn with shells, and barred with 

waves ; 
Unearthly brightness breaks the clouds — the moon ! 

Endymion, sleepest thou ? 

Sleep no more now. 

I would some words inum 
Worthy the poet's name to whom I bow. 

Yet none he needs ; 
Thou, vestal of the night's mid- watch, and thou, 
The heralded of Hesperus, ye speak 
Of that sweet name, and shall speak on for aye : 
For such as love him with the love he gave, 

His cenotaph is raised in Rome, 

But the poet hath no tomb. 




THE INCANTATION OF HERVOR. 
(18330 



At moonrise, Hervor left her couch 
Clad and tired and armed, the while 
She ceased not muttering magic runes. 
The sail was spread, the strenuous oar 
Whitened the dark blue waters, 



232 THE INCANTATION OF HERVOR. 

Still she muttered the magic runes ; 
In one night more they gained the strand, 
And she ran forth to the battle-ground 
Muttering still the magic runes. 

* Father Angantyr, wake, awake ! 
Thine only daughter, Suafa's child, 
Doth charge thee to wake up again, 
And give her the gold-hilted sword 
Forged by the Dwarves for Suafarla ! * 

Her right fore-finger pointed like a spear 

To the corse-kemeFd mound ; no voice replied. 

* Ye of the iron shrouds, and shirts of brass. 
Ye of the mast-like lance and glaive. 
From beneath the stones I stir ye, 

From beneath the roots of trees ; 

Hervordur, Hiorvardur ! 

Hrani, Angantyr ! hear ! * 
She darkened her eyes with her long fair hands. 
She listened and listened, no answer came. 

* Are the sons of Angrim wholly dust ? 
Are they who gloried in blood now ashes ? 
Ha, ha ! can none of the strong dead speak ? 
Hervordur, Hiorvardur ! 

Hrani, Angantyr ! hear ! * 
She thrust her arms abroad, with quivering tongue 
She cursed, she cursed them in their rottenness. 



THE INCANTATION OF HERVOR. 233 

* Dust, ashes, worms ! so may ye ever be, 
Dust, ashes, worms ! within your ribs 
May the vermin lodge for ever ! 
It shall be so, unless ye hear me. 
And yield up the charmbd sword ! * 
Here paused she again, and her eyes were seen 
Burning out through the dark brown night. 
Slowly a dreadful wailing rose ; 
A white light oozed from out the mould, 
She seemed to stand i' the salt sea foam : 
The turf was rent, and the black earth yawned. 

ANGANTYR. 

O, daughter Hervor, raker among dead bones. 

Speaker unto the sealed-up ears of Death, 

Why call'st thou ? wilt thou rush to hell ? 

Is sense departed and Odin's gift lost, 

That thou art here thus desperately tongued ? 

Nor father, nor brother, nor friend. 

Did cut the turf for me — 

Two men escaped - and one still holds 

Tirsing, the sword thou seekest, 

Tirsing, the incurable wounder. 



HERVOR. 

Tell'st thou a lie ! oh father, so may'st thou 
For evermore within flame-chains be bound, 

N 




234 THE INCANTATIO.V OF HERVOR. 

If thou deniest me inheritance, 
If Tirsing be not given me ! 

ANGANTYR. 

And if so, Hervor, hear ! 

The dead can prophesy, thy race 

One by one by this sword shall bleed ! 

At one of thy sons, O Hervor ! 

Men shall point and cry, * Lo there ! 

The mother-murderer ! ' if this sword shakes 

Against his thigh, O Hervor ! 

HERVOR. 

Angantyr ! never ma/st thou frighten me, 
I care not what the dead man's voice can tell. 
Angantyr, spells are mine, thou shalt not rest 
Until that sword be mine also : 
I thought thee brave, but I have found thy hall, 
And thou dost quail : it is not good to rust 
The sword of heroes ; — givfi it forth ! 

ANGANTYR. 

Stalwart in courage, youngling maid, 
Who speakest the runes at midnight. 
Powerful in herbs ; who holdest the spear 
Rune-graven, and standest in helmet and shoe, 
Before the blackness and brightness of graves. 
The brand thou seekest beneath me lies, 
Wrapt in fire thou darest not touch. 



THE INCANTATION OF HERVOR. 235 

HERVOR. 

Lo ! how I shall wrench it from thee ! 
I shall hold its edge unhurt ; 
The white fire of tombs cannot bum me, 
I dread not the white light of death. 

ANGANTYR. 

Horrible suffering ! 

Hold thine arm 

Away from me : 

Perish not yet, 

Cover thine eyes 

If thou canst not endure it 

HERVOR. 

Nothing I see 

But what I before knew. 

ANGANTYR. 

What seest thou now ? 

HERVOR. 

Father I strange things ! 

ANGANTYR. 

Now I ask thee again. 

HERVOR. 

I see a hand, but it is not that 

Of mortal living or dead, and a sword 

N 2 



236 THE INCANTATION OF HERVOR. 

Long and heavy and gold-chased, b uming— 
Tirsing is mine ! thou hast done well ! 
Greater triumph now is mine 
Than if all Norway bowed to me. 

ANGANTYR. 

Woman, thou dost not understand, 

Rash speech is thine, that sword's thy bane, 

Even as 'twas king Hialmar's bane 

When in my hand it clove him down : 

Hold it thou and hoard it well, 

But touch not its two charmed edges. 

Farewell, daughter, all my lands. 

Men and ships, arms, gold, and gods, 

With this devouring sword are thine. 

HERVOR. 

Well I shall hold it, I shall lift it, 
Till all eyes have seen and feared it, 
And my unborn sons shall wield it ! 
I return now to my bold men, 
Where the waves vex the rocking helm : 
No wish is mine to lie beside ye 
In the hall that bums with death ; 
No joy is mine to wait mom here 
Where the adder is fat and strong, 
Or keep thy tomb from closing now. 
Sleep then, sires of warriors, sleep ! 




237 



FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 

FIRST. 

