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THE  LIBRARY 

OF 

THE  UNIVERSITY 

OF  CALIFORNIA 

LOS  ANGELES 


Rev.  W.  1.  H.  Marr.  M.A.,  B.Sc. 


THE  POEMS  OF 
A.  C.  BENSON 


THE  POEMS  OF 

A.  C.  BENSON 


el  Se  Xfyfi  ris  aXXwy,  nXarda  KeXfvdos 


LONDON   :  JOHN  LANE,  THE  BODLEY  HEAD 
NEW  YORK  :  JOHN  LANE  COMPANY  :  MCMIX 


Second  Edition 


Printed  by  Ballantvne  b'  Co.  Limited 
Tavistock  Street,  Covcnt  Gardca,  London 


r. 

The  poems  comprised  in  this  book  have  been 
selected  from  the  six  following  volumes  : — 
Le  Cahier  Jaune  (privately  printed  1892), 
Poems  (1893),  Lyrics  (1895),  Lord  Vyet  and 
other  Poems  (1897),  The  Professor  and  other 
Poems  {igoo),  and  Peace  and  other  Poems{igo^). 


Arthur  C.  Benson 


Magdalene  College 
Cambridge 

Oct.  30,  1908 


91S284 


CONTENTS 


PRELUDE 

Hushed  is  each  busy  shout 


PAGE 

I 


ODES  AND   IDYLLS 


MONNOW  

The  road  was  weary  ;   and  beside  the  road 
FRITILLARIES 

Ay,  he  was  dull  and  churUsh,  slow  of  speech 
CHURCH  WINDOWS  .... 

Old  craftsmen  of  the  Galilean  lake 
IN  THE  IRON  CAGE  .... 

The  saddest  sight !     Oh,  there  are  sights  and  sounds 
THOMAS  GRAY  

'Twas  at  Ferrara,  in  a  palace  court 
PEACE        

Along  the  lonely  valley's  grassy  floor 
TO  OUR  MOTHER 

O  pure  and  true,  O  faithful  heart 
ODE— W.  E.  GLADSTONE  .... 

Give  thanks  to  God  !   our  Hero  is  at  rest 
ODE  TO  JAPAN 

Clasp  hands  across  the  world 
ODE  TO  MUSIC 

Soul  of  the  world 


II 
i6 
20 

24 

34 
41 
43 
47 
SI 


Vll 


CONTENTS 

SONNETS 

PACE 

THOMAS  GRAY 55 

Singer  most  melancholy,  most  austere 
GILBERT  WHITE 56 

Thou  wast  a  poet,  though  thou  knew'st  it  not 
OMAR  KHAYYAM 57 

Out  of  the  tombs,  across  the  centuries 
EDWARD  FITZGERALD 58 

I  hear  a  stronger  music  in  the  air 
SHADOWS 59 

The  imperious  soul  that  bows  to  no  man's  will 
THE  DEEPS  OF  GOD 60 

0  Truth  !   how  vast  thy  empire,  how  immense 

WASTE 61 

Blind  fate,  that  broodest  over  human  things 

BY  THE  CAVE 62 

Without  'twas  life  and  light ;   the  large  air  rolled 

BY  THE  STREAM 63 

Blow,  breeze,  and  whisper  somewhat  from  the  hill 
A  LILY  OF  ANNUNCIATION 64 

Buried  and  based  in  dull  uncleanly  mould 
WOUNDS 65 

The  wounded  bird  sped  on  with  shattered  wing 
IN  THE  CLOISTER 66 

Spire,  that  from  half-a-hundred  dainty  lawns 
FATIDICA 67 

Oh,  I  had  thought  to  find  some  haggard,  stern 
GASTON  DE  FOIX 68 

Half  sunk  in  marble,  soft  as  down,  he  lies 
IMAGINATION 69 

Weary  and  weak,  alone  and  ill  at  ease 
THE  SECRET 70 

1  dreamed  of  peace,  and  woke  to  find  unrest 
OUTWARD  BOUND 71 

As  sailors  loitering  in  a  luscious  isle 

viii 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

NEVERTHELESS 72 

Ah  me  I    I  thought  that  life  had  been  more  sweet 
REPROOF 73 

You  chide  me  for  my  sadness  ;    "  hope,"  you  say 
REGRET 74 

I  hold  it  now  more  shameful  to  forget 
I  AM  SMALL  AND  OF  NO  REPUTATION  ;    YET  DO  I 

NOT  FORGET  THY  COMMANDMENTS      .        75 

How  small  a  thing  am  I,  of  no  repute 
M.  E.  B 76 

I  think  that  thou  art  somewhere,  strong  and  free 
SELF  (Four  Sonnets)     .......       77 

This  is  my  chiefest  torment,  that  behind 
KEATS 80 

Laughing  thou  said'st,  'Twere  hell  for  thee  to  fail 
VICTORY 81 

So,  I  have  gained  a  crown  and  lost  a  friend 
THE  PURSUIT 82 

I  had  outstripped  him  on  the  moorland  wide 
THE  GENTIAN 83 

Say,  Gentian,  by  what  daring  alchemy 
THE  GRASSHOPPER 84 

Rest,  rest,  impatient  heart  !    thou  dost  not  know 
UTTERANCE 85 

I  have  strung  my  harp,  and  tuned  each  subtle  chord 
ANNIVERSARIES 86 

When  I  was  yet  a  child,  my  sparkling  days 
THE  POET 87 

He  shall  be  great,  and  something  more  than  great 
PRID.  KAL.  OCT 88 

0  Asian  birds,  that  round  me  in  the  gloom 

DEATH 89 

The  soul,  that  dizzied  with  the  din  of  death 
ON  THE  HILL 90 

1  would  not  dwell  with  Passion  ;    Passion  grows 

THE  SHADOW  OF  THE  SWORD       ,  .  .  .91 

Oh,  if  we  are  dissevered,  you  and  I 

ix 


CONTENTS 


IN  SCHOOL- YARD 

Snow  underfoot  ;    and  outlined  white  and  soft 
SEEDS         

One  fell  in  the  dull  ground,  and  hopeless  lay 
IN  THE  TRAIN 

Bound  for  the  west,  I  sate  alone  at  ease 
O  LACRIMARUM  FONS 

O  holiest  fount  of  sorrow,  treasured  tears 


PAGE 
92 

93 
94 
95 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

HIDDEN  LIFE 

The  turf  is  marble  underfoot 
THE  DRAGONFLY     .... 

Restless  dragonfly,  darting,  dancing 
KNAPWEED        

By  copse  and  hedgerow,  waste  and  wall 
THE  WATER-OUSEL 

A  shadow  by  the  water's  edge 
SECRETS    

Home  of  my  heart,  when  wilt  thou  ope 
DRIFTING 

I  sailed  with  a  witch  in  a  car  of  foam 
MY  FRIEND 

Where  is  my  friend  to-day 
THE  DEAD  POET      .... 

The  child  that  leans  his  ear  beside  the  sheU 
DEAN  SWIFT 

Alas,  alas  I   sad,  bitter,  loving  man 
ON  THE  WESTERN  CLIFFS      . 

Out  of  the  windy  waste 
VIATOR 

Is  this  the  February  air 
MOLINOS 

Oh,  I  wait  from  hour  to  hour 

X 


99 

lOI 

103 
105 
106 
108 
no 
"3 
IIS 
117 
119 
122 


CONTENTS 

HOC  UNUM  CUPIO 

I  only  ask  to  know  it  is  Thy  will 
STAND  ASIDE 

Stand  aside  !     The  battle  is  but  beginning 
TO  MY  FATHER 

O  loved  and  honoured,  truest,  best 
THE  THISTLEDOWN 

As  through  the  summer  land  we  sped 
BY  THE  GLACIER 

Crawl  on,  old  ice-worm,  from  the  solemn  hills 
OUT  OF  WEAKNESS 

To-day,  as  far  as  eye  can  see 
THE  CARRIER  PIGEON 

O'er  leagues  of  clustered  houses,  where 
THE  MOLE 

Dig  deeper  yet,  sir  mole,  in  the  patient  ground 
THE  TOAD 

Old  fellow-loiterer,  whither  wouldst  thou  go 
THE  BEETLE    

Whither  away  so  fast 
THE  DANDELION 

Dandelion,  dull  of  sense 
UTRUMQUE  NOSTRUM  INCREDIBILI  MODO  CON 
SENTIT  ASTRUM 

We  were  friends,  as  the  world  would  say 
FLOWER  CROWNS 

No  radiant  diadem 
WILLIAM  COLLINS 

Still  on  the  misty  flat,  below  the  down 
CHALVEY  

0  Chalvey  stream,  dear  Chalvey  stream 
IN  EXILE 

How  fares  the  world  at  home  to-day 
REDITURUS 

Green  vales  of  Kent,  across  the  blue 
MY  WILL 

1  would  live,  if  I  had  my  will 


PACE 

.    124 

126 

.    128 

.    130 

•    133 

•    135 

•  -^Z7 

'      139 

.   141 

•   144 

.   146 

.   148 

.   152 

•   154 

•   157 

160 

.   162 

164 

CONTENTS 

PACK 

ST.  LUKE'S  SUMMER i66 

Ah  me  !    how  good  to  breathe,  to  hear,  to  see 
TWENTY  YEARS  AGO i68 

I  used  to  think,  beneath  the  shade 

TO  EDMUND  GOSSE 170 

Voice  of  my  soul,  how  faint  your  echoes  ring 

A  CANTICLE  OF  COMMON  THINGS  .  .  .171 

I  praise  Thee,  Father,  for  the  sky 
TAN-YR-ALLT I74 

Feathery  woodlands,  falling,  dipping 
THE  STAGE  OF  HEAVEN 176 

The  sun's  broad  back  is  leagues  away 
CLOUDS 178 

Clouds,  by  west  winds  blown 
THE  MILL-WHEEL 180 

Turn,  mill-wheel,  solemnly  turn 
NASTURTIUMS 181 

Leaves  luxurious,  large 
PINES 183 

Funereal  pines,  your  garniture  of  woe 
ROSEMARY 184 

O  rosemary,  strong  rosemary 
THE  ORCHID 186 

My  lustrous  orchid,  rather  flesh  than  flower 
RED-FLOWERING  CURRANT 188 

Red  flower,  I  fain  would  sing  of  you  :  yet  shame 
THE  YAFFLE 190 

Laugh,  woodpecker,  down  in  the  wood 
VESPERS 192 

You  and  I,  brave  thrush,  together 
THE  SPARROW I94 

O  pertest,  most  self-satisfied 
THE  ANT-HEAP I97 

High  in  the  woodland,  on  the  mountain  side 
THE  NEWT 198 

What  means  this  enmity  'twixt  life  and  life 

xii 


CONTENTS 


TO  THE  LADY  KITTY 

A  year  ago  you  were  a  child 
ROSALIND 

Bury  my  summer  love  in  a  summer  grave 
AT  NETHER-STOWEY 

On  Quantock  Head  the  wind  blew  shrill 
AN  UNKNOWN  MASTER 

Ah  !   how  he  flung  his  heart  upon  the  page 
TIMON 

The  world  is  not  grown  old 
DOROTHEA        

They  pass  me  by,  the  gay,  the  wise 
MY  POET  

He  came  ;   I  met  him  face  to  face 
THE  ROCKET    

Out  of  his  lair  with  a  thunder-peal 
THE  TRUANT    

Some  careless  droop  of  branches  o'er  the  wall 
ATTRIBUTES 

They  praise  the  rose  for  blushing  red 
PRAYER    

My  sorrow  had  pierced  me  through  ;   it  throbbed  in 
my  heart  like  a  thorn 
AFTER  CONSTRUING         .... 

Lord  Caesar,  when  you  sternly  wrote 
AT  LOCK-UP 

Old  elm,  upon  whose  wrinkled  breast 
NEW  YEAR'S  DAY 

At  the  dawn  of  the  year  in  my  chamber  as  I  lay 
AFTERWARDS 

It  cannot  be  that  my  friend  is  dead 
THE  ROBIN  AND  THE  CREDENCE 

It  was  the  blessed  Christmas  morn 
THE  GIFT 

Friend,  of  my  infinite  dreams 
LORD  VYET 

What,  must  my  lord  be  gone 

xiii 


PAGE 
20I 

203 

204 

207 

209 

211 

213 

215 
217 

218 

219 

221 
223 
225 
227 
230 
233 
234 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

A  TRIO 236 

I,  and  the  Bird 
THE  RAILWAY 237 

Upon  the  iron  highway,  wreathed  in  smoke 
THE  MOWER 239 

Whet  thy  scythe,  mower 
LIVE-BAIT 241 

The  weir  was  fragrant,  with  the  scent 
THE  SHEPHERD 243 

The  shepherd  is  an  ancient  man 
ONE  BY  ONE 245 

One  by  one,  as  evening  closes 

WHEN  PUNCTUAL  DAWN 246 

When  punctual  dawn  came  o'er  the  hill 

IN  ETON  CHURCHYARD 247 

In  and  out  I  tread  the  slender 

THE  ARTIST  IN  CHURCH 249 

Lord  Christ,  hast  Thou  no  word  for  me 
THE  OWL 251 

When  the  winds  overhead  were  sweeping 
THE  RINGDOVE 253 

Grey  dove,  that  croonest  in  the  solemn  fir 
THE  CAT 25s 

On  some  grave  business,  soft  and  slow 
THE  HAWK 257 

The  hawk  slipt  out  of  the  pine,  and  rose  in  the  sunlit 
air 
THE  BARBEL 258 

Bearded  Barbel,  swimming  deep 
THE  WISHING  WELL 260 

Yes,    here's   the   place  :     the   meadow   thick   with 
rushes 
JACK  IN  THE  BOX 261 

The  bolt  is  slipped,  the  wiry  rings 
THE  PHCENIX 263 

By  feathers  green,  across  Casbeen 

xiv 


CONTENTS 


EVENSONG         

Thrush,  sing  clear,  for  the  spring  is  here 
SONGS         

I  cannot  sing,  as  sings  the  dauntless  owl 
CHILDHOOD 

What  do  I  remember  of  the  bygone  days 
AT  TWILIGHT 

Dear  fellow-labourers,  whom  unseen  I  own 
A  DREAM  

I  dreamed  that  as  I  gazed  upon  the  sky 

AT  THE  GRANGE      .... 

The  sheltering  pines  are  black  and  still 

A  SERMON 

I  know  not  what  the  preacher  said 

A  REMINISCENCE     .... 

I  wandered  by  the  frozen  pond 
PEACE        

Linger,  O  rapturous  hour 
THE  SONG 

Speak,  speak,  music,  and  bring  to  me 
IN  THE  DAW^N  .... 

Some  souls  have  quickened,  eye  to  eye 
IN  ABSENCE      

Ah  !   if  I  only  knew 
TIDINGS     

Blow,  wind,  blow  ;   and  rivulet  flow 
THE  LABYRINTH      .... 

And  can  it  be,  while  thus  I  thread 
AMEN 

Return,  sad  sister  Faith 
THE  CHARCOAL-BURNER 

Deep  in  the  forest's  secret  heart 
THE  SHADOW  OF  DEATH 

And  I,  who  feel  so  much  alive 
IN  THAT  DAY 

Absalom,  Absalom 

XV 


PAGE 
264 

266 

267 

268 

270 

271 

274 
276 
278 
279 
281 
283 
284 
286 
288 
292 
294 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

THE  BIRD 295 

Bird  in  the  branching  tree 
A  SONG  OF  SWEET  THINGS  THAT  HAVE  AN  END  ,     297 

The  dark  wood  and  the  solemn  sky 
THE  FOOL 299 

Fight,  said  the  Knight 
BY  THE  WEIR 302 

Slow  stirs  the  boat ;    beneath  the  cool 
MAKING  HASTE 304 

"Soon  I"  says  the  Snowdrop,   and  smiles  at  the 
motherly  Earth 
THE  HIDDEN  MANNA 305 

A  tale  of  lonely  grief  he  told 
AT  EVENTIDE 

At  morn  I  saw  the  level  plain 
THE  LOOSESTRIFE 307 

Purple  are  the  spires  of  the  velvet  loosestrife 
THE  LIZARD 310 

Jewelled  Lizard,  you  and  I 
A  MYSTERY 312 

Shepherds.     Sirs,  What  have  you  ? 
IN  A  COLLEGE  GARDEN 314 

Birds,  that  cry  so  loud  in  the  old,  green,  bowery 
garden 


306 


XVI 


THE  POEMS  OF 
A.  C.   BENSON 


PRELUDE 

Hushed  is  each  busy  shout 
The  reverent  people  wait, 
To  see  the  sacred  pomp  stream  out 
Beside  the  temple-gate. 

The  bull  with  garlands  hung, 
Stern  priests  in  vesture  grim  : 
With  rolling  voices  swiftly  sung 
Peals  out  the  jocund  hymn. 

In  front,  behind,  beside, 
Beneath  the  chiming  towers. 
Pass  boys  that  fling  the  censer  wide. 
And  striplings  scattering  flowers. 

Victim  or  minister 
I  dare  not  claim  to  be. 
But  in  the  concourse  and  the  stir, 
There  shall  be  room  for  me. 

The  victim  feels  the  stroke  : 
The  priests  are  bowed  in  prayer  : — 
I  feed  the  porch  with  fragrant  smoke, 
Strew  roses  on  the  stair. 

I  A 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 


MONNOW 


AN    ODE 


"Then  Christian  and  Hopeful  out-went  them  again,  and 
went  till  they  came  to  a  delicate  Plain  called  Ease,  where  they 
went  with  much  content  :  but  that  plain  was  but  narrow,  so 
they  were  quickly  got  over  it." 

The  road  was  weary;  and  beside  the  road, 

Beyond  the  meadow  quivering  in  the  sun, 
The  crystal  Alonnow  murmured  as  it  flowed  ; 
Monnow^  the  clearest  of  clear  streams  that 
run 
By  shingly  reaches,  where  the  cattle  drink, 
Through  islets  dense  with  shadowy  burdock- 
leaves, 
By  high  red  scarps,  with  alders  on  the  brink, 
In    glimmering    pools ; — a    leaping  troutlet 
weaves 
Swift  rings,  that  cross  and  circle,  till  the  ripples 
sink. 

It  is  the  Spring  !     How  swift  her  tripping  feet 
Tread  these  sequestered  valleys,  though  she 
dare 

5 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Not  venture  yet,  where  winds  blow  shrill  and 
fleet, 
And  all  the  down  is  washed  with  keener  air ; 
Yet  here  each  quickset    hedge    is   green  with 
gems; 
The  bold  moist  king-cup  stares  upon  the  sun 
From  oozy  creeks  ;    the  sweetbriar's  polished 
stems 
Grow  rough  with  crumpled  tufts,  and  one  by 
one, 
The  cowslips  wave  a  crown  of  clustered  diadems. 

Here  will  I  lie  a  little,  till  the  sun 

Slope  westward,  and   the  vale   be    brimmed 
with  shade, 
And  hear  the  bubbling  waters  briskly  run, 
Till    every    drowsy    sound, — the      clinking 
spade, 
Lowing  of  cattle  from  the  windy  down, 

Crying  of  cocks,  the  slowly-creaking  wain. 
In    deep    content    the  peaceful    thought   shall 
drown, 
Ay,  even  the  measured  puffing  of  the  train. 
That   hurries    busy  hearts  from   town  to  dusty 
town. 

Stream,  stream,  thou  hast  a  spirit,  hast  a  soul, 
I  doubt  not — thou  art  real,  as  I  to  thee  : 

Neckan  or  Nymph,  fond  Fay  or  merry  Troll, — 
Some  conscious  self,  some  breathing  mystery  ! 

No  copse  but  hath  its  Drvad,  each  dark  stone 

6 


MONNOW 

Its  crouching  Lemur  :  oh,  the  foolish  dream  ! 

We  have  driv'n  far  hence,  for  all  their  piteous 

moan, 

Our  faithful  sprites  : — but  thou,  swift-leaping 

stream, 

O  presence,  and  O  voice,  by  me  art  surely  known  ! 

I  know  thy  secret !  how  thy  shivering  rill 

Leaps  high  on  Cicsop  bluff,  among  the  stones  : 
Till  swelled  by  Esc  ley  brook,  from  Vagar  hill. 
Then,  where  by   Craswall  Chapel  sleep  the 
bones 
Of    grey-frocked    friars,    is    heard     a    larger 
sound  : — 
'Tis  Olchon^  dimpling  o'er  his  stony  bed, 
Olchon^  from  many  a  rood  of  moorland  ground. 
From  heathery  dingles,  bare,  unvisited, — 
Him  too  thou  dost  enfold,  and  onward  thou  art 
bound. 

Onward,  aye  onward ; — fed  by  falling  streams, 

Still  changing,  yet  eternally  the  same  ; — 
And  men   are   born   beside  thee,  dream   their 
dreams. 
And  leave  the  fading  shadow  of  a  name ; 
Still   thou   dost  leap,  and  carve    thy  shelving 
shore, 
And   push    each    boulder    further    from    its 
home, 
Till,  in  the  widening  vale,  thou  hear'st  the  roar 

7 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Of  wide-flung  breakers,  white  with  crested 
foam, 
And  drink'st  the  pungent  brine  along  thy  oozy 
floor. 

What  art  thou  ?  the  philosopher  shall  say ! 

A  tempered  element,  that  suns  distil. 
In  some  convenient  fissure  bound  to  stray  ! 
And  one  would  claim  thee  for  his  grumbling 
mill, 
And  one  would  praise  thee  that  thou  may'st  be 
drawn 
Through  fretted  watercourse,  and  brimming 
leat, 
To  fill  the  blade,  to  quicken  lea  and  lawn. 
To    make    the   grass   rich  and  the    pasture 
sweet, 
And  fill  the  dripping  pitcher  in  the  half-lit  dawn. 

I  blame  not  thee !  all  things  of  hourly  birth 

Are  born  for  simple  service  ;  serve  thou  too  ! 
But  I  that  linger  sadly  on  the  earth. 

Shortlived  as  fire,  and  fading  as  the  dew. 
Must  dream  thou  hast  a  fairer  destiny, 

For   him  that  marks   thee   truly  :  thou    art 
meet 
To  gather  healing  from  the  gusty  sky, 

To  give  cool  thoughts  to  travel-laden  feet, 
To  serve  unknown  a  secret  ministry 
Of  honour  and  delight,  and  mysteries   pure  and 
sweet. 

8 


MONNOW 

To  me  to-day  thou  speakest !  let  me  hear 

Thy  certain  voice,  that  hearing,  I  may  taste 
Thy  sweet  light-hearted  rapture,  void  of  fear 

And  envy,  swift  without  inglorious  haste. 
Now  that  the  level  sunlight  softly  broods 

On  park  and  pasture,  over  field  and  fell, 
And  dims  with  haze  the  moorland  solitudes, 

I  am  attuned  to  listen,  apt  to  spell 
The  solemn  secret,   hid   in   leagues   of  dreaming 

woods. 

Ay,  by  thy  tender  pleading,  gracious  stream, 

I  am  made  patient  :   I  am  one  with  light 
And  glory ;    one  with  every  sacred  dream 

Of  pure  delays  and  undiminished  might. 
One  little  step  ascended  nearer  Heaven, 

One  vantage  gained,   that,  howsoe'er  I 
grieve, — 
By  din  of  fretful  days  dismayed  and  driven, — 

Deep  in  my  soul  'tis  easier  to  believe 
That  all   things  are  made  new,  all  dark   desires 

forgiven. 

But  see,  the  sun  descends  o'er  Cusop  hill, 
And  sudden  shivers  down  the  dingle  run  : 

Cold  is  thy  voice,  inhospitable  thrill. 

That  mock'st  the  smouldering  embers  of  the 
sun. 

The  glory  fades  :   my  dreams  are  cold,  are  cold  ! 
Homewards  1  hasten  ;  yet  within  my  heart 

A  treasure  sleeps,  not  bought  with  any  gold, 

9 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

That   shall    outlast    the    striving    and    the 
smart 
That  weary  hand  and  brain,  where  men  are  bought 
and  sold. 

Monnow^  yet  hear  me,  till  my  tale  be  done  ! 

Speed  all  thy  rushing  waters,  leap  and  dart, 
Forget  my  mournful  questioning  :  softly  run  ! 
Hast   thou   not  spoken   with   me,   heart    to 
heart  ? 
Such  golden  hours  are  few,  as  beacon-pyres 
In  high  hill-places,  that,  one  festal  night, 
Leap  into  roaring  and  tumultous  fires, 

To    spell    a    people's    joy    from    height   to 
height 
And    bridge    the  jubilant    tracts    with    infinite 
desires. 


10 


FlllTILLARlES 

Ay,  he  was  dull  and  churlish,  slow  of  speech 
And  diffident  ;  he  had  no  piteous  arts, 
No  tricks  of  sly  imposture  ; — but  betrayed 
The  pride  of  rustic  unaffectedness, 
The  sick  disdain  that  frets  a  simple  life. 
Thrusting  itself  in  unaccustomed  haunts. 
For  now  he  plucked  his  faltering  courage  up, 
And  now  the  throng  unnerved  him  ; — long  he 

stood 
In  wistful  indecision,  holding  out 
His  sorry  packages  of  wizened  flowers, 
111  tied  with  clumsy  fingers,  trebly  rude  ; 
Yet  half  ashamed  to  seem  to  recommend 
Their  sordid  limpness  ;  shamefaced,  with  the  air 
Of  some  shy  woodland  creature  that,  ensnared 
To  make  a  show  for  gazers,  is  too  proud 
To  win  their  welcome  by  caressing  wiles, 
Yet  dumbly  vexed  at  their  indifference. 

The  summer  day  drew  on  ;  the  early  mists 
That  hid  the  topmost  branches  of  the  lime, 
And  screened  the  parapets  and  pinnacles, 
Melted  beneath  the  morning  ;  the  hot  sun 
Stared  o'er  the  chimneys,  and  the  dust  was  deep  : 

II 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Then  once  again  I  saw  him,  as  he  stole 

A  furtive  hand  to  break  a  crust  of  bread, 

And  ate  ashamed — ^while  still  his  sorry  stock 

Was  undiminished  ;  so  again  I  came 

Upon  him,  when  the  sun  was  flaring  hot, 

And  his  poor  wares  were  undiminished  still. 

Then  I  was  lost  in  pity,  and  drew  near, 

And  asked  him  whence  he  came  and  what  he  sold. 

And  he  "from  Ensham,  o'er  the  Oxford  downs  " — 

(Muttering  a  score  of  undistinguished  names) — 

"  Had  walked  all  night,  starting  when  twilight 

fell " ; 
"  And  these,"  I  questioned,  "  are  fritillaries  ?  " 
*'  Snakeheads,"    he   answered,    "  rare   outlandish 

things. 
For  such  as  love  them  ;  saw  them  in  a  croft 
That  fringed  an  upland  down,  a  spot  remote 
From  roads  and  houses,  all  unvisited  ; — 
Had  thought  that  townsfolk  cared  for  curious 

things  ; 
Himself  he  loved  them,  thought  them  magical ; 
Had  now  no  work  ; — no  fault  of  his  ; — the  time 
Was  difficult,  and  there  were  hands  enough 
And  mouths  too  many  ;  so  he  brought  them  here  ; 
Had  thought  he  might  have  made  a  little  by  them." 
All  this  and  more  in  simple  speech  he  told. 
Wondering  and  pleased  that  one  should  hearken 

to  him. 

I  bent  and  fingered  ;  rare  and  curious  tilings 
Indeed  !  no  kinsiiip  theirs  with  homely  flowers, 

12 


FRITILLARIES 

That  bloom  on  gravelled  hills,  or  in  the  waste, 
Or  in  the  tumbled  pasture  ; — withered,  dry, 
Faint-tinted,  spotted  like  an  ocelot's  skin. 
Streaked  like  the  banded  viper,  with  their  lean 
Sleek  stalks  ;  uncanny,  indeterminate  ; 
Left,  like  the  wrack  of  some  unmeasured  flood, 
From  dim  primeval  flora,  fronds  that  waved 
And  branched  long  since  in  solitary  fens. 
Spurned  by  the  bear  and  ragged  buffalo  ; 
Then, — when  the  blue-eyed  tribes  made  head,  and 

pierced 
The  forest,  pricked  the  waste  and  made  a  home, — 
Flared  out,  too  wild  to  blossom  'neath  the  eyes 
Of  prying  man  ;   expired  in  sick  disdain, 
Yet  left  some  score  of  shameless  progeny, 
In  secret  woods,  like  those  resisting  hordes. 
That  driven  to  Cornwall's  fretted  promontories, 
Or  hid  in  far  Menevia,  skulked  and  writhed 
In  mountain  fastness,  spake  a  clumsy  tongue, 
And  kept  unheeding  their  untutored  ways. 

"  Would  I  buy  more  ?  "  I  would  not :  yet  I  gave 
A  coin,  that  made  him  stare  and  think  me  fool 
Or  foolish  :  then  in  gratitude  he  spoke, 
Because  I  loved  them,  he  would  dig  me  roots, 
And  I  should  raise  the  strange  unsightly  things 
Far  from  their  own  securer  wilderness. 

And  so  he  did  me  reverence,  and  was  gone 
To  ponder  on  the  ways  of  city  folk. 
To  cast  his  wasted  wrecks  unsold  away, 

13 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Then  seek  elate  the  inviolable  depths 
Of  woodland,  far  sequestered  villages, 
Where  never  stranger  comes  from  year  to  year, — 
Since  in  the  world  is  no  fit  place  to  dwell. 

So  dreams  the  poet,  rises,  breaks  away 

From  his  austere,  unenvied  reverie. 

And  strides  toward  the  indifferent  world,  to  learn 

If  he  have  power  to  move,  to  break  their  mirth, 

To  bid  the  laughter  dwindle  into  sighs, 

Or  fill  hard  eyelids  with  absolving  tears. 

Strange  growths  he  carries,  children  of  dismay 
And  madness,  echoes  of  the  eternal  voice 
Half-heard  through  April  woodlands,   sound  of 

winds 
And  bubbling  streams,  and  dewy  fancies  pure 
Pulled  in  dim  thickets,  when  the  upward  rays 
Gush  from  the  intense  rim  of  the  hidden  sun. 

He  proffers,  but  the  world  will  none  of  these  ; — 
They  clutch  their  toys,  they  strive  for  sensual  bliss, 
And  few  have  leisure  for  the  scent  of  Spring, 
Save  such  as  flying  to  the  woodland,  gain 
Sharp  sight  through  grief  that  tames  the  fevered 

pulse, 
Or  such  as  walking  swiftly,  find  old  Death 
Sit  in  a  sheltered  arbour  by  the  road  ; 
And  start  from  lean  conventions,  wrinkled  fears, 
To  cast  their  eyes  for  once  upon  the  stars. 

H 


FRITILLARIES 

And  so  the  wistful  poet  is  disowned, 
Draws  back  into  himself,  and  drowns  his  soul 
In  some  ethereal  vision  ;  to  the  sea 
He  hears  the  streams  grow  larger,  feels  the  day- 
Shine  purer,  though  uncleanly  voices  call, 
And  though  the  funeral  horns  blow  harsh  and  high, 
He  sees  the  smile  upon  the  face  of  God. 


15 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 


CHURCH  WINDOWS 

Old  craftsmen  of  the  Galilean  lake, 
Seems  it  not  strange  to  you  all  day  to  stand 
In  these  high  minster  windows,  looking  down 
Upon  uplifted  faces,  folded  palms  ? 
Each  in  his  niche  of  costly  carven  work, 
Crocket  and  spire  and  finial  overhead, 
And  underfoot  such  radiant  stones  as  those 
Ye  dreamed  of,  when  your  pure  uplifted  thought, 
Withdrawn  a  moment  from  the  raging  world 
That  God  makes  fair  and  men  make  horrible, 
Took  shape  in  bright  imaginings,  and  traced 
The  pearly  city,  paved  with  limpid  gold, 
Foursquare,  mysterious. 

Seems  it  strange  to  you 
To  feel  the  high  sun  beat  and  stream  at  noon 
Through  your  ensanguined  vesture,  through  the 

hands 
Once  rough  with  spray  and  cordage,  now  at  length 
White  as  some  dainty  scholar's,  wan  and  thin 
With  long  seclusion,  while  the  altered  ray. 
Through  curious  gems  and  holy  aureoles. 
Paints  hues  of  Paradise  on  sculptured  stone  ? 

i6 


CHURCH  WINDOWS 

Or  when  the  organ  rises,  growing  bold, 
With  all  his  crowded  trumpets,  soaring  flutes, 
Grave  mellow  diapasons,  gushing  out 
With  such  a  flood  of  sound,  the  leaden  bands 
That  bind  you,  throb  in  shattering  ecstasy. 
What  wonder  if  you  dream  that  peace  on  earth 
Grows  perfect,  and  your  kingdom  comes  indeed  ? 

Start  ye  to  hear,  in  soft  mellifluous  tones. 

When  all  the  throng  is  hushed,  the  words  ye  said 

In  ignorance,  before  ye  yet  were  wise. 

The  childish  question,  the  uncertain  claim. 

The  tale  of  all  your  desperate  treachery, 

(Before  the  Spirit  flamed  above  your  brows,) 

When  love  and  adoration  were  too  weak 

To  meet  the  stern  set  look  of  scribes  and  priests. 

The  unclean  jests  of  riotous  legionaries, 

And  the  long  gleaming  of  those  Roman  spears  ? 

Or  when  the  hush  is  deepest,  and  you  hear 
The  fiery  speech  of  the  forerunner,  John, 
John  the  wild  hermit,  the  unquiet  heart 
Who  cried  and  yearned  and  was  unsatisfied. 
And  then  the  mild  majestic  voice  of  Him 
Who  was  your  Master  first,  and  then  your  God, 
(Too  late  for  hope,  but  not  too  late  for  faith,) 
And  memory  deepens  till  you  almost  see 
The  rolling  wilderness,  with  ridge  and  vale, 
Run  to  the  Northern  heights,  the  Mount,  the 

streets 
Of  white  Capernaum,  and  the  boat  that  swayed 

17  B 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Upon  the  swelling  of  the  azure  tide, 
While  He  yet  spake  ;  and  evermore  the  ring 
Of  wondering  faces,  waiting  to  be  fed. 

And  do  ye  smile  in  sweet  austerity 
To  hear  yourselves  extolled,  your  faltering  faith, 
Your  weak  endeavourings  to  pierce  beyond 
The  night,  the  stars,  the  little  labouring  world, 
To  that  high  throne  so  infinitely  far  ; 
When  the  pale  preacher  waxing  eloquent 
Would  make  you  demigods,  not  patient  men 
Who  wept,  and  wondered,  and  but  half  believed  ? 

Then,  when  the  lordly  crowd  streams  out,  to  join 
The  merry  world,  and  shoulder  welcome  cares. 
And  the  mute  handful  of  enraptured  souls 
Bend  low  in  utter  prayer,  or  gather  round 
To  hear  the  words  ye  heard  in  Zion  once. 
In  that  bare  upper  room,  when  secret  dread 
O'ershadowed  all  the  board,  ere  yet  the  night 
Fell,  and  the  stammering  traitor  crept  apart 
Too  dark  at  heart  to  join  the  vesper  hymn ; 
When  bread  and  wine,  too  high  for  angels'  food, 
In  paten  rich  and  sacred  chalice  gleam. 
Till  veiled  in  secret  snowy  linen,  stands 
The  unfinished  feast,  too  sacred  to  behold, 
Unlike  the  fragments  of  the  meat  divine, 
Called  in  an  instant  from  the  winds  of  heaven, 
Ye  stored  in  sorry  baskets,  so  to  stay 
Your  hunger  in  the  inhospitable  wild. — 
Say,  is  it  strange  ?     The  world  is  full  of  woe, 

l8 


CHURCH  WINDOWS 

Sharp  torments,  drear  bewildering  agonies, 
Yet  full  of  sweet  surprises,  sins  forgiven, 
And  hopes  fulfilled  beyond  the  reach  of  hope. 

And  He  that  in  your  midst  is  lifted  up. 
Branded  and  buffeted  and  crowned  with  scorn, 
Looks  with  clear  eyes  beyond  the  low-hung  mist 
We  move  in,  reads  the  secret  of  the  stars, 
Asks  of  the  Father,  and  is  not  denied 
The  knowledge  not  allowed  to  restless  brains, 
The  eternal  cause,  the  all-sufficing  end. 


19 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 


IN  THE  IRON  CAGE 

Th^  saddest  sight !    Oh,  there  are  sights  and  sounds 
And  thoughts  enough  in  this  brief  world  of  ours 
To  wet  with  tears  the  stony  face  of  Time, 
Who  has  seen  the  suns  flame  out,  the  mountains 

piled, 
And  guesses  at  the  vast  designs  of  God. 

What  think  His  angels,  as  they  go  and  come 
On  some  prodigious  errand  duly  bent. 
Whirled  in  the  howling  wind,  or  veiled  in  cloud. 
Or  in  the  shadowy  columns  of  the  rain. 
To  battle  with  the  careless  mountain  peak 
Or  rend  the  forest,  or  intently  charged 
With  storm  and  ruin  for  some  innocent  vale  ? 
Care  they  for  human  griefs,  for  lifelong  woes  ? 
And  would  they  stay  the  hand  that  strikes  the  blow, 
Wipe,  if  they  could,  the  bitter  tears  away  ? 
And  do  they  hide  the  head  and  steel  the  eye, 
Too  pure  to  question  those  permitted  wrongs, 
Too  pitiful  to  see  them  and  be  glad  ? 

'Twas  summer,  summer  on  the  pincclad  mound. 
On  the  low  pastures  and  the  rushing  stream, 

20 


IN  THE  IRON  CAGE 

On  the  brown  ribs  of  high  enormous  hills, 

And  on  the  cold  transparencies  of  snow. 

The  great  house  blinked  through  all  its  shuttered 

blinds, 
Light  happy  laughter  echoed  in  the  court, 
And  here  and  there  an  eager  couple  met 
With  interchange  of  airy  compliment. 
Light  foot  and  fluttering  vesture  : — happy  souls 
Who  live  and  still  are  fed,  they  know  not  how 
Nor  why,  and  mock  the  easy  heaven  they  gave, 
And  that  uneasy  doom  that  waits  for  all. 


Or  down  the  steps  a  dusty  climber  came 
Reddened  and  roughened,  ripe  with  early  suns, 
Attended  by  a  grave  and  frieze-clad  guide  : 
Here  in  an  arbour,  screened  by  trailing  vines, 
A  group  of  sturdy  Swabians  hourly  sate  ; — 
A  score  of  bottles  clinked  upon  the  board. 
And  vapour  streamed  from  many  an  oozy  pipe. 
Meanwhile  they  made  unlovely  argument 
With  shrill,  insistent  voices,  of  the  way 
They  came,  and  what  the  cost  of  bite  and  sup. 

I  laughed,  and  thought  the  world  was  well  content. 

Not  beautiful,  nor  wanting  to  be  wise, 

But  kind  and  comely,  gay  and  bountiful  ; 

Heedless  of  all  it  fared  so  far  to  see, 

The  steadfast  faces  of  the  monstrous  hills. 

The  far  white  horns,  the  black-ribbed  precipices, 

The  good  grave  thunder  of  the  waterfall 

21 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Among  his  dripping  gorges,  and  the  talk 

Of  streams,  and  whisper  of  the  tasselled  pines. 

Meanwhile  I  viewed,  aside  the  merry  din, 
An  iron  cage  bedizened  and  festooned, 
That  grimly  in  a  sunless  corner  stood  ; 
And  peering  in,  amid  the  shadow,  saw 
The  melancholy  brooding  yellow  eyes 
Of  a  great  ruffled  bird,  that  moping  sate 
With  all  his  seemly  feathers  staring  rough  ; 
His  great  claws  listlessly  involved  the  perch, 
His  beak  close  shut,  as  in  a  dismal  muse. 

Suddenly  from  the  court  there  broke  and  blared, 
With  delicate  shiver  of  the  violin. 
And  the  low  crooning  of  the  labouring  horn, 
And  piping  tremulous  flute,  a  minuet 
Penned  by  a  merry  master  of  old  time. 
Amid  the  roses  in  a  bower  of  May, 
Thoughtless,  and  redolent  of  youth  and  love  ; — 
Till  all  the  jovial  loiterers  drew  round 
And  hushed  their  prattle,  and  had  thoughts  of 
heaven. 

But  those  wild  eyes  dwelt  ever  on  the  hills, 
Unmoved  and  unregarding — and  a  child 
That  strayed  alone  came  idly  to  the  cage. 
And  pushed  a  wondering  finger  :  growing  bold 
He  smoothed  the  starting  down,  and  felt  the  mail 
Of  those  black  horny  claws  :  but  when  he  saw 
The  sad  bird  Jieeded  not  the  shy  caress, 

22 


IN  THE  IRON  CAGE 

Grew  vexed,  and  reached,  and  smote  him  on  the 

wing, 
So  that  he  staggered  sidelong  on  the  perch, 
But  gript  again,  and  never  turned  his  head. 

In  that  dim  brain  and  dull  bewildered  sense, 
He  seemed  once  more  to  sail  aloft  the  breeze, 
To  feel  the  strong  sun  beating  on  his  wings. 
To  tread  once  more  the  powdered  peak,  and  peer 
Through  all  his  cloudy  valleys  :  or  beneath 
The  dripping  brow  of  some  o'er-arching  rock. 
With  harsh  screams  chide  his  loitering  partner 
home. 

Up  to  the  hills  he  lifted  longing  eyes, 
And  waited  for  the  help  that  never  came  ; 
Too  proud  to  wonder  what  had  torn  him  thence  ; 
Too  sad  to  mourn,  too  strong  to  be  consoled. 