SAINT CUTHBERTS TRIAL OF FAITH, 

A FAIR-FACED man our Cuthbert was, 

The fairest ever seen, 
His hair was fair and his eyebrow dark, 

And bonny blue his eyen. 

His kin were lewd and he was meek, 

So he left them in God's fear, 
And at mom he sat at his shealing*s yett ; 

The sun shone warm and clear. 

The sun was high, it was so still 

On hill and stream and wood. 
That forthwith he broke into songs 

Of praise to God so good. 

The Saints above the firmament 

Said one to another then : 
* Hear ye that song from a land so dark 

Of wicked and violent men?' 



J 



238 FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT, 

But Christ Himself above the Saints 
Heard what was said and sung ; 

* The heart of man is dark/ quoth He, 
* This Cuthbert is but young.' 

Therewith a cloud passed o'er the sun 
And a shadow o'er Cuthbert's face ; 

At once his limbs waxed lax and shrank, 
And blisters rose apace. 

The gold hair of his head grew gray, 

His beard grew gray also, 
He laid his breviary aside. 

For his hand shook to and fro. 

The husbond crossed the stubble-field 

Bringing his daily bread, 
But when that leprous face he saw. 

The evil man was glad. 

' Ha, Cuthbert, but yestreen a boy, 
So old how canst thou be — 

Now know I that thou art no Saint, 
But God doth punish thee.' 

The husbond throws his cakes of rye 

Upon the bench and goes, 
But as he turned the meekest words 

Of thanks from Cuthbert rose. 



FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 239 

The maiden from the hill came next 
With a bunch of flowers so kind ; 

Her bowl of milk each second night 
Well knew he where to find. 



A mountain maid, she was abashed 

A clerk to look upon, 
And she would wait at eve till he 

Into his cell was gone. 
Then steal within the yett, and lay 

The can upon a stone. 

That day she sat upon the knoll, 
And saw him kneeling there ; 

She deemed it could not Cuthbert be. 
So gray was his brown hair. 

Then down with silent feet she came 

And hid behind the trees, 
That by his shealing's end grew straight. 

The howf of summer bees. 



She looked from out this covert good. 
She saw the change so grim ; 

But more than ever beautiful 
She thought his evening hymn. 




240 FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT 

The tears then from her sweet eyes fell, 

To think of his beautie, 
More swiftly gone than sorrel flowers, 

More changed than autumn tree. 

Now Cuthbert as he rose from prayer. 

He saw the shaking leaves. 
And heard the sobs, then asked he, 

* Who is it thus that grieves — 
Is it the maiden from the hill 

The alms of milk that leaves ? ' 

With that he passed the shealing*s end. 

Among the trees and bent, 
But the maiden rose right hastily. 

And away in fear she went 

The good man smiled to see her run. 

Nor murmured he at all. 
But read within the holy book 

Until the night 'gan fall ; 
Then cheerfully for sleep turned round, 

And shut his wicket small. 

Thereafter hunger in him rose. 
But none brought cakes of rye. 

And sore thirst made him very faint, 
But no herd-maid came nigh : 



122 THE TIIUID BUIK 

We ereckit, and of the erd a grete flur 

Rest in ane help abufe his sepultur : 

Syne, in ramembrance of the saulis went, 

The dolorus altaris fast by war wpstent, 

Crownit with garlandis all of haw see hewis, 

And with the bleknyt cipres deidlie bewis. 

The Troiane wemen stuide with hair doun schaik. 

About the beir weping with mony alaik ! 

And on we keist of wanne mylk mony a scull ; 

And of the bluide of sacrifice cowpis full : 1 

The saule we bery in sepultur on this wise, 

The lattir halsing syne lowde schowtit thrise, 

Eowpand at anis, adew ! quhen al is done, 

Ilkane per ordour, the mon we follow sone. 



CAP. II. 

How tlmt Eneas socht ansueir at Apollyriey 
And how he to the land of Creit salit syne. 

Syne, quhen we se our tyme to saile maist abill. 

The blastis mesit, and the fluidis stabill, 

The soft piping wind caUing to see, 

Thar schippis than furth settis our men^e : 

3e mycht haue sene the costis and the strandis 

Fillit with portage and peple thairon standis. 20 

Furth of the havin we salit all anone ; 

The sicht of land and citie sone is gone. 

Amyd the see yclepit Egeos 
Ane haly iland lyis, that hait Delos, 



242 



FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 

SECOND. 

SAINT CUTHBERTS PENANCE. 

This bield of Melrose wide and tall, 

Whereof we four are freres, 
Was at the time established first 

When Cuthbert grew in years. 

And so he joined the banded few 

Who left their cares and strife, 
With vows eschewing shows and gear, 

To live a cloistered life. 

« 

I ween he was more humble than 

The lowliest brother there, 
Scarce would he dare to look up to 

The great gilt rood at prayer 

Scarce would he take his turn to read 

Aloud at the midday meal. 
Although he was so leambd, — 

He would the same conceal. 




FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 243 

Scarce would he speak with fewest words 

Of Jesu's love and dole, 
But ever and anon the tears 

Over his eyelids stole. 



The man whom Jesu died to bless 
He sometimes looked like too, 

But then his gladness suddenly 
To woful sadness grew. 

Oft would he scan from day to day 
Saint Chrysostom's great book. 

And all this watching-time no food 
Within his lips he took. 

Oft by the night, the winter night, 
When all are fain to cower. 

And other monks their rosaries laid 
Aside till matin hour. 

He went forth on the crispfed frost 
Right through the snow or shower. 

Then gathered some with whisperings 
And twinklings of the eye, 

Who went about from cell to cell 
Saint Cuthbert to decry. 




244 FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT, 

But still their spite he noted not, 

So byeward and so meek, 
And when that night was deepest dark 

The door was heard to creak. 

Then from his pallet suddenly 

A cunning frere arose ; 
' 1*11 see,* quoth he, ' where in the mirk 

Our stalwart Cuthbert goes.* 

So saying from his couch he slid 

And softly followed him, 
Across the wood into the haugh. 