23 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 


THOMAS  GRAY 

Utriimque  sacro  digna  ulerii'io 
Mirantur  umbrae  dicere  ; — 

(Time;  March,  1771.  Place; — Rooms  in  the  Hitcham 
Building  of  Pembroke  Hall,  Cambridge.  Gray  is  understood 
to  speak.) 

'TwAS  at  Ferrara,  in  a  palace  court, — 
The  shafts  methought  of  that  vast  colonnade 
Too  slim  and  slight  to  bear  the  incumbent  mass 
Of  plinth  and  ashlar,  and  the  luscious  wreaths 
Of  fruit  and  foliage  looped  from  knob  to  knob — 
But  that  I  hardly  noted  :   'twas  a  bird, 
A  monstrous  bird,  the  tyrant  of  the  crag, 
With  gilded  claws  and  beak — a  yellower  fire 
Flamed  in  his  eye — that  dragged  a  gilded  chain 
And  ponderous  ball,  and  loathed  his  servitude. 
And  once  he  raised  himself  with  urgent  wings 
Winnowing  the  drowsy  air,  and  grasped  the  frieze 
With    shrieking    claws — but   soon    the    swinging 

weight 
Thrust  him,  all  glaring,  to  the  dust  again. 
So  that  he  fiercely  beat  his  prisoned  wings, 
And  bit  the  unyielding  metal,  vexed  at  heart  ; — 

24 


THOMAS  GRAY 

I  could  have  wept  to  hear  the  portress  laugh. 

And  I  of  late,  raising  these  weary  eyes, 
That  taint  the  radiant  beam  with  motes  that  flit 
Across  my  vision,  thick  as  summer  flies, 
Have  seemed  to  see  the  bafiied  gaze,  the  glance 
That  sad  bird  cast  about  him,  as  he  stared, 
And  snuffed  the  fraQ;rant  enervated  air. 
So  strange  a  heaviness  has  grown  of  late 
About  mc,  from  the  hour  when  glimmering  dawn 
Peers  through   my  latticed  panes,  and  from  the 

court 
The  wholesome    sounds    smite    the    distempered 

brain 
With  most  unmanning  horror,  clutch  the  heart 
In  difficult  panic,  thick  with  labouring  sighs  ; 
Then  in  that  shadow-land  the  dreaming  mind — 
Like  some  new  fly  with  crumpled  wings  undried, 
Breathless  and  dizzy  from  her  unborn  trance, — 
Retraces  step  by  step  her  backward  road, 
Down  to  the  gates  of  nothing  ;  dips  her  brush 
To  dash  with  radiant  dyes  what  might  have  been, 
But  smears  what  is,  and  what  is  yet  to  be, 
In  most  portentous  dimness. 

First  I  see 
My  mother,  tender,  careful,  hard  beset 
With  sordid  fears  and  fierce  unloving  words, 
And  almost  maddened  with  the  faltering  touch 
Of  all  those  baby  hands  about  her  breast, 
That  clung  a  moment  and  unclasped  again. 
And  were  not :  yet  to  me,  sad  heir,  bequeathed 
The  intolerable  legacy  of  love, — 

25 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Dumb  love,  that  dares  not  own  itself  enthralled, 
Creep  to  the  dear  confessional  of  fate, 
But  from  some  piteous  instinct,  hangs  amazed. 
And  slips  into  the  silent  throng  again. 

Next,  I  remember  how,  a  puny  child, 
I  drowsed  and  fretted  o'er  the  outlandish  task, 
Hard  haunting  names  and  misbegotten  words, 
Like  barbarous  arms  and  shells  from  over  sea, — 
Till  all  at  once,  as  men,  that  pierce  a  well 
And  batter,  dizzied  with  their  own  hot  breath, 
Drill  through  some  cool  and  limpid  reservoir, 
And  hear  the  din  of  waters  breaking  out, 
Cooled  through  old  years  in  green  unnoted  caves, 
So,  as  I  fumed,  I  was  at  once  aware 
Of  magic  hands  that  beckoned,  robes  that  waved, 
As  though  some  pompous  multitude  swept  by; 
As  Hermes  drove  to  regions  vexed  and  dim 
The  helpless  ghosts,  so  Virgil  waved  his  wand, 
And  faces  grew  upon  the  hollow  air, 
The  snarling  trumpets,  and  the  noise  of  war. 
And  once,  but  once,  since  that  wild  thunder- 
stroke. 
The  voice  of  waters,  deep,  ineffable. 
Hath  thrilled    my  heart,  when    Ossian,  shaggy- 
haired, 
And  veiled  in  flying  rack  of  ragged  cloud, 
Swept   from   the    Northern  wild,  and   smote  his 

harp 
With  such  a  stormy  elemental  rage. 
It  made  me  mad, — he  with  such  yearning  deep, 
With  such  unconscious  savage  nakedness, 

26 


THOMAS  GRAY 

Out  of  the  world's  youth,  impotent,  half-beast, 
Half-hero,  leaned  and  cried  upon  the  air. 

My  sober  manhood  gained,  not  apt  for  jest 
Or  loud  uproarious  revel,  such  a  maze 
Of  intertwined  and  tortuous  passages, 
By  which  mankind  wind  backward  to  the  dim 
And  wailing  Chaos,  to  the  feet  of  God, 
Yawned  vague  before  me,  that  I  hastened  on. 
And  so,  through  many  a  dim  and  dreaming  day, 
Wandered  alone  in  labyrinthine  glooms. 
And  trackless  wastes,  with  sight  of  giant  souls, 
Whose  robes  I  seemed  to  touch,   and   see  their 

brows 
Contracted  grim,  and  hear  their  muttered  speech  : 
Bishops  and  earls,  tyrants  and  orators, 
Hugh  with  caressing  gestures,  Hereward 
With  lion's  mane,  Morcar  and  Waltheof, 
Edward  Confessor  with  his  maiden  flush. 
And  Alfred,  with  a  demon  at  his  brain 
And  clouded  eyes  at  council  ;  Alcuin 
And  stately  Charlemagne  ;  the  pomp  of  Rome, — 
Pale  Nero  softly  smiling,  Cato  stern, 
Imperial  Caesar  with  his  haggard  brow, 
And  Sulla  with  the  blotched  and  seamy  face  ; 
Or  Alexander  flashed,  a  meteor  light. 
In  sudden  radiance  ;  Alcibiades 
Divinely  insolent,  and  Socrates 
Battered  and  bruised  in  some  prodigious  strife. 
All  these  I  saw,  and  lingered,  glad  at  heart. 
In  stately  harbourage  of  gardens  cool, 
By  splashing  fountains,  leafy  colonnades, 

27 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

White  temples,  bosomed  deep  in  swelling  woods, 
Where  slender  statues  seemed  to  tread  on  air. 

And  lastly,  wearied  of  that  bright  young  world 
Of  eager  glances,  laughing  certainty, 
I  turned  away,  and  drove  my  plough  afield 
In  tangled  wastes,  Bengala  and  Cathay, 
And  stumbled    through  the  tombs    of   nameless 

kings,^ 
Old  dynasties,  and  fierce  outlandish  saints, 
Gods,  demigods,  till  like  a  river  vast 
From  cold  Siberian  hills,  the  stream  of  time, 
By  haggard  capes  and  icy  promontories. 
Weltered  and  widened  to  a  shapeless  sea. 

Yet  to  what  purpose  all  this  waste  of  years  ? 
These   vast   abandoned    schemes,  these    hopeless 

hopes  ? 
I  know  not:  save  it  were  to  warm  and  soothe 
The  shuddering  soul,  that  fills  its  prison  walls. 
When  blank  and  bare,  with  scrawls  of  boding  fate, 
And  filmy  shapes  and  dreary  fantasies, 
Yet     pleased     perchance  —  I     bare     my     inmost 

thought ! — 
With  shadowy  fame,  that  like  a  royal  cloak 
Hung  loose,  and  masked  my  wasted,  naked  frame. 
And,  while  I  scorned  the  crowd,  yet  pleased  to 

note 
That  I  was  noted, — ah  the  sorry  thought  ! — 
When  idle  babblers  hushed  their  vacant  talk 
To  gaze  at  me,  and  whisper  I  was  one 
Who  held  deep  converse  with  the  secret  muse. 
It  pleased  me,  ay  it  pleased,  to  wrest  respect 

28 


THOMAS  GRAY 

For  me,  the  scrivener's  son,  from  ancient  names, 

Effete  inheritors  of  sires,  whose  deeds 

Are  stamped  and  blazoned  on  the  storied  page  ; — 

For  witness  ye  : — beside  our  garden-end, 

Behind  the  leafy  butts,  where  Ridley  loved 

To  walk,  and  con  the  scripture  o'er  and  o'er, — 

The  hollow  vaulted  sphere  of  plaster,*  daubed 

To  show  the  posture  of  the  firmament 

To  gazers,  wondering  at  the  measured  chinks, 

The  levers  and  the  wheels,  who  briskly  praise 

Our  learned  eccentric's  ingenuities 

Agape,  yet  never  wondered  at  the  stars. 

Or  stayed  to  gaze  upon  the  enormous  night. 

•  ••••• 

O  Earth,  farewell,  my  Earth,  whom   I   have 
loved 
More  like  a  patient  lover  than  a  child, 
O  leafy  aisles,  and  winding  rushy  glades, 
Deep  forest  dingles,  where  I  loved  to  lie 
Sequestered,  while  the  sun  wheeled  overhead, 
And  westering  tinged  the  glimmering  boles  with 

fire  ; — 
The  ragged  raincloud  beating  from  the  West, 
The  pure  and  spacious  morning  : — I  have  watched 
With  faithful  heart,  and  fond,  obsequious  eye, 
The  sweep  of  punctual  seasons,  when  the  spring 
Enlaced  the  privet  hedge  with  tender  spears, 

*  Dr.  Roger  Long,  Master  of  Pembroke  and  Lowndean 
Professor  of  Astronomy  (d.  1770),  a  learned  and  eccentric  man, 
constructed  a  species  of  orrery  or  celestial  sphere  in  a  domed 
building  in  the  corner  of  the  inner  court  of  Pembroke. 

29 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

And  sudden  greenness  leapt  from  bush  to  bush, 
When  swelled  the  peach,  when  bulged  the  buxom 

plum, 
When  birds  were  mute,  or  fluted  shrill  and  high, 
What  time  the  figtree  furled  her  leafy  claw, 
And  yellowing  planetrees  dangled  velvet  balls. 

Ay,  in  pursuit  of  some  unheeded  spirit. 
My  weary  foot  in  trackless  solitudes 
Has  threaded  slow,  by  high  and  heathery  moors. 
Through  passes,  where  the  dripping  ledges  lean 
Together,  and  the  writhing  rowan  clings. 
And  shows  her  fretted  leaf  against  the  sky, 
Up  to  the  brows  of  white  and  haggard  rocks, 
And  shoots  of  stone,  and   caves,  where  clammy 

drops 
Distil  in  horror  from  the  flinty  brows 
Of  mountains,  monstrous  fantasies  of  God. 

All    these    I    would     have     sung,    but    dim 

constraint 
Pressed  close  my  stammering  lips  and  trembling 

tongue  ; 
It  needs  some  ready  singer,  some  young  heart 
To  throw  a  sacred  sunshine  of  its  own 
On  these  dark  haunts,  and  read  the  riddle  right 
Of  monstrous  laws,  that  work  their  purpose  out 
For  trembling  man,  unheeding  how  they  crush 
A  thousand  hopes,  so  one  sure  step  be  gained, 
One  soul  set  higher  on  the  stairs  of  God. 
Not  I,  who  scarce,  through  sad  laborious  days, 
Can  write,  and  blot,  and  write  the  languid  verse, 
Erase  the  erring  strophe,  gild  the  rhyme, 

30 


THOMAS  GRAY 

Set  and  reset  the  curious  epithet, 
And  prune  the  rich  parenthesis  away  ; 
Then  thrust,  but  with  a  secret  tenderness. 
As  erring  maidens  clasp  their  babes  of  shame, 
My  puny,  piteous  weakling  from  the  doors. 


And  you,  my  friends,  whose  souls  are  knit  with 
mine, 
I  would  not  linger  late,  and  make  parade 
Of  ceremonious  weakness,  fond  adieux, 
With  grave-eyed  piteous  faces  round  my  bed  ; 
For  some  are  passed  beyond  the  life  I  know, 
Who  smile  and  beckon  me  in  sudden  dreams 
With  most  unearthly  radiance  ;  some  forget 
The  gracious  years,  or  flourish,  whirled  away 
On  fuller  tides  ;   Horace,*  the  ailing  lord 
Of  plaster  palaces  and  hollow  groves, 
Absorbed  in  half-a-hundred  tiny  arts. 
Master  of  none  ;  who  cannot  learn  to  merge 
The  fretful  patron  in  the  equal  friend  ; — 
The  plump  precentor,t  with  his  tragedies 
And  pompous  odes,  that  tune  their  notes  from 

mine 
Yet  droop  and  wither  to  a  sickly  end. 
And  last  and  dearest,  he  '\,  who  flashed  across 
My  wintry  gloom,  a  sweet  and  vivid  ray, 

*  Horace  Walpole. 

t  William  Mason,  Precentor  of  York,  and  an    indlflcrcnt 
poet. 

X  Charles  Victor  dc  Bonstctten. 

31 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Flashed    from    a   land    of    ancient    mountainous 

snows, 
Himself    more    pure,    and    charmed    me    from 

myself, 
Out  of  my  shadowy  cave  of  bitter  thoughts, 
To  that  forgotten  sunshine — seized  my  hands 
With  laughing   hands,  and    drew  from    me    my 

store 
Of  hoarded  learning,  while  I  learnt  from  him, 
From  those  pure  eyes  so  sweetly  raised  to  mine. 
By  youthful  jest  and  petulant  questioning, 
To  stablish  and  repair  my  ancient  faith 
In  gracious  love  and  sweet  humanities, 
That  in  my  sunless  gloom  had  half  decayed. 

Farewell,  beloved  ;  child  of  my  heart,  farewell  ! 
And  ere  the  dark  stream    thrust    me   from   the 

shore, 
Know  that  these  failing  lips  at  last  pronounced 
A  thousand  blessings  on  my  tender  child. 


And  now  once  more,  before  the  dizzy  will 
Relax  her  tremulous  grip,  ere  nerve  and  limb 
Prove  traitor  to  the  faint  and  failing  brain, 
I  will  look  forth  upon  the  spacious  heaven, 
Will  mount  the  battlemented  tower,  and  see 
League  upon  league  the  interminable  fen 
Ripple  his  steely  waters  to  the  wind. 
Glint  in  the  horizon,  break  in  reedy  waves 
On  wooded  islands  crowned  with  byre  and  barn, 
Where  all  day  long  the  goodman  biding  hears 

32 


THOMAS  GRAY 

No  sound  save  clack  of  waters,  or  the  drum 

Of  bittern,  or  the  curlew's  whistle  faint, 

Or  scream  of  ruffs,  that  stamp  the  marge  to  mire, 

Or  booming  of  a  culver  down  the  marsh, 

Or  grave  entreating  bells,  that  ring  the  folk 

To  sermon,  in  the  pauses  of  the  wind. 

But  I,  beyond  the  ftn^  the  holy  towers. 
Beyond  the  sluggish  sea  that  laps  the  ooze 
With  melancholy  murmur,  hear  a  cry 
That  calls  me,  and  is  answered  by  the  lapse 
Of  pulses  throbbing  faint,  intimate  pangs 
Abhorred  ;  as  old  dismantled  priories, 
That  seem  to  doze  across  the  summer  fields. 
Yet  slip,  dismembered  by  the  intruding  frost, 
That    cracks    their    hoary    bones,    and     as    they 

muse. 
With  sudden  start  and  shock  portend  decay. 


33 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 


PEACE 

Along  the  lonely  valley's  grassy  floor 

I  wandered  long  ;   the  seaward  breeze  blew 
cool 
Over  the  grey  stones  and  the  wnidswept  moor ; 
And  foaming  down  from  pool  to  emerald  pool 
The  clear  stream  leapt ;  on  either  side  the  high 
Grey  bastions  steadfast  hung ;  how  still  the 
vale ! 
No  sound  save  rustling  grasses,  or  the  cry 
Of  sheep  on  bare  hill-ledges,  or  the  wail 
Of  gulls  aloft,  on  vague  and  aimless  quest  that 
sail. 

Yet  here  at  length  is  peace,  or  seeming  peace  ; — 
Elsewhere  the  world  may  change,  but  ah,  not 
here  ! 
Far  to  the  South  the  shameless  towns  increase, 
Their    smoke -stained     fronts    the    rumbling 
factories  rear, 
Yet  here,  it  seems,  a  thousand  years  ago, 

The    dreaming    mind    no    difference    might 
descry  ; 
Even  so  the  hills  were  silent ;  even  so 

34 


PEACE 

The    crisp    grass    clung — the    wistful    wind 
crept  by, 
The  dimpled  pool  lay  smiling  at  the  stainless  sky. 

Higher  I  mount,  thridding  the  trackless  hill. 
O'er  tumbled  cataracts  of  shapeless  stones. 
Till  now  the  streams  are  silent,  where  the  chill 
And  shivering  mountain  shows  his  haggard 
bones. 
I  gain  the  peak  ;  and  lo,  the  fertile  land 

Lies  like  a  chart  ;  the  river  wanders  wide 
In  shining  loops  ;  on  yellow  leagues  of  sand 
Soft  creeps   the   white-rimmed  sea — and,  far 
descried. 
The  shadowy  hills  of  hope  beyond  the  golden  tide  1 

From  hamlet  roofs,  embowered  deep  in  wood, 
The  blue  smoke  rising  hangs  ;  the  burdened 
heart 
Saith  softly  to  itself,  "  'twere  surely  good 

Within  yon  quiet  land  to  dwell  apart  !  " 
Yet  there  poor  hearts  are  restless,  even  there 
They  pine  for  love,  they  scheme  for  simple 
gain. 
And  some  are  sunk  in  heavy-eyed  despair, 
And  weary  life  of  lasting  rest  is  fain. 
And  fevered  sufferers  count  the  sad  slow  hours  of 
pain. 

*'  Nay,  nay,  not  thus,"  the  ardent  mind  replies, 
**  Long  is  delight  and  short  the  hour  of  woe  ; 

35 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 
Warm  hearts  are  glad   with    children's   happy- 


cries, 


And  lovers  linger  when  the  light  is  low.*' 
Ah  me,  I  know  it — but  the  brightness  done, 

The  failing  life  its  darkening  harbour  nears, — 
A  heap  of  mouldering  turf,  a  carven  stone, 
A  lonely  grief  that  fades,    through    faithful 
tears. 
Fades  to  a  gentle  tale  among  the  shadowy  years. 

I  am  not  weary  of  the  kindly  earth, 

Nay,  I  am  fain  of  honour  and  delight ; '] 
I  bless  the  patient  hour  that  gave  me  birth, 

I  shudder  at  the  nearer-creeping  night ; 
But  I  have  dreams  of  something  deeper  yet, 

A  steadfast  joy  that  daily  should  increase, 
Warm  glowing  'neath  the  ashes  of  regret ; 

Not  dull  content  that  comes  when   ardours 
cease. 
But  peace  divinely  bright,  unconquerable  peace. 

Each  morn  I  would  arise  with  tranquil  heart, 

Not  boding  ill  unknown,  and  simply  take 
The  burden  of  the  day,  and  play  my  part 

As  not  for  self,  but  for  some  loved  one's  sake  ; 
For  love  makes  light  of  trouble,  if  it  gain 

The  smile  of  the  Beloved,  if  it  know 
That  One  is  spared  the  lightest  touch  of  pain  ; 

For  this  is  life's  best  guerdon,  to  forego 
Light  pleasure,  if  it  serve  the  Best-beloved  so. 

36 


PEACE 

Life  is  not  life,  if  in  inglorious  sloth 

The  dull  days  pass,  the  years  unheeded  roll ; 
The  grievous  message  comes,  the  friend  is  wroth, 

And  little  slights  must  sting  the  aching  soul; 
Tho'  I  be  bent  on  service,  even  then 

Rich  gratitude  for  heedless  favours  given, 
Impatient  deeds,  that  win  from  patient  men 

Much  thanks,  upbraid  me,  who  so  ill  have 
striven. 
Yet   give   me  gracious   glimpses  of  the   mind   of 
Heaven. 

Not  here  nor  there  is  peace  to  be  achieved, 
The  mind  must  change,  and  not  the  earthly 
scene  ; 
And  how  shall  he  who  once  hath  truly  grieved 
Gain  hope  and  strength  to  be  secure,  serene  ? 
Not  by  forgetting  shall  such  rest  be  earned. 
Nor  with  closed  eyes  that  dare  not  see  the 
light, 
But  facing  loss  and  death,  and  having  learned 
What  hope  remains,  what  heritage  of  might — 
Then  on  the  fearful  heart  dawns  the  unhoped-for 
light. 

And  not  in  youth  can  this  be  inly  seen, 

Not   till  the  years  have  dimmed  the  dinted 

shield  ; 
Not  till  the  stern  thought  of  what  might  have 

been 

37 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Hath  pierced  the  spirit,  and  the  wound  is 
healed. 
Youth  dreams  of  love  and  conquest,  generous 
dreams, 
Nought  is  too  high  but  he  shall  dare  to  climb  ; 
Then,  when  in  mid  ascent  the  summit  seems 
More  steep  than  Heaven  itself,  more  old  than 
Time, 
Then  dawns  the  light,  and  makes  the  broken  life 
sublime. 

Then  falls  the  stress  of  battle,  which  shall  prove 

What  spirit  best  inspired  the  ardent  dream  ; 
And  only  he  that  based  his  hope  in  love 

Shall  reach  the  height  where  dawns  the  fitful 
gleam  ; 
For  one  is  marred  in  sickness,  one  in  health, 

And  one  is  fettered  with  a  chain  of  care, 
And  one  is  spent  in  piling  useless  wealth. 

And  one  in  petty  triumphs,  thin  as  air, 
And  few  set  foot  upon  the  upward-climbing  stair. 

But  he  that  hath  not  bound  his  clouded  mind 

With  care,  or  foolish  hope,  or  vile  desire. 
He  shall  be  strong,  and  resolute  to  find 

True  gold  in  ashes  of  the  sinking  fire  ; 
He,  if  the  world  shall  call  him,  simply  great. 

Shall  do  high   deeds,  and  care   not  for  the 
praise  ; 
Or  be  high  place  denied,  not  less  elate, 

In  some  green  corner  shall  live  out  his  days, 
And  lavish  all  his  best  in  simple  seemly  ways. 

38 


PEACE 

Then  when  the  sands  of  life  fall  rare  and  light, 
Then  when  the  spent  keel  grates  upon  the 
sand, 
No  matter  whether  victor  In  the  fight 

Or    vanquished,    so    the    fight    was    greatly 
planned  ! 
His  soul  shall  be  all  lit  with  golden  gleams, 

As  when,  between  the  darkness  and  the  day. 
The  sinking  sun,  with  thrice-ennobling  beams. 
Gilds  with  unearthly  grace  and  richer  ray 
Familiar  fields  and  trees,  covert  and  winding  way. 

Peace,  Peace,  what  art  thou  ?  Is  It  truth  they 
hold 
Who  deem  that  In  the  world  thou  art  not 
found  ? 
I  know  Indeed  thou  art  not  bought  or  sold. 

But  I  have  seen  thee,  robed  in  sight  and  sound; 
An  hour  ago,  where  yonder  glimmering  pool 

Gleams  in  the  brown  moor  like  a  silver  Isle, 
I  sate  to  hear  the  water  lapping  cool  ; 
She  came,  my  dreaming  spirit  to  beguile. 
Finger  on  lip,  and   downcast   eyes   that  seemed  to 
smile. 

Nay,  she  is  near  us  yet — 'tis  only  we 

Have  lost  the  skill  to  hear  her  shyly  pass, 

When  she  with  swift  and  viewless  mystery 
Fleets  like  the   breeze   across    the   bending 
grass  ; 

39 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Not  in  the  gaps  of  profitable  toil, 

Not  in  weak  intervals  of  feverish  haste 
May  she  be  wooed  ;  but  when  from  stain  and  soil 
Our  hands  are  free,  and  weakness   proudly 
faced, 
Then  may  the  gracious  form  be  sisterly  embraced. 

Ah — unsubstantial  prize,  ah,  faint  reward  ! 

Is  then  the  cold  gift  of  thy  temperate  hand 
No  carnal  triumph  of  the  empurpled  sword, 

No  fiery  thought  that  thrills  the  awestruck 
land  ? 
But  quiet  hours,  and  sober  silent  truth. 

That  not  in  envy,  not  in  acrid  scorn, 
Can  set  aside  the  elvish  dreams  of  youth. 

The  haggard  fears,  of  age  and  languor  born, 
Patient  with  both, — and  if  alone  yet  not  forlorn. 

While  thus  I  mused,  the  day  as  though  in  pain 
Turned  pale  and  shivered  ;  soon  the  west  was 
cold. 
The  glancing  stonechat  piped  his  thin  refrain. 

And  made  the  hills  more  silent,  grey,  and  old. 
Swiftly  I  went,  and  leaping  downwards  gained 
The  green  trim  valley,  leaving  sad  and  stern 
The  huge  rock-ramparts,  scarred  and  torrent- 
stained. 
And  bursting  swiftly  through  the  crackling 
fern, 
Saw    through    the    tree-stems    black    the    orange 
sunset  burn. 

40 


TO  OUR  MOTHER 

(January,  1901) 

O  PURE  and  true,  O  faithful  heart, 
Dear  mother  of  our  myriad  race, 

The  Father  claims  thee, — His  thou  art- 
Far  hence  in  some  serener  place. 

To  taste,  in  that  diviner  air, 

The  love  that  thou  hast  garnered  there. 

O  crown  of  love,  to  live  and  bear 

Life's  highest  sorrows,  deepest,  best  ! 

The  griefs  that  might  have  sown  despair 
Bloomed  fruitful  in  thy  patient  breast. 

And  now  thou  goest,  robed  in  light, 

From  love  in  faith,  to  love  in  sight. 

We  dare  not  speak  of  glory  now  ; 

We  will  not  think  of  pomp  and  pride ; 
Tho'  listening  nations  veil  their  brow, 

And  sorrow  at  Victoria's  side. 
The  silent  Orient  wondering  hears 
The  tale  of  all  thy  gracious  years. 

41 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

For  men  of  after-time  shall  say, 
*'  She  was  so  humble,  being  great, 

That  Reason  mocked  at  civil  fray, 
And  Freedom  reigned  in  sober  state  ; 

She  ruled,  not  seemed  to  rule,  her  land, 

More  apt  to  guide  than  to  command." 

And  we  would  mourn  thee,  not  as  they 

Who  weep  irreparable  loss  ; 
But  grateful  for  the  dear  delay, 

Beneath  the  shadow  of  the  cross, 
Our  tearful  eyes  to  Heaven  we  lift, 
And  render  back  the  precious  gift. 

And  men  must  pass,  and  tears  be  dried, 
And  younger  hearts  who  have  not  known 

That  tender  presence,  gracious-eyed, 
The  loving  secret  of  the  throne. 

Shall  wonder  at  the  proud  regret 

That  crowns  thee,  and  shall  crown  thee  yet. 

Peace,  come  away  !     Thou  sleep'st  beside 

The  rugged  immemorial  sea. 
Where  year  by  year  thy  navies  glide, 

And  dream  of  ancient  victory  ; — 
And  thou — thou  farest  forth  to  prove 
The  last,  best  victory  of  Love. 


42 


ODE 

IN  MEMORY  OF  THE  RT.  HONBLE.  WILLIAM 
EWART  GLADSTONE* 

Et  pavit  eos  in  innocentia  cordis  sui :  et  intellectibus  manuum 
suarum  deduxit  eos. 

Give  thanks  to  God  !  our  Hero  is  at  rest, 

Who    more    than    all   hath   laboured,    striven, 
aspired  ; 
And  now  hath  won  his  sleep — the  last — the  best 
His  soul  desired. 

Now,  though  the  warlike  rumours  swiftly  run, 
Though  mighty  nations  toss  in  fierce  unrest, 
Though  the  harsh  thunder  of  the  throbbing  gun 
Roars  in  the  West, 

Here  all  is  still  :  beneath  his  castle  walls 

Sprouts  blade,  and  bush,  and  every  tender  thing, 
And  hark,  the  jocund  throstle  !  how  she  calls 
To  Hope  and  Spring  ! 

•  This  Ode  was  written  to  be  recited  at  Eton  on  June  4, 
1898, 

43 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Peace  on  the  smitten  hearts  that  sorrow  near ! 

Now  that  the  toil-worn  warrior  sinks  to  sleep, 
The  nations  listen,  half  afraid  to  hear 
A  nation  weep  ; 

And  patriots  weep,  strong  souls  on  alien  shores, 

And  men  whose  feet  with  saving  peace  are  shod, 
And  every  heart  that  silently  adores 
Freedom  and  God. 

Freedom  and  God  ! — these  first — but  still  he  served 
All  peaceful  labours,  and    the  world's   strong 
youth  ; 
Yet  in  the  wildest  onset,  never  swerved 
From  sternest  truth. 

The  fight  he  scorned   not ;    'twas  the   prize   he 
scorned  ! 
He  chose  the  scars  and  not  the  gauds  of  fame, 
Gave  crowns  to  others,  keeping  unadorned 
His  homely  name. 

Spring  after  spring,  beneath  the  budding  elm, 

Not  worn  with  toil,  yet  joyful  in  release. 
He  shook  the  dust  of  battle  from  his  helm, 
And  practised  peace. 

Intent  for  rest — as  he  had  hardly  fought — 

Hid  from  the  world,  the  uproar  and  the  fret, 
Plunged  in  an  instant  in  serener  thought, 
He  could  forget ! 

44 


ODE 

While  yet  his  words  made  havoc  of  men's  fears, 
And    thrilled    reverberant   through  the   spell- 
bound throng, 
Smiling  he  stept  from  empire,  to  the  years 
Through  time,  through  song, 

Immortal  made,  old  knights  and  spouses  true ; 

And  far  as  his  enkindled  eyes  could  scan, 
He  shot  his  arrowy  thought,  and  pierced,  and  knew 
The  soul  of  man. 

Or  in  the  village  temple,  morn  by  morn. 

He  cleansed  his  pure  heart  with  a  humble  prayer, 
And  rose  on  Zion's  songs,  beyond  the  bourne 
Of  earthly  care ; 

And  last  the  Father  willed  one  pang  of  love, 

From  wisdom's  fiercest  fire,  one  glowing  coal 
Should  touch  his  lips,  to  chasten  and  to  prove 
The  stainless  soul. 

Swift,  swift  was  patience  perfect  :  where  he  lay, 
What  heart  could  fail,  what  lips  could  murmur 
then  ? 
He  whispered,  'twixt  the  darkness  and  the  day, 
His  faint  Amen. 

Eton,  remember !     How  shall  men  forget 
Thy  heroes'  roll,  thy  burden  of  renown. 
The  bright  surpassing  jewels  strongly  set 
Within  thy  crown, 

4.5 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Till  God's  vast  purpose  silently  enfold 

The  thoughts  that  are  not  and  the  things  that 
are, 
Till  mercy  reign,  in  gentle  glory  rolled 
From  star  to  star  ? 

Not  mighty  deeds,  in  keenest  foresight  planned, 
Strong  words,  sweet  motions   of  bewildering 
grace, 
Not  these  receive  at  God's  all-judging  Hand 
The  loftiest  place, 

But  souls  that  keep,  through  warfare  and  through 
ease, 
Though  praise,  though  hate  about  their  name 
be  blown. 
The  childlike  heart,  the  childlike  faith — for  these 
Are  next  the  Throne. 


46 


ODE  TO  JAPAN 

(March,  1902) 

Clasp  hands  across  the  world, 

Across  the  dim  sea-line, 
Where  with  bright  flags  unfurled 
Our  navies  breast  the  brine  ; 
Be  this  our  plighted  union  blest, 
Oh  ocean-throned  empires  of  the  East  and  West  ! 

For  you,  for  us,  the  thrill 

And  freshness  of  the  tide, 
Where  ice-fed  rollers  fill 

High  hearts  with  steadfast  pride  ; 
For  both,  the  genial  tropic  waves 
Press  warm  across  the  sea,  and  chafe  our  shivering 
caves. 

Here,  rich  with  old  delays, 

Our  ripening  freedom  grows, 
As  through  the  unhasting  days 
Unfolds  the  lingering  rose ; 
Through  sun-fed  calm,  through  smiting  shower, 
Slow  from  the  pointed  bud  outbreaks  the  full-orbed 
flower. 

47 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

But  yours — how  long  the  sleep, 

How  swift  the  awakening  came  ! 
As  on  your  snowfields  steep 
The  suns  of  summer  flame  ; 
At  morn  the  aching  channels  glare  ; 
At  eve  the  rippling   streams  leap  on  the  ridged 
stair. 

'Twas  yours  to  dream,  to  rest, 

Self-centred,  mute,  apart, 
While  out  beyond  the  West 

Strong  beat  the  world's  wild  heart ; 
Then  in  one  rapturous  hour  to  rise, 
A  giant  fresh  from  sleep,  and   clasp  the  garnered 
prize  ! 

Here,  from  this  English  lawn. 

Ringed  round  with  ancient  trees, 
My  spirit  seeks  the  dawn 
Across  the  Orient  seas. 
While  dark  the  lengthening  shadows  grow, 
I  paint  the  land  unknown,  which  yet  in  dreams 
know. 

Far  up  among  the  hills 

The  scarlet  bridges  gleam. 
Across  the  crystal  rills 

That  feed  the  plunging  stream  ; 
The  forest  sings  her  drowsy  tune  ; 
The  sharp-winged  cuckoo  floats  across  the  crescent 
moon. 

48 


ODE  TO  JAPAN 

Among  the  blue-ranged  heights 

Dark  gleam  the  odorous  pines  ; 
Star-strewn  with  holy  lights 
Glimmer  the  myriad  shrines ; 
At  eve  the  seaward-creeping  breeze 
Soft  stirs  the  drowsy  bells  along  the  temple  frieze 

Your  snowy  mountain  draws 

To  Heaven  its  tranquil  lines ; 
Within,  through  sulphurous  jaws, 
The  molten  torrent  shines  ; 
So  calm,  so  bold,  your  years  shall  flow 
Pure  as  yon  snows  above,  a  fiery  heart  below. 

From  us  you  shall  acquire 

Stern  labour,  sterner  truth. 
The  generous  hopes  that  fire 
The  Spirit  of  our  youth. 
And  that  strong  faith  we  reckon  ours, 
Yet  have  not  learned  its  strength,  nor  proved  its 
dearest  powers. 

And  we  from  you  will  learn 

To  gild  our  days  with  grace, 
Calm  as  the  lamps  that  burn 
In  some  still  holy  place  ; 
The  lesson  of  delight  to  spell, 
To  live  content  with  little,  to  serve  beauty  well. 

Your  wisdom,  sober,  mild. 

Shall  lend  our  knowledge  wings  ; 

The  star,  the  flower,  the  child. 
The  joy  of  homely  things, 

49  D 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

The  gracious  gifts  of  hand  and  eye, 
And  dear  familiar  peace,  and  sweetest  courtesy. 

Perchance,  some  war-vexed  hour, 

Our  thunder-throated  ships 
Shall  thrid  the  foam,  and  pour 
The  death-sleet  from  their  lips  ; 
Together  raise  the  battle-song, 
To    bruise    some    impious   head,    to  right    some 
tyrannous  wrong. 

But  best,  if  knit  with  love, 
As  fairer  days  increase, 
We  twain  shall  learn  to  prove 
The  world-wide  dream  of  peace  ; 
And  smiling  at  our  ancient  fears, 
Float  hand  in  loving  hand  across  the  golden  years. 


50 


ODE  TO  MUSIC* 

Soul  of  the  world  ! 
Spirit  of  slumbrous  things,  whate'er  thou  art, 
Who  dreamest  smiling,  with  bright  pinions  furled, 
Deep,    deep,    beyond    the   noise  of  street  and 
mart, 
In  forest  spaces,  or  in  pastures  wide, 

Where  the   hot  noonday    weaves    a    breathless 
spell, 
Along  the  unfrequented  river-side, 

Amid  the  cool  smell  of  the  weedy  stream  ; 
Of  sight  and  scent  thou  dreamest  well — 
But  music  is  thine  earliest  and  thy  latest  dream  ! 

O  far-off  time  ! 

Ere  sound  was  tamed  by  gracious  mastery, 
Faint  fugue  of  wakening  birds  at  matin  prime, 

Or  mid-day  booming  of  the  laden  bee, 
Bass  of  the  plunging  stream,  or  softly  stirr'd, 

The  crawling  sea's  monotonous  undertone, 
Or  windy  lowing  of  the  forest  herd, 

•  Performed  at  the  Opening  of  the  new  Concert  Hall  in 
the  Royal  College  of  Music  on  June  13,  1901  ;  the  music  by 
Sir  Hubert  Parry. 

51 


ODES  AND  IDYLLS 

Thin  pipe  of  dancing  flies  at  shut  of  day, 
Winds  in  wild  places  making  moan — 
These  were  the  songs  of  earth,  in  artless  disarray. 

O  march  of  years  ! 

The  simple  days  are  dead,  the  rich  tides  roll, 
And  we,  the  inheritors  of  toil  and  tears, 

Utter  the  ampler  message  of  the  soul. 
How  clear  the  subtle  proem  !     Murmuring  sweet 

The  soft  wood  whispers  ;  on  the  silence  leap 
The  shivering  strings,  with  motion  fairy-fleet, 

Soul-shattering  trumpets,  lending  fire  and  glow  ; 
The  mighty  organ  wakes  from  sleep, 
And  rolls  his  thund'rous  diapasons,  loud  and  low. 

Behold  us  met  ! 

In  no  light  fancy,  no  inglorious  mirth, 
But  strong  to  labour,  striving  well  to  set 

The  crown  of  song  upon  the  brows  of  earth. 
Music,  be  this  thy  temple  hourly  blest, 

Of  sweet  and  serious  law  the  abiding-place  ; 
Bid  us  be  patient  !     Bid  us  love  the  best  ! 

Climb,  gently  climb,  to  summits  yet  untrod, 
Spirit  of  sweetness,  spirit  of  grace, 
Voice  of  the  soul,  soft  echo  of  the  mind  of  God  ! 


52 


SONNETS 


THOMAS  GRAY 

Singer  most  melancholy,  most  austere, 

So  overcharged  with  greatness,  that  thy  frame 
Was  all  too  frail  to  feed  the  aspiring  flame. 

And  sank  in  chill  disdain  and  secret  fear. 

Save  that  thy  idle  fingers  now  and  then 
Touched  unawares  a  slender  chord  divine  ; 
Oh,  if  but  half  the  silence  that  was  thine 

Were  shared  to-day  by  clamorous  minstrel-men  ! 

I  thread  the  woodland  where  thy  feet  have  strayed  ; 
The  gnarled  trunks  dreaming  out  their  ancient 
tale 
Are  fair  as  then  ;   the  same  sad  chime  I  hear 
That  floats  at  eve  across  the  purple  vale  ; 
The  music  of  thy  speech  is  in  my  ear. 
And  I  am  glad  because  thou  wast  afraid. 


55 


SONNETS 


GILBERT  WHITE 

Thou  wast  a  poet,  though  thou  knew'st  it  not, 
Then,  on  a  merry  morning,  when  the  thrush 
Fluted  and  fluted  briskly  in  the  bush. 

And  blackbirds  whisked  along  thy  garden-plot ; 

Didst  watch  an  hour  beside  thy  hanger's  foot 
The  quivering  kestrel  hung  aloft  the  skies 
To  mark  aught  stirring,  or  with  pensive  eyes 

In  cherry-orchards  didst  forecast  the  fruit. 

And  shall  I  deem  it  idle  thus  to  scan 
The  myriad  life,  and  reverently  wait, 
A  patient  learner,  auguring,  behind 
The  restless  hand,  the  unhesitating  mind  ? 
This  was  thy  daily  task,  to  learn  that  man 
Is  small,  and  not  forget  that  man  is  great. 


56 


OMAR  KHAYYAM 

Out  of  the  tombs,  across  the  centuries 

The  chill  voice  called  and  answered,  "  Yea,  I 

knew  ! 
I  prayed  the  prayers  that  bring  no  peace  to  you, 

I  paid  the  same  sad  price  for  growing  wise ; 

I  knew  the  sick  despairs  that  vex  you  still, 

The  same  dumb  night,  the  old  unwavering  stars, 
The  same  wild  lust  that  in  a  moment  mars 

The  patient  barriers  of  the  labouring  will. 

And  this  was  mine,  to  inweave  the  tender  dream 
With  shame  and  pain,  and  all  that  hope  ignores  ; 
To  catch  the  whispers  of  Eternity  ; 
To  gaze  beyond  the  whirlpool,  see  the  stream. 
The  steady  stream,  that  sets  to  desert  shores 
Far  off,  and  those  dim  continents  to  be." 


57 


SONNETS 


EDWARD  FITZGERALD 

I  HEAR  a  Stronger  music  in  the  air, 

I  mark  a  richer  harmony  combine 

With  those  thin  eager  melodies  of  thine  ; 

I  look  for  thee  and  find  another  there  ; — . 

And  dost  thou  beckon  from  the  ages  dim, 
My  cynic  minstrel,  Omar  ?     Is  it  thou  ? 
Or  do  I  trace,  behind  the  furrowed  brow, 

The  shy  and  sober  lineaments  of  him 

Who  lingered  listless  in  a  land  of  streams  ; — 
As  when  some  laughing  child  endues  a  mask 

Of  frozen  horror,  whence  the  pure  eye  shines 
In  smiling  softness  ;   'twas  thy  destined  task 
To  dig  new  ores  from  those  ungarnered  mines, 
And^flush  with  young  desires  those  pallid  dreams. 


58 


SHADOWS 

The  imperious  soul  that  bows  to  no  man's  will, 
That  takes  by  right  the  service  of  his  kind, 
Floats  in  free  air,  unchastened,  unconfined. 

Strikes  what  he  lists,  enslaving,  spoiling  still. 

But  when  he  falls  upon  the  common  ground. 
Swift,  swift  the  visions  falter  :   his  brave  wing 
Sustains  him  not  ;  andthat  swift  shadowy  thing 

Runs  from  the  darkness,  and  enwraps  him  round. 

So  you  may  see  the  hovering  kestrel  beat 
Over  the  crag,  slow-circling,  pinions  stiff, 
Then  fall  through  wind  and  sunshine,  check 
his  flight. 
And  as  he  wheels  to  perch  below  the  cliff. 
His  shadow  fleets  across  the  limestone  white, 
And  closes  with  him,  settling  at  his  feet. 


59 


SONNETS 


THE  DEEPS  OF  GOD 

O  Truth  !  how  vast  thy  empire,  how  immense. 
Lost  in  thy  gracious  nearness,  we  forget  ; 
Our  narrow  bounds  we  strenuously  set 

About  us,  too  intent  to  wander  thence  : 

We  dream  of  majesty  and  innocence 
Among  a  thousand  trivial  mockeries. 
Till  some  high  deed  soars  up,  and  draws  the  eyes 

Aloft,  and  lightens  the  bewildered  sense. 

So  when  we  creep  beneath  the  lowering  skies. 
The  lonely  hern  above  the  marshland  sails 
High  overhead,  slow  flapping  down  the  wind  ; 
And  all  at  once  the  grey  veil  seems  to  rise 
And  tower,  and  as  the  lowlit  evening  pales, 
The  illimitable  cloudland  looms  behind. 


60 


WASTE 

Blind  fate,  that  broodest  over  human  things, 
That  through  thy  long  inheritance  of  tears 
Dost  bring  to  birth,  through  sad  and  shape- 
less years. 

One  poet,  heart  and  voice  :  but  ere  he  sings. 

Thou  dost  delight  to  sever,  to  estrange. 

To  bid  the  restless  brain  reluctant  sleep. 
And  toss  his  glories  to  the  common  heap, 

Waiting  thy  leisure,  and  the  world's  slow  change. 

As  some  dishevelled  garden,  when  the  frost 
Crusts  the  dry  turf,  and  blunders  through  the 
lines 
Of  summer's  green  battalions,  laying  low 
The  towering  lupines  that  untimely  blow  ; 
And  o'er  the  leaves  in  rich  disorder  tossed 
The  unavailing  sun  in  mockery  shines. 


6i 


SONNETS 


BY  THE  CAVE 

Without  'twas  life  and  ligKt  ;  the  large  air  rolled 
Down  from  the  hill ;  the  merry  heather-bird 
Strutted  and  drummed,  or  through  the  hillocks 
whirred, 

Scattering  the  dew,  and  bade  his  mates  be  bold. 

Within,  severe  and  sad,  the  cold  cave  wept ; 
The  filmy  tear-drop  splashed,  or  quivering  stood 
Full-orbed,  as  in  the  ancient  solitude 

Pendant  to  base  minutely  nearer  crept. 

Though  still  'tis  mine  to  linger  in  the  sun, 

To  drink  the  pure  keen  scent  of  heathery  miles, 
Catching  the  busy  minutes  as  they  run, 

Yet  I  remember  that  my  joys  are  brief, 
That  in  the  sunless  dark  eternal  grief 
Its  monumental  record  slowly  piles. 


62 


BY  THE  STREAM 

Blow,  breeze,  and  whisper  somewhat  from  the 
hill, 
From  cool  grey  stones    and   beds   of  heather 

brown  ; 
Lay  dowrj    thy  languid    schemes,  poor   heart, 
lay  down 
Thy  piteous  hopes,  thy  fears  of  shadowy  ill. 

And  listen,  listen  where  the  water  runs 
Under  the  peaty  bank,  by  shingle  white. 
Washed   through   and    through  when    winter 
floods  unite. 

And  delicately  dried  by  summer  suns. 

Let  thy  free  thought  flow  down  with  gentle  speed 

Along  the  vale,  beyond  the  headland  dim, 
To  drink  the  sharp  scent  of  the  briny  weed, 

Where  on  the  sandy  spit  the  brooding  throng 
Of  pensive  gulls  pipe  clear  their  plaintive  hymn, 
Pipe  all  at  once,  like  nuns  at  evensong. 


63 


SONNETS 


A  LILY  OF  ANNUNCIATION 

Buried  and  based  in  dull  uncleanly  mould, 
Amazed  I  see  my  patient  lily  climb, 
Who  all  unseen,  about  the  bones  of  time 

Lays  hidden  hands  of  faith  :  then  brave  and  bold 

The  sleek  stem  soars,  knowing  how  firm  and  deep 
Her  fibres  wind  and  wander  :  soon  she  weaves 
Hope's  ladder  high  with  strong  and  stately 
leaves. 

And  smiles  embattled,  being  throned  so  steep. 

Last,  her  precarious  citadel  she  arms, 

Trims  and  anoints  with  subtlest  alchemy 
Green  spearheads,  mutely  folded,  soon  to  be 
White  trumpets,  breathing  peace,  not  raw  alarms  ; 
And  smites  with  meek  artillery  whate'er 
Wounds  and  deflowers  the  else  ambrosial  air. 


64 


WOUNDS 

The  wounded  bird  sped  on  with  shattered  wing, 
And  gained  the  holt,  and  ran  a  little  space, 
Where  briar  and  bracken  twined  a  hiding-place  ; 

There  lay  and  wondered  at  the  grievous  thing 

With  patient  filmy  eye  he  peeped,  and  heard 
Big  blood-drops  oozing  on  the  fallen  leaf  ; 
There  hour  by  hour  in  uncomplaining  grief 

He  watched   with  pain,  but   neither    cried   nor 
stirred. 

The  merry  sportsmen  tramped  contented  home, 
He  heard  their  happy  laughter  die  away  ; — 
Across  the  stubble  by  the  covert-side 
His  merry  comrades  called  at  eventide  ; 
They  breathed  the  fragrant  air,  alert  and  gay, 
And  he  was  sad  because  his  hour  was  come. 


65 


SONNETS 


IN  THE  CLOISTER 

Spire,  that  from  half-a-hundred  dainty  lawns, 
O'er  battlemented  wall  and  privet-fence, 
Dost  brood  and  muse  with  mild  indifference. 

Through  golden  eves  and  ragged  gusty  dawns  ; — 

O  cloistered  court,  O  immemorial  towers, 

O  archways,  filled  from  mouldering  edge  to  edge 
With  sober  sunshine,  O  bird-haunted  ledge, 

Say,  have  ye  seen  her  ?     Shall  she  soon  be  ours  ? 

She,  whom  we  seek,  most  dear  when  most  denied, 
Seen  but  by  sidelong  glances,  past  us  slips, 
Waves  from  a  window,  beckons  from  a  door, 
Calls  from  a  thicket  by  the  minster-side, 
Presses  a  flying  finger  to  her  lips. 

Smiles  her  sad  smile,  and  passes  on  before. 


66 


FATIDICA 

Oh,  I  had  thought  to  find  some  haggard,  stern, 
Harsh  prophetess,  with  dim  and  cloudy  brows, 
With  eyes  like  winter  suns,  that  under  boughs 

Knotted  and  black,  in  frosty  silence  burn. 

But  thou,  methinks,  art  innocent  and  fair. 
With  childish  hand  and  gracious  pitying  eye, 
Too  sweet  to  hold  the  veils  of  mystery, 

And  solve  the  stubborn  riddle  of  despair. 

Yet  suddenly  through  guarded  eyes  breaks  forth 
A  smile  that  ripples  all  the  face  of  Death, 
And  penetrates  and  glorifies  my  fears  ; 
As  icy  stars  that  shiver  from  the  North, 

Frosting  my  sleeve,  at  touch  of  human  breath 
11,  and  dissolve,  and  tremble  into  tears. 


67 


SONNETS 


GASTON  DE  FOIX 

Half  sunk  in  marble,  soft  as  down,  he  lies, 
Smiling  with  that  inscrutable  content 
That  comes  when  brows  are  grey,  and  shoulders^ 
bent. 

But  seldom  deigns  to  brood  in  younger  eyes. 

Armed  as  he  fell,  he  needs  no  braveries, 

Nor  wreath,  nor  curious  gaud,  nor  jewelled  ring, 
Who  was  not  loth  to  perish,  that  a  king, 

A  careless  king,  might  sit  an  hour  at  ease. 

Happy  the  hero  who  hath  served  the  truth. 
And,  full  of  years,  is  borne  through   weeping 
streets 
Amid  a  weepmg  nation.     Happier  he 
Who  in  one  glorious  hour  his  fate  completes, 
Setting  the  seal  of  immortality 
On  all  the  grace  and  goodliness  of  youth. 


68 


IMAGINATION 

Weary  and  weak,  alone  and  ill  at  ease, 

I  summon  subtle  sprites  that  serve  me  well ; 
Then,  at  the  bidding  of  the  sudden  spell. 

The  world  slip«  from  me ;    then  the  thundering 
breeze 

Whirls  my  frail  bark  beyond  the  Orcades, 
And  o'er  me  hangs,  with  spire  and  pinnacle, 
A  fretted  ice-crag  stooping  through  the  swell, 

Over  the  broad  backs  of  the  ranging  seas. 

The  rapture  fades ;   the  fitful  flame  flares  out. 
Leaving  me  sad,  and  something  less  than  man, 
Pent  in  the  circle  of  a  rugged  isle, 
A  later  Prospero,  without  his  smile. 
Without  his  large  philosophy,  without 
Miranda,  and  alone  with  Caliban. 


69 


SONNETS 


THE  SECRET 

I  DREAMED  of  pcacc,  and  woke  to  find  unrest ; 
I  laid  rash  hands  upon  the  sweeping  train 
Of  honour,  but  I  bent  and  clutched  in  vain 

And  patience  frowned  and  mocked  my  bitter 
quest. 

But  one,  who  slipped  unnoted  through  the  throng, 
Drew  near  me,  and  upheld  my  faltering  feet, 
And  "  Here  "  he  said,  "where  faith  and  failure 
meet. 

Here  is  the  secret  thou  hast  sought  so  long !  " 

As  when  the  traveller,  who  long  hours  has  scanned, 
Beyond  the  blue  horizon,  wide  outspread, 
The  sober  solemn  shadow  of  the  hills, 
Starts  from  his  sleep  to  see  how  close  at  hand. 
Fretted  and  channelled  by  a  thousand  rills, 
Looms  out  the  broad  sun-dappled  mountain- 
head. 


70 


OUTWARD  BOUND 

As  sailors  loitering  in  a  luscious  isle, 

A  southern  land,  a  land  of  fire  and  snow. 
Where  all  night  long  a  still  and  secret  glow 

Gilds  the  rich  gloom  through  many  a  fragrant  mile, 

Pulp  of  exotic  fruitage  crush,  and  smile 

To  hear  a  strange  speech  bandied  to  and  fro. 
Then,  when  the  sea-horn  hums,  arise  and  go 

To  thankless  toil,  to  bitter  food  and  vile. 

So  I,  without  one  backward  thought,  one  clasp 

Of  hands  desired,  without  one  shrinking  fear 

Of  seas  that  thunder  over  shingly  bars, 

Would  don  my  battered  garb,  and  strongly  grasp 

he  tiller,  worn  by  faithful  toil,  and  steer 

Right  onwards  for  the  everlasting  stars. 


71 


SONNETS 


NEVERTHELESS 

Ah  me  !   I  thought  that  life  had  been  more  sweet, 
More  radiant,  more  triumphant ;  I  had  thought 
Some  harbourage  were  here  for  minds  distraught, 

Some  hope  fulfilled,  some  goal  for  patient  feet : 

Yet,  in  my  tempered  grief,  my  bitterness 
That  halts  upon  the  threshold  of  despair, 
I  too  have  dreams  of  somewhat  far  and  fair ; 

What  others  prate  and  preach,  I  softly  guess. 

As  one,  who  walks  at  dusk,  in  sordid  care 

Enwrapt,  through  ancient  streets  and  gateways 
grim. 
Is  smit  with  sudden  wonder  as  he  sees 
The  minster  lights  strike  through  the  misty  air, 
To  find  them  hang  so  high  among  the  trees, 
And  show  so  subtly  fair,  so  gorgeous-dim. 


7^ 


REPROOF 

You  chide  me  for  my  sadness ;   "  hope,"  you  say, 
"  Is  urgent,  and  the  marching  years  are  just ; 
Take  heart  and  hearken  ;   through  the  din  and 
dust 

Thrills  the  calm  music  of  a  sweeter  day  ;  " 

Yet  when  the  strident  voice  of  toil  is  low, 
I  bend  and  hearken  for  the  music  sweet, 
And  ah  !  the  harmony  is  incomplete, 

And  blurred  with  discords  of  untimely  woe. 

God  help  us,  for  His  saints  have  waited  long, 
Watched  early,  suffered  hardness,  laboured  late  ; 
And  yet  the  air  is  thick  with  patient  cries. 
The  world  is  wounded  sore,  and  cannot  rise, ; 
Shot  through  and  through  with  flying  shafts  of 
fate, 
And  weighted  with  irreparable  wrong. 


73 


SONNETS  / 


REGRET 

I  HOLD  it  now  more  shameful  to  forget 
Than  fearful  to  remember  ;   if  I  may- 
Make  choice  of  pain,  my  Father,  I  will  pray- 
That  I  may  suffer  rather  than  regret ; 

And  this  dull  aching  at  my  heart  to-day- 
Is  harder  far  to  bear  than  when  I  set 
My  passionate  heart  some  golden  thing  to  get, 

And,  as  I  clasped  it,  it  was  torn  away. 

"  The  world  is  fair,"  the  elder  spirit  saith, 

"  The  tide  flows  fast,  and  on  the  further  shore 
Wait  consolations  and  surprises  rare." 
But  youth  still  cries  "  The  love  that  was  my  fai^h 
Is  broken,  and  the  ruined  shrine  is  bar*^ 
And  I  am  all  alone  for  evermore." 


74 


I  AM  SMALL  AND  OF  NO  REPUTA- 
TION;   YET  DO  I  NOT  FORGET 
THY  COMMANDMENTS 

How  small  a  thing  am  I,  of  no  repute, 

Whirled  in  the  rush  of  these  eternal  tides ; 
Spun  daily  round  upon  this  orb  that  rides 

Among  its  peers,  itself  how  most  minute  ! 

Yet  as  I  muse  in  sad  comparison, 

Restless  and  frail,  I  thrill  with  sudden  awe. 
Clasped  in  the  large  embrace  of  life  and  law 

That,  howsoe'er  I  falter,  bear  me  on. 

So  should  a  drop  within  the  sluggish  vein 
Of  some  vast  saurian — that  slumbers  deep 
In    seas    undreamed  of,  rolling  through  the 
swell — 
In  labyrinthine  artery  swim  and  creep, 
Yet  hear  far  off,  again  and  yet  again, 

The  vasty  heart  beat  in  his  central  cell. 


75 


SONNETS 


M.  E.  B. 

I  THINK  that  thou  art  somewhere,  strong  and  free, 
Free  in  some  ampler  region,  where  the  same 
High  love, — that  flickers  here  with  fitful  flame, 

That  speaks  at  times  in  wafts  of  memory 

On  high  sequestered  hills,  or  by  the  sea 

Broad-rolling,  or  in  tracts  of  woodland  green, — 
Shines  forth  in  steady  radiance,  full,  serene, 

Restoring  hope,  refining  purity. 

I  think  that  when  our  hearts  are  full  of  mirth, 
And  glad,  without  dishonour  to  the  dead. 
Thou  art  consenting  from  thy  secret  cell ; 
As  here  the  electric  pulse,  that  o'er  the  earth. 
From  zones  remote  and  under  ocean's  bed, 
Speaks  of  my  friend  and  whispers  he  is  well 


76 


SELF 


I 


This  is  my  chlefest  torment,  that  behind 

This  brave  and  subtle  spirit,  this  swift  brain, 
There  sits  and  shivers,  in  a  cell  of  pain, 

A  central  atom,  melancholy,  blind, 

Which  is   myself  :    tho'   when    spring    suns   are 
kind, 
And  rich  leaves  riot  in  the  genial  rain, 
I    cheat     him     dreaming,    slip     my    rigorous 
chain. 
Free  as  a  skiff  before  the  dancing  wind. 

Then  he  awakes,  and  vexed  that  I  am  glad. 
In  dreary  malice  strains  some  nimble  chord. 
Pricks  his  thin  claw  within  some  tingling 

nerve  : 
And  all  at  once  I  falter,  start,  and  swerve 
From  my  true  course,  and  fall,  unmanned   and 
sad, 
Into  gross  darkness,  tangible,  abhorred. 

11 


SONNETS 


II 


Yet  I  can  send  my  thought  from  sun  to  sun, 
Behind  the  stars,  beyond  the  eternal  night ; 
Pierce  through  the  whirling  spheres  of  fervent 
light. 

Or  nearer  roam  :  hither  and  thither  run ; 


Strain  to  a  sharp  and  icy  summit,  thread 

The  poisonous  depth  of  some  hot  forest  maze, 
Or  haunt  the  dark  sea-bottom's   glimmering 
ways. 

Where  sunken  wrecks  hang  silent  overhead. 

Now,  in  a  sun-dried  city  of  the  south. 

Linger    through    dusty    vineyards,    branching 
palms ; — 
The  shrill  cicalas  chirping  in  the  drouth ; — 
Or  swim  by  coral  islets,  floating  free 
And  eager,  parting  with  imagined  arms 
The  crystal  rollers  of  a  sapphire  sea. 


Ill 

Or  I  constrain  the  poets  to  my  call ; — 

With  Homer,  staff  in  hand,  and  lyre  on  back, 
Stumbling  and  sightless  on  the  upland  track, 

Or  praised  and  honoured  in  the  echoing  hall, 

78 


SELF 

Hear  from  his  lips  the  rolling  thunders  fall ; 
Or  sit  with  Virgil  in  the  orchard-edge, 
Hearing  the  bees  hum  in  the  privet  hedge, 

And  deep-mouthed  cattle  lowing  from  the  stall. 

Or  I  can  follow  Una's  peerless  knight 
Riding  alone  in  mountain  solitudes. 

Where  Awbey  leaps  from  Bally-howra  hill  ; 
Or  trace  the  clear  impetuous  Rotha  rill, 
vVithWordsworth,  mouthingmusic  in  the  woods, 
His  eyes  transfigured  with  a  sacred  light. 

IV 

Or  I  can  trace  the  cycles  that  have  been, 
See  silent  priests,  dead  Caesars,  face  to  face  ; 
Laugh  with  old  wits,  with  serious  statesmen  pace, 

Peep  unobserved  at  many  a  secret  scene. 

Thence  through  wild  woods  my  dreaming  way 
I  take. 
Through  ancient  citiespiledof  ponderous  stones, 
Or  dripping  caverns  carpeted  with  bones, 

To  wattled  huts  isled  in  a  mountain  lake. 

Backwards,  still  backwards,  till  the  glowing  earth 
Lose  beast  and  tree,  and  show  her  haggard  scars ; 
To  chaos,  and  the  chill  sun's  nebulous  birth  : — 
Above,  beneath,  the  flaming  aeons  roll : — 
Still  in  its  cold  cell  sits  the  brooding  soul. 
More  to  itself  than  thirty  thousand  stars. 

79 


SONNETS 


KEATS 

Laughing  thou  said'st,  'Twere  hell  for  thee  to 
fail 
In  thy  vast  purpose,  in  thy  brave  design, 
Ere  thy  young  cheek,  with  passion's  venomed 
wine 
Flushed  and  grew  pale,  ah  me  !  flushed  and  grew 
pale  ! 

Where  is  thy  music  now  ?     In  hearts  that  pine 
O'erburdened,  for  the  clamorous  world  too  frail 
Yet  love  the  charmed  dusk,  the  nightingale, 

Not  for  her  sweet  sake  only,  but  for  thine. 

Thy  name  is  writ  in  water,  ay,  'tis  writ 

As  when  the  moon,  a  chill  and  friendless  thing 

Passes  and  writes  her  will  upon  the  tide, 
And  piles  the  ocean  in  a  moving  ring  : 
And  every  stagnant  bay  is  brimmed  with  it. 
Each  mast-fringed  port,  each  estuary  wide. 


80 


VICTORY 

So,  I  have  gained  a  crown  and  lost  a  friend  ! 

What,  was  he  envious  of  my  climbing  fame. 

Did  he  aspire  to  what  I  did  not  claim. 
Mistake  the  summit  that  I  dared  ascend  ? 

And  I,  who  chiefly  toiled  that  I  might  spend 
My  hoarded  hopes  to  crown  his  tardier  name, 
Sad  and  alone,  in  solitude  and  shame, 

Sit  mourning,  careless  what  the  fates  may  send. 

So  David,  when  the  fiercest  fight  was  won. 
Recked  not  of  all  the  faithful  hearts  that  bled 
To  comfort  him,  to  guard  his  troubled  days  : 
He  to  his  Captains  spoke  no  word  of  praise, 
But  wailed  in  cold  unreasoning  grief,  and  said  : 
"  Oh  my  son  Absalom,  my  son,  my  son  !  " 


8i 


SONNETS 


THE  PURSUIT 

I  HAD  outstripped  him  on  the  moorland  wide, 
The  heathery  moor,  with  grassy  tracks  betwee 
The  peaty  hills :   at  eve  he  should  have  been 

A  moving  speck  upon  the  far  hill-side. 

But  here  within  the  tangled  forest,  here 
With  all  these  trailing  vines  about  my  feet, 
Among  the  tall  tree-stems,  he  steps  as  fleet 

As  I,  though  I  be  winged  with  instant  fear. 

For  every  clutching  branch  I  rend  away. 
Each  knotted  creeper,  tremblingly  untied. 

Each  hazel-thicket,  where  I  bend  and  crawl, 
Leaves  free  the  perilous  gap  for  him  to  glide 
Still  nearer,  till  with  sobbing  breath  I  fall 
Upon  my  face,  and  he  shall  spring  and  slay. 


82 


THE  GENTIAN 

Say,  Gentian,  by  what  daring  alchemy 

Dost  thou  distil  from  cold  and  weary  stones, 
From  tumbled  rocks,  the  spent  earth's  staring 
bones, 

The  intensest  essence  of  the  unclouded  sky  ? 

Is  it  through  dreaming,  night  by  weary  night. 
Through  still  pale  months  beneath  the  drifted 

snow. 
Dreaming  of  sunshine  and  warm  fields  aglow. 

Of  azure  depths,  vast  leagues  of  tranquil  light  ? 

Not  thine  the  outrageous  splendours  of  the  morn, 

The  crimson  pomp  of  sunset,  the  brisk  ray 
Of  the  heavenly  arch,  of  watery  conflict  born. 
But   the   pure   radiance   of  the   untroubled 

heaven 
When   the  eye   dives,   in   headlong  rapture 
driven. 
Zone  beyond  zone,  and  finds  no  stop  nor  stay. 


83 


SONNETS 


THE  GRASSHOPPER 

Rest,  rest,  impatient  heart !   thou  dost  not  know 
What  'tis  thou  seekest :  wilt  thou  hurl  away 
For  petty  praise,  a  little  gilded  show, 

The  lavish  treasure  of  the  golden  day  ? 

Yon  grasshopper,  in  green  enamelled  mail. 

With  waving  whisks  and  blunted  nose  upthrust, 
Draws  whizzing  thighs  athwart  his  plated  tail, 

Or  trails  his  belly  in  the  sun-warmed  dust, 

Or  leaps  among  his  fellows,  caring  nought 

Which  leaps  the  highest,  which  the  braver  drest  ; 

With  solemn  face,  his  edged  jaws  crossing  slow, 

He  clips  the  succulent  salad  :   gives  no  thought 

That  soon  the  clouds  shall  gather  from  the  West, 

And  all  the  high  hill-pastures  ache  with  snow. 


84 


UTTERANCE 

I    HAVE  Strung  my  harp,  and  tuned  each  subtle 
chord 
To  truest  consonance,  and  day  by  day 
Have  trained  my  tripping  fingers  how  to  stray 

With  swift  unerring  motions.     I  have  stored 

My  mind  with  every  grave  melodious  tone, 
Each  eager  modulation,  deftly  planned 
O'er  perilous  gaps  to  reach  a  welcoming  hand  : — 

Yet  cannot  frame  a  music  of  my  own. 

O  for  that  hour  when,  with  reverberant  wings, 
Some  airy  thought,  deliberate,  at  my  call, 
Shall  drop  beside  me,  whispering  in  my  ear  : 
And  I  shall  seize  my  harp,  and  thrill  to  hear 
The  pent-up  music  ripple  and  break,  with  all 
My  heart's  rich  secrets  echoing  down  the  strings. 


85 


SONNETS 


ANNIVERSARIES 

When  I  was  yet  a  child,  my  sparkling  days 
Spake  little  with  each  other,  but  with  joy 
Each  sprang  to  life,  by  favourite  friend  or  toy 

Distinguished,  walking  in  familiar  ways ; 

Each  in  itself  a  breathing  mystery, 

Portending  nought,  save  through  the  lagging 
weeks. 

In  restless  foot,  in  flushed  and  eager  cheeks, 
Savour  and  sound  of  the  imagined  sea. 

But  now  they  talk  together,  and  are  sad ; — 
"  To-day,"  they  say,  "  how  short  a  time  ago. 
We   laid   her,   weeping,   in   the   churchyard 

ground  : " 
And  one  saith,  "ere  the  solemn  year  move 
round, 
Shall  this  be  reft  from  me  that  makes  me  glad  ? " 
And  all  make  answer,  saying,  "  Even  so." 


86 


THE  POET 

He  shall  be  great,  and  something  more  than  great, 
But  human  first :  and  nought  of  human  known 
Shall  slip  unnoted  from  his  meshes,  thrown 

With  wary  hand  in  secret  seas  of  fate. 

So  great,  so  human,  that  the  song  he  sings 
Seems  but  the  faint  effulgence  of  the  soul. 
That  dived  to  hell,  and  rising,  pure  and  whole, 

Beat  in  the  sunlit  air  her  happy  wings. 

His  soul  shall  be  a  valley  full  of  trees ; 

Pines  for  soft  sound,  and  limes  for  scent  and 
shade. 
Where  birds   may  nest,   blithe   thrush    and 
bright-eyed  wren, 
Flowers  for  delight,  and  fruit  for  healing  made. 
And  heart  of  oak,  to  build  the  homes  of  men, 
And  swim  secure  in  thunder-throated  seas. 


87 


SONNETS 


PRID.  KAL.  OCT. 

O  Asian  birds,  that  round  me  in  the  gloom 
Patter  and  peck  unseen,  or  with  loud  stroke 
Soar  to  the  covert  of  some  branching  oak, — 

To-morrow  comes  the  destined  hecatomb. 

Shout  once  again  your  strident  orisons, 

Thanks  for  the  dewy  morning,  for  the  food 
By  hands  unseen  at  woodland  corners  strewed, 

For  water  cool,  that  through  the  thicket  runs. 

To-morrow  comes  the  end  : — the  wood  astir 
With  patient  tramping  figures,  and  the  noise 
Of  tree-trunks  tapped,  the  cry  of  eager  boys, 
The  startled  rush,  and  battling  as  you  rise 

Above  the  copse,  beyond  the  topmost  fir. 

Death,  lightning  death,  amid  the  echoing  skies. 


88 


DEATH 

The  soul,  sore  dizzied  with  the  din  of  death, 
The  roar  of  clamorous  blood  in  failing  ears, 
Still  sees  the  sickly  swimming  day,  and  hears 

The  rattling  intake  of  his  sobbing  breath  : 

Then  cleaves  the  dark  slow,  tranquillising  tide, 
And  swims  in  silent  waters,  careless  now 
If  still  they  press  his  hand,  and  kiss  his  brow, 

But  snaps  the  parting  strands,  and  wanders  wide, 

Then,  in  one  glowing  instant,  that  atones 

For  woe  and  fear,  made  one  with  life  and  light, 
He  watches,  as  he  hangs  in  wondering  ease. 
Poised  in  the  dusk,  the  red  earth  with  her  seas 
And  islands,  snowy  poles  and  sunlit  zones, 
Thunder  and  heave,  and  leap  across  the  night 


89 


SONNETS 


ON  THE  HILL 

I  WOULD  not  dwell  with  Passion  ;  Passion  grows 
By  what  he  feeds  on — sense  and  sound  and 

sight — 
The  myriad  bubbles  dancing  to  the  light, 

The  frenzied  fragrance  of  the  wanton  rose. 

But  Love  may  dwell  with  me :   pure  Love,  that 
glows 
The  richer  through  the  cold  and  lonely  night  ; 
And   gilds  with   warm   effulgence,  brave   and 
bright, 
The  frosty  sparkle  of  unsullied  snows. 

When  Passion  throbs  and  quivers.  Love  is  still 
And  piteous ;   swift  to  picture,  apt  to  bend 
And  listen  ;   at  the  shut  of  evening  gray 
He  rises,  threads  the  valley,  climbs  the  hill. 

To  stand  beside  the  milestone,  stand  and  say 
So  many  leagues  divide  me  from  my  friend. 


90 


THE  SHADOW  OF  THE  SWORD 

Oh,  if  we  are  dissevered,  you  and  I, 

Some  sad,  implacable,  and  far-off  day, — 
You  on  the  kindly  earth  designed  to  stay, 

I  somewhere  in  the  unsubstantial  sky. 

I  will  be  patient  in  the  silent  world. 

Trace  all  its  sombre  capes  and  valleys  dim, 
Importune  of  the  brisk-eyed  cherubim 

Where  first  your  spirit-wings  must  be  unfurled. 

But  if  within  the  vast  bewildering  throng 
Of  all  the  souls  of  all  who  ever  died, 

We  miss  the  meeting,  why  we  will  be  true ; 
I  think  it  will  not  seem  so  very  long — 

For  you  will  search  for  me,  as  I  for  you — 
When  I  shall  turn  and  see  you  at  my  side. 


91 


SONNETS 


IN  SCHOOL-YARD 

Snow  underfoot ;   and  outlined  white  and  soft 
Statue  and  plinth  and  cornice,  where  the  grim 
Vast  buttresses  troop  westward,  towering  dim, 

So  cold,  so  comfortless  ;   the  air  aloft 

Yawns  into  blackness  ;   but  below,  the  bright 
Barred  casements  strike  a  glow  upon  the  air, 
And  busy  voices  hum  and  murmur  there 

Of  boys  who  hardly  guess  their  heart  is  light. 

And  yet,  alone  and  sad,  I  hear  a  voice 

That  chides  me,  yearning  for  that  thoughtless 
bliss, 
Amid  dark  walls  that  loom,  chill  airs  that 
freeze. 
Oh  !  dear  and  hidden  Father,  grant  me  this, 
When  in  dark  ways  Thou  lead'st  me,  to  rejoice 
Because  in  light  and  joy  Thou  leadest  these. 


92 


SEEDS 

One  fell  in  the  dull  ground,  and  hopeless  lay 
Hearing  the  secret  waters  murmuring  ; 
Till  his  dark  life  was  quickened  by  the  spring, 

And  with  soft  hands  he  climbed  to  meet  the  day. 

And  one  was  winnowed  in  his  nakedness, 

And  in  the  humming  mill  was  bruisedand  rolled. 
And  indistinguishably  bought  and  sold. 

To  feed  the  folk  that  toiled  in  heaviness. 

The  choice  is  ours  :   we  know  not  which  to  ask  ; 

For  either  way  is  bounteous,  either  blest  ; 
To  feed  the  frail,  to  give  high  hearts  relief  ; 
And  each  were  well  ;  but  oh,  the  matchless  grief, 

To  fail  and  falter  in  the  heavenly  quest. 

And  miss  meanwhile  the  homely  humble  task  ! 


93 


SONNETS 


IN  THE  TRAIN 

Bound  for  the  west,  I  sate  alone  at  ease  ; 

The  impatient  engine  puffed  a  vaporous  curl ; 

Last  came  a  bustling  man,  with  boy  and  girl 
That  bore  his  baggage,  and  were  fain  to  please. 

He  chid  them    spake  them  roughly :   then  each 
child 
Looked  in  his  face  and  strove  to  understand, 
And  when  he  slept,  they  laid  small  hand  in  hand, 

And  softly  and  compassionately  smiled. 

As  tender  souls,  on  whom  some  bitter  loss 

Has  fallen,  gently  name  the  vanished  name, 
Tracing  the  sombre  shadow  of  the  cross 

With  trembling  lips,  and  plead  to  be  forgiven. 
And  emulate,  or  wholly  put  to  shame. 
The  careless  magnanimity  of  heaven. 


94 


O  LACRIMARUM  FONS 

O  HOLIEST  fount  of  sorrow,  treasured  tears  ; 

O  eager  consolation  of  sick  grief  ; 

That  bring  to  burdened  sadness  pure  relief, 
Ye  have  no  fellowship  with  craven  fears  ! 

True  tears  are  sorrow's  guerdon,  for  they  prove 
The  worth  of  suffering,  that  the  sacred  dart 
Hath  struck,  and  shivered  the  incredulous  heart, 

And  pierced  the  secret  amplitude  of  love. 

For  of  thy  shafts,  that  hourly  past  us  flame, 
Some  taint  and  mar  our  innocence,  and  some 
Are  bent  and  blunted  by  the  stubborn  mind, 
Or  throb  and  rankle  in  the  tortured  frame  : 

But  I  will  pray,  if  Thy  strong  hands  are  kind, 
"  Let  them  strike  home,  my  God,  let  them 
strike  home ! " 


95 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


HIDDEN  LIFE 

The  turf  is  marble  underfoot, 

The  fountain  drips  with  icy  spears ; 

And  round  about  the  cedar's  root 

The  hungry  blackbird  pecks  and  peers. 

The  mud  that  rose  beside  the  wheel 
In  liquid  flake,  stands  stiff  and  hard ; 

Unbroken  lies  the  dinted  heel. 
With  icy  streaks  the  rut  is  barred. 

Behind  the  knotted  black  tree-tops 
The  solemn  sunset  waning  burns. 

The  pheasant  mutters  in  the  copse, 

And  patters  through  the  crackling  ferns. 

Yet  down  below  the  frozen  rind 
The  silent  waters  creep  and  meet ; 

The  roots  press  downwards  unconfined, 
Where  deeper  burns  the  vital  heat. 

As  when  the  summer  sky  is  clear, 
And  heat  is  winking  on  the  hill. 

The  swimmer  rests  beside  the  weir 
To  feel  the  fresh  luxurious  chill ; 

99 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

So  earth  lies  still  beneath  the  night, 
And  takes  no  thought  of  wintry  woe, 

She  shudders  with  a  keen  delight, 
And  nestles  in  her  robe  of  snow. 


I  GO 


THE  DRAGONFLY 

Restless  dragonfly,  darting,  dancing 
Over  the  ribbons  of  trailing  weed. 

Cease  awhile  from  thy  myriad  glancing, 
Poised  on  the  curve  of  the  swinging  reed  ; 

Where  the  lilyleaf  smooths  her  creases. 
Rest  like  a  warrior  carved  in  stone  ; 

Then  when  the  crisp  edge  starts,  and  the  breezes 
RuflBe  the  water,  arise,  begone  ! 

Mailed  in  terror,  thy  harness  gleaming, 
Soldier  of  summer,  a  day's  desire  ! 

Lantern  eyeballs  lustrously  dreaming. 
Mirroring  woodland,  hill,  and  spire, 

Wondering  gaze  at  the  depths  that  pent  thee 
Crawling  soft  on  the  dim-lit  floor  ; 

Was  it  the  fire  in  thy  heart  that  sent  thee 
Brave  through  the  ripple,  to  shine  and  soar  ? 

Then  when  the  piled  clouds  big  with  thunder 
Smite  thee  down  with  a  summer's  tear, 

Floating,  lost  in  a  languid  wonder. 
On  to  the  deadly  swirl  of  the  weir, 

lOI 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Dream  of  the  days  of  thy  sunny  playing, 
Take  no  thought  of  the  depths  beneath, 

Till  the  eddies  that  smile  in  slaying 
Draw  thee  on  to  the  deeps  of  death. 

I  too  come  in  the  summer  weather, 

Dropping  down  when  the  winds  are  low. 

Float  like  birds  of  an  alien  feather, 
Weary  of  winter  and  Northern  snow  ; 

Cool  depths  under  us,  blue  above  us. 
Carelessly  drifting  side  by  side. 

Is  there  a  heart  to  guide  us,  love  us  ? 
Are  we  but  made  to  be  tossed  aside  i 

Wherefore  question  of  what  befall  thee 
Winds  that  blow  from  the  sunless  shore  ? 

One  hath  made  thee  and  One  shall  call  thee 
Dream  in  the  sunlight,  and  ask  no  more. 


102 


KNAPWEED 

By  copse  and  hedgerow,  waste  and  wall, 

He  thrusts  his  cushions  red  ; 
O'er  burdock  rank,  o'er  thistles  tall, 
l^*He  rears  his  hardy  head  :  ■ 

Within,  without,  the  strong  leaves  press ; 

He  screens  the  mossy  stone, 
Lord  of  a  narrow  wilderness. 

Self-centred  and  alone. 

He  numbers  no  observant  friends. 

He  soothes  no  childish  woes, 
Yet  nature  nurtures  him,  and  tends 

As  duly  as  the  rose  ; 
He  drinks  the  blessed  dew  of  heaven. 

The  wind  is  in  his  ears. 
To  guard  his  growth  the  planets  seven 

Swing  in  their  airy  spheres. 

The  spirits  of  the  fields  and  woods 

Throb  in  his  sturdy  veins  : 
He  drinks  the  secret,  stealing  floods, 

And  swills  the  volleying  rains  : 

103 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

And  when  the  bird's  note  showers  and  breaks 

The  wood's  green  heart  within, 
He  stirs  his  plum)^  brow  and  wakes 
[    To  draw  the  sunlight  in. 

Mute  sheep  that  pull  the  grasses  soft 

Crop  close  and  pass  him  by, 
Until  he  stands  alone,  aloft, 

In  surly  majesty. 
No  fly  so  keen,  no  bee  so  bold, 

To  pierce  that  knotted  zone, 
He  frowns  as  though  he  guarded  gold, 

And  yet  he  garners  none. 

And  so  when  autumn  winds  blow  late, 

And  whirl  the  chilly  wave, 
He  bows  before  the  common  fate, 

And  drops  beside  his  grave. 
None  ever  owed  him  thanks,  or  said 

"  A  gift  of  gracious  heaven." 
Down  in  the  mire  he  droops  his  head, 

Forgotten,  not  forgiven. 

Smile  on,  brave  weed  !  let  none  inquire 

What  made  or  bade  thee  rise  : 
Toss  thy  tough  fingers  high  and  higher 

To  flout  the  drenching  skies. 
Let  others  toil  for  others'  good 

And  miss  or  mar  their  own  ; 
Thou  hast  brave  health  and  fortitude 

To  live  and  die  alone  ! 

104 


THE  WATER-OUSEL 

A  SHADOW  by  the  water's  edge, — 
A  flash  across  the  mossy  ledge, 

That  stems  the  roaring  race. 
Dark  were  his  plumes  as  dim  twilight. 
The  crescent  on  his  throat  gleamed  white, 

The  breeze  was  in  his  face. 

I  follow,  but  he  flies  before, 
And  when  I  gain  the  sandy  shore 

Close,  close,  methinks,  behind  : — 
His  tiny  footprints  speck  the  beach. 
He  fleets  to  some  sequestered  reach, 

A  shadow  on  the  wind. 

Love  flies  me  as  that  dusky  bird, 

I  too  have  marked  his  flight,  and  heard 

The  rustle  of  his  wings. 
He  leads  me  with  divine  deceit. 
To  trace  the  print  of  vanished  feet. 

Not  where  he  nests  and  sings. 


105 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


SECRETS 

Home  of  my  heart,  when  wilt  thou  ope 

Thy  silent  doors  to  let  me  in  ? 
What !  not  one  glimpse  to  quicken  hope 

Of  all  that  I  aspire  to  win  ? 

So  near,  and  yet  so  oft  denied  ! 

The  roses  on  my  trellis  throw 
Their  heedless  scent  from  side  to  side, 

Yet  will  not  whisper  what  they  know. 

The  yellow  moon,  that  hangs  and  peers 

Amid  the  icy  horns  on  high. 
Leans  to  the  listening  earth,  yet  fears 

To  tell  the  secret  of  the  sky. 

0  pines,  that  whisper  in  the  wind. 

When  lingering  herds  from  pasture  come. 
Breathe  somewhat  of  your  steadfast  mind  : 
The  hour  is  yours  :  yet  ye  are  dumb. 

Sweet  answering  eyes,  you  too  have  learned 
The  secret  that  you  will  not  tell — 

1  should  have  known  it,  but  you  turned 

That  moment,  and  the  lashes  fell  ! 

io6 


SECRETS 

Home  of  my  heart,  why  stand  so  cold 
And  silent  ?     There  is  mirth  within 

The  sun  sinks  low  :  the  day  is  old  : 
Oh  let  the  baffled  wanderer  in  ! 