Led by the snow-marks dim. 

Late at sunset the sleet had blown 

Into the eye of day ; 
Their slow steps verily were cold, 

Imprinted in the clay. 

He followed to the river's edge ; 

But soon repented he 
That ever he did on such a chace 

With the other freres agree. 

For fear came like an icicle 

Into his curdled brain. 
And sure he felt the cold more keen 

Than earthly frost or rain. 




FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 24S 

But from the stars shot arrowy sparks 

As if alone to him ; 
Till he waxed more wrothful than afraid, 

All woebegone but grim. 

Quoth he, * The youth must have some nook 

Wherein to bait him soon ; 
I'll find him out although I die 

I' the sedges in a swoon.* 

Upon the sand he set his foot, 

He sank up to his thigh, 
And further in, hands raised in prayer, 

He saw sweet Cuthbert lie. 

And a voice in his ear 

Said clear and low, 
* Until my servant press his bier 
What thou hast seen let no man hear ; 

Thy steps are loosened, go ! ' 




of the pest 



OF ENEAJJOS. 127 

Aud I thair statutis aud seir lawis thanie taucht, 

Assynging ilk ane propir liouss and aucht ; 

Quhen sudanlie ane cruell pest and traik, a discripcion 

So that comis and fruitis gois to wraik, 

Throw the comippit air and cours of hevin, 

A deidlie 3eir, fer wers than I can nevin, 

Fell on our membris with sic infectioun, 

Was na remeid, cuire, nor correctioun. 

The sweit sawlis leifis the bodeis deid, 

Or seik thai ly gaspand in euery steid ; 10 

And forder eik, Syryus, the frawart star, 

Quhilk clepit is the sing canicular, 

So brint the feildis, all was barraud maid ; 

Herbis wox dry, wallowing, and gane to faid ; 

The seifi ground denjds his fruite and fudis. 

My fadir exhortis ws tume agane our fludis 

To Delos, and Apollois ansueir speir, 

Beseiking him of succouris ws to leir, 

Quhat end ontill our irksum panis he sendis. 

And be quhat way we mycht assay amendis 20 

Of this turbatioun, or quhiddir and quhar that he 

Will at we seik or sett our course our see. 



CAP. III. 

How Troiane goddis apperis to Enee, 
And how that he was stormested on the see. 

Cum is the nycht, that euery beist on gi'ound The Troyan 

Desiris rest be kynd, and slepis sound ; f^resto 




FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 247 

* Why stand ye here,' the fisher said, 

* Your eye on the waters gray ? ' 

* I see,* quoth he, * an island small. 

Afar, like peace, away/ 

* An isle of rocks and sand it is. 

And no fresh spring is there. 
And in its blackened clefts and holes 
Devils and changelings fare/ 

* A hermit's benison be thine, — 

Its name I now would learn ; ' 

* Father, a poor man's thanks are mine, 

The island's name is Feme/ 

Next day upon Feme's beach he stept 

From the good fisher's bark ; 
His welcome such as Noah's was ^ 

When he issued from the ark. 

The boards of a tangled wreck and boughs 

There stranded by the tide, 
Took he for balks to bigg a bower 

Wherein he might abide. 

Next, that the waters might not swell 

Upon him in the night, 
He made a wall with stones, four men 

Can't shift with all their might. 




OF ENEADOS. 255 

That lowsit of the taMl with a spang. 
And sone betyde, and in thar sychtis sprang 
A felloun grislie monstre and woundring, 
As weil was knawin syne at the ending : 
The feirfuU spa men therof pronosticate 
Schrewit chancis to betyde and bad estate. 
For quhy, this schaft, fleand in the inoist air, 
Brint in a bleis, and in the randoun al quhair 
With low and flambis gan do notify. 
And, all consumyt, vanist in the sky; 10 

As dois oft steme schot falling fra the hevin, 
Drawand thaireffcer a taile of fyrie levin. 
Estonist in thair myndis, abasit stude 
The folk of Sicill and all the Troiane blude ; 
And, netheles, maist douchty Eneas 
Eefusit nocht the takin, but gan embrace 
Acestes glaidlie, and riche giftis hjm. gaif ; 
Syne said hym thus : Tak, fadir myne, ressaue 
Sic favorable aspectis benevolent 
As the gret king of hevin has to the sent, 20 

That Ust with wncouth singis honour the. 
Thou sail haue heir this reward and degre, 
A coup of gold engrave with figuris seir, 
A present wmquhile of my fadir deir, 
Ancyant Anchise, quham Cisseus, of Trace king, 
In remembrance hym gaif in luif taiknyng. 
And sayand thus, his templis all, but weir. 
He gan involue and belt with greyn lawreir, 
And syne has causit all the otheris befoir 
Proclame Acestes, and declair victor. 30 

Nor gentill Evrition his gloir invyis nocht, 
Howbeit that he onlie the foull doun brocht, 



FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT 249 

Roundel and flourish and gleeman's chime ! 
Hark ! in the ha' we hear them now, 
The wine is flowing rife I trow, 
This is an Easter gay ! 
Saint Cuthbert ! pray ye for us all 
Before we pass away. 

King Egfrid from Norhumber-land, 

And Saint Theodore also. 
With a silver crosier o'er the waves 

To Cuthbert's island go. 

True tears then from his old eyes came, 

(Blest ground whereon they fell !) 
For a gyve of love did hold his heart 

To his God-fashioned cell. 

' I go,' said he, * at God's good heste 

Unto high places now. 
Would that I might be spared, but all 

At God's good heste should bow.' 
With that he humbly bended down. 
And so received the mitre-crown. 



o 



250 



FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 

FOURTH. 

SAINT CUTHBERT S DEATH. 

My words are few and like the days 

That o'er this brow may flit 
Ere you my brethren well-beloved 

See my mass-tapers lit 

Saint Cuthbert knew before they came, 
When death-pains he should dree, 

And for the last time took the cup 
Kneeling on naked knee. 