107 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


DRIFTING 

I  SAILED  with  a  witch  in  a  car  of  foam, 

Over  the  sleeping  lake  : 
And  she  said  :  Sail  on  to  my  haunted  home  . 

Then  did  I  answer  make  : — 
Not  so,  I  cried,  I  will  ride  and  roam, 
I  will  sail  all  day  in  our  bell  of  foam, 
But  I  may  not  go  to  your  haunted  home. 

And  your  hand  I  will  not  take. 

She  smiled  a  smile  like  an  icy  lake 
When  the  warm  winds  over  it  quiver, 

Yea,  wise,  she  said,  is  the  choice  you  make, 
We  will  sail,  sail  on  for  ever  ; 

Over  the  sleeping  forest  go. 

And  scale  the  unvisited  heights  of  snow, 

And  ride  unharmed  where  the  whirlwinds  blow, 
And  skim  o'er  the  deadly  river. 

She  spoke  of  marvellous  things  with  me, 
On  her  knee  I  pillowed  my  head  : 

We  heard  the  surge  of  the  tumbling  sea 
As  westward  we  fared  and  fled  : — 

io8 


DRIFTING 

And  my  heart  was  steeped  in  her  fantasy, 
Till  once  as  we  floated  merrily, 
Oh,  here  is  your  hand  in  mine,  said  she. 
And  here  is  my  home,  she  said. 

The  idle  music  died  in  my  brain, 

And  left  me  alone,  awake. 
And  I  was  aware  of  a  stony  plain. 

And  a  dizzy,  haunting  ache  ; 
I  sigh  all  day,  but  I  sigh  in  vain 
For  a  sound  of  the  murmuring  voice  again. 
For  a  draught  of  healing  to  ease  my  pain, 

And  a  hand  for  mine  to  take  ! 


109 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


MY  FRIEND 

Where  is  my  friend  to-day  ? 
'Twas  but  a  week  ago 
That  he  smiled  in  my  face  with  his  careless  grace, 
Loved  me — but  could  not  stay, — 
What  of  his  work,  would  I  know  ? 
Little  as  yet  to  say. 
Nothing  as  yet  to  show  ! 

Where  is  the  soul  austere  ? 
Nourished  from  springs  remote. 
Delicate,  bright  with  a  wizard  light. 
Shy  as  a  maiden's  fear. 
Bold  as  a  trumpet's  note. 
Sweet  as  the  woodlark's  throat  ? — 
Only  he  is  not  here  : 

Ever  some  hint  perplexed 
Spoke  in  the  quivering  flame. 
Some  shadow  of  doom  from  the  gates  of  gloom  ; 
Often  I  cheered  him,  vexed, 
Chiding  his  tardy  fame  ; 
Oh,  when  I  see  him  next 
Will  he  be  still  the  same  ? 

no 


MY  FRIEND 

Where  are  the  restless  feet  ? 
Where  are  the  starry  eyes  ? 
The  caressing  hand,  and  the  brain  that  planned 
Never  to  realise  ? 
Oh,  when  we  next  shall  meet, 
How  shall  I  dare  to  prize 
What  seemed  so  incomplete  ? 

Hark  to  the  world  to-day  ! 
Yesterday  some  one  said 
That  he  masked  with  a  smile  a  worldling's  wile. 
Self-centred,  cold  and  gay  ; 
Now  that  my  friend  is  dead, 
Hark  to  the  prayers  they  pray  ' 
See  the  false  tears  they  shed  ! 

What  lies  here  on  the  bed  ? 
What  is  this  pinched  white  thing, 
With  a  stony  eye  and  a  lip  that's  dry  ? 
See  I  drive  from  the  stiffened  head, 
Yon  fly  with  the  buzzing  wing  ; 
Presently  when  I  am  fled, 
He  will  return  and  bring — 

Nay,  but  I  do  him  wrong. 
Nothing  of  him  I  see, 
Save  the  shrouding  dusk,  the  chrysalis  husk, 
Oh  but  we  loved  it,  we  ! 
He  is  serene  and  strong, 
Hath  he  a  thought  of  me 
Under  the  angels'  song  ? 

Ill 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

If  it  be  well  with  him, 
If  it  be  well,  I  say, 
I  will  not  try  with  a  childish  cry 
To  draw  him  thence  away  : 
Only  my  day  is  dim. 
Only  I  long  for  him. 
Where  is  my  friend  to-day  ? 


112 


THE  DEAD  POET 

The  child  that  leans  his  ear  beside  the  shell, 

Grows  grave  to  hear  the  multitudinous  roar, 
Remembered  echoes  of  the  pulsing  swell 
That  sets  from  shore  to  shore  ; 

But  heeds  not  that  the  cool  and  rosy  rim 

Once  bulged  with  shuddering  growth  of  beard 
and  horn, 
That  pushed  with  loathly  grasp  about  the  dim 
Untrodden  caves  forlorn  : 

That  day  by  day  from  ooze  and  weltering  slime 

Built  up  his  filmy  chambers,  cell  by  cell, 
Yet  only  schemed  to  shelter  for  a  time 
His  shrinking  softness  well. 

My  poet,  thus  I  drink  thy  dreaming  soul, 

I  scan  the  self-wrought  fabric  line  by  line, 
I  mark  the  mounting  music  surge  and  roll, 
Inviolate,  divine  ; 

Yet  when  thy  weary  eyes  grew  hard  in  death. 
The  busy  crowd  laid  hands  upon  thy  bones. 
They  probed  the  impulse  of  thy  lightest  breath. 
And  analysed  thy  groans  ; 

113  H 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

With  down-drawn  lips,  where  lurked  a  curious 
smile, 
They  traced  the  devious  error  of  thy  days  ; 
They  said,  We  will  be  strong  and  stern  awhile, 
Before  we  dare  to  praise. 

They  ask  by  what  dark  alchemy  he  drew 
So  sweet  a  savour  from  so  rank  a  root. 
So  while  the  yeasty  slander  worked  and  grew, 
I  sighed  irresolute. 

I  thank  thee,  O  my  poet  !     What  thou  art 

Is  mine,  and  what  thou  wert  is  not  for  me  ; 
Perchance  the  very  sin  that  clutched  thy  heart, 
Thy  fruitless  agony, 

Winged  most  the  soaring  spirit  :  hadst  not  erred, 

Thou  hadst  not  raged  the  dragging  mire  to  shun 
With  battling  pinion,  as  the  lowliest  bird 
Sails  nearest  to  the  sun  : 

I  take  the  airy  structure,  lean  my  ear 

Beside  it,  and  the  wizard  echoes  roll ; 

My  heart  grows  clean  and  I  forget  to  fear 

O  thou  imperious  soul  ! 


114 


DEAN  SWIFT 

Alas,  alas  !  sad,  bitter,  loving  man  ; 

With  jests  for  others,  to  thyself  least  kind  ; 
That  didst  with  studied  boldness  dare  to  scan 

The  shadowy  horrors  of  the  darkened  mind. 

A  heart  that  ached  for  love,  by  nature  made 
'Neath  loving  lips  to  grow  more  sweet  and  mild, 

Mutely  itself  upon  the  altar  laid, 

From  that  true  self  by  truer  self  exiled. 

As  that  prophetic  roll,  upon  the  lip 

Of  acrid  savour.  Heaven's  own  manna  proved  ; 
Ay  !  there  was  sweetness  here,  'mid  stain  and  slip 

Of  word  and  thought,  still  yearning  to  be  loved  ! 

Thou  didst  look  love  and  sorrow  in  the  face, 
And  sorrow  choosing,  didst  but  love  defer, 

And  love  hath  crowned  thee  in  a  calmer  place, 
With  her  who  soothed  thy  aching  life,  and  her 

Whose  weakness  made  thee  cruel,  who  designed 
A  jealous  thrust  and  fell  upon  the  steel ; 

Let  those  who  blame  the  unforgiving  mind 
Learn  from  thy  caustic  silence  how  to  feel. 

115 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Alas  !  what  means  for  us  thy  troubled  face  ? 

The  pure  in  heart  still  striving  to  be  foul  ? 
The  generous  spirit  scheming  for  a  place  ? 

The  filthy  jest  that  masked  the  serious  soul  ? 

This  :  that  our  days  are  wholly  incomplete  ; — 
Some   baseness   mars  them,   some  unbanished 
taint, 

That  clogs  in  miry  ways  the  aspiring  feet, 
And  specks  the  robe  of  many  a  willing  saint. 

We,  in  the  dust  of  some  disordered  room, 
For  our  dropt  treasure  peer  and  grope  aghast  ; 

Ah,  if  the  hand  encounter  through  the  gloom 
The  golden  circle,  seize  it,  hold  it  fast  ! 


ii6 


ON  THE  WESTERN  CLIFFS 

Out  of  the  windy  waste 

Of  waters  rolling  gray, 
Homeward  the  red  sails  haste 

Across  the  bay. 
Over  the  downs  I  see 

The  summits  black  and  sheer, 
When  evening  on  the  lea 

Is  pale  and  clear. 

There  as  the  twilight  falls, 

The  seabirds  float  and  cry  ; 
— Only  the  mountain  walls 

Make  faint  reply  ; — 
Or  with  broad  wing  decline 

Down  to  their  rocky  home, 
Warm  in  the  chilly  brine, 

Nestled  in  foam. 

Over  the  oozy  weed 

The  flying  feet  haste  on, 

Hither  and  thither  speed 
Ere  day  be  done. 
117 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

For  them  the  fry  that  dive 
Poise  in  their  liquid  bed, 

They  neither  fear  nor  strive, 
Sleep  and  are  fed. 

Then  comes  the  night,  the  end, 

What  should  their  dying  be  ? 
Death  steals,  a  silent  friend. 

Out  of  the  sea. 
Under  the  rocky  edge 

They  close  their  languid  eye. 
While  shrill  from  tuft  and  ledge 

Their  brethren  cry. 

Or  where  the  stranded  wrack. 

Rimmed  on  the  stunted  grass, 
Rattles  so  dry  and  black 

As  the  winds  pass, 
The  draggled  feather  flies. 

The  frail  denuded  bones 
Bleach,  and  the  sightless  eyes, ' 

On  the  grey  stones. 

Under  the  weary  hill 

The  wandering  footsteps  cease  ; 
He  that  must  wander  still 

Envies  your  peace. 
Wasted  by  harsh  events. 

Sighs  to  be  large  and  free, 
Mix  with  the  elements, 

And  breathe,  and  be. 
u8 


VIATOR 

Is  this  the  February  air 

That  breathes  in  fragrance  on  my  brow  ? 
So  soft,  methinks,  'twould  never  dare 

To  nip  the  bloom  or  whirl  the  snow  ; — 
And  yet  no  hint  of  treachery 
Lurks  in  the  clear  enlivened  sky. 

The  speckled  arum-spike  begins 

His  crumpled  glistening  cap  to  thrust  : 

Blithe  on  the  road  the  dry  leaf  spins, 
The  yew  is  packed  with  yellow  dust  ; 

Beneath  the  elm  small  things  are  seen, 

That  star  the  dyke  with  lively  green. 

Where  smoothly  dips  the  sheltered  lea 
The  merry  crested  plovers  run, 

Or  lost  in  dreamy  reverie 

Hoist  their  long  wings  to  feel  the  sun 

Or  wheel  with  melancholy  cry, 

And  lessen  in  the  western  sky. 

The  eyes  that  track  them  draw  the  soul 
To  fly,  to  follow  where  they  go  ; 

119 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

They  came  from  where  the  torrents  roll, 

Where  those  vext  lands  were  dim  with  snow  ; 
They  little  reck  what  ways  they  tread  ; 
Or  by  what  waters  they  are  fed. 

Huge  toppling  clouds  are  piled  in  air  ; 

A  bluff  in  billowy  vapour  rolled, 
Faint  summits  perilously  fair, 

With  thunderous  base  of  sullen  gold. 
I  thread  in  thought  the  cloudland  through, 
To  win  the  upper  purer  blue  ; 

The  chestnuts  by  the  timbered  grange 
Are  standing  as  they  stood  before, 

Yet  somewhat  delicate  and  strange 
Informs  them  :  they  are  old  no  more  ; 

A  hundred  times  I  passed  this  way  : — 

What  spirit  makes  them  new  to-day  ? 

The  soul  puts  on  her  summer  dress. 
And,  tired  awhile  of  scheme  and  gain, 

Clothes  with  delight  the  wilderness, 
And  dreams  that  she  is  pure  again  : 

Then,  idly  wondering,  tries  her  wing. 

Only  content  to  soar  and  sing. 

Out  of  the  woods  sweet  spirits  call — 
Here  be  at  rest,  with  all  forgiven  : 

Thy  burden  galls  thee  ;   let  it  fall. 
And  take  the  flowery  road  to  heaven  ; 

Thou  lingerest  in  the  stony  way, 

Custom,  not  honour  bids  thee  stay. 

1 20 


VIATOR 

Nay,  nay,  I  answer,  I  have  heard, 
As  in  some  half-remembered  dream, 

A  note  that  shames  the  jocund  bird, 
A  truer  voice  than  wind  or  stream  ; 

Ye  know  not  and  ye  may  not  know, 

Yet  aid  me,  cheer  me  ere  I  go. 

The  birds  sail  home  :    the  mouldering  tower 
With  measured  chime  tolls  out  the  day  ; 

Close  with  the  irrevocable  hour  ; 

Make  thy  brief  thanks ;  thy  vespers  pay  : 

To-morrow's  seed  waits  to  be  sown. 

To-day  God  gave  thee  for  thine  own. 


121 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


MOLINOS 

Oh,  I  wait  from  hour  to  hour, 
Just  wait  what  the  next  may  bring  ; 
A  blossom,  a  bud,  a  flower, 
Or  a  bitter  crawhng  thing. 
I  think,  when  the  tense  will  bends, 
Of  all  I  have  missed  or  marred  ; 
Yet  I  know  it  is  God  who  sends, 
And  'tis  not  so  hard. 

I  looked  in  the  years  gone  by 
For  great  flowing  gifts  from  His  hand  : 
I  stared  at  the  fathomless  sky, 
And  knew  I  should  understand  ; 
Now  the  folk  pass  on  in  the  street, 
And  rarely  stop  at  my  gate, 
I  bless  them,  the  careless  feet, 
Though  I  only  wait. 

Through  the  open  windows  the  sun 
Shines  rarely,  parting  the  gloom  ; 
He  stays  ere  his  course  be  run 
To  enliven  the  lonely  room  ; 

122 


MOLINOS 

Yet  over  the  racing  rack 
He  shines  without  stint  or  stain, 
The  winds  blow  keen  at  his  back. 
And  shall  I  complain  ? 

Ah  yes  !  I  can  wait  and  smile, 
I  can  scan  the  long  road  where  it  lit 
Like  a  ribbon  for  many  a  mile. 
Till  it  melt  in  the  infinite  skies  ; 
And  when  I  have  watched  my  fill. 
And  the  chill  eve  cometh  late, 
Let  me  say,  I  have  learned  thy  will, 
I  can  wait,  still  wait. 


123 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


HOC  UNUM  CUPIO 

I  ONLY  ask  to  know  it  is  Thy  will, 

That  Thou  hast  planned  the  pain  and  probed 
the  sore, 
That  when  I  welter  in  dark  waves  of  ill 

They  were  Thy  choice  before  : 

Not  some  blind  beating  of  insensate  might, 
That  knows  not  whence  or  why,  but  hastens  on, 

And  recks  not  if  its  stroke  be  strong  or  light, 
Nor  whom  it  falls  upon  ; 

Saying,  I  know  no  recompense  or  stay, 

By  no  faint  prayers  My  favour  may  be  won  ; 

Sometimes  I  spare  the  sickening  life,  or  slay 
The  bud  that  drinks  the  sun. 

I  ask  not,  answer  not  :  I  break  or  bless  : 
Think  not  I  come  to  ease  or  end  thy  woe  : 

Think  not  thy  youth  so  apt  for  happiness 
Moves  Me  to  let  thee  go. 

O  Father,  that  we  chide  Thee,  is  it  well  ? 

I  suffer,  but  I  did  not  ask  to  be  : 
And  if  Thou  hurry  me  from  hell  to  hell, 

To  shake  my  hold  on  Thee, 

124 


HOC  UNUM   CUPIO 

I  am  Thy  child,  though  wrecked  in  stormy  seas, 
Sometime  my  tears  shall  Thy  compassion  move 

I  can  endure  Thy  bitterest  decrees, 
If  certain  of  Thy  love. 


125 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


STAND  ASIDE 

Stand  aside  !     The  battle  is  but  beginning, 

And  the  field  is  wide  ! 
No  room  for  dreamers !  the  fight  is  worth  the 
winning  ; — 

Wherefore  stand  aside  ! 
Hark  to  the  clash  of  steel,  the  murderous  rattle, 

As  the  ranks  divide  ; — 
Hast  thou  heart  for  the  fury  of  the  battle  ? 

Stand  aside  ! 

Why  ?     I  know  not ;    perchance  thy  leader  saw 
thee  ; — 

He  was  here  anon  ; — 
Thou  wert  wistfully  gazing  out  before  thee, 

As  the  flying  spears  swept  on  ; 
Thou  didst  stand,  on  thy  sword  a  moment  leaning. 

Was  it  languor,  or  fear,  or  pride  ? 
Ask  not,  answer  not — Truth  !  it  needs  no  screen- 
ing ; 

Only  stand  aside  / 

Rage  in  thy  heart  ?  It  comes  too  late  for  mending ; 
Rage  was  best  before  : 
126 


STAND  ASIDE 

Tears  in   thine   eyes  ?  Good  lack,   he  knows  no 
bending  ; 

Hark  to  the  infinite  roar  1 
Thou  hast  leisure  to  frame  a  million  reasons  ; — 

Oh  !   but  truth  is  wide  : — 
This  be  thy  task,  as  seasons  slip  to  seasons  ; 

Only  stand  aside  ! 

Thou  wilt  hear,  on  the  lonely  hillside  wending, 

When  the  fight  is  done, 
Down  in  the  valley  the  sounds  of  music  blending, 

And  the  shouts  of  victory  won  ; 
We  fare  rudely — and  rude  will  be  our  laughter  ; 

Yours  to  think  and  pray  ! 
You  will  fight,  you  say,  in  the  long  hereafter  ; 

Stand  aside  to-day  ! 

It  may  be  we  shall  fight  again  together, 

You  will  do  your  part  ; — 
Give  me  rather  the  grave  beneath  the  heather. 

Than  the  wounds  which  smart  ! 
You  will  hover  on  heights  of  airy  scheming, 

Heights  that  we  ne'er  have  tried  ; — 
Ours  the  slumber  without  the  need  of  dreaming  ; 

Therefore  stand  aside  ! 


127 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


TO  MY  FATHER 

O  LOVED  and  honoured,  truest,  best 

Of  friends  and  fathers,  mine  though  death 

Divide  us,  mine  through  toil  and  rest, 
Since  first  I  drew  uncertain  breath, 

There,  where  the  desert  bloomed  with  towers, 
Subdued,  replenished,  starred  with  praise, 

With  memories  of  diviner  hours. 

When  thou,  through  glad  laborious  days, 

Didst  nurse  and  kindle  generous  fires, 
That,  as  the  old  earth  forward  runs. 

May  fit  the  sons  of  hero  sires 
To  be  the  sires  of  hero  sons. 

From  that  grey  choir,  whose  purer  lines 
Are  fair  above  the  humming  town, 

A  western  land  of  ports  and  mines. 
The  watered  vale,  the  bleaker  down. 

Desired  thee,  welcomed  as  her  own. 

Till  fateful  voices,  surely  heard, 
Constrained  thee  to  an  ancient  throne, 

A  larger,  more  majestic  word  ; 

128 


TO   MY   FATHER 

What  though  the  years  grow  loud  and  late, 
Though  spoiling  hands  seem  overbold, 

Though  thunders  of  a  troubled  state 
About  Augustine's  chair  are  rolled. 

True  sire,  true  son  of  Aaron's  line, 
Still,  as  the  sacred  burden  grew, 

'Mid  pomp  and  policy  divine, 
A  fonder,  gentler  father  too. 

I  need  your  patient  trust,  I  need 
Your  glad  forgiving  welcome  ;  hear 

Your  son  who  loves  his  childhood's  creed 
Because  you  loved  it,  made  it  dear. 

For  we  have  fared  by  hills  and  waves, 
And  paced  by  many  a  hallowed  site. 

And  bent  together  over  graves 

That  first  estrange,  and  then  unite  ; 

So  shall  the  Lord  of  Life,  who  sets 
On  faithful  hearts  His  seal  of  fire. 

Make  music  of  our  weak  regrets, 
And  crown  our  impotent  desire. 


129 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  THISTLEDOWN 

As  through  the  summer  land  we  sped, — 

(The  busy  wheels  rushed  on,) — 
I  turned  the  tedious  page,  and  read 

The  woes  of  Jill  and  John. 
Oh  for  a  breath  of  frosty  breeze, 

I  sighed,  for  the  chill  sharp  weather, 
To  arrest  the  languorous  mood,  and  freeze 

The  melting  soul  together. 
Over  the  soiled  page,  suddenly. 

With  pinions  golden-brown. 
Came  drifting,  drifting,  delicate,  shy, 

An  arrowy  thistledown. 

In  the  gust  the  flapping  curtain  beat ; 

It  started,  light  as  the  fawn. 
Stepping  at  dusk  with  dainty  feet 

On  the  pine-girt  mountain-lawn. 
I  closed  the  book  with  zealous  care, 

I  prisoned  the  fair  frail  thing, 
That  rode  so  free  on  wings  of  the  air, 

Aimlessly  wandering. 
One  glance  I  cast  on  the  fleeting  scene  ; — 

(The  turning  wheels  flew  fast) — 

130 


THE  THISTLEDOWN 

A  pasture,  ridged  with  tumbled  green  ; 

A  spring  through  the  rushes  passed  ; 
'Twas  here  your  merry  kinsmen  stood 

In  glory  self-decreed, 
Bonny  trespassers,  fearless,  rude, 

Close-packed  with  feathery  seed. 
There  hung  a  wood,  that  wheeling  showed 

A  shade-fiecked  avenue, 
Deep-rutted  climbed  the  woodland  road. 

The  castle  towers  looked  through. 
A  grey  high-shouldered  church  beside 

The  green  downs,  steep  and  tall. 
With  wind-swept  pastures,  terraced  wide, 

And  blue  sky  over  all. 

Ten  years  ago  !  and  memory  tossed 

The  tiny  thought  aside  ; 
I  deemed  that  picture  whelmed  and  lost, 

In  the  dim  years'  shadowy  tide  ; 
Again  I  turn  the  tedious  page. 

Alone  in  the  sombre  town. 
And  here  lies  prisoned,  and  wan  with  age, 

The  faded  thistledown. 
Out  of  the  dark  the  visions  swim, 

The  high  downs  terraced  green, 
The  huddling  church,  the  avenue  dim. 

The  castle  peers  between. 

I  praise  the  cunning  thought  that  lays 

Her  hoarded  sweetness  by, 
And  half  surprised,  half  proud,  betrays 

Her  hidden  treasury  ; 

131 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Darts  through  my  soul  a  sudden  fear, 
A  thought  too  dark  to  spell ; — 

My  heart,  if  all  things  are  as  clear 
Recorded,  is  it  well  ? 


132 


BY  THE  GLACIER 

Crawl  on,  old  ice-worm,  from  the  solemn  hills ; 

Press  deep   thy   burrowing  snout   among   the 
stones, 
Mutter  and  murmur  with  thy  turbid  rills, 

And  crush  the  old  Earth's  bones  ; 


Gnaw,  grind  the  patient  cliffs  with  ravenous  teeth, 
The  crumbling  crag  shall  feed  thy  snaky  spine. 

The  dim  unfathomed  caverns  gape  beneath. 
Azure  and  crystalline. 

From  those  high  fields  with  dazzling  whiteness 
piled, 

From  crests  too  lofty  for  the  eagle's  wing. 
By  icy  precipices  undefiled. 

Thou  creepest,  wondrous  thing. 

We  fear  thee  not,  old  monster  ;  see,  we  go 
In  pleasing  awe  to  trace  thy  writhings  vast ; 

Soft  laughter  rings  above  thy  crusted  snow, 
Light  footsteps  hurry  past. 

133 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Haste  thee,  for  thou  art  destined  to  decay, 
High  in  the  valley  thy  old  scars  are  set ; 

Dost  thou  take  thought  of  thy  diminished  sway  ? 
What,  art  thou  tyrannous  yet  ? 

The  high  peaks  crumble,  topple  to  their  fall. 
The  torrent  whirls  the  boulder  to  the  vale, 

A  thousand  voices  to  surrender  call  ; — 
And  thou  shalt  not  prevail. 

Light  fairy  hands,  the  noontide  and  the  rain. 
Deface  yon  bristling  horrors,  one  by  one. 

Daily  they  pass  to  feed  the  fertile  plain. 
And  drink  the  steady  sun. 


134 


OUT  OF  WEAKNESS 

To-day,  as  far  as  eye  can  see, 

Or  thought  can  multiply  the  sight, 
In  tangled  croft,  on  upland  lea, 

A  message  flashed  along  the  light 
Has  worked  strange  marvels  underground. 

And  stirred  a  million  sleeping  cells, 
The  rose  has  hopes  of  being  crowned  ; 

The  foxglove  dreams  of  purple  bells  ; 

No  tiny  life  that  blindly  strives. 

But  thinks  the  impulse  all  his  own. 
Nor  dreams  that  countless  other  lives 

Like  him  are  groping,  each  alone  ; 
What  dizzy  sweetness,  when  the  rain 

Has  wept  her  fill  of  laden  showers, 
To  peep  across  the  teeming  plain. 

Through  miles  of  upward-springing  flowerr 

The  brown  seed  bursts  his  armoured  cap. 
And  slips  a  white-veined  arm  between  ; 

White  juicy  stalks,  a  touch  would  snap, 
And  twisted  horns  of  sleekest  green 

135 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Now  shift  and  turn  from  side  to  side, 
And  fevered  drink  the  stealing  rain, 

As  children  fret  at  sermon-tide, 
When  roses  kiss  the  leaded  pane. 

The  tender,  the  resistless  grace. 

That  stirs  the  hopes  of  sleeping  flowers. 
Could  shake  yon  fortress  to  her  base. 

And  splinter  those  imperial  towers  ; 
Concentred,  bound,  obedient. 

The  soul  that  lifts  those  dreaming  lids 
Could  mock  old  Ramses'  monument. 

And  pile  a  thousand  pyramids. 


136 


THE  CARRIER  PIGEON 

O'er  leagues  of  clustered  houses,  where 
The  long  town  flies  its  streamers  black, 

Aloft  upon  the  smoky  air, 

Thou  didst  divine  the  homeward  track  ; 

Then  out  o'er  park  and  sandy  heath 
Thy  chartered  pinions  bore  thee  well. 

The  indifferent  world  was  spread  beneath  ; 
How  could  we  tell  ? 

Why  didst  thou  stay  thy  wandering 
That  day  within  my  fatal  pine  ? 

The  leaden  hail  that  rent  thy  wing, 

The  fault,  if  fault  there  were,  was  mine. 

Thou  didst  pursue  thy  cherished  trust, 
With  shattered  plume  and  filmy  eye, 

Again  I  flung  thee  in  the  dust,  j 

Only  to  die. 

Indeed,  indeed,  I  deemed  thee  one 

Of  that  astute  rapacious  crew, 
That  pluck  the  seed  before  the  sun 

Is  gracious,  ere  it  drink  the  dew. 

137 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Beneath  the  beech  thy  fellows  toil, 

Grey  specks  upon  the  trampled  floor 
Of  rusty  gold,  to  gorge  and  spoil 
The  squirrel's  store. 

How  couldst  thou  guess  thy  confidence 
Would  such  unkindly  welcome  find  ? 

The  folk  that  trained  thy  trustful  sense, 
God  help  me,  were  a  gentler  kind. 

Thou  didst  not  crave  for  alien  air. 
No  restless  impulse  bade  thee  roam, 

Thy  sweetest  hope,  thy  fondest  care 
To  hasten  home. 

The  words  that  tied  by  gentle  hands 
Beneath  thy  ready  pinion  lay, 

I,  sorrowing,  loosed  their  careful  bands ; 
They  passed  a  less  ethereal  way. 

Lest  wanton  time  should  violate 
Thy  pious  bones,  thy  tender  frame, 

I  bade  the  holt  commemorate 
Thy  nameless  name. 

Then  ere  I  hid  the  piteous  feet, — 

Poor  rosy  feet  ! — I  rent  away 
The  ring  that  told  thy  customed  beat. 

The  scant  duration  of  thy  day. 
Sleep  well  beneath  the  hanger's  side, 

So  shalt  thou  be,  through  my  regret, 
As  never  duteous  dove  that  died. 
Remembered  yet. 
138 


THE  MOLE 

Dig  deeper  yet,  sir  mole,  in  the  patient  ground, 

Score  not  my  sloping  park 
With  starting  turf  uplifted,  crumbling  mound, 

Old  delver  in  the  dark  ! 

For  thee  no  gin  with  iron  shears  is  set, 

To  nip  thy  velvet  hide  ; 
But  tempt  me  not,  or  I  shall  pinch  thee  yet 

Seeing  the  world  is  wide. 

I  make  no  claim  to  ampler  dignity. 

Nor  check  the  tiny  scale. 
We  live  our  destined  hour,  nor  when  we  die 

Shall  meet  successors  fail. 

I  do  not  ask  from  thy  vicarious  pain, 

To  win  ambiguous  good. 
Or  draw  strange  secrets  from  thy  shattered  brain 

And  palpitating  blood. 

Like  thee  I  feast  on  what  I  did  not  earn, 

And  quake  at  destiny, 
But  seeing  I  am  stronger,  thou  shalt  learn 

To  do  my  will,  or  die. 

139 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

The  earth-worm  hears  thee  scraping  overhead, 

To  push  thy  tunnel  dim, 
In  vain  he  writhes  across  his  oozy  bed, 

If  thou  encounter  him. 

Thy  comfortable  cape  so  deftly  dight, 
Unnoted  girds  thee  round  : 

Who  set  those  hands  so  scholarly  and  white 
To  fumble  underground  ? 

But  shouldst  thou  think  thyself  too  fine  to  hide, 

Too  dainty  to  be  foul, 
Oh,  wait  awhile  till  thou  hast  proved  and  tried 

What  frets  a  human  soul  ! 

I  mine,  and  countermine,  and  blindly  run, 

Beset  with  snare  and  gin, 
And  even  beneath  free  air  and  merry  sun 

Dark  fancies  shut  me  in. 

For  both  alike  the  darkness  and  the  day, 
The  sunshine  and  the  showers  ; 

We  draw  sad  comfort,  thinking  we  obey 
A  deeper  will  than  ours. 


140 


THE  TOAD 

Old  fellow-loiterer,  whither  wouldst  thou  go  ? 

The  lonely  eve  is  ours. 
When  tides  of  richer  fragrance  ooze  and  flow 

From  heavy-lidded  flowers. 

With  solemn  hampered  pace  proceeding  by 

The  dewy  garden-bed, 
Like  some  old  priest  in  antique  finery. 

Stiff  cope  and  jewelled  head  ; 

Thy  sanctuary  lamps  are  lit  at  dusk, 
Where  leafy  aisles  are  dim  ; 

The  bat's  shrill  piccolo,  the  swinging  musk 
Blend  with  the  beetle's  hymn. 

Aye  something  paramount  and  priestly  too, 

Some  cynic  mystery. 
Lurks  in  the  dull  skin  with  its  dismal  hue, 

The  bright  ascetic  eye  ; 

Thou  seem'st  the  heir  of  centuries,  hatched  out 

With  aeons  on  thy  track  ; 
The  dust  of  ages  compasses  about 

Thy  lean  and  shrivelled  back. 
141 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Thy  heaving  throat,  thy  sick  repulsive  glance 

Still  awes  thy  foes  around  ; 
The  eager  hound  starts  back  and  looks  askance, 

And  whining  paws  the  ground. 

Yet  thou  hast  forfeited  thy  ancient  ban, 

Thy  mystical  control  ; 
We  know  thee  now  to  be  the  friend  of  man, 

A  simple  homely  soul ; 

And  when  we  deemed  thee  curiously  wise, 
Still  chewing  venomed  paste. 

Thou  didst  but  crush  the  limbs  of  juicy  flies 
With  calm  and  critic  taste. 

By  the  grey  stone  half  sunk  in  mossy  mould. 

Beside  the  stiff  boxhedge. 
Thou  slumberest,  when  the  dawn  with  fingers  cold 

Plucks  at  the  low  cloud's  edge. 

O  royal  life  !  in  some  cool  cave  all  day, 
Dreaming  old  dreams,  to  lie. 

Or  peering  up  to  see  the  larkspur  sway 
Above  thee  in  the  sky  ; 

Or  wandering  when  the  sunset  airs  are  cool 

Beside  the  elm-tree's  foot, 
To  splash  and  sink  in  some  sequestered  pool, 

Amid  the  cresses'  root. 
142 


THE   TOAD 

Abhorred,  despised,  the  sad  wind  o'er  thee  sings  ; 

Thou  hast  no  friend  to  fear, 
Yet  fashioned  in  the  secret  mint  of  things 

And  bidden  to  be  here. 

Man  dreams  of  loveliness,  and  bids  it  be ; 

To  truth  his  eye  is  dim. 
Thou  wert,  because  the  spirit  dreamed  of  thee, 

And  thou  art  born  of  him. 


143 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  BEETLE 

Whither  away  so  fast, 

Bold  beetle,  say  ? 
Spurning  the  sand-grains  in  thy  busy  haste, 

Across  the  trodden  way  f 
In  purple  mail  bedight. 

So  dark  and  truculent, 
Armed  cap-a-pie  like  Launcelot  for  the  fight. 

Or  on  love's  errand  bent. 


For  thee  the  wheatlield  towers 

In  high  dim  colonnades. 
Still  hurrying  down  the  overarching  bowers  ? 

Still  pressing  through  the  blades  ? 
The  midgets  in  thy  track 

Shrink  trembling  and  aghast, 
To  see  thy  jointed  horns  and  armour  black 

Sweep  proudly,  proudly  past. 

What,  wilt  not  stay  thy  feet  ? 

No  rest,  no  leisure  yet  ? 
Ere  those  dark  clouds  in  toppling  thunder  meet, 

And  all  the  world  be  wet  ? 

144 


THE  BEETLE 

Well,  I  will  onward  too, 

Into  the  western  sky  : 
We'll  think  great  thoughts  of  all  we  mean  to  do, 

Old  beetle,  you  and  I. 


14! 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  DANDELION 

Dandelion,  dull  of  sense, 
I  that  love  thee,  praise  thee,  spare  thee 
In  the  nook  whence  others  tear  thee, 

Hear  me  in  thine  own  defence  ; 

Hear  me,  herb  of  insolence. 

Dandelion,  hear  me  call, 
Shouldst  thou,  dainty,  seek  to  sigh  on 
Velvet  pillows,  dandelion, — 

(Thou  shalt  hear  me) — see  thou  sprawl 

Where  I  will,  or  not  at  all. 

See,  the  close-cropped  lawn  is  mine  ! 
Let  the  wilderness  invite  thee, 
Let  the  broken  shade  delight  thee, 

Let  the  golden  celandine 

See  thee,  and  in  envy  pine. 

Shun  the  waste,  the  common  wood, 
Where  the  cottage-children  sally  : 
Stalk,  that  snapped  so  musically. 
Oozing  thick  with  milky  blood. 
Solitude  for  thee  were  good. 

146 


THE  DANDELION 

Dandelion,  dost  thou  crave 
For  some  maiden  breast  to  lie  on, 
Smiling,  dying,  dandelion. 

Some  soft  hand  to  stoop  and  save, 
Save  thee  from  thy  felon's  grave  ? 

Leave  thy  dreaming  !  know  that  eyes" 
Sad  as  mine  have  wit  to  bless  thee, 
Though  I  bend  not,  nor  caress  thee. 
He  that  sports  with  Passion  dies, 
Seal  thy  heart  :  be  pure,  be  wise. 

Dandelion,  see  thou  shun 

Hope  of  fickle  adoration  : 

Crush  thy  larger  aspiration, 

Flaunt  thee,  till  thy  race  be  run, 
Stare  and  glow,  a  mimic  sun. 

Blow  thy  feathered  aureole  ; 
Let  the  shadowy  arrows  quiver 
Down  the  glade,  across  the  river. 
Then  at  eve,  w^en  flower-bells  toll, 
Then  release  thy  dreaming  soul. 


H7 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


UTRUMQUE  NOSTRUM  INCREDIBILI 
MODO  CONSENTIT  ASTRUM 

We  were  friends,  as  the  world  would  say, 
Boys  together  in  April  weather  ; 

Lounged  in  a  reprehensible  way 

Under  the  elm-trees,  half  the  day, 

Seldom  serious,  under  the  shade. 
Talking  of  trifles,  rides  and  rifles, 

Finding  each  for  the  other  made, 

I  the  scabbard  and  you  the  blade  ; 
Not  that  we  spoke  of  it  save  to  joke  of  it  ; — 

That  was  the  story  ;  nothing  new  ; 

Yet  it  was  strange  to  me  and  you, 
You  were  gladdest  and  I  was  saddest, 

You  were  tender  and  I  was  true  ; — 

So  it  seems  to  me  now  ;  but  then, 

I  was  slave  to  the  king  of  men. 


Many  a  year  since  then  has  died  ; 

First  we  were  parted,  grew  half-hearted, 
Worked  and  worried,  and  worse  beside. 
Thought  with  a  sigh  of  the  vanished  prime  ; 

Yesterday,  on  a  morn  in  May, 

148 


UTRUMQUE  NOSTRUM 

As  the  matin-bells  began  to  chime, 
Who  but  yourself  should  cross  my  door  ? 
Looking  much  as  you  looked  before, 
Somewhat  grimmer  and  somewhat  dimmer, 
Smiling  less  than  you  smiled  of  yore. 

There  as  we  talked  the  wonder  grew  ; 

Was  it  my  comrade  ?  was  it  you  ? 
You  that  I  sighed  for,  ay,  would  have  died  for  ? 

Why  did  you  frown  ere  your  tale  was  told, 
Chide  the  thrush  that  piped  in  the  bush. 

Curse  the  laburnum's  hanging  gold  ? 

I  like  the  brooding  bird  was  prest 
Warm  and  fond  in  a  narrow  nest. 

Sweetly  bound  in  a  simple  round, 
Under  the  shadow  of  mellow  towers, 
Softly  chiming  the  measured  hours. 
You  had  drunk  of  the  cup  of  life. 

Drained  its  sweetness,  mocked  at  completeness, 
Nibbled  at  fame  and  dallied  with  strife. 
Sipped  the  sweets  of  a  thousand  books, 
Basked  in  laughter  and  loving  looks. 
Nestled  close  to  the  merry  world  ; — 
Why  were  your  bright  wings  suddenly  furled  ? 
Why  did  you  lapse  in  your  soaring  flight. 
Stoop  and  dive  to  the  tides  of  night  ? 

What  have  you  done  with  your  soul,  my  friend  ? 
Where  is  the  ray  you  were  wont  to  send, 

149 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Glancing  bright  through  the  outer  night, 
Touching  with  hope  what  was  dark  before, 
Glimmering  on  to  the  further  shore  ? 

God  suffers  the  light  to  know  eclipse, 
Dashes  the  cup  from  the  eager  lips  ; 
You  perchance  would  have  drunk  too  deep  ; 
Fallen,  lulled  in  a  magic  sleep. 
Now  you  strain  through  a  surge  of  pain, 

Whirled  and  whelmed  in  the  streams  of  death 
Faintly  gripping  the  rock  beneath. 

I  meanwhile,  in  my  slumberous  isle, 
Hear  the  trumpet  blown  for  the  fray, 
Wild  war  music  that  winds  away  ; 
Then  the  struggle  when  heroes  die. 
Strong  helms  shiver,  and  I  not  by. 
Fair  you  think  is  the  quiet  vale. 
The  branching  courts  of  the  nightingale 

Loud  and  long  is  her  idle  song  ; — 
Yet  she  suffers  before  she  sings. 
Folded  fast  are  the  quivering  wings. 
Under  the  leaf,  to  the  throbbing  breast 
Closely  the  rankling  thorn  is  prest. 

Courage,  my  comrade  !  say,  we  miss 
All  that  was  possible  once  of  bliss. 
Say  we  gave  to  the  eager  wave. 

Scattering  free  without  fear  or  heed, 
What  would  have  made  us  kings  indeed. 

150 


UTRUMQUE  NOSTRUM 

Where  we  bury  our  hopes  outworn, 
Doubts,  and  dreams  that  have  died  of  scorn 
Ah  !  and  a  thousand  sorry  things. 
Love  like  a  flower  unbidden  springs. 
Let  it  bloom  in  a  faithful  breast  : — 
That  is  our  treasure  :  leave  the  rest. 


151 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


FLOWER  CROWNS 

No  radiant  diadem 

For  heroes'  brows  I  twine  ; 
Roses  and  bay  for  them, 

Sad  leaves  for  thine  ! 

Not  the  sepulchral  yew, 
That  wears  a  solemn  grace  ; 

That  were  more  meet  to  strew 
Some  dear  dead  face. 

Heartsease  and  violets 

In  sweet  humility ; 
These  are  for  calm  regrets, 

And  not  for  thee. 

Thorns  for  the  holy  brow 

Of  royal  suffering  ; 
A  crown  of  pain,  and  thou 

Art  more  than  king. 

But  flowers  that  close  at  eve. 
When  dews  of  healing  fall  ; 

Frail  weeds  of  night  shall  weave 
Thy  coronal. 