Then turned he on the altar-steps 

Amidst the altar's light, 
And laid aside his ring and staff. 

And cope so richly dight. 

Lastly he doffed his mitre there, 

And every one 'gan weep : 
Quickly he blessed them : then went forth 

As a child that goes to sleep. 



k 



FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 251 

* Now follow me not,' said he, * no one 

Must follow me I trow. 
Save a brother who can hold the oar, 

I need none other now/ 



They kissed his garments* hem and feet, 
They kissed them o'er and o'er, 

And many times they stayed him quite 
That they might kiss them more. 

But he had caused them all to go 
Before he reached the shore. 



And now he seats him in the boat 
With a rower by his side, — 

Along the greenery of the sea 
And foam-blossom they glide. 

Soon they come to the long black swell 
That heaves their bark about : 

Hark, on the naked craigs of Feme, 
The breakers, how they shout ! 

Nearer they come, the boatman now 

Holds on to the landing-stone. 

Saint Cuthbert riseth from his seat 

And totters out alone. 

o 2 




252 FOUR ACTS OF SAINT CUTHBERT. 

* Father/ said the boatman, ' now 

The sun dips in the sea, — 
Must I return alone, and when 
Shall I come back for thee ? ' 

The west was red, the cold wind blew, 
The clouds were gathering grim. 

Twilight was settling into night. 
When Cuthbert answered him : 

* Come when it seemeth good to thee. 

Or com,e no more at all, 
But if thou com*st uncowl thy head. 
And bring with thee a pall.' 

No more the rower asked, but watched 

The feeble feet go on, 
When lo, the door of his ancient hut 

Was opened gently from within. 
And an odorous light 
Streamed out on the night ; 

He entered, and it closed him in ; 

The Saint to heaven was gone. 




253 



THE DANCE OF DEATH. 

Clerk Hubert lay asleep : 
Not in deep sleep, but in the feverish sense 

Midway between 
The active living daylight and the world 
Of dusk-eyed dreamland, when the memory 
Goes dancing with the fancy light of heel. 
Singing the while a fitful chant, of things 
That may have happened and been long forgot, 
Or those whose interest is of yesterday. 

With other things that we 

Mortals can never see. 

Clerk Hubert lay asleep : 
Not in deep sleep, but in the uncouth life 

Wherein whatever, 
Waking, we have dwelt most upon, comes back 
In a new garb and startles us awake. 
Or keeps us bound upon the night-mare's back 
Until its tale is told and all its train 
Of maskers have performed their antic feats. 
Presto ! they change ; behold 
The maskers turned to gold. 




254 THE DANCE OF DEATH. 

Gold, gold, the much desired, — 
And then, God wot, if any one did mark 

The sleepers face, 
They would descry a broad smile flickering there ; 
For truly pleased, yea, blessed he is to gain 
What he had sought so long ; he calls his bonds 
All in, but when he seeks the heaps to pay. 
The gnomes have buried them ! Those sinewy gnomes, 
Beardless and yellow, and his usurers. 

Threadbare and lank and grim, 
Treble and bass, strike up their hymn. 

At other times right sad 
And full of lamentations are these dreams : 

When the lone heart 
Is mourner, and before we rest ourselves 
As cold night comes, we cast the black weeds off. 
And they whose brow was veiled, who have gone hence, 
Hold us in talk amidst the loneliness 
And darkness : lighting up our lives again 
With some familiar action, as of old. 

And the tear doth dry 

In the slumberer*s eye. 

By other beds, moth winged 
And very gentle, are those sylphs that flit 

Tween night and morn ; 
A subtle love-drink do they bring with them ; 



THE DANCE OF DEATH, 255 

And the deluded sleeper throws his arms 
Into the vacant air and turns again, 
Dreaming a hundred love joys in one dream. 
'Tis said these baseless fancies can assume 
The forms of all things but the sun and moon, 
And stars that give us light 
From other spheres more bright. 

Clerk Hubert lay quite still j 
And I would now relate the dream he had. 

If dream it was. 
A set of Emblems old he had that day 
Been conning, and Hans Holbein's Dance of Death ; 
And as the eyelid closed upon the sense, 
These pictures came again, waxed into life, 
And fleetly through the windings of his brain 
The morthead apparition junketted, 

And now and then he showed 

His scythe so long and broad, 

And made a staff of it 
For leaping to and fro ; then would he stop 

A-listening like ; 
When, if he heard the sound of winsome mirth. 
Or children's untired laugh at evensong 
Or age's groan, — which mattered not, — he sprang 
Alert, and silenced it for ever. Swart 
And ugly and albeit wise seemed he. 



756 THE DANCE OF DEATH, 

He neither gibber'd nor did make a moan, 
No sound at all he made whate'er he did, 

Hither and there, 

And everywhere. 

And now in the dark night 
The minster bell began to jowl eleven, — 

The Christian bell, 
With its deep sound o'er slumbering roofs ; then up 
Death mounted, in the mid-air o'er the spire 
The new day was just kissing with the old. 
But scarcely had the clock told half its tale, 
In at the carven window of the spire 
He went, where was the bellman pulling stout, 

By the rope that twisted 

The bell as he listed. 

Then Death put forth his hand. 
And at the same time that the man did pull 

He smote the bell. 
That split like earthen cup from rim to ring ; — 
A labourer heard it as he counting lay, 
And counting only six, he thought 'twas morn, 
And groped about to find the tinder-flint 
Another heard it, a young student, still 
Sitting as he had sat since yesterday, 

Scanning and poring, 

Scribing and scoring. 



THE DANCE OF DEATH, 257 

So with a wearied sigh 
He laid his cheek upon his hand a while, 

Some strength to gain, 
To recommence his task and finish it ; 
But Death sucked up the oil that stored his lamp, 
And, with a moment's dance, the barbed flame 
Went up, and he was in the dark. Away 
Sped Death above the city in a swirl 
Of wind, and every chimney rocked, and some 

Fell down and battered 

The street, ruin-scattered. 

Out of sight speeds he on high, 
And the clouds burst open, the rain comes down 

As the winds arise 
Rattling the hinges of windows and doors ; 
He is here, is there, is everywhere ; 
And as he passes the frog turns up 
Its white belly, and the strong-limbed trees 
Bend to the shivering earth, and pour 
Their yellowing leaves like the dust of years. 

And the wavering bat 

On the earth falls flat. 

The everlasting hills 
Throw down their rocks at his approach ; 

The eagle old 
Soars till the lightning sears her wing. 




258 THE DANCE OF DEATH. 

And falls where the blind bat fell before ; 
He touches the bridge as he onward speeds, 
The keystone drops and the great arch falls, 
Damming the black triumphant stream, 

As the foam boils up 

Like a poison cup. 

In the cottager's thatch 
He boreth a hole for the wolfish wind 

To enter by. 
From her storm-strewn nest the small bird flies, 
The cottager doth the same, you'll hear 
His cry, and you'll hear the thunder growl. 
And the rush of the stream, and the forest's roar, 
The wheezing catarrh from the chimney-nook 
Of the palsy- shaken, and childhood's whine, — 

And each one's breath 

Is sucked by Death. 

Clerk Hubert sweated cold. 
As the tempest still more revelled and shook 

His casement loose ; 
And now it seemed it was the ending hour 
Of the old year, and that men kept awake, — 
He heard their songs at intervals he thought, — 
Waiting upon the bell to toll the twelve. 
That they might with their hot drink wish good luck 
Of the New Year, as is the custom old ; 



56 THE FIRST BUIK 

Thai ilk goddis mat dewlie reward the 

According thi desert in all degree. 

Quhow happy and joyous was that tyme serene 

That the producit hes, sa noble ane quene ! 

How wirschipfall eik war thai parentis of mycht 

Quhilk the engendrit hes, sa worthie a wycht ! 

Quhill fludes rynnis in the see but dowt, 

Quhill sonnis schaddow circuUis hillis abowt, 

And the firmament stems doith contene, 

Thi honour and thi fame sail euir be grene, 10 

And thi renowne remane perpetually 

Throw all realmes quharto that drevin am I. 

Thus saing, to his friend Ilioneus 

His rycht hand gaif he, and to Serestus 

Gaif his left hand ; syne welcumit euery man. 

The Strang Cloanthus and the stowt Giane. 

Quene Didos ^^^ quene Dido, astonist a litle wie 
Muaer to At the first sycht, behalding his bewtie, 

Awoundering be quhat wise he cumin was, 

On to him syne scho said with myld faice : 20 

Sone of the goddes, quhat hard aduersite 

Throw out sa feill perrellis hes cachit the ? 

Quhat force and violence drave the bidder till ws, 

Apoun thir coistis that bene so dangerus 1 

Art thou nocht the ilk compacient Eneas, 

That apoun halie Venus engenerit was 

Be the Troiane Anchises, as thai sa, 

Besyde the fluide Symois in Phrygia ? 

Wele I remembir, to Sydon the cietie 

Sen Teucer come, banist fro his cuntre, 30 

Seikand supple at Belus, and sum new land. 

My fader than, Belus, I wnderstand. 



26o THE DANCE OF DEATH. 

* I am the one whose thought 

Is as the deed ; no power before me went, 

And none shall come 
Behind me ; I am strengthened with the years 
A nether Omega am I ; a chain 
I bound round all things lasts for evermore : 
Under my touch, Man vanishes as doth 
The worm he germinates, the moth that comes 
From the maggot, the invisible living thing 
That stirs upon the moth, — I am inborn 

With all lives, and 

With all lives I expand. 

* But fear me not, I am 

The hoary dust, the shut ear, the profound, 

The heart at rest, 
The tongueless negative of nature's lies, — 
Fear me not, for I am the blood that flows 
Within thee ; I am change ; it is even I 
Creates a joy and triumph when thou feePst 
New powers within thee ; I alone can make 

The old give place 

To thy onward race. 

* All men are bom to me ; 

I am the father,' mother, — yet ye hate 

Me foolishly : 
An easy spirit and a free lives on. 




THE DANCE OF DEATH. 261 

But he who fears the ice doth stumble ; walk 

Peacefully, confidently ; I'm thy friend, 

To walk with thee in peace : but grudge and weep 

And carp, I'll be a cold chain round thy neck 

Into the grave, each day a link drawn in. 

Until thy face shall be upon the turf. 

And the hair from thy crown 

Be blown like thistle-down.' 

The speaker without breath 
Here ceased, and Clerk Hubert winced and groaned, 

Withouten power 
To speak the horrors that within him stirred, — 
A desperate case was his indeed, till Death 
Grew tired of waiting, and took hold of him, 
Or nearly did — in vain again he tried 
To shout, now mouth to mouth with that dread lord. 

Who stood by the bed, 

Close to his head. 



Such trembling seized his limbs 
As shook the stented couch ; whereat the dame 

Who by him lay, 
The wedded mistress of this learnt Clerk, 
Woke up in gentle fear for her good lord, 
And roused him up and made him tell his dream. 
Signing the cross on her brow and his own. 



i 



262 THE DANCE OF DEATH, 

For he averr'd Death next would come to her, 
And that her Hfe 
Would end the strife. 

But this she would not hear, 
But rather deemed his love alone had brought 

The phantom there. 
He answered, * Nay, that Death was by them still, 
And that her passing-bell was in his ear. 
Nor would a few months pass till every man 
Would hear it.* Then she soothed him with sweet 
words. 

Again in a short while 
Once more sleep held them in its coil. 

But the morning arose 

On a long sheeted corse, 
And the stable-boy combing 

A coal-black horse : 
The corse was Clerk Hubert's ; 

The black horse ere long 
Drew the bier to the church-vault 

With prayer and song. 




263 



A FABLE. 
(1832.) 