152 


FLOWER  CROWNS 

Or  those  rude  herbs  that  shed 
Their  seed  in  miry  ways  ; 

The  lark  sings  overhead, 
With  none  to  praise. 

Lilies  for  innocence, 

Snowdrops  for  hope  divine, 
The  rue  for  sad  suspense. 

And  that  is  thine  ! 


153 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


WILLIAM  COLLINS 

Still  on  the  misty  flat,  below  the  down, 

In  miry  creeks  the  slow  brine  comes  and  goes  ; 

The  minster  tower  across  the  red-roofed  town 
From  dawn  to  eve  its  circling  shadow  throws  ; 

The  walls  that  echoed  to  thy  shuddering  groan 
Are  vocal  now  with  heedless  boyish  talk  ; 

The  pigeons  huddle  on  their  ledge  of  stone, 
Beneath,  the  brawling  daws  confederate  stalk. 

Hushed  the  long  echo  of  the  vesper  hymn  ; 

Across  thy  grave  the  solemn  shadows  grow  : 
And  art  thou  grateful  for  the  coolness  dim  ? 

Sad  singer,  dost  thou  slumber  well  below  I 

The  glimmering  evening  thou  hast  made  thine 
own 

Surely  and  silently  in  softness  falls. 
She  draws  the  colour  from  the  mellow  stone, 

And  veils  the  majesty  of  stately  walls. 

Ay,  we  can  leave  thee  :  thou  art  born  again, 
Thy  wistful  smile  shines  sweet  across  the  years  ; 

Lapt  in  the  still  contentment  born  of  pain. 
Reaping  the  harvest  of  thy  shadowy  fears. 

154 


WILLIAM  COLLINS 

And  seems  it  strange  a  younger  minstrel's  hand 
Should  falter  over  griefs  so  long  decayed, 

Should  lean  across  the  century,  and  stand 
Weighing  a  woe  irrevocably  weighed  ? 

The  red  rose  beckons  from  his  garden-plot ; 

And  "  Life,"  she  says,  "  is  mine,  and  thine  to- 
day." 
The  fond  abstracted  singer  heeds  her  not. 

O'er  mouldering  bones  he  sighs  himself  away. 

Nay,  when  a  fiery  soul  that  might  have  made 
Immortal  music,  mute  and  voiceless  lies, 

Only  in  dull  hearts  is  the  sorrow  laid  ; 
The  loss,  the  bitter  wonder  never  dies. 

Thine  was  the  pain  with  startled  eyes  to  see 
The  larger  range  of  undiscovered  art  ; 

Though  the  blind  world  in  critic  mockery 
Curbed  the  fierce  beat  of  thy  prophetic  heart. 

Risen  like  a  star,  extinguished  like  a  star 
In  some  brief  conflagration,  when  the  light 

That  orbed  itself  in  secret  tracts  afar 

Flares  out,  and  slips  engulphed  in  ancient  night. 

And  shall  we  plead  the  yearnings  of  our  race. 
Our  shattered  hope,  our  faltering  innocence, 

Brandish  our  faint  ideals  in  the  face 

Of  Him  who  thrusts  us  hither,  draws  us  hence  ? 

155 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Who  knits  the  ravelled  thread  with  prescient  ruth, 
Sad  schemings,  unendurable  despair  ; 

Though  reeling  minds  may  totter,  He  is  Truth  ; 
Though  hearts  may  ache  to  view  Him,  He  is 
there. 


156 


CHALVEY 

0  Chalvey  stream,  dear  Chalvey  stream, 

^here  are  not  many  singers 
Would  think  you  worth  a  minstreVs  dream. 
And  very  weary  -fingers. 

1  sing  your  praises  urideterred  ; — 

In  days  when  sight  was  sharper, 
Another  Jordan  was  preferred 
To  Abana  and  Pharpar. 

A  mile  across  the  level  land 

A  pool  is  set  with  willows, 
You  toss  a  cone  of  restless  sand, 

And  leap  in  tiny  billows. 
So  cool  and  calm,  from  hidden  springs, 

Out  of  the  dark  that  bound  you, 
You  join  a  hundred  living  things. 

Sweet  sighs,  sweet  scents  around  you. 

You  ripple  on  'neath  summer  skies. 
With  grassy  banks  to  guide  you, 

Where  to  and  fro  swift  laughter  flies 
Of  boys  that  play  beside  you. 

157 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

And  all  at  once,  before  you  know, 
Beneath  the  bridge  you  shiver. 

You  thread  the  stately  pool,  and  lo  ! 
You  topple  in  the  river. 

By  weir  and  lock,  by  bridge  and  mill, 

You  roll  and  roar  and  rumble, 
And  fouler  things  and  fouler  still 

Within  your  eddies  tumble, 
And  soon  beneath  a  smoky  pall 

The  city  hums  about  you. 
And  churned  by  iron  wheels  you  fall 

In  tides  that  toss  and  flout  you. 

Then  waking  after  fevered  days. 

You  see,  beyond  the  shipping. 
The  shadowy  headland  through  the  haze. 

The  red  buoy  dipping,  dipping  ; 
The  air  intoxicates  like  wine. 

And  in  the  merry  weather. 
The  flying  sail,  the  hissing  brine 

Keep  carnival  together. 

Oh,  in  that  larger  place,  amid 

The  ecstasy  of  motion. 
When  you  are  free  and  fearless,  hid 

Within  the  leaping  ocean, 
When  fond  constraint  to  freedom  yields, 

With  all  the  world  before  you, 
Forget  not  the  familiar  fields. 

The  quiet  source  that  bore  you. 

158 


CHALVEY 

0  Chalvey  stream,  dear  Chalvey  stream, 

Flow  onward  unabated, 
What  though  to  careless  eyes  you  seem 

A  little  overrated. 
Pm  not  ashamed  to  call  you  friend, 

To  own  our  fond  relations, 
Like  all  things  mortal  you  depend 

On  your  associations. 


159 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


IN  EXILE 

How  fares  the  world  at  home  to-day  ? 

The  road,  the  high  familiar  trees, 
The  climbing  lane  that  breaks  away 

By  sandy  cuttings,  where  it  please  ? 
The  steep  and  stony  field,  I  trow. 

That  feeds  the  rushing  water-head, 
Is  thick  with  sorrel  tall  ere  now, 

A  dimpling  sheet  of  filmy  red  : 
I  know  that  by  the  covert  side. 

Where  shrill  belated  lapwings  caU. 
The  ragwort  flaunts  his  tattered  pride 

In  green  and  gold  majestical. 
Cool  orchids,  pulsing  purple  blood. 

About  the  marshy  meadows  low, 
Or  in  the  spare  sequestered  wood 

With  paler  grace,  unnoted  blow. 

So  sharp,  so  clear  the  fancies  float 
Before  the  dreaming  soul,  that  I 

Can  almost  hear  the  throstle's  note. 
And  spell  the  early  cuckoo's  cry. 

How  strange  a  passion  in  me  broods 

For  those  green  miles,  that  homely  glade, 

1 60 


IN  EXILE 

That  sweep  of  undistinguished  woods, 

That  little  space  of  sun  and  shade  ; 
How  sick  the  longings  on  me  crowd 

To  thread  again  the  sunny  street, 
Where  now  the  converse  rises  loud, 

(And  I  lie  here)  ;  to  set  my  feet, 
Where  those  who  take  my  place  may  stand. 

To  dream  my  own  familiar  dreams  : — 
And  I  am  loitering  in  a  land, 

A  tumbled  land  of  stones  and  streams. 


i6i 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


REDITURUS 

Green  vales  of  Kent,  across  the  blue 
My  heart  unbidden  turns  to  you  ; 
Your  woodlands  deep,  your  misty  skies 
To  me  are  more  than  paradise. 

Here  sprawls  the  earth,  in  chaos  hurled, — 
Brute  fastness  of  a  ruder  world, — 
Couched  dragonlike  with  spine  and  horn, 
And  flushed  with  fury  eve  and  morn. 

Beyond,  aloft,  the  snow-capped  dome 
Hangs  like  a  bell  of  fairy  foam  ; 
And  frowns  across  the  nearer  wood. 
In  envious,  aching  solitude. 

How  free  to  range  'neath  larger  skies  J 
We  murmur — yet  the  eager  eyes 
But  change  th'  horizon,  when  we  roam  ; 
The  brooding  heart  still  sits  at  home. 

Ye  cheer  me  not,  O  hills  austere  ! 
I  may  not,  dare  not  linger  here  : 
Yet  happier,  that  I  carry  hence 
Some  touch  of  your  indifference. 

162 


REDITURUS 

Farewell,  farewell  !    I  see  you  fade 
Far  off,  a  tract  of  rugged  shade  ; 
The  sun  that  quits  these  darkening  skies, 
Green  vales  of  Kent,  on  you  shall  rise. 


163 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


MY  WILL 

I  WOULD  live,  if  I  had  my  will, 
In  an  old  stone  grange  on  a  Yorkshire  hill ; 
Ivy-encircled,  lichen-streaked, 
Low  and  mullioned,  gable-peaked. 
With  a  velvet  lawn,  and  a  hedge  of  yew, 
An  apple  orchard  to  saunter  through. 
Hyacinth-scented  in  spring's  clear  prime, 
And  rich  with  roses  in  summer-time, 
And  a  waft  of  heather  over  the  hill, 
Had  I  my  will ! 

Over  my  tree-tops,  grave  and  brown. 
Slants  the  back  of  a  breezy  down  ; 
Through  my  fields,  by  the  covert-edge, 
A  swift  stream  splashes  from  ledge  to  ledge, 
On  to  the  hamlet,  scattered,  gray, 
Where  folk  live  leisurely  day  by  day  ; 
The  same  old  faces  about  my  walks  ; 
Smiling  welcomes  and  simple  talks  ; 
Innocent  stories  of  Jack  and  Jill ; 
Had  I  my  will  ! 

How  my  thrushes  should  pipe  ere  noon. 
Young  birds  learning  the  old  birds'  tune  ! 

164 


MY  WILL 

Casements  wide,  when  the  eve  is  fair, 
To  drink  the  scents  of  the  moonlit  air. 
Over  the  valley  I'd  see  the  lights 
Of  the  lone  hill-farms,  on  the  upland  heights  ; 
And  hear,  when  the  night  is  alert  with  rain, 
The  steady  pulse  of  the  labouring  train. 
With  the  measured  gush  of  the  merry  rill. 
Had  I  my  will ! 

Then  in  the  winter,  when  gusts  pipe  thin, 
By  a  clear  fire  would  I  sit  within, 
Warm  and  dry  in  the  ingle  nook, 
Reading  at  ease  in  a  good  grave  book  ; 
Under  the  lamp,  as  I  sideways  bend, 
I'd  scan  the  face  of  my  well-loved  friend  ; 
Writing  my  verses  with  careless  speed. 
One  at  least  would  be  pleased  to  read  ; 
Thus  sweet  leisure  my  days  should  fill, 
Had  I  my  will  ! 

Then  when  the  last  guest  steps  to  my  side  ; 
— May  it  be  summer,  the  windows  wide, — 
I  would  smile  as  the  parson  prayed, 
Smile  to  think  I  was  once  afraid  ; 
Death  should  beckon  me,  take  my  hand, 
Smile  at  the  door  of  the  silent  land  ; 
Then  the  slumber,  how  good  to  sleep 
Under  the  grass  where  the  shadows  creep. 
Where  the  headstones  slant  on  the  wind-swept 
hill, 

I  shall  have  my  will  ! 

165 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


ST.  LUKE'S  SUMMER 

Ah  me  !  how  good  to  breathe,  to  hear,  to  see  ! 

Flown  is  the  languid  summer's  drooping  heat ; 
The  large  wind  blusters,  racing  boisterously, 

And  whistles  in  the  stubble  at  our  feet. 

Before  the  dark  November  glooms  draw  near, 
Before  the  sad  mist,  like  a  veil,  is  drawn 

Athwart  the  leafless  covert,  and  the  drear 
Wet  winter  shudders  at  the  lingering  dawn. 

To-day,  when  Autumn  over  leafy  miles 

Unfurls  his  crimson  banners,  brave  and  bold. 

The  pine  frowns  blacker  through  the  forest  aisles, 
When  all  beside  is  splashed  with  reckless  gold. 

Pale  with  chill  lustre  in  the  duskier  plain, 
The  brimming  river  winding  I  descry. 

Under  the  flying  footsteps  of  the  rain 

The  hamlet's  whirling  smoke-wreaths  fade  and 
fly. 

Over  the  red  roofs  blinks  the  solemn  tower. 
With  shuttered  eyelids,  meditating  peace, 

Or  stirs  itself  to  strike  a  pensive  hour. 

Then  dreams  and  wonders  till  the  echoes  cease. 

1 66 


ST.  LUKE'S  SUMMER 

At  that  calm  note  a  host  of  broodings'^rash 
Take  noisy  wing,  and  fly  the  troubled  brain, 

Bred  in  the  damp  hours  when  the  slow  rains  splash 
And  trickle  down  the  sodden  streaming  lane. 

Thy  soft  balms  mollify  the  fretted  soul. 
Fresh  wind  of  autumn  :  how  divine  to  see 

The  tides  of  circumstance  beneath  me  roll. 
Alone,  upon  a  grassy  down  with  thee. 

Yet  back  upon  themselves  the  old  chimes  ring  I 
Healing  is  well,  yet  wherefore  wounds  to  heal  ? 

Bear  with  the  listless  hour,  the  suffering  ; 

The  breezes  blow,  and  we  have  learned  to  feel. 


167 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


TWENTY  Y^EARS  AGO 

I  USED  to  think,  beneath  the  shade, 

That  life  was  such  a  simple  thing, 
There  !  like  that  over  !  deftly  played  ; 

How  high  and  clear  the  plaudits  ring  ! 
I  used  to  think  that  Fortune  sent 

At  times  a  swift,  at  times  a  slow, 
You  played  your  best  and  were  content  ; — 

But  that  was  twenty  years  ago. 

I  thought  that  if  the  wickets  flew 

Your  honest  effort  made  amends  ; 
Your  score  was  blank,  but  then  you  drew 

Such  strength  and  solace  from  your  friends. 
But  now  I  see  from  eye  to  eye 

A  smile  of  cynic  pleasure  go, 
They  like  to  see  the  wickets  fly  ; — 

And  did  they,  twenty  years  ago  ? 

My  comrades  vanish  from  the  pitch 
With  more  of  failure,  less  of  fame, 

And  one  is  spoiled  by  growing  rich. 
And  one  is  shadowed  by  a  name. 

i68 


TWENTY  YEARS  AGO 

And  those  who  keep  their  wickets  up 
Still  shakier,  more  uncertain  grow, 

And  count  less  surely  on  the  cup 
They  hoped  for,  twenty  years  ago. 

Around  the  pitch  I  see  a  ring 

Of  ugly  faces,  wild  and  wan. 
And  by  the  wickets  stands  a  thing 

I  do  not  love  to  think  upon. 
My  chances  are  more  tamely  sent  ; 

And  more  depends  upon  a  throw ; 
The  game  is  somewhat  different 

From  cricket  twenty  years  ago. 

And  yet  we  learn,  some  more,  some  less. 

Beneath  the  showers,  beneath  the  suns, 
That  sense  and  pluck  and  kindliness 

Are  braver  things  than  getting  runs. 
And  by  the  old  pavilion  sits 

A  simple  form  I  used  to  know. 
Who  marks  and  claps  the  humblest  hits, 

Unchanged  from  twenty  years  ago. 

The  ball  spins  on  :   young  faces  wait 

To  take  our  place,  to  join  the  sport  ; 
Oh  give  us  leisure,  'tis  not  late, — 

We  find  the  innings  all  too  short  ; 
And  if  the  older  fellows'  play 

Is  to  your  thinking  somewhat  slow. 
Leave  them  their  chance  :   remember,  they 

Began  it  twenty  years  ago. 

169 


LYRICAL  POEMS, 


TO  EDMUND  GOSSE 

Voice  of  my  soul,  how  faint  your  echoes  ring  ! 
Children  of  hope,  how  negligently  dressed  1 
Friend,  if  you  lean  and  listen  where  I  sing, 
I  care  not  for  the  rest. 

Ah,  the  thin  harvest  of  laborious  days  ! 
Truest  of  critics  and  of  friends  most  true, 
The  chastened  glories  of  my  slender  lays 
Be  consecrate  to  you. 

Rich  and  profuse  your  precious  balms  were  shed ; 
They  smoothed   your    critic    arrows,  salved    the 

smart ; 
They  broke  the  stubborn  pride  of  hand  and  head  ; 
They  did  not  break  the  heart  ! 


170 


A  CANTICLE  OF  COxMMON  THINGS 

I  PRAISE  Thee,  Father,  for  the  sky. 

Thy  soft  translucent  canopy, 

The  pompous  cloudland  trailing  by. 

For  large  and  level  plains  that  swell 
To  wooded  height,  sequestered  dell. 
Not  waste,  but  tilled  and  watered  well  ; 

For  elms  that  break  in  cloudy  green, 
With  hamlet  roofs  that  peep  between, 
For  orchards  rather  guessed  than  seen. 

For  water,  wayward  sprite,  that  runs 
So  clear  and  deep  neath  dusty  suns. 
To  cleanse  and  cool  Thy  little  ones ; 

For  thundering  weirs  and  silent  wells, 
For  water-plants  with  humid  cells. 
Pink  willow-herb  and  cumfrcy-bells. 

For  autumn  with  his  flaming  hand 
Dashed  on  the  covert,  with  the  brand 
Of  death,  and  silence  subtly  planned  ; 

171 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

For  summer  indolently  fair, 
For  winter  with  her  keener  air, 
For  spring  with  her  surprises  rare. 

I  praise  Thee,  Father,  for  the  prize 
Of  friendship,  whether  wild  or  wise, 
The  sudden  glance  of  answering  eyes ; 

For  motions  of  bewildering  grace, 

For  spirits  sweeter  than  the  face 

That  screens  them  ;   for  that  lost  embrace. 

For  sessions  leisurely  and  sweet. 
When  firelight  warms  the  idle  feet, 
Where  fact  and  fantasy  compete. 

For  music — ah,  the  gracious  thing  ! — 

Or  blown  aloft  on  airy  wing. 

Or  throbbing  from  the  tremulous  string ; 

When  in  the  hushed  and  crowded  choir 
A  thousand  blended  pipes  conspire 
To  thrill  the  soul  with  vague  desire. 

For  jests  that  instantly  beguile 

The  saddest  brows  to  unbend  and  smile  ; 

For  masters  of  melodious  style. 

For  mighty  minds  to  cheer  me  bent. 
More  keen  than  mine,  more  eloquent, 
And  how  divinely  different  ! 

■172 


A  CANTICLE  OF  COMMON  THINGS 

For  all  illusions,  trebly  sweet, 

Fond  dreams  of  pleasure  made  complete. 

And  harbourage  for  weary  feet. 

For  stubborn  hopes  that  will  not  die, 
Though  flouted  by  the  sullen  sky, 
And  based  on  saddest  memory. 

For  faith  that,  when  my  need  is  sore. 
Gleams  from  a  partly-open  door. 
And  shows  the  firelight  on  the  floor. 

For  truth  herself,  that,  howsoe'er 
Blind  in  my  vilencss  I  despair. 
Reigns  peerless,  absolutely  fair  ; 

For  wholesome  shame,  that  strongly  schools 

The  raging  impulses  of  fools 

By  sudden  pangs  or  patient  rules. 

For  love,  that,  when  my  spirit  trips. 
Through  the  cold  throng  towards  me  slips. 
And  rains  soft  kisses  on  my  lips. 

I  praise  Thee,  Father,  though  Thou  thrust 
Me  crying  in  the  common  dust, 
Not  as  I  would  but  as  I  must. 


173 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


TAN-YR-ALLT 

Feathery  woodlands,  falling,  dipping, 

Down  from  the  height  to  the  river's  edge  ; 
Voice  of  the  rivulet,  dashing,  dripping. 

Crevice  hy  crevice,  ledge  by  ledge  ; 
Lawns  high-sloping  and  sunlit  spaces, 

Glades  that  glimmer  from  crag  to  plain, 
Shy  unvisited  secret  places. 

See  I  fall  at  your  feet  again  ! 

Voice  of  summer,  delaying,  coming. 

Thrushes  piping  in  bush  and  brake. 
Bees  round  feathery  catkins  humming, 

Buds  that  slumber  and  fear  to  wake  ; 
Frail  anemones,  airy,  slender. 

Stars  engendered  of  wind  and  dew. 
Celandines  faithful,  violets  tender, 

Oh  !  to  be  worthy  to  sing  of  you  ! 

What  shall  we  say  of  thee,  ancient  spirit, 
Cold  in  the  starlight,  hot  in  the  sun  ? 

What  arc  the  realms  that  are  thine  to  inhcrit- 
Art  thou  manifold,  art  thou  one  ? 

174 


TAN-YR-ALLT 

What  is  thy  labour,  what  thy  leisure  ? 

When  thou  art  weary  of  frost  and  fire, 
Dost  thou  then,  for  thy  fitful  pleasure, 

Carve  the  iris  and  scent  the  briar  ? 

Lord  of  nakedness,  Lord  of  laughter, 

Thou  that  art  secret,  and  great,  and  glad, 
Wilt  thou  still  in  the  dark  hereafter 

Smile  and  frolic,  and  leave  us  sad  ? 
When  I  stoop  to  the  silent  portal. 

Let  me  say  with  my  latest  breath, 
"  Once,  in  a  moment  of  light,  a  mortal 

Breathed  a  challenge  to  Doubt  and  Death." 


175 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  STAGE  OF  HEAVEN 

The  sun's  broad  back  is  leagues  away, 
The  chilly  fields  are  washed  with  grey  ; 

The  distant  woodlands  fade 

In  one  thin  belt  of  shade. 

The  clouds  from  furthest  marge  to  marge 
Grow  dark  and  imminent  and  large  ; 

Huge  heights  and  summits  dim 

Intolerably  grim. 

The  drear  uncertain  gulf  is  spanned 
By  bridges  desperately  planned, 

The  cloud-fronts  drip  with  red 

As  though  a  monster  bled. 

What  means  this  furious  pageantry 
Enacted  in  the  tortured  sky  ? 

The  impalpable  array 

Of  horror  and  dismay  ? 

The  tiniest  grain  of  sand  would  race 
Unspent  from  battlement  to  base, 

The  lark's  unruffled  crest 

Might  pierce  that  mountain's  breast, 
176 


THE  STAGE  OF  HEAVEN 

My  God,  that  dost  erect  thy  stage 
For  such  unreal  fantastic  rage, 
And  pile  these  forms  unkind 
Of  mists  and  subtle  wind, 

Say,  are  the  woes  we  read  in  thee — 
Wrath,  judgment,  blankest  misery — 
But  thy  unkindly  play, 
That  dawn-winds  sweep  away  ? 


177  M 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


CLOUDS 

Clouds,  by  west  winds  blown 

To  the  gates  of  morn, 
Could  I  float  with  you 

Over  hill  and  plain. 
Float  to  lands  unknown, 

Over  tracts  forlorn, 
1  might  melt  in  dew. 

And  be  born  again  ! 

I  am  tired  of  earth. 
Tired  of  toil  and  gain. 

Tired  of  beating  still 
At  the  unyielding  bars  ; 

Death  succeeds  to  birth, 
i     Joy  dissolves  in  pain  ; 

Let  me  float  at  will 
Under  sky  and  stars. 

Here  the  rushing  wind 
Shrieks  in  street  and  stair, 

Pipes  his  restless  lay 
Over  roaring  woods  ; 
178 


CLOUDS 

Higher,  unconfined, 

Runs  the  dizzy  air, 
Where  in  vaporous  grey 

Tendercst  silence  broods. 

Through  your  vales  of  down 

Let  my  spirit  go, 
On  your  shoulders  soft 

Stand,  and  be  at  rest ; 
While  the  crowded  town 

Thunders  leagues  below, 
Soar  alone,  aloft, 

Sweeping  from  the  west. 


179 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  MILL-WHEEL 

Turn,  mill-wheel,  solemnly  turn, 
Under  the  gable  fringed  with  fern  ; 
Run,  swift  freshet,  steadily  run, 
Filling  the  black  lips  one  by  one  ; 

Toss  and  gurgle  thy  waters  cool, 
Ere  thou  splash  in  the  moss-lined  pool ; 
Hark  how  the  loud  gear  sullenly  groans, 
Whirling,  whirling  the  patient  stones  ! 

Haste  thee,  rivulet,  haste  away, 
All  that  we  ask  thou  hast  done  to-day  ; 
Cease,  O  streamlet,  thy  chiding  sound. 
Hence  !  forget  thou  wast  ever  bound  ; 

Leap  and  linger  with  fitful  gleam. 
Till  thou  plunge  in  the  brimming  stream  ; 
Thine  to  wander,  and  thine  to  be 
Merged  at  length  in  the  monstrous  sea. 

Only  forget  not,  there  at  play. 
How  in  the  valley,  day  by  day, 
Under  the  gable  fringed  with  ferns. 
Black  and  solemn  the  mill-wheel  turns  ! 

i8o 


NASTURTIUMS 

Leaves  luxurious,  large, 

Hung  like  moons  on  the  stalk. 
Sprawling  from  marge  to  marge, 

Fringing  my  garden  walk. 
Supple  and  sleek  you  twine, 

Facing  the  tranquil  west, 
Velvety-veined,  each  line 

Breathing  of  warmth  and  rest. 

Then  when  the  waiting  earth 

Thrills  at  the  touch  of  spring, 
Stung  into  sudden  birth. 

Up  to  the  light  you  fling 
Passionate-hued,  like  fire. 

Petal  and  pointed  horn, 
Restless  as  sharp  desire, 

Dainty  as  virgin  scorn. 

So  should  the  singer  go. 
Drinking  the  friendly  air. 

Calm,  unimpassioned,  slow  ; 

Then  in  a  moment  rare 
i8l 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Loosing  the  pent  desire, 

Thrilled  with  a  reckless  might, 
Break  into  fury  and  fire. 

Sparkle  and  flash  with  light. 


182 


PINES 

Funereal  pines,  your  garniture  of  woe, 

Your  sable  plumes,  your  listless  haggard  air, 
Were  ye  sincere,  ye  would,  methinks,  forego. 

Yon  lively  larch  is  delicately  fair  ; 
She  shames  your  sadness  down  the  woodland 
glade, 
Yet  hath  as  sharp  a  servitude  to  bear  ; 

Who  would  bethink  him,  in  your  dismal  shade. 

So  true  a  heart  beat  'neath  your  rugged  rind, 

And  merriest  then,  when  men  are  most  afraid  ? 

Drinking  the  harsh  roar  of  the  uneasy  wind. 

Ye  triumph,  when  his  stormy  clarions  blow 
To  battle,  and  the  slow  rain  weeps  behind. 


183 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


ROSEMARY 

O  ROSEMARY,  Strong  rosemary, 

That  bloomest  when  the  sleet  flies  free, 

And  winds  are  wailing  drearily  ! 

Thy  stunted  leaves  are  splashed  with  grey, 
Like  weeds  that  feel  the  salt  sea  spray, 
Or  hoar  frost  on  a  bitter  day  ; 

Thy  rugged  branch  obscurely  grows, 
Thy  patient  bud  unnoticed  blows. 
More  faithful  than  the  expected  rose  : 


O  rosemary,  sad  rosemary, 
O  herb  of  sharpest  memory. 
Of  penitence  and  purity. 

With  thee  they  strew  the  untimely  dead  ; 
Below  the  pale  world-weary  head 
Thy  pure  and  patient  leaves  are  spread. 

184 


ROSEMARY 

Thy  serious  scent,  thy  pungent  spray, 
Can  penetrate  and  wave  away 
The  sickliest  threatenings  of  decay. 


O  rosemary,  shy  rosemary, 
O  bitter  sweet  philosophy. 
That  blooms  when  hope  and  honour  die  ;- 

Ere  love  and  faith  grow  obsolete. 
Before  the  blackness  yawn  complete, 
Breathe  thro'  me,  melancholy,  sweet, 

The  will  to  guess  what  most  abides. 
The  hope  that  draws  the  silent  tides 
To  fulness,  and  the  star  that  guides. 


•185 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  ORCHID 

My  lustrous  orchid,  rather  flesh  than  flower, 

Some  rich  exotic  beetle,  gaudy  fly, — 
The  rose  outlives  her  life  one  rapturous  hour, 
The  violets  droop  and  die. 


But  thou  dost  swing  with  speckled  flag  unrolled, 
With  glossy  belly,  stiffened  wings  outspread. 
Like  some  outlandish  beauty,  bought  and  sold 
To  please  a  princely  head. 


I  love  thee  not  for  all  thy  curious  art, 

Thy  patient  glories,  thy  imperious  air  ; 
Thou  dost  bewilder  and  amaze  the  heart. 
Not  bloom  or  nestle  there. 


Go  hang  in  tropic  glades,  where  painted  birds 
Flutter  and  scream  from  tower  to  tower  of 
bloom  ; 
Leave  me  the  rose  that  whispers  fragrant  words 
About  my  sunless  room. 
1 86 


THE  ORCHID 

A  tortured  spirit  in  a  feverish  dream, 

Spinning  strange  fancies  to  beguile  his  pain, 
Surely    conceived    thee  : — 'twas    the    wandering 
gleam 
Of  some  overweighted  brain. 

But  love  was  his,  and  utter  tenderness, 

Who    wrapped    the    rose    in    myriad    petals 
sweet ; — 
Avaunt,  perfection  !     Give  mc  something  less 
Presumptuous,  less  complete  ! 


187 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


RED-FLOWERING  CURRANT 

Red  flower,  I  fain  would  sing  of  you  :   yet  shame 
Upon  your  homely  name  ! 

Nay,  dear  !  so  honest,  so  self-willed  a  flower, 

So  true  from  hour  to  hour. 
So  little  dainty,  yet  so  pure  of  scent, 

Sharp  and  indifferent, 
Should  bear  a  name  that  fits  the  budding-time, 

To  tremble  into  rhyme. 

Think  you  that  one  who  kissed  and  kissed  again. 

With  madness  in  his  brain, 
Behind  the  garden-hedge,  when  tender  spring 

Was  shy  and  lingering, 
When  she  who  needs  must  love  him,  tearful,  slow, 

Still  clung,  yet  bade  him  go, 
Then,  as  he  went,  grasped  at  the  scented  gloom. 

And  clutched  and  crushed  the  bloom, 
And  sobbing  gave,  and  left  upon  his  arm 

The  touch  of  fingers  warm, — 
Think  you,  I  say,  that  he  would  e'er  forget 

How  cold  her  cheek  and  wet  ? 
i88 


RED-FLOWERIXG  CURRANT 

And  on  grey  days  when  creeps  the  glimmering 
dawn 

About  his  prosperous  lawn, 
Not  heed  the  message  of  remembered  pain 

You  flash  along  his  brain  ? 

Ay,  and  to  me,  as  here  I  sing  your  praise, 

A  waft  of  childish  days 
Comes,  of  old  days  I  deemed  I  had  forgot — 

But  some  swift  voice  saith  not — 
Days  for  whose  hours  I  would  exchange  long  years 

Of  fortitude  and  fears  ; 
The  tower,  the  heathery  hill,  the  fir-clad  land. 

The  soft  constraining  hand. 
Laughter,  and  flying  footsteps  on  the  grass  ; — 

The  red  flower  saith  "  Alas  !  " 

O   red-lipped   flower,   white   heart   that   thrusts 
between, 

O  leaf  of  tender  green. 
Thou  hast  more  tears  and  memories  to  tell 

Than  one  poor  heart  can  spell. 


189 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  YAFFLE 

Laugh,  woodpecker,  down  in  the  wood  ; 

What  do  you  find  that  moves  your  mirth  ? 
Should  I  laugh  if  I  understood 

All  that  you  know  of  the  merry  earth  ? 
Is  it  indeed  so  good  ? 

All  day  long  has  the  sunlight  lain 

Over  the  valley,  across  the  sea, 
Over  the  meadows  that  ache  for  rain, 

Hazy  hills  on  the  utmost  lea, 
Herds  that  graze  in  the  plain  ; 

Under  the  crag,  where  the  tree-tops  lean. 
Flashed  your  feathers  in  green  and  gold, 

Stroke  by  stroke,  with  a  dip  between  ; 

Then  you  tapped  at  the  woodworm's  hold 
Shattered  his  flimsy  screen. 

Pulled  and  swallowed  him,  writhing  soft  ; 

Was  he  dreaming  of  summer  too. 
Where  he  swung  in  the  airy  croft  ? 
Had  he  toiled  to  be  food  for  you  ? 
You,  where  you  sate  aloft, 

190 


THE   YAFFLE 

Felt  the  summer  in  brain  and  blood, 
Pleased  to  think  that  your  simple  craft 

Brought  you  leisure  and  ample  food, — 
That  was  your  secret  :   so  you  laughed 
Loud  and  long  in  the  wood. 


191 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


VESPERS 

You  and  I,  brave  thrush,  together, 

Tune  and  trim  our  careful  note  ; 
I  with  pen  of  grey  goose-feather. 

You  with  loud  and  lusty  throat. 
When  the  misty  house-fronts  glimmer, 

In  the  chill  reluctant  dawn, 
When  the  weary  stars  grow  dimmer, 

You  awake  the  slumbering  lawn  : 
Fresh  and  ardent,  merry-hearted. 

Singing,  drenched  with  purest  dew, 
Thanks  for  tedious  glooms  departed, 

Grace  for  all  you  mean  to  do. 


I,  meanwhile,  unwilling  shoulder 

Weighty  tasks  of  import  small  ; 
Chide  and  smile,  till  growing  bolder 

When  the  dusk  begins  to  crawl, 
Puff  the  weary  winking  ashes 

Into  shoots  of  livelier  flame. 
Greet  the  comfortable  flashes — 

Wavering  hope  and  flickering  fame — 
192 


VESPERS    " 

Till  the  sudden  conflagration 

Waves  its  fire-flags,  leaping  high ; 

One  august  illumination 
Lights  the  interminable  sky. 

Yet,  sweet  bird,  could  I  recover 

What  your  guarded  strophes  told. 
Hence,  far  hence,  some  happy  lover 

Pleased  would  ring  my  hammered  gold. 
Could  I  write  the  enraptured  minute 

Clasp  the  imperishable  beam, 
All  the  grace  that  sleeps  within  it. 

Lilies'  scent  and  sunset  gleam  ; 
From  your  airy  inspiration, 

I  might  win  the  inward  ease, 
Win  serene  and  soft  elation 

Over  warring  destinies. 
Worlds  would  hush  to  hear  the  story. 

Could  I  once,  but  once,  unfold 
All  the  intolerable  glory 

That  a  mortal  heart  can  hold  ! 


193 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  SPARROW 

O  PERTEST,  most  self-satisfied 

Of  aught  that  breathes  or  moves, 
See  where  you  sit,  with  head  aside, 

To  chirp  your  vulgar  loves  : 
Or  raking  in  the  uncleanly  street 

You  bolt  your  ugly  meal, 
Undaunted  by  the  approaching  feet. 

The  heedless  splashing  wheel. 

Old  poets  in  your  praise  were  stirred — 

I  fear  you  must  forget — 
Catullus  loved  you,  shameless  bird, 

You  were  his  lady's  pet. 
You  heard  her  dainty  breathing,  perched 

Beside  her  when  she  slept  ; 
You  died  : — her  pretty  cheeks  were  smirched  ;- 

And  'twas  for  you  she  wept. 

The  imperious  Bustard  strides  no  more 

Across  the  grassy  waste  ; 
The  gallant  Ruff  deserts  the  shore 

He  trampled  into  paste  ; 

194 


THE  SPARROW 

The  Oriole  falls,  a  flaming  sprite, 

Before  the  unsparing  gun  : 
Whilst  thou  by  some  diviner  right 

Dost  wanton  in  the  sun. 

When  prey  is  scarce,  when  tempests  fret 

And  freeze  the  stiffening  loam, 
The  worm  has  tunnelled  deeper  yet, 

The  beetle  sits  at  home. 
You  shake  your  chilly  limbs,  and  puff 

Your  crest  in  mild  surprise. 
And  peep,  a  ball  of  downy  fluff, 

With  bright  and  beaded  eyes. 

No  secret  raptures  thrill  your  throat 

On  fragrant  moonlit  nights  ; 
You  never  had  the  mind  to  note 

Indignities  or  slights  ; 
The  soul  that  craves,  but  rarely  finds, 

The  vague,  the  high,  the  true, 
The  weaknesses  of  noble  minds, — 

They  never  troubled  you. 

Your  selfish  purpose  never  swerves 

From  its  appointed  end  ; 
Your  sturdy  bonhomie  deserves 

Success,  but  ne'er  a  friend. 
Where  sweetness  languishes,  and  grace," 

You  multiply  and  thrive  ; — 
It  proves  you,  of  the  feathered  race, 

The  fittest  to  survive. 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Contentment  and  equality 

Are  pleasing  names  enough  ; 
But  we  prefer,  we  know  not  why, 

A  more  ethereal  stuff. 
Ignoble  welfare, — doubtful  good — 

We  see  with  clouded  eyes ; 
We  did  not  make  the  world, — yet  would 

To  God  'twere  otherwise  ! 


196 


THE  ANT-HEAP 

High  in  the  woodland,  on  the  mountain  side, 

I  ponder,  half  a  golden  afternoon, 
Storing  deep  strength  to  battle  with  the  tide 

I  must  encounter  soon. 

Absorbed,  inquisitive,  alert,  irate, 

The  wiry  wood-ants  run  beneath  the  pines, 

And  bristle  if  a  careless  footfall  grate 
Among  their  travelled  lines. 

With  prey  unwieldy,  slain  in  alien  lands. 
When  shadows  fall  aslant,  laden  they  come, 

Where,  piled  of  red  fir-needles,  guarded  stands 
Their  dry  and  rustling  dome. 

They  toil  for  what  they  know  not ;  rest  they  shun  ; 

They  nip  the  soft  intruder  ;   when  they  die. 
They  grapple  pain  and  fate,  and  ask  from  none 

The  pity  they  deny. 


197 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  NEWT 

What  means  this  enmity  'twixt  life  and  life 

Both  bidden  to  be  here  ? — 
This  dull,  instinctive  hate,  compelling  strife 

With  what  I  scorn,  yet  fear  ? 
I  fondly  bend  above  the  crystal  pool, 

And  start  to  see  thee  rise. 
Grim  water-demon,  sliding  through  the  cool 

With  horns  and  humps  and  eyes. 
The  mystic  wavings  of  thy  arrowy  tail, 

Thy  helpless  groping  hands 
(I  follow  ancient  sages) — can  avail 

To  sicken,  where  he  stands. 
The  thirsty  ox,  that  with  blunt  muzzle  bends 

To  draw  the  warm  wave  in. 
Whilst  thou  for  thine  obscene  and  secret  ends 

Dost  work  the  dainty  sin. 
Thou  with  corroding  venom,  deftly  flung 

In  unsuspecting  eyes. 
Didst  blind  the  stripling  that  hot-handed  hung 

To  pull  his  lilied  prize. 

Nay,  I  suspend  my  fury  ;  let  me  see 
How  thou,  uncleanly  eft, 

198 


THE  NEWT 

Dost  while  away  in  loathly  alchemy 

The  hours  of  daylight  left  : 
I'll  see  thee  pack  in  folded  water-leaves 

Thy  black  and  oozy  egg. 
Or  swallow  down  the  filmy  phantom  greaves 

Torn  from  thy  naked  leg, 
Or  rend  thy  smoother,  sicklier  brother — him 

Thou  dost  devour  in  deep 
And  tangled  dens,  in  w^eedy  coverts  dim, 

Then  sink  in  sullen  sleep. 
But  when  the  brief  spring  days  are  o'er,  and  thou 

Hast  loved,  and  slain  thy  foes, 
The  crest  is  doffed  that  towers  above  thy  brow  ; 

A  warrior  in  repose. 
Eating  not,  breathing  not,  with  orange  gleam 

Of  belly  mailed,  within 
Some  damp  sequestered  cranny,  thou  dost  dream 

Of  all  thy  summer  sin. 

Thou  that  wouldst  read  the  riddle  of  thy  birth 

Across  the  ages  old, 
And  bid  the  shameless  secrets  of  the  earth 

Before  thine  eyes  unfold. 
To  breed  one  puny  eft,  the  sovereign  powers 

Conspired  and  schemed  and  planned. 
The  restless  sea  through  dark  and  tedious  hours 

Foamed  out  the  shifting  sand  ; 
A  race  of  forms,  in  monstrous  nightmare  dreamed 

By  spirits  ill  at  ease. 
Crawled  in  the  weltering  ooze,  or  dimly  gleamed 

Across  the  plunging  seas, 

199 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Till  Time,  diminished  and  enslaved,  let  fall 

His  ancient  vaster  spoil, 
And  thou,  poor  water-worm,  art  heir  of  all 

The  horror  and  the  toil ! 
The  bony  relics  of  thy  ancient  race 

Hang  in  the  shattered  cleft. 
And  Nature  hastens  on  through  wandering  space 

To  sport  with  what  is  left. 
She  plays  her  bitter  game  in  smiling  scorn 

Until  her  dreaming  age 
Be  rent  with  strong  convulsions,  tossed  and  torn  ; 

As  that  beleaguered  sage. 
Who,   when    the   vengeful   crowd   burst    raging 
through 

The  bastions  he  had  planned. 
Was  pierced  by  Roman  daggers,  as  he  drew 

His  circles  on  the  sand. 


2C«D 


TO  THE  LADY  KITTY 

A  YEAR  ago  you  were  a  child 

Of  rounded  cheek  and  slender  limb  ; 

A  spring  that  bubbled  undefiled 

With  pleasure,  pleasure  to  the  brim. 

'Twas  almost  sweet  to  see  you  fret, 

To  win  you  back  to  joy  again  ; 
The  azure  gleam  through  eyelids  wet 

Broke  fresh  as  sunshine  after  rain. 

Your  sweet  advances  shyly  made, 

Your  soft  caresses  hardly  won, 
Were  pure  as  though  an  angel  prayed 

And  fickle  as  the  April  sun. 

You  were  not  fair,  as  some  are  fair. 

Because  your  dreams  were  grave  and  high  ; 

Naught  lay  behind  your  golden  hair, 
And  your  incomparable  eye. 

You  seemed  as  free  as  winds  that  hiss 
All  day  within  the  tasselled  pine  ; 

The  breath  of  your  reluctant  kiss 

Was  warm  and  sweet  as  honeyed  wine. 

201 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Poor  baby  hand,  ungainly  grown  ! 

Poor  restless  limbs  that  lounge  and  lie  ! 
The  dreams  of  sovereignty  o'erthrown 

Still  plead  in  your  pathetic  eye. 

Is  beauty  like  ethereal  dew 

Absorbed  from  hence  to  settle  there  ? 
And  has  it  flown,  poor  child,  from  you, 

To  flaunt  and  blossom  otherwhere  ? 

Obsequious  courtiers  hemmed  you  round  ; — 
Neglectful  now  they  pass  you  by  ; 

You  knew  not  why,  but  you  were  crowned  ; 
You  are  dethroned,  you  know  not  why. 

Yet  mu'-mur  not  :  no  reigning  lord 
Is  served  with  half  such  tender  care. 

As  he  whose  chamber  is  the  sward. 
His  canopy  the  common  air. 


202 


ROSALIND 

Bury  my  summer  love  in  a  summer  grave, 
Under  the  roses,  close  to  the  murmuring  wave. 
Sigh  but  one  sigh  as  he  slips  from  sight,  no  more  ; 
Then  your  foot  to  the  stretcher,  your  hand  to  the 
oar. 

It  was  his  will  to  come  when  the  woods  were  green ; 
Smiling,  delaying,  he  stepped  the  elms  between, 
I  sat  musing,  the  boat  swung  loose  in  the  tide. 
Then  as  I  wondered,  he  slipped  with  a  smile  to 
my  side. 

Green  were  the  streamers  that  swayed  in  the  water 

cool. 
Mute  were  the  grave-eyed  fish  that  poised  in  the 

pool. 
Deep,  how  deep,  were  the  heavens  of  sapphire  blue. 
He  was  tender  :   I  cared  not  if  he  were  true. 

While  we  floated,  the  dumb  boat  jarred  on  the  bank. 
Chilly  the  breeze  crept  up,  and  the  red  sun  sank. 
That  was  the  end  I  knew,  when    he   stepped  to 

the  side  a — 
Yet,  ah  yet,  was  it  he  or  I  that  died  ? 

203 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


AT  NETHER-STOWEY 


On  Quantock  Head  the  wind  blew  shrill, 
The  springs  congealed  in  waxen  folds, 

Beneath  the  shoulder  of  the  hill 

We  dropt  across  the  heathery  wolds, 

By  hanging  wood  and  falling  stream  ; 

The  homely  plain  beneath  us  lay  ; 
Far  off,  the  visionary  gleam 

Of  shadowy  hills  across  the  bay  ! 

Blue  hills  of  dream-land,  so  we  leave 
Your  gentle  outlines  unexplored. 

About  you  glows  a  holier  eve, 
Your  vales  are  lined  with  softer  sward ; 

But  closer  traced,  the  weary  hill. 
The  wrinkled  fields,  the  miry  ways. 

The  same  sad  earth  is  with  us  still. 
Her  marred  delights,  her  old  delays. 

204 


AT   NETHER-STOWEY 


II 


We  lingered  in  the  homely  street 
Where  once  an  eager  spirit  came  ; 

Here  stayed  his  wild  and  weary  feet, 
Uncheered  by  wealth,  unblest  by  fame. 

The  meagre  house,  the  paven  floors, 

Were  haunted  by  ethereal  airs. 
Strange  spirits  pulled  the  loose-latched  doors, 

Or  glided  up  the  crazy  stairs. 

The  mariner  with  staring  eyes. 
The  wanton  fays  of  moor  and  fell, 

And  underneath  the  troubled  skies 
The  vampire  brood  of  Christabel. 

Ah  !  Coleridge,  hadst  thou  played  thy  part, 
Thy  human  part,  with  clearer  eye  ! 

Hadst  thou  but  stayed  thy  faltering  heart 
With  aught  of  wholesome  dignity  ! 

O  recreant  priest  of  sweet  desires. 

So  soft,  so  craven,  'twas  denied 
To  trim  the  sacrificial  fires. 

And  fling  the  smoking  censer  wide. 

Thy  fiery  and  unflinching  mind 

Dragged  on  the  shuddering  helpless  clay. 

As  Hector's  corpse  was  whirled  behind 
The  flying  chariot  of  dismay. 

205 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

From  piteous  and  uncertain  lips 

The  royal  message  streamed  to  waste, 

Ah  me  !  in  fierce  and  frail  eclipse, 
To  sink  dishonoured  and  ungraced. 

It  left  thee,  as  on  barren  sands 

The  mouldering  porch  of  ancient  kings 
In  gorgeous  desolation  stands 

And  points  to  far  and  fallen  things. 


206 


AN  UNKNOWN  MASTER 

Ah  !  how  he  flung  his  heart  upon  the  page, 
That  old  musician  ;  yet,  methinks,  'tis  all 
He  left  us,  redolent  of  kindly  age, 
This  mellow  madrigal  : 

Long,  long  the  days  ere  this  one  strain  might  be  ! 

He  heard  the  plaintive  whisper  of  the  shower 
On  streaming  walls,  and  waited  lingeringly 
For  one  celestial  hour. 

More  skilful  fell  the  deft,  unwavering  hand  ; 

More  negligent  the  soaring  spirit  grew  ; 
A  dreaming  soul  that  indolently  planned. 
And  still  deferred  to  do. 

Sudden  it  came  :  'twas  on  a  summer  night  ; 

The  towers  loomed  black  against  an  emerald  sky, 
The  scent  of  flowers  that  sickened  in  the  light 
Went  richly  wandering  by  : 

A  rhythmic  music  beat  upon  his  brain, 

A  passion  too  intense  to  be  denied  ; — 
Eager  and  airy  came  the  opening  strain. 
The  chords  unite,  divide, 
207 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Or  hang  suspended,  as  a  breaker  leans 

O'er-arched,  before  it  whitens  on  the  shore  ; 
Pure  as  the  silent  evening's  greys  and  greens, 
As  more  and  ever  more 

Beat  the  quick  waves  of  harmony  austere, 

Marred  by  no  frail  and  faulty  instrument, 
But  as  the  angels  sing  within  their  sphere. 
Above  the  morning  bent, 

All  night  the  patient  hand  untiring  wrote. 

Till  morning  rimmed  the  east  with  smouldering 
lire. 
Until  the  drowsy  bird's  uncertain  note 
Attuned  the  awakened  choir. 

Then  sank  the  fount  of  music  :  sank  and  died 

To  rise  no  more  beneath  the  lingering  touch  1 
Was  this  ethereal  gem  contemned,  decried, 
Or  praised,  perchance,  too  much  ? 

Was  he  disheartened  that  his  message  beat 

With  hand  too  faint  the  slumbering  doors  of 
men  ? 
Or  did  he  soar,  his  rapture  incomplete, 
To  dreams  beyond  our  ken  ? 


208 


TIMON 

The  world  is  not  grown  old. 
Nor  weary,  nor  afraid  ; 

It  is  as  bright,  as  bold, 

As  when  it  first  was  made  ; 

Its  hope  as  warmly  burns, 
Its  faith  as  clear,  as  high  ; 

On  whom  it  loves  it  turns 
A  strong  rewarding  eye. 

And  if  I  think  its  mirth 
Is  rude,  ungenerous  grown, 

Its  idols  things  of  earth, — 
The  loss  is  all  mine  own. 

So  if  I  creep  away 

To  woods  and  rippling  streams 
To  ponder  or  to  pray. 

To  dream  my  sickly  dreams, 

It  waves  a  kind  good-bye, 
It  smiles  a  careless  smile. 

Then  turns,  alert  to  fly 
O'er  many  a  dusty  mile. 
209 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

My  woes  it  soon  forgets 

In  laughter,  love,  and  wine, 

Mine  are  the  weak  regrets. 
The  loss,  the  shame  is  mine. 


210 


DOROTHE  A 

They  pass  me  by,  the  gay,  the  wise, 

The  brave,  the  strenuous  in  the  race  ; 
They  deem  I  have  not  strength  to  rise, 

Or  wit  to  jostle  for  a  place. 
They  see  me  dallying  with  the  morn, 

Or  slumbering  when  the  sun  is  high. 
And  half  in  pity,  half  in  scorn. 

They  smile,  and  pass  the  poet  by. 

But  you  whose  passion  is  to  wreathe 

An  arm  round  any  suffering  thing. 
As  simple  as  the  air  you  breathe. 

As  true  as  swallow  on  the  wing. 
You  saw,  you  questioned  ;   with  a  look 

You  chid  me  ;   you  would  point  me  hence, 
The  only  vice  you  cannot  brook 

Is  this  supine  indifference. 

Ah,  dear  !     You  are  the  same,  you  see  ; 

When  every  moment,  near  or  far. 
That  sacred  instinct  bids  you  be 

None  other  than  the  thing  you  are. 

211 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

God  spared  no  pains  in  making  you  ; — 
But  me,  and  many  another  one  ? 

I  sometimes  wonder  if  He  grew 
Aweary,  ere  His  work  was  done. 

You  could  not  think  it,  if  you  would, 

That  printed  words  upon  a  page 
Can  breed  strange  madness  in  the  blood, 

Annulling  duty,  place,  and  age  ; 
You  never  found  your  heart  and  brain, 

Your  very  creed  of  right  and  wrong 
Struck  ruinous,  and  remade  again 

Within  the  passage  of  a  song. 

I  think,  if  all  the  world  were  June, 

The  faith  you  worship  would  be  mine  ; 
The  stillness  of  the  summer  noon 

Is  sweet  as  sacramental  wine. 
But  life  is  full  of  rainy  days, 

When  greyness  broods  within,  without  ; 
I  stumble  on  through  miry  ways  ; 

The  naked  elms  are  brown  about. 

You  only  claim,  you  say,  to  be 

To  your  ideal  sometimes  true  : 
Oh,  be  not  then  so  wroth  with  me, 

I  serve  a  sovereign  mistress  too  ! 
I  serve  her  :   yet  my  faith  is  scant. 

But  that  you  smile,  and  breathe,  and  move, 
Is  all  the  evidence  I  want 

Of  unimaginable  love. 

212 


MY  POET 


He  came  ;   I  met  him  face  to  face, 
And  shrank  amazed,  dismayed  ;   I  saw 

No  patient  depth,  no  tender  grace, 
No  prophet  of  the  eternal  law. 

But  weakness  fretting  to  be  great, 
Self-consciousness  with  sidelong  eye, 

The  impotence  that  dares  not  wait 
For  honour,  crying  "  This  is  I." 

The  tyrant  of  a  sullen  hour, 

He  frowned  away  our  mild  content  ; 
And  insight  only  gave  him  power 

To  see  the  slights  that  were  not  meant. 


II 

And  was  it,  then,  some  trick  of  hand. 
Some  deft  mechanical  control. 

That  bridged  the  aching  gulf,  and  spanned 
The  roaring  torrent  of  the  soul  ? 

213 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

And  when  convention's  trivial  bond 
Was  severed  by  the  trenchant  pen, 

Was  there  no  single  heart  beyond  ? 
No  hero's  pulse  ?     And  art  thou  then 

The  vision  of  that  brutish  king, 
A  tortured  dream  at  break  of  day, 

A  monstrous  misbegotten  thing. 

With  head  of  gold  and  heart  of  clay  ? 


214 


THE  ROCKET 

Out  of  his  lair  with  a  thunder-peal, — 
Swiftly  the  fire-wheels  roar  and  reel — 
Spurning  the  earth  with  a  hissing  heel, 

Over  the  din  he  strides  ; 
Scatters  his  gold  on  the  hungry  air. 
Free  as  a  comet  with  trailing  hair  ; 
Over  the  steeple  with  lustre  rare 

Lonely  and  loud  he  rides. 

Then,  as  he  soars  to  the  height  profound. 
Softly  breaks  with  a  muffled  sound. 
Parts,  and  lavishly  strews  around 

Largess  of  rainbow  dyes, 
Lighting  the  smoky  rolling  shroud  ; 
White  and  wan  are  the  gazing  crowd  ; 
Then  from  the  silence,  large  and  loud, 

Shiver  their  happy  cries. 

May  not  one  of  the  airy  sprites, 
Weary  of  passion  and  hot  delights. 
Shine  and  soar  through  the  starry  nights  ? 
Royally,  swiftly,  rise  ? 

2I<J 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Must  he  falter  in  mid-career  ? 
May  he  not  gather  his  strength  and  steer 
On  for  ever,  a  shining  sphere 
Into  the  gracious  skies  ? 

Nay,  the  heroic  beneficent  soul 
Hears  the  insolent  murmurs  roll, 
Soars  aloft  to  an  airy  goal, 

Shedding  his  vital  gleam  ; 
Glad  if  another  may  spurn  the  sod, 
Hears  in  the  stillness,  alone  with  God, 
Only  the  plunge  of  the  calcined  rod 

Short  and  sharp  in  the  stream. 


ai6 


THE  TRUANT 

Some  careless  droop  of  branches  o'er  the  wall, 
Some  hidden  laughter  of  a  stream  unseen, 

Some  breeze  that  wrote  among  the  rye-grass  tall 
Its  secret  form  in  whorls  of  rustling  green  ; — 

These  drew  me  from  my  quest  : — for  I  was  sped 
On  some  grave  business  that  demanded  haste  ; — 

Now  here  I  lie  and  rest  my  careless  head, 

Or  wade  through  feathery  grasses  to  the  waist. 

The  birds'  song  drops  :   the  solemn  beetles  fly  ; 

Between  the  trunks  I  see  the  smouldering  west ; 
At  home  they  blame  the  truant  :  what  care  I  ? 

I  deem  the  trespass  worthier  than  the  quest. 


217 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


ATTRIBUTES 

They  praise  the  rose  for  blushing  red 
And  nestling  soft  and  smelling  rare, 

The  mountain,  that  its  haggard  head 
Mounts  up  through  breezy  miles  of  air. 

The  painter,  who,  whate'er  he  scanned 
In  finest  lineaments  could  trace, — 

They  gaze  with  wonder  on  his  hand 
Before  they  look  within  his  face. 

The  poet, — he  who  swiftly  caught. 

Before  the  sudden  glory  died. 
In  golden  words  a  fleeting  thought  ; — 

They  praise,  but  thrust  him  from  their  side. 

O  vile  desire  of  praise  unproved  ! 

O  frailest,  most  ungenerous  fall  ! 
Let  me,  for  one  short  hour,  be  loved 

For  mine  own  self,  or  not  at  all. 


218 


PRAYER 

My  sorrow  had  pierced  me  through  ;  it  throbbed 
in  my  heart  like  a  thorn  ; 
This  way  and  that  I  stared,  as  a  bird  with  a 
broken  limb 
Hearing  the  hound's  strong  feet  thrust  imminent 
through  the  corn, 
So  to  my  God  I  turned  :   and  I  had  forgotten 
Him. 


Into  the  night  I  breathed  a  prayer  like  a  soaring 
fire  ; — 
So  to  the  windswept  cliff  the  resonant  rocket 
streams, — 
And  it  struck  its  mark,  I  know  ;  for  I  felt  my  flying 
desire 
Strain,  like  a  rope  drawn  home,  and  catch  in  the 
land  of  dreams. 

What  was  the  answer  ?     This — the  horrible  depth 
of  night, 
And  deeper,   as   ever   I   peer,   the  huge  cliff's 
mountainous  shade, 

219 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

While  the  frail  boat  cracks  and  grinds,  and  never 
a  star  in  sight, 
And  the  seething  waves  smite  fiercer  ; —  and  yet 
I  am  not  afraid. 


220 


AFTER  CONSTRUING 

Lord  C^sar,  when  you  sternly  wrote 
The  story  of  your  grim  campaigns, 

And  watched  the  ragged  smoke-wreath  float 
Above  the  burning  plains, 

Amid  the  impenetrable  wood. 

Amid  the  camp's  incessant  hum, 
At  eve,  beside  the  tumbling  flood 

In  high  Avaricum, 

You  little  recked,  imperious  head. 

When  shrilled  your  shattering  trumpet's  noise, 
Your  frigid  sections  would  be  read 

By  bright-eyed  English  boys. 

Ah  me  !  who  penetrates  to-day 

The  secret  of  your  deep  designs  ? 
Your  sovereign  visions,  as  you  lay 

Amid  the  sleeping  lines  ? 

The  Mantuan  singer  pleading  stands  ; 

From  century  to  century 
He  leans  and  reaches  wistful  hands. 

And  cannot  bear  to  die. 

221 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

But  you  are  silent,  secret,  proud, 
No  smile  upon  your  haggard  face, 

As  when  you  eyed  the  murderous  crowd 
Beside  the  statue's  base. 

I  marvel  :  that  Titanic  heart 

Beats  strongly  through  the  arid  page, 
And  we,  self-conscious  sons  of  art, 

In  this  bewildering  age, 

Like  dizzy  revellers  stumbling  out 
Upon  the  pure  and  peaceful  night, 

Are  sobered  into  troubled  doubt, 
As  swims  across  our  sight 

The  ray  of  that  sequestered  sun. 
Far  in  the  illimitable  blue, — 

The  dream  of  aU  you  left  undone, 
Of  aU  you  dared  to  do. 


222 


AT  LOCK-UP 

Old  elm,  upon  whose  wrinkled  breast 

Three  strait  domains  converge,  unite, 
Three  petty  lords,  of  thee  possest, 

Each  deem  thee  theirs  by  legal  right ; 
Three  creeping  tyrants,  each  empowered 

To  hew  in  hypochondriac  haste, 
To  spoil  thy  greenness,  deep  embowered. 

To  spill  thy  tranquil  life,  and  waste 
The  giant  pulse  that  throbs  and  swells. 

That  drives  the  mounting  sap  full-fed 
Through  arteries  and  myriad  cells, 

A  hundred  feet  above  my  head. 
And  doubtless  in  thy  musing  hours 

Thy  spirit,  on  its  airy  throne, 
Surveys  the  clustered  garden-bowers, 

And  deems  the  triple  realm  thine  own. 

How  cool  on  early  morns  in  June 
To  swim  aloft  in  bracing  mist, 

Before  the  languors  of  the  noon. 
Before  the  silent  vane  is  kissed 

By  those  pure  rays  that  filter  through, 
Ere  yet  the  sun  has  gathered  up 

223 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

His  cloudy  skirts,  and  drunk  the  dew 
Pure-globed  within  the  lily's  cup  : 

While  yet  the  pompous  jackdaws  shout 
Their  plain  complacent  litanies, 

And  more  ethereal,  less  devout. 
The  lonely  thrush  adores  the  skies. 

Weary  of  trivial  mastery. 

And  tired  of  seeming  to  be  stern, 
I  waste  a  twilight  hour  to  see 

The  sullen  wintry  sunset  burn 
Behind  thy  blackening  bole,  and  trace 

Thy  hieroglyphs  of  knotted  boughs, 
A  demon  arm,  a  tortured  face. 

Blind  eyes  beneath  o'erweighted  brows  ; 
Familiar  scars,  aloft,  unseen. 

Unnoted  when  the  leaves  are  fair  ; 
Forgotten  when  the  world  is  green  ; 

But  welcomed  back  when  all  is  bare. 

In  indistinguishable  grey 

Ye  too  are  merged  :   the  darkening  street 
Forgets  the  noises  of  the  day  ; 

I  hear  across  the  hurrying  feet 
The  light  conventional  farewells, 

Of  lips  with  no  regretful  taint, 
Rung  home  by  din  of  cheerful  bells. 

Imprisoned  in  serene  constraint  ; 
Young  forms  across  the  casements  flit. 

While  blacker  grows  the  thickening  gloom. 
And  one  by  one  the  lamps  are  lit 

And  twinkle  out  from  room  to  room. 

224 


NEW  YEAR'S  DAY 

(January  ist,  1893) 

At  the  dawn  of  the  year  in  my  chamber  as  I  lay, 
Wondering  I  opened  my  unheeding  eyes  ; 

I  could  see  the  shining  river,  and  the  road  that 
wound  away, 
And  the  plain,  and  the  sea,  and  the  skies. 

There  was  no  smoke  from  the  little  sleeping  town  ; 

Keen,  chilly  keen  was  the  half-lit  air  ; 
On  the  casement-ivy  fell  the  shadow  of  the  down, 

And  the  dawn  came  in  unaware. 

Suddenly,  how  suddenly,  across  the  golden  cloud 
Out  of  the  heart  of  the  mysterious  sea. 

With  her  shadowy  sails  full  set,  with  phantom 
hull  and  shroud. 
Came  a  ship  that  was  meant  for  me. 

Flying  out  of  shadow,  into  shadow  passed  away  ; 
Though  I  scanned  the  heaving  flats,  she  was 
borne  from  out  my  ken  ; 
Had  she  cut  the  far-off  waters  through  alternate 
night  and  day 
Was  she  freighted  by  man  for  men  ? 

225  p 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Ship,  phantom  ship,  from  the  islands  of  the  air. 
Do  you  bear  me  a  gift  in  your  dark  and  crowded 
hold  ? 

Is  it  love,  is  it  honour,  is  it  death  that  you  bear 
Out  of  the  ages  old  ? 

With  honour,  glowing  honour,  I  would  fain  be 
crowned  ; 
And  with  love,  warm  love,  I  should  most  be 
blest ; 
But  how  softly,  ah  !  how  softly,  death  would  wrap 
me  round  ; 
I  know  not  which  would  be  best. 

And  the  winds  of  the  night  said  "Hush,"  and 
sighed  away 
Over  the  craggy  shoulder  of  the  hill  ; 
And  my  heart  said  "  Yea,"  but  my  spirit  answered 
"  Nay," 
And  the  dawn  said  "  which  I  will." 

As  I  wondered,  as  I  gazed,  with  a  rush  of  gorgeous 
lire 
Over  the  sea's  rim  leapt  the  sudden  sun  ; 
And  I  veiled  my  eyes  in  pain,  and  forgot  my  dim 
desire 
For  the  year  was  indeed  begun. 


226 


AFTERWARDS 

It  cannot  be  that  my  friend  is  dead 

And  never  a  word  to  me  ; 
He  would  have  stept  in  dreams  to  my  bed, 
I  should  have  seen  him  stand  at  my  feet, 
Crowned  in  glory  and  smiling  sweet, 

Bidding  me  rise  and  see. 


Yesterday,  when  the  board  was  bright, 

Chilly  the  mist  outside. 
Merry  it  seemed  in  the  taper's  light ; 
Then,  it  was  then  he  strove  with  death. 
Swooned  and  shivered  and  cried  for  breath, 

Lying  alone  he  died. 


While  I  jested,  no  answer  came 
Back  from  the  doors  of  doom, 

Voices  crying  a  phantom  name ; 

No  furious  gust  the  windows  shook. 

No  secret  sense  of  a  spectral  look 
Silenced  the  clamorous  room. 

227 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Nay,  in  the  night-time,  ere  I  slept, 

I  had  no  fears  for  him, 
Slowly  the  stillness  round  me  crept,'^^ 
Only  the  hand  of  the  warm  spring  rain 
Whispered  soft  at  the  window-pane, 

Only  the  skies  were  dim. 


Now  in  the  infinite  realm  of  light, 

Fresh  from  his  new-found  rest. 
Steeped  in  delicate  sound  and  sight, 
Hourly  he  wanders,  seeing  clear 
All  that  the  tired  soul  dreams  of  here. 
All  that  the  heart  deems  best. 


See,  as  a  town-bred  child  that'you  lead 

Over  the  silver  sands, 
Gathers  the  ribbons  of  glossy  weed. 
Black-horned  sea-egg  and  twisted  shell, 
Rare  to  handle  and  briny  to  smell. 

Filling  his  wasted  hands ; — 


Who  would  bid  him  suspend  his  play. 

Silence  his  rapturous  glee  ? 
Bid  him  think  of  the  fallen  day 
Over  the  city,  where,  vexed  and  dim, 
Toils  his  father,  who  thinks  of  him, 
Saying,  "  he  thinks  of  me  "  ? 

228 


AFTERWARDS 

Gladden  my  restless  darling's  dreams, 
Wonder  and  wealth  of  the  sea  ! 

Steep  his  soul  in  your  gracious  gleams  ! 

Yet,  as  he  stepped  to  the  silence  vast. 

Oh,  I  had  thought  that  just  as  he  passed 
He  would  have  thought  of  me. 


239 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  ROBIN  AND  THE  CREDENCE 


It  was  the  blessed  Christmas  morn, 
When  for  our  solace  Christ  was  born. 

The  Church  was  swept  and  garnished  well  ; 
The  pine-boughs  made  a  wholesome  smell ; 

Then,  ere  the  great  bells,  far  aloof, 
Jangled  and  hummed  above  the  roof, 

In  silence  came  the  ancient  priest, 
To  bless  the  house  and  set  the  feast. 

He  carved  the  bread  of  wheat-flour  fine, 
In  chalice  poured  the  fragrant  wine. 

Soon  by  the  spoken  word  to  be 
Instinct  with  deep  Divinity. 

Then  stored  the  credence  point-device. 
To  serve  the  holy  Mysteries, 

But  ere  the  sacred  veil  he  laid. 

He  humbly  knelt,  and  softly  prayed. 


THE  ROBIN  AND  THE  CREDENCE 

II 

Meanwhile,  across  his  ordered  prayer, 
Fell  tender  flutterings  through  the  air, 

Like  dainty  cherubs  sailing  by 
On  some  light-hearted  ministry, 

A  bird,  incomparably  drest 
In  downy  cape  and  ruby  vest, 

(That  bird  who  roused  the  timid  rage 
Of  serious  folk  on  pilgrimage  ; 

He  munched  liis  spidery  food,  and  made 
Interpreter  o'ershoot  his  trade  :) 

He  perched,  and  swooped,  and  shyly  veered,- 
The  priest  across  his  fingers  peered  ; — 

Upon  the  credence  lit  and  paced. 
And  found  the  banquet  to  his  taste  ; 

The  food,  he  thought,  that  came  at  call, 
Was  set  and  consecrate  for  all 

Whoe'er  the  precinct  duly  trode. 
For  me,  or  any  child  of  God. 

He  ate,  approved,  and  ate  his  fill. 
Then  piped  a  grace  with  right  goodwill. 

231 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

III 

Then  creaked  the  door  :   the  ringers  came, 
Came  clattering  child,  and  feeble  dame, 

To  seek,  like  Anna,  long  and  late, 
Her  Lord  within  the  Temple  gate  ; 

Sir  Redbreast  saw  them  ;   at  the  view 
The  thankful  sinner  upward  flew. 

There  in  the  rafters  pluming  sate. 
Aloft,  secure,  inviolate  ; — 

The  old  priest  rising  from  his  knees 
Repaired  the  tiny  ravages. 

It  pleased  him  that  the  sacred  feast 
Was  thus  diminished,  thus  increased  :' 

Though  God,  he  thought,  still  waits  to  bless 
The  meat  with  grace  and  godliness, 

Yet  *twas  no  harm  (perchance  he  erred) 
The  benediction  of  a  bird  ! 


232 


LORD  VYET 

"  Nay,  sirs,  unbar  the  door, 
The  broken  lute  shall  fall  ; 
My  son  will  leave  his  ball 

To  tarnish  on  the  floor." 

Yon  bell  to  triumph  rings  ! 

To  greet  thee,  monarchs  wait 

Beside  their  palace  gate. 
"  Yes,  I  shall  sleep  with  kings." 

My  lord  will  soon  alight 

With  some  rich  prince,  his  friend, 
Who  shall  his  ease  attend. 

"  I  shall  lodge  low  to-night." 

My  lord  hath  lodging  nigh  ! 
"  Yes,  yes,  I  go  not  far, — 
And  yet  the  furthest  star 

Is  not  so  far  as  I." 


235 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


A  TRIO 

I,  and  the  Bird, 

And  the  Wind  together, 
Sang  a  supplication 

In  the  winter  weather. 

The  Bird  sang  for  sunshine, 
And  trees  of  winter  fruit, 

And  love  in  the  spring-time, 
When  the  thickets  shoot. 

And  I  sang  for  patience 
When  the  teardrops  start  : 

Clean  hands  and  clear  eyes. 
And  a  faithful  heart. 

And  the  Wind  thereunder. 
As  we  faintly  cried, 

Breathed  a  bass  of  wonder. 
Blowing  deep  and  wide. 


236 


THE  RAILWAY 

Upon  the  iron  highway,  wreathed  in  smoke, 
Or  East  or  West  the  clanking  engine  reels, 
The  weary  dust  spins  onward  at  the  stroke 
Of  half-a-hundred  wheels. 

It  comes,  the  breathless  driver  staring  straight 
Through    misty    eye-holes,    with    the    sudden 
gleam 
Of   burnished   dome,   and   cranks   of   ponderous 
weight. 

And  clouds  of  hissing|steam. 

Old  countrymen,  that  trudge  from  new-ploughed 
lands. 
And  on  high  bridges  stay  their  weary  feet, 
See  faces  flashed  beneath  them,  waving  hands 
That  may  not  stay  to  greet. 

Or  slow,  with  hollow  blast  and  wealthy  din, 

By  wide-armed  signals  creeps  the  laden  train, 
High  vans  with  shuddering  jolt,  and  rattling  pin, 
And  clink  of  clattering  chain. 

237 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Wide-eyed,  affrighted  cattle,  meek  and  still  : 

And  murky  coal  for  city  folk  to  burn, 
And  dusty  blocks  hewed  from  some  western  hill, 
And  wreathed  in  twisted  fern. 

But  best  of  all,  when,  in  the  sullen  night, 

Along  the  dim  embankment,  hung  in  air, 
Shoots   the   red   streamer,   linked  with  cheerful 
light  ; 

The  wide-flung  furnace-glare 

I 
Lights  the  dim  hedges  and  the  rolling  steam  : — 

Then  passes,  and  in  narrowing  distance  dies, 
Tracked    by    the    watchful    lanterns'    lessening 
gleam. 

Two  red  resentful  eyes. 

And  some  are  borne  to  dim  and  alien  shores. 

And  some  return  to  merriment  and  home  : — 
These,  while  the  train  through  slumbering  home- 
stead roars 

Thrill  with  delight  : — and  some 

Fly  from  the  horror  that  their  hands  have  wrought 

And  shudder,  as  the  shivering  engine  reels  ; 
They  fly,  but  falter  :  one  red-throated  thought 
Pants  ever  at  their  heels. 


238 


THE  MOWER 

Whet  thy  scythe,  mower, 
Though  thy  hand  swing  slow 

The  sun  falls  lower, 
And  the  shadows  grow. 

How  the  white  blade  flashes 

In  the  steady  sun  ! 
All  the  dinted  slashes 

Tell  the  death  of  one. 

Field-flower  and  clover, 
Sword-grass  seeded  high. 

Summer  dreams  are  over, 
Side  by  side  they  lie. 

Winds  above  them  lying 
Stir  with  fragrant  feet  ; 

Who  would  shrink  from  dying 
If  death  smelt  so  sweet  ? 

From  the  sturdy  shoulder 
Let  the  scythe  be  swung  ; 

Soon  the  blade  shall  moulder 
In  the  granary  hung. 

239 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Iron  steeds  of  battle 

Snort  o'er  humming  farms 
Hear  them  clink  and  rattle, 

Lifting  solemn  arms ! 

Whet  thy  scythe  bolder, 
Evening  comes  apace  : 

One  with  scythe  on  shoulder 
Runs  a  rival  race. 

Through  the  whispering  grasses 
Let  the  bright  blade  ring  ; 

Ere  the  good  time  passes, 
Mower,  stride  and  swing. 


240 


LIVE-BAIT 

The  weir  was  fragrant,  with  the  scent 
Of  falling  streams  and  trailing  weeds  ; 

The  careful  angler  leaned  intent, 
And  cast  his  net  beyond  the  reeds  : 

Three  silvery  dace  imprisoned  there 

Were  dragged  all  gasping  to  the  air. 


One  from  the  dripping  net  he  took, 
And  squeezed  his  tender  body  hard, 

And  pierced  him  with  his  cruel  hook 
That  all  his  limber  mouth  was  marred  : 

Then  cast  him  where  the  stream  gushed  out 

To  be  a  bait  for  Master  Trout. 


So  all  that  golden  afternoon 

He  strove  and  swam — now  dangled  high. 
Now  plunged  afresh  :  and  oh,  so  soon 

As  he  hath  gained  his  liberty. 
Must  swing  and  flicker,  sorely  spent 
Within  the  dazzling  firmament. 

241  Q 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

At  evensong  he  sobbed  and  died. 

I  know  not  !  but  did  God  forget 
That  day  upon  the  water  side, 

Or  cast  him  sternly  in  the  net  ? 
Oh  broken  dreams,  oh  cruel  lot  ! 
Would  I  could  think  that  God  forgot ! 


242 


THE  SHEPHERD 

The  shepherd  is  an  ancient  man, 

His  back  is  bent,  his  foot  is  slow  ; 
Although  the  heavens  he  doth  not  scan, 
He  scents  what  winds  shall  blow. 

His  face  is  like  the  pippin,  grown 

Red  ripe,  in  frosty  suns  that  shone  ; 
'Tis  hard  and  wrinUed,  as  a  stone 
The  rains  have  rained  upon. 

When  tempests  sweep  the  dripping  plain. 
He  stands  unmoved  beneath  the  hedge. 
And  sees  the  columns  of  the  rain, 

The  storm-cloud's  shattered  edge. 

When  frosts  among  the  misty  farms 

Make  crisp  the  surface  of  the  loam. 
He  shivering  claps  his  creaking  arms. 
But  would  not  sit  at  home. 

Short  speech  he  hath  for  man  and  beast  ; 

Some  fifty  words  are  all  his  store. 
Why  should  his  language  be  increased 
He  hath  no  need  for  more. 
243 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

There  is  no  change  he  doth  desire, 

Of  far-off  lands  he  hath  not  heard  ; 
Beside  his  wife,  before  the  fire, 

He  sits,  and  speaks  no  word. 

He  holds  no  converse  with  his  kind. 

On  birds  and  beasts  his  mind  is  bent ; 
He  knows  the  thoughts  that  stir  their  mind, 
Love,  hunger,  hate,  content. 

Of  kings  and  wars  he  doth  not  hear. 

He  tells  the  seasons  that  have  been 
By  stricken  oaks  and  hunted  deer. 

And  strange  fowl  he  has  seen. 

In  Church,  some  muttering  he  doth  make, 

Well-pleased  when  hymns  harmonious  rise  ; 
He  doth  not  strive  to  overtake 
^i^        The  hurrying  litanies. 

He  hears  the  music  of  the  wind, 

His  prayer  is  brief,  and  scant  his  creed  ; 
The  shadow,  and  what  lurks  behind. 
He  doth  not  greatly  heed. 


244 


ONE  BY  ONE 

One  by  one,  as  evening  closes, 

Droop  the  flowers  that  drank  the  sun 
See,  they  sleep,  my  weary  roses. 
One  by  one  : 

Never  did  I  bend  above  you, 

O  my  flowers,  while  all  was  bright ; 
There  is  time,  I  said,  to  love  you 
Ere  the  night. 

You  were  neither  watched  nor  tended, 
Fevered  thoughts  were  mine  instead, 
Now  the  weary  day  is  ended  ; — 
You  are  dead. 

Now  I  come  in  dumb  disorder. 

Seek  and  search,  in  wild  regret, 
If  one  rose  in  bed  or  border 
Wakens  yet. 

Nay,  they  slumber  till  the  morrow  ! 
Hasten  homewards  :  bar  the  gate. 
Through  the  cold  dark  hours  of  sorrow 
I  will  wait. 

245 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


WHEN  PUNCTUAL  DAWN 

WHENjpunctual  dawn  came  o'er  the  hill, 
In  orange  veiled  and  tender  blue, 
Wan  in  the  dark  field  gleamed  the  rill. 
The  dusky  hedge  was  gemmed  with  dew. 

And  patient  sheep  from  folded  feet 
Rose  one  by  one,  alert  for  food, 
And  one  by  one,  so  small  and  sweet. 
The  flattened  grass-stems  stirred  and  stood. 

And  I  too  rose,  and  stepping  down 
Drank  deep  the  invigorating  air. 
And  scanned  the  little  sleeping  town. 
And  thanked  my  God  that  I  was  there. 


246 


IN  ETON  CHURCHYARD 

In  and  out  I  tread  the  slender 

Paths  that  wind  by  grave  and  grave  ; 
In  the  summer  breeze  the  tender 
Grasses  wave. 

Jackdaws  cheerily  hallooing 

From  the  turret's  dizzy  edge  : 
Glossy  doves  serenely  cooing 
From  their  ledge. 

Through  the  stillness,  faint  and  dreamy, 

Comes  the  murmur  of  the  town, 
Where  the  thorn  tree  shakes  her  creamy 
Petals  down. 

Brothers,  sisters,  silent  lying. 

Ere  you  breathed  the  last  long  breath, 
Were  you  too  afraid  of  dying, 
Not  of  death  ? 

Do  you  walk  unseen  beside  us  I 

Prompt,  applaud  our  dreams  of  good  ? 
Would  you  comfort,  warn  us,  guide  us, 
If  you  could  ? 

247 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Children,  tired  of  idle  jesting, 

Locked  in  dear  embraces  weep  : 
Sink  reluctant,  sink  protesting 
Into  sleep. 

Tho'  the  host  that  none  can  number 

Greet  upon  the  joyful  shore, 
jl  should  be  content  to  slumber 
Evermore. 


248 


THE  ARTIST  IN  CHURCH 

Lord  Christ,  hast  Thou  no  word  for  me, 

Thou  high  and  humble  soul  ? 
Thine  ailing  creatures  turn  to  Thee 
From  their  abiding  misery, 

And  wonder,  and  are  whole. 

Strong  words  Thou  hast  for  knave  and  king. 

For  publican  and  priest, 
For  flowers  that  bloom,  and  birds  that  sing 
For  every  small  or  suffering  thing, 

Sad  man  and  patient  beast  : 

For  us  with  our  awakened  eyes, 

With  skilled  and  careful  hands, 
Who  harvest  from  the  sunset  skie? 
A  sense  of  gracious  mysteries, 

Thou  hast  no  dear  commands  ? 

Hath  Thomas  faith,  hath  Peter  zeal, 

Hath  Paul  his  words  of  fire  ? 
Not  less  imperiously  I  feel, 
Not  less  insistently  I  kneel 

Before  my  pure  desire. 

249 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Ay,  I  can  preach  Thee,  I  can  trace, 

With  firm  and  strenuous  line, 
The  awful  splendours  of  the  Face, 
The  shrouded  effluence  of  the  grace 
Too  urgently  Divine. 

Lo  In  our  eyes  the  tear-drops  start, 

We  swim  in  stormy  seas  : 
Hast  Thou  within  Thine  ample  heart. 

No  shelter  for  the  sons  of  art. 
No  room  for  such  as  these  ? 

Or  wert  Thou  silent  of  design^ 

Because  Thy  thought  was  cold  ? 
Doth  love  of  word,  of  hue,  of  line, 
Sequester  from  Thy  power  divine, 
Dissociate  from  Thy  fold  ? 

0  words  of  Power,  O  gracious  deeds  ! 
When  Thou  didst  dwell  with  men. 

Thou  didst  divine  their  deepest  needs  : 

1  marvel,  and  my  spirit  bleeds 
That  Thou  wast  silent  then. 


250 


THE  OWL 

When  the  winds  overhead  were  sweeping, 
And  the  whole  loud  woodland  was  astir, 

You  were  perched,  like  a  weary  hermit,  sleeping 
In  a  dark  tangled  fork  of  the  fir. 

But  at  last  when  the  tired  wind  was  winging 
To  the  edge  of  the  smouldering  light, 

Your  laughter,  wild  and  horrible,  came  ringing 
And  sent  a  sudden  chill  through  the  night. 

You  laughed,  demoniacally  dreaming 
Of  the  rush  of  the  startled  mouse. 

When  you  with  your  grey  wing  gleaming 
Sweep  low  o'er  his  heathery  house. 

And  quiet  woodland  things  without  number. 
Who  were  couched  in  bracken  and  in  brake, 

Shivered  chill,  on  the  edge  of  slumber. 
At  the  thought  of  a  wicked^thing  awake. 

Thrice  you  turned  your  horned  head  in  the 
shadow. 
And  blinked  with  impenetrable  eyes^ 
Then  out  over  copse  and  misty  meadow 
You  swept  under  shrouded  skies. 

251 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

The  bell  beat  one  in  the  village, 
With  the  firelight  red  in  the  room, 

As  you  came  and  went,  to  slay  and  to  pillage. 
With  your  soft  wing  flapping  in  the  gloom. 


252 


THE  RINGDOVE 

Grey  dove,  that  croonest  in  the  solemn  fir, 

Lost  in  unutterable,  deep  content. 
Soon  will  the  drowsy  forest  be  astir. 