Two striplings in the ancient time 
Between themselves agreed to climb 
The Holy Mount ; perchance they'd see 
Something of life's great mystery, 
Through the smoke or through the fires 
That hilFs Tartarean throat respires. 
Forthwith they fixed with leathern thong 
Their brazen sandals high and strong, 
And bent their knees to the ascent 
A league or two, when overspent 
And breathless, one of them cried out, 
* Comrade, hold ! I'm not so stout 
As thus to urge for long ; I'll call 
The sun to stay awhile his fall, 
And give us time to rest us here ! ' 
So with a self-complacent peer 
Adown the slope, he stretched himself 
Like one who would give all his pelf 
For a snug retreat and a full wine-cup, 




264 ^ FABLE, 

And would say to himself, I shall drink it up, 

I deserve it all, I have done enough. 

Labour without a fee's all stuff! 

The other adventurer looked up still, 

Scanning and measuring all the hill ; 

Lost he seem'd in expectation. 

Living on hope's immaterial ration ; 

But now, while nursing his left foot 

As if it were sick, cried the first, * Let's put 

A great stone here to mark the spot 

Before we start again ; why not ? ' 

His comrade half indignant rose 

And dipt a snail by its shrinking nose 

Between his finger and his thumb. 

And with a grand flourish derisive and dumb, 

Placed it for the monument. 

Then set himself to the ascent. 

So now again for an hour or so 

Abreast like loving friends they go ; 

Wading scoria, vaulting creeks 

Where the sluggish lava reeks, 

When suddenly he who before had stopt. 

In a fainting fit of laughter dropt. 

* Ha ! my comrade bold,' quoth he, 

' I have been thinking, ha, ha, he ! 

I have been thinking, that a cat, 

Or a squirrel, a weasel, or even a rat, 

Could climb this hill much better than we ! 



A FABLE. 265 

What fools we are one drop of sweat 
To lose in such a monstrous fret, 
Making a toil of a pleasure. No ! 
Let's lie down here an hour or so, 
Until the sun gets round the hill' 
* Nay ! ' cries his companion, * if you will 
Rest here, you shall rest alone, not I, 
And long enough before you spy 
The top, I'm there.' With that he left 
The weak one seeking a shady cleft. 

Onward sped he through the glare. 
With naked breast and loosened hair ; 
Onward still he won his way 
And touched the sky ere close of day. 

Next morn a rabble with horn-books, beads, 
Bells, drums, masks, and other small needs 
For mimiming and make-believe, descried 
The laggard slumbering on his side. 
He was not half-way up the hill, 
And yet a great way above them still ; 
Something they wanted to gabble about, 
And there was he ! so they raised a shout. 
Wonderful ! — a mere boy ! oh, 
Such love of science and such a flow 
Of perseverance, courage, all 
Supposable virtues great and small ! 




266 A FABLE. 

Doubtless he hath toiled all night 

Without either supper or lantern-light, 

And now returns in time to greet 

Our wise-heads with the hill's last feat. 

Mighty traveller ! They shout, 

Till he starts and wakes and looks about, 

Rubbing his eyes and wondering why 

They stare at him so, stare and cry, 

Mighty traveller ! But soon 

He saw it was indeed full moon, 

Full tide I rather ought to say 

For him and his affairs that day. 

— 'Tis true he had been outstripped far, 

But why should that be the smallest bar ; 

His comrade, the true conqueror, he 

Is just too high for them to see, — 

Down steps Sir Magnanimity 

With air coquettish, pleased and shy. 

The mummers raise him shoulder high, 

And with their awkward backs round bent, 

Tlie youth of genius smiles content. 

On to the temple where all stuff 

Useless elsewhere shares the puff 

Of incense now they carry him, 

With damnable clatter and chant of hymn ; 

Cobbler, patcher, quidnunc, drone, 

* Idea-less girl/ and long-tongued crone, 

Running together, a quack never lacks 



% 



A FABLE. 267 

Bolstering from bolstered quacks, 

* Claw me — claw thee/ suits both the backs 1 

But it is, good sooth, a stint of labour 

To dance and leap, with pipe and tabor 

Stunning the wide-mouthed beholders, 

With a false god on one's shoulders ; 

So they seat him on the shrine 

And aver he looks divine, 

Although at first he feels but queer, 

And now and then begins to fear 

His honours may be overdone, 

Even if he be ApoUo^s son ; 

When lo, like Moses from Sinai, 

The other traveller stands close by! 

He had seen the moon's eclipse 

Through the fire firom Etna's lips. 

With Orion had he spoken. 

His fast with honey-dew had broken. 

Seen the nether world unveiled, 

Nor had fainted nor had quailed : 

And here he stands amidst the throng, 

On his tongue a wise sweet song, 

In his hand a laurel fair. 

An opal rainbow round his hair, 

Truth reigning from his great mild eye. 

And in his heart humility. 

Cease their din the rabble-rout, 

And mutter and whisper all about, 



268 A FABLE. 

* What's his name, and whence comes he ? 
What may here his business be ? 

Do you understand his speech ? 

He seems at once to sing and preach ! ' 

The cobblers, patchers, quidnuncs, drones, 

* Idea-less girls ' and long-tongued crones, 
Nod and wink and say, * So, so, 

WeVe chosen our Genius, and want no mo', 
One like ourselves we've chosen, one 
Who has not with such haste begun. 
One who can sing and who can preach, 
Who can whistle as well as teach. 
But one who is not such a dunce 
As to addle our heads by them all at once 1 ' 
With that they drive him from the place, 
They raise their hands against his face. 
They will not suffer his eyes' sharp light, 
They mock him and drive him into night. 
O saddest sight of all, they steal 
The laurel when his senses reel, 
And give it to their favourite ! 



But whether the history endeth here, 
Doth not certainly appear : 
Time bears a wallet at his back, 
And very willingly 'gives the sack' 




^^ THE 

XIII. Bukes of Eneados of the 
Famose Poete Virgill HLvm^- 

lateD out of latpne Cltx^tti into 

f afi^er in (i50D, 0iaiifittv <5aMm 

BouQla0> TdisS^op of ^unitel^ anD 

(anUl to ^e Mz of 9lnsu0* 

d^errisuite i^tiins 

1^ ptvtmUv 

pttAoit* 



VOL. n. 