Soon  will  the  loud  wind  thunder  imminent. 
But  while  the  shadows  lengthen,  while  the  light 

Slants  from  the  West  across  the  red-stemmed 
grove, 
Croon  thy  soft  lay  of  intimate  delight, 

Of  rapturous  solitude,  and  gracious  love. 

Thou  from  the  branching  fastness  canst  discern 

The  woodways  winding  green,  the  island  knolls 
Crowned  with  tall  oaks,  and  rimmed  with  rusty 
fern. 

The  beeches,  with  their  plain  and  rounded  boles, 
Widespreading,  over  smooth  and  crackling  floors  ; 

The  chestnuts  splashed  with  golden  bravery. 
The  pine,  a  slender  pyramid,  that  soars 

With  velvet  greenness  to  the  freer  sky. 

Croon  as  thou  wilt  :  no  enemy  is  near  : 
Close  for  awhile  thy  proud  and  wary  eyes, 

Speak  to  my  heart,  while  yet  I  linger  near, 
Thy  patient  peace,  thy  languorous  mysteries. 

253 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Left  to  herself,  how  musical  of  mood 

The  world's  old  heart,  beside  her  chosen  shore  ! 

The  din,  the  shattering  tumult,  and  the  rude 
Thunder  of  battle  should  be  heard  no  more. 

No  more  the  wild  uproarious  thirst  of  life 

The  din  of  words  whose  purpose  is  the  same  : 
The  weary  enmities,  the  feverous  strife, 

Here  in  this  peace  are  nothing  but  a  name. 
Peace,  strenuous  peace,  is  thine  and  mine  to-day, 

Sedatest  energy,  divine  desire. 
This  be  my  part  in  thy  unconscious  lay, — 

Strongly  to  hope  and  softly  to  aspire. 


254 


THE  CAT 

On  some  grave  business,  soft  and  slow 
Along  the  garden-paths  you  go 

With  bold  and  burning  eyes 
Or  stand,  with  twitching  tail,  to  mark 
What  starts  and  rustles  in  the  dark 

Among  the  peonies. 

The  dusty  cockchafer  that  springs 
Upon  the  dusk  with  whirring  wings, 

The  beetle  glossy-horned. 
The  rabbit  pattering  through  the  fern, 
May  frisk  unheeded,  by  your  stern 

Preoccupation  scorned. 

You  go,  and  when  the  morning  dawns 
O'er  blowing  trees  and  dewy  lawns, 

Dim-veiled  with  gossamer, 
When  cheery  birds  are  on  the  wing. 
You  creep,  a  wild  and  wicked  thing. 

With  stained  and  starting  fur. 

You  all  day  long,  beside  the  fire. 
Retrace  in  dreams  your  dark  desire. 
And  mournfully  complain, 

255 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

In  grave  displeasure,  if  I  raise 
Your  languid  form  to  pet  or  praise  ; — 
And  so  to  sleep  again. 

The  gentler  hound,  that  near  me  lies, 
Looks  up  with  true  and  tender  eyes, 

And  waits  my  generous  mirth  ; 
You  do  not  woo  me,  but  demand 
A  gift  from  my  unwilling  hand, 

A  tribute  to  your  worth. 

You  loved  me  when  the  fire  was  warm, 
But  now  I  stretch  a  fondling  arm, 

You  eye  me  and  depart. 
Cold  eyes,  sleek  skin,  and  velvet  paws. 
You  win  my  indolent  applause. 

You  do  not  win  my  heart. 


256 


THE  HAWK 

The  hawk  slipt  out  of  the  pine,  and  rose  in  the 

sunlit  air  : 
Steady  and  still  he  poised  ;  his  shadow  slept  on  the 

grass  : 
And   the    bird's   song   sickened   and   sank  :     she 

cowered  with  furtive  stare 
Dumb,  till  the  quivering  dimness  should  flicker 

and  shift  and  pass. 

Suddenly  down  he  dropped  :    she  heard  the  hiss 

of  his  wing, 
Fled  with  a  scream  of  terror  :  oh,  would  she  had 

dared  to  rest  ! 
For  the  hawk  at  eve  was  full,  and  there  was  no 

bird  to  sing. 
And  over  the  heather  drifted  the  down  from  a 

bleeding  breast. 


257  R 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  BARBEL 

Bearded  Barbel,  swimming  deep 
In  the  cool  translucent  gloom, 

Poised  in  contemplative  sleep. 
In  your  liquid  moving  room  : 

Where  the  watery  gleams  transfuse 
Coated  rush  and  sleek  strong  reed. 

Up  the  swaying  avenues. 

Rimmed  with  plumed  and  velvet  weed  : 

Bearded  Barbel,  you  survey 

Hour  by  hour  the  pebbly  floor  : 

Have  you  ne'er  a  wish  to  stray 
Wider  from  the  willowy  shore  ? 

Have  you  ne'er  a  wilful  wonder 

Whence  the  dancing  bubbles  gleam. 

Whence  the  broad  weir's  drowsy  thunder 
Mutters  down  the  murmuring  stream  ? 

Bearded  Barbel,  be  content  ! 

Your  dim  world  is  small  and  sweet ; 
Let  your  safer  merriment 

Laugh  to  scorn  our  restless  feet. 

258 


THE  BARBEL 

If  your  curious  wilful  greed 

Tempt  you.  ah  the  illusive  gleam  ! 

You  will  suffer,  you  will  bleed, 
Writhing  in  the  troubled  stream. 

Sweeps  a  wild  bewildering  glare  : 
Gleams  your  silver  mail  beneath  : 

Then  the  thin  and  acid  air 
Chokes  your  faint  and  sobbing  breath. 


259 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  WISHING  WELL 

Yes,  here's  the  place :    the  meadow  thick  with 
rushes, 

The  gravelly  hill,  the  elms  beside  the  pool. 
Here  through  the  dancing  sand  it  jets  and  gushes, 

Divinely  clear  and  cool. 

Now  must  I  kneel  and  set  my  palms  together, — 
So  runs  the  rite, — and  then,  devoutly  bowed, 

Face  down  the  wind,  so  it  be  windy  weather. 
Then  speak  my  wish  aloud. 

No  vague  desires,  virtue  and  health  combining. 
Not  love — but  one  inevitable  name. 

Not  wealth,  but  cash — describing  and  defining 
The  very  coin  I  claim. 

Then  O  bright  hope,  with  no  success  to  dim  it. 
Vast  vague  desires,  of  you  I  dare  not  think  ! 

Dear  boundless  dreams  I  must  curtail  and  limit  ! 
Nay,  nay  !  I  will  not  drink. 


260 


JACK  IN  THE  BOX 

The  bolt  is  slipped,  the  wiry  rings 
Release  their  struggling  mystery  : 

The  merry  monster,  out  he  springs. 
With  whiskered  cheek  and  cheery  eye 

He  leaps  and  claps  his  cymballed  hands, 

Then  still  in  frozen  silence  stands. 


Come,  cram  the  ruddy  rascal  down. 
Thrust  pointed  chin  on  springy  breast 

No  matter,  let  him  fret  and  frown, 
Within  his  cedarn  prison  prest  : 

Through  hours  of  anguish  let  him  gain 

New  strength  to  spring  and  clap  again. 


When  Epimetheus  half  undid 
Pandora's  box  in  surly  greed. 

Slipping  from  out  the  lifted  lid. 

Came  darling  dream,  and  pretty  deed, 

And  fifty  sweet  imaginings 

With  beaded  eyes  and  filmy  wings. 

261 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

"  For  shame,  for  shame,"  Prometheus  cried, 
"  Dear  silly  brother,  they  are  sped  : — 

Nay  throw  the  vacant  casket  wide. 
It  prisons  one  ethereal  head  : 

Still  nestling  in  the  fragrant  dusk 

Lies  hope,  a  frail  and  faded  husk." 

Spring  up,  and  clap  thy  nimble  hands, 

O  irrepressible  delight  ! 
At  thy  light-hearted  shrill  demands 

Our  burdened  hearts  grow  strong  and  bright 
Though  faith  wax  faint  and  love  take  wing, 
Unreasoning  hope  shalHeap  and  sing. 


262 


THE  PHCENIX 

By  feathers  green,  across  Casbeen, 
The  pilgrims  track  the  Phoenix  flown, 

By  gems  he  strewed  in  waste  and  wood. 
And  jewelled  plumes  at  random  thrown. 

Till  wandering  far,  by  moon  and  star. 
They  stand  beside  the  fruitful  pyre. 

Whence  breaking  bright  with  sanguine  light, 
The  impulsive  bird  forgets  his  sire. 

Those  ashes  shine  like  ruby  wine. 
Like  bag  of  Tyrian  murex  split. 

The  claw,  the  jowl  of  the  flying  fowl 
Are  with  the  glorious  anguish  gilt. 

So  rare  the  light,  so  rich  the  sight. 
Those  pilgrim  men,  on  profit  bent. 

Drop  hands  and  eyes  and  merchandise, 
And  are  with  gazing  most  content. 


263 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


EVENSONG 

Thrush,  sing  clear,  for  the  spring  is  here  : 
Sing,  for  the  summer  is  near,  is  near, 

All  day  long  thou  hast  plied  thy  song. 
Hardly  hid  from  the  hurrying  throng  : 

Now  the  shade  of  the  trees  is  laid 
Down  the  meadow  and  up  the  glade  : 

Now  when  the  air  grows  cool  and  rare 
Birds  of  the  cloister  fall  to  prayer  : 

Here  is  the  bed  of  the  patient  dead, 
Shoulder  by  shoulder,  head  by  head. 

Sweet  bells  swing  in  the  tower,  and  ring 
Men  to  worship  before  their  King. 

See  they  come  as  the  grave  bells  hum. 
Restless  voices  awhile  arc  dumb  : 

More  and  more  on  the  sacred  floor 
Feet  that  linger  about  the  door  : 

264 


EVENSONG 

Sweet  sounds  swim  through  the  vaulting  dim, 
Psalm  and  canticle,  vesper  hymn. 

That  is  the  way  that  mortals  pray  : 
Which  is  the  sweeter  ?  brown  bird,  say  ! 

Which  were  best  for  me  ?  both  are  blest  ; 
Sing  thy  sweetest  and  leave  the  rest. 


265 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


SONGS 

I  CANNOT  sing  as  sings  the  nightingale, 

Frenzied  with  rapture,  big  with  rich  delight, 

Till  lovers  lean  together,  passion-pale. 

And  chide  the  awestruck  silence  of  the  night. 

I  cannot  sing  as  sings  the  tranquil  thrush, 
O'er  dewy  thicket  and  untrodden  lawn, 

When  early  gossamers  veil  the  frosted  bush 
In  the  chaste  freshness  of  the  sparkling  dawn. 

I  cannot  sing  as  sings  the  brooding  dove, 

At  windless  noon,  in  her  high  towers  of  green, 

A  song  of  deep  content,  untroubled  love. 
With  many  a  meditative  pause  between. 

I  cannot  sing  as  sings  the  dauntless  owl 
His  shout  of  horror  at  a  dark  dead  hour  : 

When  the  hair  pricks,  and  startled  watch-dogs 
howl, 
And  night-bells  clamour  In  the  lonely  tower. 

But  I  can  sing  as  sings  the  prudent  bee, 

As  hour  by  patient  hour  he  goes  and  comes, 

Bearing  the  golden  dust  from  tree  to  tree. 
Labours  in  hope,  and  as  he  labours,  hums. 

266 


CHILDHOOD 

What  do  I  remember  of  the  bygone  days  ? 
Little  of  the  sorrow,  something  of  the  praise. 

Pleasant  games  of  childhood,  in  the  pleasant  shade. 
Toiling  at  a  pleasure,  playing  at  a  trade  ! 

Often  very  weary,  never  glad  to  rest. 
Taking  love  and  laughter  with  a  reckless  zest. 

Claiming,  howso  heedless,  still  to  be  approved  ; 
Cold  to  those  that  loved  me,  wroth  with  those  I 
loved. 

Now  that  I  am  older,  what  is  left  behind  ? 
Still  the  restless  wonder,  still  the  childish  mind. 

Still  I  take,  unthankful,  service,  love,  delight. 
Laugh  to  see  the  morning,  murmur  at  the  night. 

Do  I  doubt  Thy  goodness,  question  of  Thy  will  ? 
Father,  Lord,  forgive  us — we  are  children  still. 


267 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


AT  TWILIGHT 

Dear  fellow-labourers,  whom  unseen  I  own, 

My  heart  goes  out  towards  you,  in  this  grey 
Soft  hour  ;   I  wonder  if  you  too  have  known, 
As  day  succeeds  to  day, 

The  early  sadness,  slowly  gathering  strength, 

The  stillness  of  the  long  laborious  noon. 
The  strong  o'er-mastering  ardour,  till  at  length 
The  darkness  falls  too  soon  ? 

The  large  sun  drops  ;  the  vapours  in  his  track 

Roll  westward,  and  the  distant  stars  draw  nigh  ; 
The  silent  wood  grows  sinister  and  black 
Against  an  emerald  sky. 

Now,  ere  the  lamp's  warm  circle  on  the  floor 

And  on  these  patient  hands  be  calmly  thrown, 
The  soul  may  slip  unchallenged  from  her  door, 
And  wander  forth  alone. 

I  quit  the  land  ;   I  hoist  the  throbbing  gear ; 

The  shallop  rocks,  the  seaward  wind  blows  free. 
The  huge  sail  flaps  and  bellies,  as  I  steer 
Into  the  plunging  sea  ; 
268 


AT  TWILIGHT 

That  lonely  sea,  where  should  some  sudden  sail 
Gleam  o'er  the  hissing  breaker,  gleam  and  fly. 
Yet  no  bewildered  mariner  may  hail, 
No  pilot  make  reply. 


269 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


A  DREAM 

I  DREAMED  that  as  I  gazed  upon  the  sky 

A   bright   star    slipt    and    tumbled    from    its 
sphere. 
It  veered  and  swooped,  until  it  dropt,  to  lie 
Upon  my  table  here. 

So  small  it  seemed,  a  globe  of  swimming  light; 

Now  clouding  dark,  now  flashing  swift  and  large, 
Like  silent  lightning  on  a  summer  night. 
Below  the  horizon's  marge. 

I  thrilled  with  hope,  I  stretched  an  eager  arm ; 
"  Here   sleeps,"   I    cried,  "  the   secret    of  the 
spheres ! " 
But  as  I  touched  it,  it  was  soft  and  warm, 
And  wet  with  human  tears. 


270 


AT  THE  GRANGE 

The  sheltering  pines  are  black  and  still, 
No  breeze  to  stir  the  listening  ferns  ; 
Beyond  the  shoulder  of  the  hill 
The  sunset  burns. 

The  lamp  within  the  casement  sheds 

Through  glimmering  leaves  a  warmer  glow ; 
Soft  moths  across  the  garden-beds 
Flit  large  and  low. 

The  weary  horse  plods  clinking  home, 

Plods  softly  down  the  sandy  lane, 
The  swift  bat  flickers  in  the  gloom 
Across  the  pane. 

Faint  through  the  silent  meadows  heard, 

Murmur  the  hazel-hidden  streams, 
Beside  dark  copses,  where  the  bird 
Is  wrapt  in  dreams. 

Rich  peace,  cool  silence  !     Who  could  think 

That  any  heart  were  restless  so  ? 
That  any  shivering  soul  could  sink 
In  baseless  woe  ? 

271 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Restless — to  find  the  world  so  sweet, 

Yet  craving  momently  to  hear 
One  foot  among  all  other  feet 
That  draws  not  near. 

Fearful — because  the  shadow  stays 

To  whelm  the  half-completed  task, 
Withholding  through  the  golden  days. 
The  boon  I  ask. 

Nay,  nay  !  be  master  of  thy  fate  ; 

Knit  close  the  bonds  that  shall  endure ; 
And  if  thou  canst  not  yet  be  great, 
Be  calm,  be  pure  ! 


272 


A  SERMON 

I  KNOW  not  what  the  preacher  said  : — 
His  words  fell  muffled  in  a  dream, 

By  clause  and  clause,  from  head  to  head, 
He  traced  a  sad  and  subtle  scheme ; 

Through  legal  maze,  on  dizzy  height, 
The  curious  metaphysic  trode  : 

He  held  with  all  his  tedious  might, 
The  mirror  to  the  mind  of  God. 

The  mind  of  God  !  and  all  the  while 
His  large  wind  thundered  in  the  tower, 

And  on  the  casements  of  the  aisle 

Pelted  and  tapped  the  driving  shower  . 

Old  grandsires  shivered  at  the  sound  ; 

How  cold  among  the  slanting  stones. 
The  comfortless  and  ugly  ground, 

Where  they  must  lay  their  aching  bones  ! 

While  lovers  sat  in  blushing  thought. 
And  heeded  not  the  unkindly  skies  ; — 

But  with  an  awkward  rapture  caught 

The  sudden  glance  of  wistful  eyes. 

273  s 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


A  REMINISCENCE 

I  WANDERED  by  the  frozen  pond, 

In  the  nipping  eager  weather, 
And  there  I  met  two  lovers  fond 

That  walked  and  leaned  together. 
They  were  not  comely,  rich,  or  wise. 

They  had  no  past,  no  story, 
But  either  pair  of  eager  eyes 

Was  lit  with  tender  glory. 
A  frosty  haze  bedimmed  the  sky. 

The  red  sun  flared  thereunder. 
Gilding  a  pompous  canopy 

Where  they  might  walk  and  wonder. 
How  glossy-green,  on  the  covert-edge, 

The  gemmed  and  guarded  holly  ! 
The  fat  thrush  piped  in  the  wintry  hedge 

To  feed  their  melancholy. 
How  large  and  new  the  mystery 

That  set  them  softly  guessing. 
While  overhead  the  spacious  sky 

Renewed  the  ancient  blessing. 
And  I  was  part  of  their  young  dream, 

Of  the  merry  pageant  round  them, 
Transfigured  by  the  heavenly  gleam  ; — 

For  nothing  could  astound  them. 
274 


A  REMINISCENCE 

The  children  smiled  to  see  them  blest, 

And  mocked  their  fond  entwining, 
They  passed  into  the  golden  west, 

And  left  me  half  repining  ; 
Rich  store  had  I  of  sober  days, 

And  contemplations  lonely, 
Some  little  wealth,  some  human  praise, — 

They  had  each  other  only. 
And  yet  I'd  give,  unenvied  pair, 

My  intellectual  vision, 
To  be  so  sweet  a  mutual  care, 

To  cause  such  dear  derision. 
And  I  too  passed,  a  lonely  form, 

In  the  nipping  eager  weather. 
Yet  it  somehow  made  my  heart  more  warm 

To  think  of  them  together. 


275 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


PEACE 

Linger,  O  rapturous  hour, 

Before  the  sunlight  die, 
Before  the  flying  shower 
Sweep  from  the  west,  and  scour 
The  patient,  tearful  sky. 

The  world's  at  rest,  with  will 
And  leisure  to  be  fair  ; 

The  trees  are  golden  still, 

Despite  the  ascetic  thrill 
Of  winter  in  the  air. 

Why  are  these  moments  few 

On  the  unhappy  earth, 
When  skies  and  friends  are  true, 
And  hearts  are  born  anew 
In  some  redeeming  birth  ? 

The  mood,  the  place,  the  friend,- 

All  these  are  mine  to-day, 
I  feel  your  fancy  bend 
To  mine,  and  softly  blend 
With  all  I  dare  not  say. 
276 


PEACE 

Sometimes  my  heart  is  high 
But  lonely,  or  my  friend 

Is  merry  when  I  sigh, 

Or  else  the  sullen  sky 

Is  cloud  from  end  to  end. 

Exultant  and  amazed, 

I  greet  the  kindling  mood ; 
My  hopes  upheld  and  raised, 
My  soft  suggestion  praised, 

My  silence  understood. 

The  anxious  question  fails, 
And  hope,  aloft  the  skies, 
Her  cloudy  ladder  scales. 
And  faith  unreasoning  veils 
Her  melancholy  eyes. 

Stay,  rapturous  hour,  and  steep 
My  soul,  till  daylight  fade  ; 
Before  the  darkness  leap 
From  tree  to  tree,  and  creep 
With  silent  lapse  of  shade. 


277 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  SONG 

Speak,  speak,  music,  and  bring  to  me 

Fancies  too  fleet  for  me, 

Sweetness  too  sweet  for  me. 
Wake,  wake,  voices,  and  sing  to  me. 

Sing  to  me  tenderly ;  bid  me  rest. 

Rest,  Rest !  ah,  I  am  fain  of  it ! 
Die,  Hope  !  small  was  my  gain  of  it ! 

Song,  take  thy  parable, 

Whisper  that  all  is  well. 

Say  that  there  tarrieth 

Something  more  true  than  death. 
Waiting  to  smile  for  me ;  bright  and  blest. 

Thrill,  string  :  echo  and  play  for  me 
All  that  the  poet,  the  priest  cannot  say  for  me  ; 
Soar,  voice,  heavenwards,  and  pray  for  me, 
Wondering,  wandering ;  bid  me  rest. 


278 


IN  THE  DAWN 

Some  souls  have  quickened,  eye  to  eye, 

And  heart  to  heart,  and  hand  in  hand  ; 
The  swift  fire  leaps,  and  instantly 
They  understand. 

Henceforth  they  can  be  cold  no  more ; 

Woes  there  may  be, — ay,  tears  and  blood, 
But  not  the  numbness,  as  before 
They  understood. 

Henceforth,  he  saith,  though  ages  roll 

Across  wild  wastes  of  sand  and  brine, 
Whate'er  betide,  one  human  soul 
Is  knit  with  mine. 

Whatever  ioy  be  dearly  bought. 

Whatever  hope  my  bosom  stirs, 
The  straitest  cell  of  secret  thought 
Is  wholly  hers. 

Ay,  were  we  parted,  life  would  be 
A  helpless,  heartless  flight  along 
Blind  tracks  in  vales  of  misery  . 
And  sloughs  of  wrong. 
279 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Nay,  God  forgive  me  !     Life  would  roll 

Like  some  dim  moon  through  cloudy  bars ; 
But  to  have  loved  her  sets  my  soul 
Among  the  stars. 


280 


IN  ABSENCE 

Ah  !  if  I  only  knew 

If  it  were  well  with  you, 

'Twere  well  with  me. 
You  in  your  silent  dreams 
Rest,  where  the  southern  streams 

Fall  to  the  sea. 

Forest  and  meadow  lands 
Disjoin  our  willing  hands, 

Sever  our  hearts, 
Still,  over  stream  and  hill. 
Beckons  my  spirit  till 

Daylight  departs. 

We  for  so  brief  a  space 
Run  our  divided  race. 

Seems  it  not  hard 
That  from  these  sharp  delights 
Of  common  days  and  nights 

We  grieve  debarred  .'' 

We,  like  twin  stars  that  run, 
With  each  the  other's  sun. 
Fiery  and  fleet, 
281 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Poised  in  one  spacious  night, 
And  bathed  in  mutual  light 
Still  softly  greet. 

Nay,  but  the  sages  say 
That  on  some  sudden  day 

Of  sound  and  flame, 
The  spell  that  half  divides 
Breaks,  and  the  airy  tides 

With  huge  acclaim, 

Thunder,  and  inwards  roll, 
And  soul  to  sundered  soul 

Must  swiftly  run  : — 
They,  in  their  wild  unrest 
Leap  to  each  other's  breast. 

And  both  are  one. 


282 


TIDINGS 

Blow,  wind,  blow  ;  and  rivulet  flow 
Down  by  the  moor  to  the  bridge  I  know. 

Stream,  be  wise  :   ere  the  ripple  rise, 
Catch  the  image  of  pure  grey  eyes. 

She  who  stands  in  the  meadow-lands, 
Gathers  her  cowslips  with  tender  hands. 

Bid  her  throw  in  the  pool  below 
One  of  her  blossoms  :  let  it  go  ! 

Let  it  ride  on  the  brimming  tide, 
Slip  to  the  river,  and  wander  wide. 

Flower,  swim  down  to  the  smoky  town  : 
Whisper  a  message  before  you  drown ; 

I  shall  go  when  the  warm  winds  blow. 
Wend  my  way  to  the  bridge  I  know. 

Under  the  tree,  by  the  grassy  lea, 
Has  she  a  tender  thought  of  me  .'' 

283 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  LABYRINTH 

And  can  it  be,  while  thus  I  thread 
The  devious  plot  of  winding  ways, 
Inextricably  intertwined, 
With  hurried  breath,  and  startled  tread, 
That,  out  beyond  the  twilight  maze. 
The  vagueness,  cruelly  defined, 
Lie  quiet  lawns,  and  fountains  fed 

With  spouted  waters,  sunlit  glades, 
And  soft  applause  of  dovelike  wings. 
And  temples  of  unearthly  peace, 
Where  labour  in  a  moment  fades 
To  happy  weariness,  that  flings 

The  tired  limbs  down,  that  ache  to  cease 
From  toiling,  under  grassy  shades  ? 

Meanwhile,  in  this  bewildering  gloom, 
I  linger,  thrusting  weary  foot 
Past  weary  foot,  and  stumble  on 
From  woe  to  woe,  from  doom  to  doom, 
To  where,  beside  the  elm-tree's  root, 
It  seemed  a  sudden  radiance  shone. 
And  fragrance  breathed  from  spires  of  bloom. 

284 


THE  LABYRINTH 

Ah  !  easy  triumph,  when  I  came 

At  morning  through  the  pillared  gates, 
Through  branching  alleys,  dewy-wet ; 
But  now  my  heedless  feet  I  blame, 
And  wonder  what  dim  error  waits, 
What  weary  leagues  to  traverse  yet. 
That  seem  the  same,  and  not  the  same. 


285 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


AMEN 

Return,  sad  sister  Faith 
Dim,  unsubstantial  wraith ! 
Return,  thy  votary  saith, 

He  needs  thee  now  : 
Thou  wert  serenely  fair ! 
But  some  diviner  air 
Gleams  on  thy  silvered  hair, 

And  crowns  thy  brow ; 

Thou  wilt  return,  and  I 
Shall  rather  sing  than  sigh. 
In  that  great  company 

Of  souls  forlorn  : 
One  with  all  hearts  that  break 
For  some  beloved's  sake, 
The  hopeless  hearts,  that  ache 

And  dare  not  mourn. 

Wherefore,  since  pain  and  pride 
Must  sleep  unsatisfied, — 
Because  Thy  heart  is  wide. 
And  dim  our  ken, — 
286 


AMEN 

To  that  vast  prayer  that  rolls 
Beyond  the  frozen  poles, 
With  all  desirous  souls 
I  cry,  Amen. 


287 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  CHARCOAL-BURNER 

Deep  in  the  forest's  secret  heart, 

Within  green  glooms  and  half-lit  shade, 

The  charcoal-burner  plies  his  art, 
And  moves  about  the  silent  glade. 

Around  tall  stakes,  that  inward  lean, 
Small  leafy  boughs  he  twists  and  binds, 

And  turf  breast-high,  to  guard  and  screen 
His  stiffening  limbs  from  aching  winds. 

Beside  the  broad  and  knotted  oak, 
Still  leafless,  when  the  Spring  is  done. 

All  day  the  pungent  oily  smoke 

Wells  upward  from  his  plastered  cone. 

All  night,  beneath  the  star-strewn  sky. 
That  roofs  the  glimmering  wood  below, 

Through  dusty  films  a  fiery  eye 

Gleams  with  a  still  and  inward  glow. 

At  noon,  above  his  labour  bowed, 

He  hears,  beyond  the  branch-built  stack, 

The  cart  that  jolts  and  jangles  loud 
Along  the  upward-climbing  track. 

288 


THE  CHARCOAL-BURNER 

The  sodden  cartridge  stained  with  rust, 
By  merry  sportsman  flung  behind  ; 

He  lifts  it  musing  from  the  dust, 
It  seems  to  link  him  to  his  kind. 


In  mists  of  sound  a  Sabbath  chime 

Across  the  dreaming  woodland  swims, 

He  dreams  of  some  forgotten  time, 

And  murmurs  half-remembered  hymns. 

He  sees  the  snake,  a  liquid  coil, 

Take  shape,  and  rustle  through  the  leaves, 
The  robin  that,  to  spy  his  toil, 

Hops  bickering  round  his  branching  eaves. 

He  heeds  not,  tho'  the  nightingale 

Sings  richly  to  a  dying  fall, 
Though  answering  cuckoos  up  the  vale 

Draw  closer,  every  time  they  call. 

He  cares  not  though  the  windflower  wave 
Her  gleaming  stars  beneath  the  night, 

Not  though  the  glossy  bluebell  pave 
The  copse  with  tracts  of  purple  light. 

When  morning  glimmers  in  the  glade 
He  wakes,  his  punctual  slumbers  done, 

And  ere  the  dusky  twilight  fade 
He  sleeps,  as  dreamless  as  a  stone. 

289  T 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

He  hears  the  first  shy  songster  spill 
His  liquid  note,  nor  loud  nor  long, 

Faint  tremulous  pipe  and  drowsy  trill, 
Till  all  the  wood  is  rich  with  song. 

He  listens  when  the  night-winds  rise 

About  his  turf-piled  parapet, 
And  when  the  last  soft  murmur  dies 

He  dreams  of  something  stiller  yet. 

And  if  the  rattling  thunder  wake 

From  ragged  cloud-wreaths,  piled  in  air, 

He  hides  himself  within  the  brake, 
And  all  his  mind  is  dim  with  prayer. 

He  is  not  merry,  is  not  sad  ; 

Unthinking,  hour  by  lonely  hour. 
Is  in  the  sunshine  dumbly  glad, 

And  dumbly  patient  in  the  shower. 

He  hath  no  fierce  desires  to  slake. 
No  restless  impulse  to  control, 

And  moving  woods  and  waters  make 
A  secret  music  in  his  soul.  5 


He  hath  no  altar  and  no  priest. 
But  in  the  forest,  vast  and  dim, 

Tall  branches  keep  a  solemn  feast, 
And  thrushes  chant  a  vesper  hymn. 
290 


THE  CHARCOAL-BURNER 

The  broad  face  of  the  tranquil  sky 
Is  mirrored  in  the  forest  pool, 

And  somewhat  fatherly  and  high 
Walks  in  the  forest  in  the  cool. 

God  is  about  him  all  day  long ; 

He  hears  around  each  haunted  path 
An  endless  litany  of  song  ; 

For  shrine  and  incense-smoke  he  hath 

His  branching  roof  of  subtle  grace, 
Fresh  savours  on  the  wholesome  air  ; 

A  forest  is  a  holy  place, 

And  labour  is  the  seed  of  prayer. 


291 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  SHADOW  OF  DEATH 

And  I,  who  feel  so  much  alive, 

Who  thrill  with  life  from  head  to  feet, 
Work,  think,  and  speak,  enjoy  and  thrive, 

Love  daylight,  talk,  and  cheerful  meat  ; — 
The  day  must  come  when  from  my  door 

1  must  be  borne  with  waxen  face, 
A  stiffened  thing,  all  shrouded  o'er, 

To  my  last  dark  abiding-place. 

There  have  been  days  when  I  desired 

To  fling  the  wearied  flesh  away, 
So  sad  1  seemed,  so  inly  tired, 

I  loathed  the  bright,  unfeeling  day. 
And  yet  in  spite  of  pain  and  loss, 

The  world  is  daily  grown  more  dear  ; 
1  love  my  life,  nor  hold  it  dross, 

I  love  it — I  would  still  be  here  ! 

Each  day  that  passes  binds  me  close 
And  closer  to  the  world  I  love  ; 

Each  day  that  wanes,  the  instinct  grows 
To  look  around,  and  not  above  ; 

292 


THE  SHADOW  OF  DEATH 

Bright  boys  and  girls,  all  ardent  hearts, 
Sweet  women,  wise  and  warlike  men, 

I  watch  them  play  their  gracious  parts ; — 
I  wonder  shall  I  watch  them  then  ? 

God,  Thou  didst  make  me,  set  me  here  ; 

I  own  with  tears  Thy  sovereign  power  ;- 
I  would  not  shrink  in  shuddering  fear  ! 

Oh,  in  that  last  and  dreadful  hour, 
Give  some  strong  medicine  for  my  soul. 

Ere  my  sick  spirit  find  release  ; 
And  when  the  dim  tides  o'er  me  roll, 

Enwrap  the  darkening  mind  with  peace. 


293 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


IN  THAT  DAY 

Absalom,  Absalom  ! 
Put  back  thy  fragrant  hair  ! 

Loud  is  the  city's  hum  ; 
Why  dost  thou  linger  there. 
To  set  soft  hearts  on  fire  ? 
That  thou  may'st  reign,  and  be 

What  vainly  men  desire, 
What  best  it  liketh  thee  ? 
Hark  to  the  city's  hum, 
Absalom,  Absalom  ! 

Absalom,  Absalom  ! 
Canst  thou  not  clearer  see 

The  thronging  forms  that  come 
Beneath  the  branching  tree  ? 

The  green  ways  of  the  wood, 
And  dripping  from  the  dart 

The  small  dull  pool  of  blood 
That  drains  the  traitorous  heart. 
See  the  dim  forms  that  come, 
Absalom,  Absalom  ! 


294 


THE  BIRD 

<'  Bird  in  the  branching  tree, 

Clasping  the  airy  bough, 
What  is  thy  minstrelsy  ? 

What  singest  thou  ?  " 
"  Hark! "  said  the  bird,  *'  I  sing 

The  sunshine  and  the  rain, 
And  many  a  sweet  small  thing 

That  Cometh  not  again." 

"  Swift  from  the  tree's  green  heart 

Joyfully  leaps  the  song  ! 
Rare  is  thy  secret  art 

So  rich  and  strong  1  " 
"  Nay,"  said  the  bird,  "  not  so  1 

I  have  no  skill,  no  art  ; 
Only  the  thanks  that  flow 

From  a  full  glad  heart." 

"  Over  the  still  pale  streams 

Quivers  a  single  star  1 
Is  it  thy  hope  that  gleams 

So  fair,  so  far  ?" 
295 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

"  Nay,"  said  the  bird,  "  I  sing 
Neither  of  joy  nor  pain  ; 

Sweet,  most  sweet  is  the  thing 
That  Cometh  not  again." 


296 


A  SONG    OF  SWEET  THINGS  THAT 
HAVE  AN  END 

The  dark  wood  and  the  solemn  sky, 
The  moon's  face  on  the  ghmmering  pool, 
The  full  stream  singing  drowsily, 
The  faint  breeze  out  of  the  thicket  cool. 
Heart  speaketh  to  heart, 

Friend  is  glad  with  friend  ; 
The  golden  hours  depart. 
Sweet  things  have  an  end. 

The  white  cloud  on  the  green  down's  edge, 
The  clear  stream  by  the  gravel  small, 
Pale  honey-horns  that  swing  in  the  hedge, 
The  cock's  halloo  and  the  dove's  low  call. 
Heart  speaketh  to  heart, 

Friend  is  glad  with  friend ; 
The  golden  hours  depart, 
Sweet  things  have  an  end. 

Hidden  music  airily  heard. 
The  child's  voice  in  the  warm  woodways. 
The  soft  glance  and  the  murmured  word. 
The  soft  close  of  the  summer  days. 

297 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Heart  speaketh  to  heart, 
Friend  is  glad  with  friend  ; 

The  golden  hours  depart, 
Sweet  things  have  an  end. 


298 


THE  FOOL 

Fight,  said  the  Knight, 

Fight  well ! 
Let  the  sword  be  bright, 
Flashing  left  and  right ; 
Life  or  death,  day  or  night, 

Heaven  or  Hell, — 
No  matter,  so  I  fight, 

Fight  well. 

Sing,  said  the  Bard, 

Sing  well  1 
Though  the  way  be  hard, 
Though  the  joy  be  marred  ; 
At  the  clanging  of  the  blows, 
At  the  whisper  of  a  rose, 

Thou  shalt  tell 
What  each  knows  not  and  yet  knows  ; 

Sing  well ! 

Mark,  said  the  Fool, 

Mark  well  ! 
The  minstrels  will  I  rule, 
And  will  set  the  knights  to  school, 
299 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

Though  I  cannot  sing  nor  fight, 
I  can  judge  if  swords  be  bright ; 

I  can  tell 
If  the  minstrel  rhymeth  right, 

Mark  ye  well  1 

The  knight  ran  to  fight 

With  a  will ; 
His  eye  was  glad  and  bright ; 
His  sword  flashed  left  and  right. 
In  the  evening  on  his  face 
He  was  lying  in  his  place 

Very  still. 
Said  the  Fool,  "  They  that  fight 

Have  their  fill." 

The  minstrel  rose  to  sing, 

'Twas  a  strain 
That  he  loved,  a  gracious  thing  ; 
And  the  harpers  in  a  ring 
Twanged  a  prelude  clear  and  strong  ; 
Oh,  to  please  the  listening  throng 

They  were  fain  ; 
But  the  heart  too  full  of  song 

Brake  in  twain. 

Said  the  Fool,  "  They  have  spent 

That  they  had. 
The  Minstrel's  heart  is  rent. 
And  the  Knight's  good  sword  is  bent; 

300 


THE  FOOL 

What  remaineth,  for  my  part, 
But  to  keep  the  cheerful  heart 

That  I  had  ?  " 
So  the  Fool  made  merriment, 

And  was  glad. 


301 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


BY  THE  WEIR 

Slow  stirs  the  boat  ;  beneath  the  cool 

Clear  water  sways  the  ribboned  weed ; 
The  large-eyed  fish  across  the  pool 

Poise,  dart  and  poise,  and  give  no  heed. 
The  distant  woods  are  dim  with  haze, 

The  merry  swallows  flicker  near  ; 
And  o'er  the  flashing  waterways 

Murmurs  and  drips  the  lazy  weir. 

The  reed  beside  me  stirs  and  shakes 

His  tufted  head,  how  fresh  and  strong  ! 
And  in  my  drowsy  memory  wakes 

An  old  and  half- forgotten  song. 
And  all  the  books  I  mean  to  write, 

And  all  the  fame  that  I  would  win, 
And  all  uneasy  dreams  take  flight, 

And  leave  my  heart  at  peace  within. 

Ah  me  !  but  we  forget  to  live  ! 

We  sell  sweet  days  for  wealth  and  pride  ; 
And  when  we  have  no  more  to  give, 

The  soul  is  still  unsatisfied  ! 

302 


BY  THE  WEIR 

Well,  I  have  laboured,  I  have  planned  ; 

For  once  my  plans,  my  labours  cease. 
God  lays  to-day  a  loving  hand 

Upon  my  shoulder,  saying  "  Peace  1  " 


303 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


MAKING  HASTE 

"  Soon  ! "  says  the  Snowdrop,  and  smiles  at  the 
motherly  Earth, 
"  Soon ! — for    the   Spring   with    her    languors 
comes  stealthily  on. 
Snow  was  my  cradle,  and  chill  winds  sang  at  my 
birth  ; 
Winter  is  over — and  I  must  make  haste  to  be 
gone  ! 

*'  Soon,"  said  the  Swallow,  and  dips  to  the  wind- 
ruffled  stream, 
"  Grain  is  all  garnered — the   Summer   is  over 
and  done  ; 
Bleak  to  the  Eastward  the  icy  battalions  gleam, 
Summer  is  over — and  1  must  make  haste  to  be 
gone  ! 

*'  Soon — ah,  too    soon  !  "    says    the    Soul,  with  a 
pitiful  gaze, 
"  Soon  ! — for  I  rose  like  a  star,  and   for  aye 
would  have  shone. 
See  the  pale  shuddering  dawn,  that  must  wither 
my  rays, 
Leaps  from  the  mountain — and  I  must  make 
haste  to  be  gone  !  " 

304 


THE  HIDDEN  MANNA 

A  TALE  of  lonely  grief  he  told, 

Of  shattered  life  and  dull  despair  ; 

And  as  he  spoke  a  mist  unrolled, 
And  angels,  sorrowful  and  fair, 

Cool  leaves  of  healing  trees  did  hold. 

Ah  me,  'twas  I,  not  he,  espied 

Those  proffering  hands,  that  healing  tree 
Beside  the  bitter  spring,  beside 

The  silent  wells  of  agony — 
And  I,  not  he,  was  satisfied. 


305 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


AT  EVENTIDE 

At  morn  I  saw  the  level  plain 

So  rich  and  small  beneath  my  feet, 
A  sapphire  sea  without  a  stain, 

And  fields  of  golden-waving  wheat ; 
Lingering  I  said,  "  At  noon  I'll  be 

At  peace  by  that  sweet-scented  tide. 
How  far,  how  fair  my  course  shall  be, 

Before  I  come  to  the  Eventide  !  " 

Where  is  it  fled,  that  radiant  plain  ? 

I  stumble  now  in  miry  ways  ; 
Dark  clouds  drift  landward,  big  with  rain. 

And  lonely  moors  their  summits  raise. 
On,  on  with  hurrying  feet  I  range, 

And  left  and  right  in  the  dumb  hillside, 
Grey  gorges  open,  drear  and  strange, 

And  so  I  come  to  the  Eventide  1 


306 


THE  LOOSESTRIFE 

Purple  are  the  spires  of  the  velvet  loosestrife  ; 

On  the  gliding  water  lies  a  purple  stain, 
Hour  by  hour  it  blushes  where  the  brimming  river 
rushes, 
Rushes  gaily,  rushes  proudly,  but  cometh  not 
again. 

On  a  day  in  deep  midsummer  doth   the    purple 
loosestrife 
Break  in  clustered  blossom,  on  a  day  that  poets 
know. 
Over  beds  of  whispering  rushes,  where  the  green 
dim  freshet  gushes, 
Where  through  leagues  of  level  pastureland  the 
stream  winds  slow. 