271 



DEDICATIO POSTICA. 




Now many years ago in life's midday, 
I laid the pen aside and rested still, 
Like one barefooted on a shingly hill : 

Three poets then came past, each young as May, 

Year after year, upon their upward way, 

And each one reached his hand out as he passed, 
And over me his friendship's mantle cast. 

And went on singing, everyone his lay. 

Which was the earliest ? methinks 'twas he 

Who from the Southern laurels fresh leaves brought, 
Then he who from the North learned Scaldic 
power. 
And last the youngest, with the rainbow wrought 
About his head ; a symbol and a dower. — 

But I can't choose between these brethren three. 




4 THE PROLOUG OF 

With bad harsk speche and lewit barbour tong, 
The Auc- Presume to write quhar thi sueit bell is rong, 
toorishumi- Qj. contirfait sa precious wourdis deirl 

Na, na, nocht sua, bot knele quhen I thame heir. 

For quhat compair betuix midday and nycht, 

Or quhat compare betuix myrknes and lycht, 

Or quhat compare is betuix blak and quhyte, 

Far gretar diference betuix my blunt endyte 

And thi scharp sugurat sang Virgiliane, 

Sa wyslie wrocht with neuir ane word in vane, 10 

My waverand wit, my cunnyng feble at all, 

My mynd mysty, thir ma nocht myss ane fall. 

Stra for this ignorant blabring imperfyte 

Beside thi polyte tenuis redemyte. 

And no the les with support and correctioun, 

For naturall luife and freindfull afifectioun, 

Quhilkis I beir to thi worlds and endyte, 

Althocht, God wait, I knaw thann full lyte, 

And that thi facund sentence mycht be song 

In our langage als weill as Latyne tong ; 20 

Alswele, na, na, impossible war, per de, 

3it with your leif, Virgill, to follow the, 

I wald into my rurale wlgar gros. 

Write sum savoring of thi Eneados. 

Bot sair I drede for to distene the quyte, 

Throu my corruptit cadens imperfyte ; 

Distene the, na forsuith, that ma I nocht, 

Weill ma I schaw my burell busteous thocht, 

Bot thi work sail enduire in laude and glory. 

But spot or fait, conding eteme memory. 30 

Thocht I offend, onhermit is thine fame, 

Thyne is the thank, and myne sal be the shame. 




OF ENEADOS. 4 t 

Schawin till Eneas mesit gritlie his feir ; 

The first assurance of confort was heir, 

And hoip of releif eftir aduersite ; 

For as he went diuers thingis to se, 

Rowmyng about the large temple scheno, 

For to behald the cuming of the queue, 

And of the ciete the greit prosperite. 

The mony werkmen, and thair craftis sle 

In dew proportioun, as he wonderit for joy t«, 

He saw per ordour all the siege of Troye, 10 

The famous battellis, wlgat throw the warld or this, 

Of kyng Priame, and athir Atrides ; 

Atrides bein in Latyne clepit thus, 

Thir nevois reput of king Atrius, 

That in our langage ar the brethir tway. 

King Agamemnon, and duik Menelay ; 

And, baJdar than thaim baith, the ferce Acliill. 

He stintis, and wepand said Achates till : 

How now, quhilk place is this ] my friend, quod he, 

Quhat regioun in erd ma fundin be, 20 

Quhair our misfortoun is nocht fullie proclame 1 

Alace ! behald, see 3onder king Priame, 

Lo, heir his wirshep is haldin in memor ; 

Thir lamentable takins passit befor 

Our mortale myndis aucht to compassioun steir. 

Away with dreid, and tak na langar feir ; 

Quhat I wenis thou na this fame sal do the guide 1 

Thus said he, and fed his mynd, quhar he stuide, 

With thir plesand fen3eit imagery, 

Mumand sair, and wepand tendirly, 30 

The fluide of teris haling ouir his face ; 

For as he lukit on the werk percace. 



G THE PROLOUG OF 

Fader of bukis, protectour to science and lare, 

My speciall gude lord Henry Lord Sanct Clair, 

Quhilk with grete instance diuers tymes seir, 

Prayit me translait Virgill or Omeir ; 

Quhais plesour suithlie as I wnderstuid, 

As neir coniunct to his lordschip in bluid, 

So that me thocht his requeist ane command, 

Half disparit this wark tuik on hand, 

Nocht fullie grantand, nor anis sayand 3e, 

Bot onelie to assay quhow it mycht be. 10 

Quha mycht ganesay a lord sa gentle and kynd. 

That euir hed ony curtasy in thair mynd, 

Quhilk beside his innative polecy, 

Humanite, curaige, fredome and chevalry, 

Bukis to recollect, to reid and se, 

Hes greit delite als euir hed Ptolome 1 

Quharfor to his nobilite and estaite, 

Quhat so it be, this buik I dedicaite, 

Writing in the language of Scottis natioun. 

And thus I mak my protestacioun. 20 



A protesta- ^tlflll^^^ ^ protest, beaw Schiris, be jour leif, 
ReadOT.*^* wlipl ^^^ ^®^ advisit my werk or je repreif, 




Considdir it warlie, reid ofbair than anis, 
Weill at ane blenk slee poetry nocht tane ys; 
And }it, forsuith, I set my besy pane 
As that I suld, to mak it braid and plane, 
Kepand na sudroun bot our awin langage. 
And speikis as I lemit quhen I was page. 
Nor }it sa clene all sudroun I refuse, 
Bot sum word I pronunce as nychtbour doise ; 30 



OF ENEADOS. 



49 



Seand the woid cart, and spuil3e of the knycht, 
And the corps of his derast freynd sa dycht. 
Pryame wnarmit streik furth handis did he spy, 
Frome Achilles his sonis body to by. 
Himself alsua, mydlit, persavit he, 
Amang princis of Grece in the melle. 
The orient oistis knew he one by one. 
And Vulcanus armour on blak Memnone. 
The madynnis cum fra Amasone saw he sone, 
With crukit scheildis schapin lik the mone, 
Led by thair furious quene Pantissalie ; 
Amyde the thowsandis egirlie fechtis sche, 
And quhair hir pap was for the speir cut away, 
Of gold thairon was belt ane riche tischay. 
Ane wordy weriour suthlie thai mycht hir ken. 
This wench stoutlie recontir durst with men. 



10 



CAP. VIII. 



How to the temple cumis queue Dido, 
Quhar that Enee hisferisfand cdso. 



Quhill as the manful Troiane Eneas 
To se thir nyce figuris thocht wounder was, 
Andjas he musit, studeand in ane stair 
Bot on ane sycht quharon he blenkit thair, 
The quene Dido, excellent in bewtie, 
To temple cummis with ane fair men3ie 
Of lustie ^onkeris walking hir about. 
Lyik to the goddes Diane with hir rout, 

VOL. II. D 



Quene Dido 
with hir 
tryane 
curaith to 
church. 



20 



8 THE PROLOUG OF 

That sic ane bulk, but sentence or engyne, 

Suld be intitillit efber the poet divyne ; 

His omait goldin yersis mair than gilt, 

I spittit for despyt to see sua spilt 

With sic a wycht, quhilk treulie be myne entent, 

Knew neuer thre wowrdis of all that Virgill ment. 

Sa fer he chowpis, I am constrenit to flyte. 

The thre first bukis he hes ourhippit quyte, 

Salfand ane litle twiching Polidorus, 

And the tempest sent furth be Eolus, 10 

And that fidl sympillie on his awin gyse, 

Virgill thame wrote al on ane wther wyse. 

For Caxtoun puttis in his buik out of tone, 

The storme furth sent be Eolus and Neptone ; 

But quha that redis Virgill suthtfastlie, 

Sail fynd Neptune salf Eneas navie. 

Me list nocht schaw how the story of Dido 

Be this Caxtoun is haill peruertit so, 

That bisyde quhair he fenis to follow Bowcas, 

He rynnis sa fer fra VirgUl in mony place, 20 

On sa prolixt and tedious fassoun, 

So that the feird buik of Eneadon, 

Tuiching the luif and deith of Dido queue. 

The twa part of his volume doith contene, 

That in the text of Virgill, traistis me, 

The twelft part scars conteins, as je ma se. 

The fyfbe buik of the feistis funerale, 

The lusty gammys, and plais palustrale, 

That is ourhippit quyte and left behynd, 

Na thing therof ^e sail in Caxtoun fynd. 30 

The saxt buik eik, he grantis that wantis hail. 

And for therof he wnderstuid nocht the tail. 




158 THETHRIDBUIK 

Quhill brane, and ene, and blude all popillit out : 

I saw that crewell fend eik thar, but dout, 

Thar lymmis ryfe and eit, as he wer wod, 

The 30ustir tharfra chirtand and blak blud, 

And the halt flesch ondir his teth flikkerand. 

Bot not wnwrokin, forsuith, this feist he fand ; 

Nor Vlixes list nocht lang suffir this, 

Ne this king of Ithachie himself nor his 

Mychtyne for3et, into sa gret a plycht. 

For samyn as that horrible fendlech vncht 10 

Had eit his fill, and drunk wyne he him gave, 

Sowpit in sleip, his nek fourth of the cave 

He straucht, fordrunkin, ligging in his dreme, 

Bokkis furth and ^iskis of 3oustir mony streme. 

Raw lumpis of flesch and blude blandit with wyne ; 

We the gret goddis besocht, and cavillis syne 

Castis, quhat suld be euery mannis pert ; 

Syne all attanis about and on him stert, 

And, with ane scharpit and brint sting of tre. 

Out did we boir and pyke his mekle E, 20 

That lurkit allane vnder his thrawn front large, 

Als braid as is ane Gregioun scheild or targe. 

Or lyk onto the lantrin of the mone : 

And thus at last haif we revengit sone 

Blythlie the gostis of our feris deid. 

Bot 36, wnhappy men, fle from this steid. 

Fie, fle this cost, and smyte the cabill in twaine ! 

For, quhow grislie and quhow greit I 30W sane 

Lurkis Polipliemus, 3ymmand his beistis rowch, 

And all thair pappis milkis throuch and throuch, 30 

Ane hundreith vtheris, als huge of quantite, 

Endlang this ilk costis syde of the se, 




180 THE FOWRT BUIK 

Eftir all wes voydit, and the lycht of day 
Ay mair and mair the mone quenchit away, 
And the declyning of the sternis brycht 
To sleip and rest perswadis euery wycht, 
Within her chalmer allane scho langis sair, 
And thocht all waist for lak of hir lufair. 
Amyd ane woid bed scho hir laid adoun, 
And of him absent thinkis scho heris the soun ; 
His voce scho heris, and him behaldis sche, 
Thocht he, God wait, fer from her presence be ; 10 
And sum tyme wald scho Ascanius, the page, 
Caucht in the figur of his faderis ymage, 
And in hir bosum brace, gif scho tharby 
The luif vntellable mycht swyk or satisfy. 
The werk and wallis begovn ar nocht wpbrocht ; 
The joungkeris deidis of armes exercis nocht ; 
Lone makig Nodir fortieis nor turratis suir of weir 
negugent. Now graith thai mair ; for all the werk, but weir, 
Cessis and is stoppit, baith of pynnakles hye, 
And byg towris, semyt to ryse in the skye. 20 



CAP. III. 

Till Venus carpis Juno the goddes, 

And of thair speche and sermon mair and les. 

Alswyth as Juno, with sic malice ourtane, 
Persauit hir deir freind that remeid was nane, 
Nother fame nor honour the rage resist mycht, 
Saturnus douchtir with sic wordis on hycht