Many  are  thy  flow'ret  faces,  sturdy  loosestrife. 

Not  a  bloom,  but  a  jocund  company  of  bloom  ; 
Thou  dost  face  each  wind  that  bloweth,  and  the 
circling  sun  that  gloweth 
From  his  eastern  cloud-pavilions  to  the  western 
gloom. 

307 


LYRICAL  POEMS 

We  depart,  and  men  forget  us  soon,  but,  O  brave 
loosestrife, 
Thou  shalt  link  the  laughing  hour  to  the  hour 
that  laughs  no  more. 
Thou  shalt  gather  grace  and  glory  and  a  crown  of 
ancient  story, 
And  the  child  shall  love   the   velvet  spire    his 
father  loved  before. 

Bend  thy  velvet  head,  whisper  low,  purple  loose- 
strife, 
Tender  secrets  of  the  summer,  and  the  shore, 
and  the  stream, 
Of  the  bright  eyes  that  espied  thee,  and  the  soft 
hopes  breathed  beside  thee, 
Summer    vows    and   sunny    laughter    and   the 
golden  dream. 

Many  are  the  hearts  that  have  loved  thee,  loose- 
strife, 
Very  true  and  tender  was  the  heart  that  loved 
thee  best. 
He  was  wounded  many  a  morrow  ;  he  was  pierced 
with  utter  sorrow, 
He  was  blind  and  hungry-hearted,  and  he  could 
not  rest. 

Wherefore,  when   thou    swayest    in    the   breezes, 
loosestrife, 
Shine    for    other    wanderers    and    repair    thy 
lustrous  head  ; 

308 


THE  LOOSESTRIFE 

But  bethink  thee  of  thy  lover,  whom  the  grave- 
yard grasses  cover, 
And  the  stain  upon  the  waters,  where  a  heart 
hath  bled. 


3C^9 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


THE  LIZARD 

Jewelled  Lizard,  you  and  I 
On  the  heathery  hill-top  lie, 
While  the  westering  sun  inclines 
Past  the  clump  of  red -stemmed  pines  ; 
O'er  the  little  space  of  sun 
Creep  their  shadows,  one  by  one. 

Now  you  sit  with  sparkling  eye 
While  the  bee  spins  homing  by  ; 
Now  you  quiver,  dart,  and  rush. 
Flickering  thro'  the  heather-bush  ; 
Pattering  round  me,  as  I  muse, 
Through  the  dry  gorse  avenues. 

What  fantastic  spirit  made  you 
So  devised  you,  so  arrayed  you, 
Thus,  through  centuries  of  leisure, 
Shaped  you  for  a  moment's  pleasure, 
Stole  from  woodland  diadems 
Your  incomparable  gems. 
Borrowed  from  the  orbM  dew 
Emerald  glints  to  burnish  you  ? 

310 


THE  LIZARD 

See,  the  world  beneath  us  smiles ; 
Heathery  uplands,  miles  on  miles, 
Purple  plains  and  ridges  steep. 
Smoke  from  hamlets  bowered  deep, 
Rolling  downs  with  hazy  head 
To  the  far  horizon  spread. 

Think  it,  lizard,  every  rood, 
Every  stretch  of  field  and  wood, 
Every  yard  of  sunny  space, 
Rears  and  tends  its  little  race  ! 
Half-a-hundred  little  hearts 
Play  unseen  their  tiny  parts, 
Bask  beneath  the  liquid  sky, 
Lizard  bright,  as  you  and  L 

Whence  and  whither  !  here  you  rest ; 

You  would  scorn  the  foolish  quest. 

I  in  drear  omniscience 

Weave  me  dreams  of  how  and  whence. 

You,  you  care  not  ;  you,  you  run 

To  and  fro  beneath  the  sun. 

Till  these  lights  your  armour  leave. 

Darkling  in  the  dusky  eve. 


311 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


A  MYSTERY 

Shepherds,     Sirs,  What  have  you  ? 

fVise  Men.  A  mystery.^ 

Shepherds.     O,  may  we  know  it  ? 

JVise  Men.  Yea,  hear  and  see ! 

Myrrh  for  a  death,  and  gold  for  a  king  ; 
And  incense  meet  for  a  Heavenly  Thing. 

Shepherds.     Sirs,  how  came  ye  ? 

Wise  Men.  By  crooked  ways. 

Shepherds.     What  is  your  guerdon  ? 

Wise  Men.  Love  and  Praise  ; 

Love  for  a  Mother,  Praise  for  a  Birth, 
A  Star  in  Heaven  and  a  Star  on  Earth. 

Joseph.     Sirs,  whence  came  ye  } 

Wise  Men.  From  old  Chaldee. 

Joseph.     What  is  your  secret  ? 

Wise  Men.  That  we  see. 

Mother  and  Maiden  undefiled, 
Gifts  of  Grace  for  a  wondrous  Child. 

Shepherds.     Who  are  yon  bright  ones  ? 
Wise  Men.  Yea,  we  know  ! 

312 


A  MYSTERY 

Shepherds.     What  is  their  secret  ? 
Wise  Men.  Ay,  'tis  so  ! 

Angel.     Peace  on  the  Earth,  goodwill  to  men, 
And  shining  angels  to  cry  Amen. 

Angels.  Alleluia  1     Amen. 


313 


LYRICAL  POEMS 


IN  A  COLLEGE  GARDEN 

Birds,  that  cry  so  loud  in  the  old,  green,  bowery 
garden, 
Your  song  is  of  Love  !   Love  !  Love  !  Will  ye 
weary  not  nor  cease  ? 
For  the  loveless  soul  grows  sick,  the  heart  that 
the  grey  days  harden  ; 
I  know  too  well  that  ye  love  !  I  would  ye  should 
hold  your  peace  ! 

I  too  have  seen  Love  rise,  like  a  star  ;    I   have 
marked  his  setting ; 
I   dreamed    in    my  folly    and    pride  that  Life 
without  Love  were  peace. 
But  if  Love  should  await  me  yet,  in  the  land  of 
sleep  and  forgetting — 
Ah,  bird,  could  you  sing  me  this,  I  would  not 
your  song  should  cease  ! 


3H: 


INDEX  OF  FIRST  LINES 


INDEX  OF  FIRST  LINES 


Absalom,  Absalom  !..... 

Ah  !  how  he  flung  his  heart  upon  the  page 

Ah  !  if  I  only  knew         ..... 

Ah  me  !  how  good  to  breathe,  to  hear,  to  see  ! 

Ah  me  !  I  thought  that  life  had  been  more  sweet 

Alas,  alas  !  sad,  bitter,  loving  man 

Along  the  lonely  valley's  grassy  floor 

At  morn  I  saw  the  level  plain 

And  can  it  be,  while  thus  I  thread 

And  I,  who  feel  so  much  alive 

A  shadow  by  the  water's  edge 

As  sailors  loitering  in  a  luscious  isle 

As  through  the  summer  land  we  sped 

A  tale  of  lonely  grief  he  told 

At  the  dawn  of  the  year  in  my  chamber  as  I  lay 

A  year  ago  you  were  a  child  .... 

Ay,  he  was  dull  and  churlish,  slow  of  speech     . 

Bearded  Barbel,  swimming  deep 

Bird  in  the  branching  tree       .... 

Birds,  that  cry  so  loud  in  the  old,  green,  bowery  garden 

Blind  fate,  that  broodest  over  human  things     . 

Blow,  breeze,  and  whisper  somewhat  from  the  hill 

Blow,  wind,  blow  ;  and  rivulet  flow 

Bound  for  the  west,  I  sat  alone  at  ease 

Buried  and  based  in  dull  uncleanly  mould 

Bury  my  summer  love  in  a  summer  grave 

By  copse  and  hedgerow,  waste  and  wall  . 

By  feathers  green,  across  Casbeen  . 

Clasp  hands  across  the  world 
Clouds,  by  west  winds  blown 
Crawl  on,  old  ice-worm,  from  the  solemn  hills  . 

Dandelion,  dull  of  sense  .... 

Dear  fellow  labourers,  whom  unseen  I  own 
Deep  in  the  forest's  secret  heart 
Dig  deeper  yet,  sir  mole,  in  the  patient  ground 

Feathery  woodlands,  falling,  dipping 

Fight,  said  the  kaight    ..... 


PAGE 
294 
207 
281 
166 
72 

34 
306 
284 
292 

IDS 

130 

225 

201 

II 

258 
295 

314 
61 

63 
283 

94 

64 
203 

103 

263 

47 

178 

133 

146 
268 
288 

■* 

174 
299 


INDEX  OF   FIRST  LINES 

Friend,  of  my  infinite  dreams 
Funereal  pines,  your  garniture  of  woe 

Give  thanks  to  God  !  our  Hero  is  at  rest 
Green  vales  of  Kent,  across  the  blue 
Grey  dove,  that  croonest  in  the  solemn  fir 

Half  sunk  in  marble,  soft  as  down,  he  lies 

He  came  ;  I  met  him  face  to  face     . 

He  shall  be  great,  and  something  more  than  great 

High  in  the  woodland,  on  the  mountain  side     . 

Home  of  my  heart,  when  wilt  thou  ope    . 

How  fares  the  world  at  home  to-day  ? 

How  small  a  thing  am  I,  of  no  repute 

Hushed  is  each  busy  shout     .... 

I,  and  the  Bird      ...... 

I  cannot  sing,  as  sings  the  nightingale 

I  dreamed  of  peace,  and  woke  to  find  unrest     . 

I  dreamed  that  as  I  gazed  upon  the  sky  . 

I  had  outstripped  him  on  the  moorland  wide    . 

I  have  strung  my  harp,  and  tuned  each  subtle  chord 

I  hear  a  stronger  music  in  the  air    . 

I  hold  it  now  more  shameful  to  forget 

I  know  not  what  the  preacher  said 

In  and  out  I  tread  the  slender 

I  only  ask  to  know  it  is  Thy  will     . 

I  praise  Thee,  Father,  for  the  sky    . 

I  sailed  with  a  witch  in  a  car  of  foam 

Is  this  the  February  air 

It  cannot  be  that  my  friend  is  dead 

I  think  that  thou  art  somewhere,  strong  and  free 

It  was  the  blessed  Christmas  morn 

I  used  to  think,  beneath  the  shade 

I  wandered  by  the  frozen  pond 

I  would  live,  if  I  had  my  will 

I  would  not  dwell  with  Passion  ;  Passion  grows 

Jewelled  Lizard,  you  and  I      .  .  .  . 

Laughing  thou  said'st,  'Twere  hell  for  thee  to  fail 

Laugh,  woodpecker,  down  in  the  wood 

Leaves  luxurious,  large   . 

Linger,  O  rapturous  hour 

Lord  Caisar,  when  you  sternly  wrote 

Lord  Cliribt,  hast  Thou  no  word  for  me 

318 


PAGS 

43 
162 

253 

68 

213 

87 
197 

106 

160 

75 
I 

236 

266 
70 

270 
82 

85 

58 

74 

273 

247 

124 

171 

108 

119 

227 

76 

230 

168 

274 

164 

90 

310 

80 
190 
i8i 
276 
221 
249 


INDEX  OF  FIRST  LINES 

PACi 

My  lustrous  orchid,  rather  flesh  than  flower      .  .  .186 

My  sorrow  had  pierced  nie  tlirougli  ;    it  throbbed  in  my 
heart  like  a  thorn        .  .  .  .  .  .  .219 

No  radiant  diadem         .  .  .  .  .  .  .152 

O  Asian  birds,  that  round  me  in  the  gloom        ...        88 
O  Chalvey  stream,  dear  Chalvey  stream  .  .  .  .157 

O,  holiest  fount  of  sorrow,  treasured  tears         •  •  •        95 

O  loved  and  honoured,  truest,  best  .  .  .  .128 

O  pertest,  most  self  satisfied  .  .  .  .  .  .194 

O  pure  and  true,  O  faithful  heart    .  .  .  .  .41 

O  rosemary,  strong  rosemary  .  .  .  .  .184 

O  truth  !  how  vast  thy  empire,  how  immense    ...        60 
O'er  leagues  of  clustered  houses,  where    .  .  .  .137 

Oh,  if  we  are  dissevered,  you  and  I  .  .  .  .91 

Oh,  I  had  thought  to  find  some  haggard,  stern  .  .        67 

Oh,  I  wait  from  hour  to  hour  .  .  .  .  .122 

Old  craftsmen  of  the  Galilean  lake  .  .  .  .  .16 

Old  elm,  upon  whose  wrinkled  breast        ....      223 

Old  fellow  loiterer,  whither  wouldst  thou  go  ?  .  .  .      141 

On  Quantock  Head  the  wind  blew  shrill  ....      204 

On  some  grave  business,  soft  and  slow      .  .  .  .255 

One  by  one,  as  evening  closes  .....      245 

One  fell  in  the  dull  ground,  and  hopeless  lay     ...        93 
Out  of  his  lair  with  a  thunder-peal  .  .  .  .  .215 

Out  of  the  tombs,  across  the  centuries      ....        57 

Out  of  the  windy  waste  .  .  .  .  .  .117 

Purple  are  the  spires  of  the  velvet  loosestrife    .  .  .     307 

Red  flower,  I  fain  would  sing  of  you  :  yet  shame        .  .188 

Rest,  rest,  impatient  heart,  thou  dost  not  know         .  .        84 

Restless  dragonfly,  darting,  dancing  .  .  .  .101 

Return,  sad  sister.  Faith         ......     268 

Say,  Gentian,  by  what  daring  alchemy     ....       83 

Shepherds.     Sirs,  What  have  you  ?  .  .  .  .312 

Singer  most  melancholy,  most  austere      .  .  .  .55 

Slow  stirs  the  boat  ;  beneath  the  cool        ....      302 

Snow  under  foot  ;  and  outlined  white  and  soft  .  .        92 

So,  I  have  gained  a  crown  and  lost  a  friend       .  .  .81 

Some  careless  droop  of  branches  o'er  the  wall    .  .  .217 

Some  souls  have  quickened,  eye  to  eye     ....      279 

'•  Soon  I  "  says  the  snowdrop,  and  smiles  at  the  motherly 
earth  .........      304 

Soul  of  the  world  !  .  .  .  .  .  .  .51 

Speak,  speak,  music,  and  bring  to  me       ....      278 

Spire,  that  from  half  a  hundred  dainty  lawns  ...       66 


INDEX  OF  FIRST  LINES 

stand  aside  !     The  battle  is  but  beginning 
Still  on  the  misty  fiat,  below  the  down     . 

The  bolt  is  slipped,  the  wiry  rings  . 

The  child  that  leans  his  ear  beside  the  shell 

The  dark  wood  and  the  solemn  sky 

The  hawk  slipt  out  of  the  pine,  and  rose  in  the  sunlit  air 

The  imperious  soul  that  bows  to  no  man's  will 

The  road  was  weary  ;  and  beside  the  road 

The  saddest  sight  !     Oh,  there  are  sights  and  sounds 

The  sheltering  pines  are  black  and  still    , 

The  shepherd  is  an  ancient  man 

The  soul,  that  dizzied  with  the  din  of  death 

The  sun's  broad  back  is  leagues  away 

The  turf  is  marble  underfoot . 

The  weir  was  fragrant,  with  the  scent 

The  world  is  not  grown  old     . 

The  wounded  bird  sped  on  with  shattered  wing 

They  pass  me  by,  the  gay,  the  wise 

They  praise  the  rose  for  blushing  red 

This  is  my  chiefest  torment,  that  behind 

Thou  wast  a  poet,  though  thou  know'st  it  not 

Thrush,  sing  clear,  for  spring  is  here 

To-day,  as  far  as  eye  can  see  . 

Turn,  mill  wheel,  solemnly  turn 

'Twas  at  Ferrara,  in  a  palace  court 

Upon  the  iron  highway,  wreathed  in  smoke 

Voice  of  my  soul,  how  faint  your  echoes  ring 

Weary  and  weak,  alone  and  ill  at  ease 

We  were  friends,  as  the  world  would  say 

What  do  I  remember  of  the  bygone  days  ? 

What  means  this  enmity  'twixt  life  and  life 

What,  must  my  lord  be  gone  ? 

When  I  was  yet  a  child,  my  sparkling  days 

When  punctual  dawn  came  o'er  the  hill  . 

When  the  winds  overhead  were  sweeping 

Where  is  my  friend  to-day  ?  . 

Whet  thy  scythe,  mower 

Whither  away  so  fast     .... 

Without  'twas  life  and  light ;  the  large  air  rolled 

Yes,  here's  the  place  :  the  meadow  thick  with  rushes 

You  and  I,  brave  thrush,  together 

You  chide  me  for  my  sadness  ;  "  hope,"  you  say 

320 


PAGE 
126 

154 

261 

"3 

297 

257 

59 

5 

20 

271 

243 

89 

176 

99 
241 

209 

65 
211 
218 

77 

56 

264 

135 

180 

24 

237 
170 

69 
148 
267 
198 

234 
86 
246 
251 
no 

239 

144 

62 

260 

192 

71 


POEMS 

By  STEPHEN  PHILLIPS 

Fourteenth  Edition 
Crown  8vo,  4s.  6d.  net. 

Times.— "Mr.  Phillips  is  a  poet,  one  of  the  half-dozen  men 
of  the  younger  generation  whose  writings  contain  the  indefin- 
able quality  which  makes  for  permanence." 

Spectator. — "In  his  new  volume  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips  more 
than  fulfils  the  promise  made  by  his  '  Christ  in  Hades  '  :  here 
is  real  poetic  achievement — the  veritable  gold  of  song." 

Academy. — "  How  should  language,  without  the  slightest 
strain,  express  more  !  It  has  an  almost  physical  effect  upon 
the  reader,  in  the  opening  of  the  eyes  and  the  dilation  of  the 
heart." 

Westminster  Gazette. — '*  But  the  success  of  the  year  is  the 
volume  of  poems  by  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips,  which  has  been 
received  with  a  chorus  of  applause  which  recalls  the  early 
triumphs  of  Swinburne  and  Tennyson." 

Thb  Onlooker  in  Blackwood's  Magazijte.— "This  volume 
has  made  more  noise  than  any  similar  publication  since 
Alexander  Smith  shot  his  rocket  skyward.  But  in  this  case 
the  genius  is  no  illusion.  There  are  passages  here  which 
move  with  the  footfall  of  the  immortals,  stately  lines  with  all 
the  music  and  the  meaning  of  the  highest  poetry." 

Mr.  W.  L.  Courtney  in  Daily  Telegraph.—"  The  man  who, 
with  a  few  graphic  touches,  can  call  up  for  us  images  like 
these,  in  such  decisive  and  masterly  fashion,  is  not  one  to  be 
rated  with  the  common  herd,  but  rather  as  a  man  from  whom 
we  have  the  right  to  expect  hereafter  some  of  the  great  things 
which  will  endure." 


PAOLO  ^  FRANCESCA 

BY  STEPHEN  PHILLIPS 

Twenty-fifth   Thousand 
Crown  8vo,  4s.  6d.  net. 

Times. — "Simple,  direct,  concerned  with  the  elemental 
human  passions,  and  presenting  its  story  in  the  persons  of 
three  strongly-defined  characters  of  the  first  rank,  it  should 
appeal  to  the  dramatic  sense  as  well  as  to  the  sense  of  poetic 
beauty.  A  very  beautiful  and  original  rendering  of  one  of 
the  most  touching  stories  in  the  world." 

Mr.  William  Archer  in  Daily  Chronicle.— "  k  thing  of 
exquisite  poetic  form,  yet  tingling  from  first  to  last  with 
intense  dramatic  life.  Mr.  Phillips  has  achieved  the  impos- 
sible. Sardou  could  not  have  ordered  the  action  more 
skilfully.  Tennyson  could  not  have  clothed  the  passion  in 
words  of  purer  loveliness." 

Mr.  W.  L.  Courtney  in  Daily  Telegraph. — "  We  possess 
in  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips  one  who  redeems  our  age  from  its 
comparative  barrenness  in  the  higher  realms  of  poetry." 

The  Westminster  Gazette.— "Th.\s  play  is  a  remarkable 
achievement,  both  as  a  whole  and  in  its  parts.  It  abounds 
in  beautiful  passages  and  beautiful  phrases.  A  man  who 
can  write  like  this  is  clearly  a  force  to  be  reckoned  with." 

Mr.  Owen  Seaman  in  Morning  Post.—"  Mr.  Phillips  has 
written  a  great  dramatic  poem  which  happens  also  to  be  a 
great  poetic  drama.  We  are  justified  in  speaking  of  Mr. 
Phillips's  achievement  as  something  without  parallel  in  our 
age." 

Standard.— "  A  drama  which  is  full  of  golden  lines.  A 
powerful  but  chastened  imagination,  a  striking  command 
of  the  resources  of  the  language,  and  an  admirable  lucidity 
alike  of  thought  and  expression  are  combined  to  produce  a 
play  which  will  give  pleasure  of  a  lofty  kind  to  multitudes 
of  readers." 


HEROD:  A  Tragedy 

By  STEPHEN   PHILLIPS 

TWENTY-FIRST  THOUSAND 
Crown  8vo,  4s.  6d.  net. 


Daily  Telegraph. — "  It  is  simple,  magnificent,  grandiose, 
awaking,  as  Aristotle  demanded,  our  pity  and  our  terror." 

Mr.  Max  Bkerbohm  in  Saturday  Review. — "  His  drama  is 
so  fiery  coloured,  so  intense,  the  characters  so  largely  pro- 
jected, the  action  so  relentlessly  progresses,  till  the  final 
drops  of  awe  are  wrung  from  us,  that  only  the  greatest  of 
dramatic  poets  could  accompany  with  verse  quite  worthy 
of  it." 

Athenctum. — "Not  unworthy  of  the  author  of  the  •  Duchess 
of  Malfi.'" 

Globe. — "  Its  grim  imagination  and  fantasy  may  be  com- 
pared with  that  of  Webster." 

Daily  Graphic. — "Intensity  which  entitles  it  to  rank  with 
the  works  of  Webster  and  Chapman." 

Mr.  William  Archer  in  the  World. — "  The  elder  Dumas 
speaking  with  the  voice  of  Milton." 

Times. — "'  In  other  words,  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips  is  not  only 
a  poet  and  a  rare  poet,  but  that  still  rarer  thing,  a  dramatic 
poet." 

The  Spectator. — "  The  purely  dramatic  quality  of  the  play 
is  surprisingly  high.  There  remains  the  literary  quality  of 
the  verse,  and  here,  too,  we  can  speak  with  few  reserves. 
Mr.  Phillips's  blank  verse  is  flexible,  melodious,  and  majestic. 
He  coins  splendid  phrases  to  fit  the  grandiose  imaginings  of 
the  distempered  mind  of  the  King. 

'The  red-gold  cataract  of  her  streaming  hair 
Is  tumbled  o'er  the  boundaries  of  the  world' 

is  an  image  worthy  of  Marlowe,  of  whom  we  are  again  and 
again  delightfully  reminded." 

The  Daily  Chronicle, — "  A  gain  to  the  British  acting  drama, 
no  less  than  to  the  loftier  literature  of  our  time." 


ULYSSES:  A  Drama 

IN  J  TROLOGUE  AND  THREE  ACTS 
By  STEPHEN  PHILLIPS 

TENTH  THOUSAND 
Crown    8vo,    4s.   6d.   net 

SOME  PRESS  OPINIONS 

Daily  Telegraph. — "  It  is  a  grateful  task  to  discover  in  the 
new  volume  many  indications  of  that  truly  poetic  insight, 
that  vigorous  expression  of  idea,  that  sense  of  literary  power 
and  mastery  which  have  already  made  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips 
famous,  .  t  .  J  There  is  a  finely  perceptive  quality  in  all 
Mr.  Phillips's  scenic  touches  which,  combined  with  rheto- 
rical fervour  and  the  most  indubitable  natural  vigour,  makes 
the  new  dramatic  poem,  '  Ulysses,'  a  very  worthy  contribu- 
tion to  modern  literature." 

Daily  Chronicle. — "  Mr.  Phillips  is,  in  the  fullest  sense  of 
the  word,  a  dramatic  poet.  Any  critic  who  has  bound  him- 
self to  canons  of  dogma  which  would  exclude  such  work  as 
Mr.  Phillips  has  hitherto  given  us  had  better  unbind  himself 
with  what  speed  he  may  ;  for  this  is  a  case  in  which  the 
poet  will  assuredly  have  the  last  word." 

Standard. — "' Ulysses '  will  add  to  Mr.  PhiUips's  reputa- 
tion as  one  of  the  few  living  masters  of  English  song." 

Daily  Mail. — "  In  the  power  of  its  imagery  and  the  beauty 
of  its  phrase  it  is  not  unworthy  to  stand  beside  '  Christ  in 
Hades '  and  '  Paolo  and  Francesca.' " 

Mr.  James  Douglas  in  the  Star. — "  '  Ulysses '  is  a  splendid 
shower  of  dazzliitg  jewels  flunn  against  gorgeous  tapestries  that  arc 
shaken  by  the  wind  of  passion.  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips  is  the 
greatest  poetic  dramatist  we  have  had  since  Elizabethan  times." 


TWENTIETH  THOUSAND 

MARPESSA 

By  STEPHEN    PHILLIPS 

FLOWERS  OF  PARNASSUS.  Volume  3 

With  about  7  Illustrations.     Demy  i6mo  (5^x4^  inches). 

Bound  in  Cloth,  is.  net. 
Bound  in  Leather,  is.  6d.  net. 


OTHER  VOLUMES  IN 

FLOWERS    OF    PARNASSUS 

Demy  i6mo  {5J  x  4J  inches).     Gilt  Top. 

Bound  in  Cloth,  Gilt  Top.     Price  is.  net. 
Bound  in  Leather,  Gilt  Top.     Price  is.  6d.  net. 

A  Series  of  Famous  Poems  Illustrated  under  the 

General  Editorship  of  Francis  Coutts 

gray's  elegy 

browning's  the  statue  and  the  bust 

rossetti's  the  blessed  DAMOZEL 

the  nut-brown  maid 

tennyson's  a  dream  of  fair  women 

tennyson's  the  day  dream 

suckling's  a  ballade  upon  a  wedding 

fitzgerald's  omar  khayyam 

pope's  the  rape  of  the  lock 

watts-dunton's  christmas  at  the  "mermaid" 

blake's  songs  of  innocence 

shelley's  the  sensitive  plant 

watson's  wordsworth's  grave 

reliques  of  STKATFORD-ON-AVON 

MILTON'S  LYCH^AS 

WORDSWORTH'S  TINTERN  ABBEY 

LONGFELLOW'S  THE  BUILDING  OF  THE  SHIP 

WATSON'S  THE  TOMB  OF   BURNS 

CHAPMAN'S  A  LITTLE  CHILD'S  WREATH 

MORRIS'S  THE  DEFENCE  OF  GUENEVERE 

HOGG'S   KILMENY 

DAVIDSON'S  THE  BALLAD  OF  A'NUN 

WORDSWORTH'S  RESOLUTION  AND  INDEPENDENCE 

KEATS'S   ISABELLA 

TENNYSON'S  MAUD 

THE  SONG  OF  SONGS,  WHICH  IS  SOLOMON'S 


NEW    POEMS 

BY    STEPHEN    PHILLIPS 

Crown  8vo.     Price  4s.  6d.  net. 
SOME   PRESS    OPINIONS. 

Spectator.—"  It  is  with  no  small  pleasure  that  we  record  the  appearance 
of  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips's  new  volume  of  poems  .  .  .  poems  almost  without 
exception  characteristic  of  Mr.  Phillips's  best  work  .  .  .  '  Cities  of  Hell," 
exceedingly  stirring  and  original.  .  .  .  '  Grief  and  God,'  soul-moving.  .  .  . 
'  The  Son,'  most  poignant  and  terrible.  .  .  .  Exquisite  is  Endymion's 
address  to  Selene." 

Standard.—"  A  remarkable  volume,  rich  in  the  pure  gold  of  poetry.  .  .  . 
Mr.  Phillips  possesses  the  sovereign  gift  of  imagination.  ...  He  can 
conjure  up  in  a  few  virile  lines  of  haunting  beauty  a  picture  which  makes 
its  own  instant  appeal  even  to  the  most  fastidious  of  critics.  This  volume 
.  .  .  will  widen  the  circle  of  those  readers  who  have  already  learnrd  to  look 
to  Mr.  Phillips  for  the  sort  of  poetry  which  is  always  rare  and,  perhaps, 
never  was  more  so  than  to-day." 

Daily  Telegraph.— "  The  book  is  one  of  outstanding  importance.  .  .  It 
is  no  little  thing  that  Mr.  Phillips  should  sustain,  with  such  emphatic  dig- 
nity, the  high  level  of  thought  and  utterance  which  has  characterised  all 
the  best  of  his  work.  The  present  volume  is  packed  with  striking  and 
essential  poetry." 

Morning  Leader. — "Passages  like  this  .  .  .  are  worthy  in  their  noble 
splendour  of  Keats  or  Marlowe  at  his  best  in  this  vein  of  air  and  fire  .  .  . 
Mr.  Phillips  ...  is  a  master  of  beauty,  a  real  poet  of  whatsoever  is  lovely 
and  of  picturesque  report." 

Liverpool  Post. — "  Mr.  Stephen  Phillips  is  one  of  the  few  poets  of  our 
time.  ...  In  the  lyric '  A  Poet's  Prayer '  we  have  something  that  baffles 
definition.  It  is  the  mysterious  spirituality  which  surrounds  Gray's 
'  Elegy '  ;  it  is  the  profound  sense  of  poet  responsibility  which  Wordsworth 
has  shown  us  in  many  places,  which  Browning  proclaimed  as  the  poet's  and 
the  musician's  privilege." 

Scotsman. — "  '  lole '  .  .  .  a  one-act  tragedy  which  reads  beautifully,  a 
dignified,  calm,  and  statuesque  exposition.  .  .  .  Next  in  importance  is  an 
Endymion  narrative  in  that  delicate,  nervous,  and  shimmering  blank  verse 
of  which,  alone  among  moderns,  this  writer  has  the  secret,  a  mystery  he 
illustrates,  without  giving  away,  also  in  '  The  Parting  of  Launcelot  and 
Guinevere,'  and  in  a  fine  dramatic  monologue,  '  Orestes.'  These  are 
accompanied  by  exquisite  lyrical  pieces  of  varied  forms." 

THE  COLLECTED  POEMS 
OF      ERNEST     DOWSON 

With  Illustrations  and  a  Cover  Design  by  AUBREY  BEARDSLEY, 

and  a  I'ortrait  by  WILLIAM  KOTHENSTEIN. 

Crown  8vo.     Price  5s.  net. 

SHAKESPEARE,    PEDAGOGUE    AND 
POACHER 

By  RICHARD    GARNETT.      Crown  8vo.    Price  3s.  6d.  net. 


NEW   POETRY 


THE     POEMS     OF 
WILLIAM  WATSON 

Edited  and  arranged,  with  an  Introduction,  by  J.  A.  SPENDER. 
In  2  Volumes.    With  Portrait  and  many  new  Poems. 
Crown  8vo,  gs.  net. 

Times. — "  William  Watson  is,  above  all  things,  an  artist  who  is  proud 
of  his  calling  and  conscientious  in  every  syllable  that  he  writes.  To 
appreciate  his  work  you  must  take  it  as  a  whole,  for  he  is  in  a  line  with  the 
high  priests  of  poetry,  reared,  like  Ion,  in  the  shadow  of  Delphic  presences 
and  memories,  and  weighing  every  word  of  his  utterance  before  it  is  given 
to  the  world." 

Athenaum. — "His  poetry  is  a  'criticism  of  life,'  and,  viewed  as  such,  it 
is  magnificent  in  its  lucidity,  its  elegance,  its  dignity.  We  revere  and 
admire  Mr.  Watson's  pursuit  of  a  splendid  ideal ;  and  we  are  sure  that  his 
artistic  self-raastery  will  be  rewarded  by  a  secure  place  in  the  ranks  of  our 
poets.  .  ,  .  We  may  express  our  belief  that  Mr.  Watson  will  keep  his 
high  and  honourable  station  when  many  showier  but  shallower  reputations 
have  withered  away,  and  must  figure  in  any  representative  anthology  of 
English  poetry.  .  .  .  '  Wordsworth's  Grave,'  in  our  judgment,  is  Mr. 
Watson's  masterpiece  ...  its  music  is  graver  and  deeper,  its  language  is 
purer  and  clearer  than  the  frigid  droning  and  fugitive  beauties  of  the 
'  Elegy  in  a  Country  Churchyard.'  " 

WesttninsUr  GatelU. — "  It  is  remarkable  that  when  Mr.  Watson's  poetry 
directly  invites  comparison  with  the  poetry  of  preceding  masters  his 
equality  always,  his  incomparable  superiority  often,  becomes  instantly 
apparent.  ...  No  discerning  critic  could  doubt  that  there  are  more 
elements  of  permanence  in  Mr.  Watson's  poems  than  in  those  of  any  of 
his  present  contemporaries.  ...  A  very  treasury  of  jewelled  aphorisms, 
as  profound  and  subtle  iu  wisdom  and  truth  as  they  are  consummately 
felicitous  in  expression." 

Bookman. — "  From  the  very  first  in  these  columns  we  have  pleaded  by 
sober  argument,  not  by  hysterical  praise,  Mr.  Watson's  right  to  the  fore- 
most place  among  our  living  poets.  The  book  is  ...  a  collection  of 
works  of  art,  like  a  cabinet  of  gems." 

Speclalor. — "  The  two  volumes  will  be  welcomed  by  the  poet's  numerous 
admirers.  There  is  a  pleasure  in  the  possession  of  a  complete  edition  of  a 
great  writer's  works.  .  .  .  We  must  apologise  for  quoting  so  copiously,  but 
the  book  is  so  full  of  beautiful  things  that  in  his  pleasure  at  seeing  them  all 
together  the  critic  is  irresistibly  tempted  to  talve  them  out  and  remind 
his  readers  of  them  separately." 

St.  James's  Gazette. — "  The  publication  of  these  volumes  confers  a  distinct 
benefit  on  contemporary  thought,  contemporary  poetry,  and  on  English 
literature  in  a  wider  sense." 

Mr.  William  Archer  (in  the  Morning  Leader). — "Among  the  critics  of 
the  nineties  enamoured  of  this  or  that  phase  of  eccentricity,  affectation, 
or  excess,  Mr.  Watson  had  to  pay  dearly  for  his  austere  fidelity  to  his  ideal 
of  pure  and  perfect  form.  But  these  days  are  past;  detraction  now  hide? 
its  diminished  head;  the  poet  ...  is  clearly  seen  to  be  of  the  great  race." 


RECENT   POETRY 


SELECTED  POEMS  OF 

JOHN  DAVIDSON 

Foolscap  8vo 
Bound  In  Cloth,  3s,  6d.  net.     Bound  in  Leither,  5s.net 

Times. — "  There  are  not  more  than  two  or  three  living 
writers  of  English  verse  out  of  whose  poems  so  good  a 
selection  could  be  made.  The  poems  in  the  selection  are 
not  only  positive  ;  they  are  visible." 

Athenanim. — "There  is  urgent  need  for  a  collected  edition 
of  Mr.  Davidson's  poems  and  plays.  The  volume  and  the 
variety  of  his  poetry  ought  to  win  for  it  wider  acceptance.  It 
is  indeed  curious  that  poetry  so  splendid  as  Mr.  Davidson's 
should  fail  to  get  fuller  recognition.  There  are  many  aspects 
of  his  genius  which  ought  to  make  his  work  popular  in  the 
best  sense  of  the  word.  He  has  almost  invented  the  modern 
ballad.  .  .  ,  He  handles  the  metre  with  masterly  skill,  filling 
it  with  imaginative  life  and  power." 

Literary  World. — "We  count  ourselves  among  those  to  whom 
Mr,  Davidson  has  made  himself  indispensable." 

Daily  Mail. — "  Mr.  Davidson  is  our  most  individual  singer. 
His  variety  is  as  surprising  as  his  virility  of  diction  and 
thought." 

St.  James's  Gazette. — "  This  volume  may  serve  as  an  intro- 
duction to  a  poet  of  noble  and  distinctive  utterance." 

New  Age. — "  The  book  contains  much  that  Mr.  Davidson's 
warmest  admirers  would  best  wish  to  remember  him  by. 
There  is  a  subtle  charm  about  these  poems  which  eludes 
definition,  which  defies  analysis." 

T.P.'s  Weekly. — "Mr.  Davidson  is  one  of  the  most  individual 
of  living  poets  ;  he  has  a  rare  lyrical  faculty." 

Morning  Post. — "Mr.  Davidson  is  as  true  a  poet  as  we  have 
now  among  us.  .  .  .  he  has  included  nothing  that  we  do  not 
admire." 

Daily  Graphic. — "  This  delightful  volume." 

Dundee  Advertiser. — "  Its  poetry  gives  out  a  masterful  note. 
.  .   .  Mr.  Davidson's  poem  pictures." 


CORNISH    BALLADS 

AND    OTHER   POEMS 

P.Y 

ROBERT   STEPHEN    HAWKER 

VICAR  OF  MORWENSTOW 

Edited     by     C.    E.    BYLES 

illustrated  by 
J.  LEY  PETHYBRIDGE 

Price  y.  net. 


This  book  is  a  revised  edition  of  Hawker's  Complete  Poems, 
published  in  1899  at  7s.  6d.  The  chief  differences  consist  of  the 
reduction  in  price,  the  inclusion  of  a  number  of  fresh  illustrations 
and  a  few  additional  poems,  and  a  general  improvement  in  the 
"  get-up  "  of  the  book.  In  binding  it  will  be  uniform  with  "Foot- 
prints of  Former  Men  in  Far  Cornwall."  The  new  illustrations 
will  include  the  following: — 

ILLUSTRATION  to  illustrate 


Clovelly 
The  Black  Rock,  Widemouth 
St.  Nectan's  Kieve 
Morwenstow  Church  (Exterior) 
The  Well  of  St.  Morwenna 
The  Well  of  St.  John  . 
The  Source  of  the  Tamar    . 
Launcells  Church 

The   Figure-head    of   the    Cale- 
donia 
Boscastle  Cliffs  in  a  Storm 

Hartland  Church 
St.  Madron's  Well 


Hennacliff  .... 
Tintagel  .... 
Effigy   of  Sir  Ralph   de   Blanc 

Minster  in  Stratton  Church 
Sharpnose  Point 
Portrait  of  Sir  Bevill  Granville 
The  Font  in  Morwenstow  Church 


"Clovelly." 

"  Featherstone's  Doom." 

"  The  Sisters  of  Glen  Nectan." 

"  Morwennae  Statio." 

"The  Well  of  St.  Morwenna." 

"  The  Well  of  St.  John." 

"  The  Tamar  Spring." 

"  The  Ringers  of  Launcells 
Tower." 

"  The  Figure-head  of  the  Cale- 
don  ia  at  her  Captain's  Grave." 

"The  Silent  Tower  at  Bot- 
treaux." 

"The  Cell  by  the  Sea." 

"  The  Doom-Well  of  St.  Mad- 
ron." 

"  A  Croon  on  Hennacliff." 

"  The  Quest  of  the  Sangraal." 

"Sir  Ralph  de  Blanc-Minster 
Bien-Aim6." 

"  The  Smuggler's  Song." 

' '  The  Gate  Song  of  Stowe." 

"The  Font." 


THE     WORKS     OF 
FRANCIS    COUTTS 

THE  REVELATION  OF  ST.  LOVE  THE 

DIVINE.      Square  i6mo.     Price  3s.  6d.  net. 

THE  ALHAMBRA  AND  OTHER  POEMS. 

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THE  MYSTERY  OF  GODLINESS  :  A  Poem. 

Square  i6mo.      Price  3s.  6d.  net. 

THE  POET'S  CHARTER  ;  or,  The  Book  of 

Job.     Crown  8vo.      Price  3s.  6d.  net. 

MUSA  VERTICORDIA  :    Poems.    Crown  8vo. 
Price  3s.  6d.  net. 

THE     ROMANCE    OF    KING    ARTHUR. 
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SOME    PRESS   OPINIONS. 

The  Academy. — "  The  reader  feels  behind  this  verse  always 
a  brave  and  tender  spirit,  a  soul  which  has  at  any  rate  '  beat 
its  music  out*;  which  will  not  compromise ;  which  cannot 
lie  ;  which  is  in  love  with  the  highest  that  it  sees." 

Literature. — "  It  is  not  every  writer  who  is  master,  as  was 
quite  truly  said  of  Mr.  Coutts  some  years  ago,  of  the  rare  and 
difficult  art  of  clothing  thought  in  the  true  poetic  language.'' 

St.  James's  Gazette. — "All  who  know  Mr.  Coutts'  other 
poems  already  will  have  much  joy  of  this  volume  and  look 
eagerly  for  more  to  follow  it,  and  those  who  do  not  yet 
know  them  may  well  begin  with  this  and  go  back  to  its 
predecessors." 


The  LOVER'S  LIBRARY 

KDITED  BV 

FREDERIC    CHAPMAN 

Size  5^  X3  inches. 

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Bound  IN  Parchment    .        .         Price3s.net, 
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THE  SILENCE  OF  LOVE,      By  E.  HOLMES 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  TENNYSON 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  LANDOR 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  E.  B.  BROWNING 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  BURNS 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  SUCKLING 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  HERRICK 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  W.  S.  BLUNT  (PROTEUS) 
SONNETS  OF  SHAKESPEARE 
LOVE  SONGS  FROM  THE  GREEK 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  BYRON     LOVE  POEMS  OF  POE 
LOVE  POEMS  OF  MOORE     THE  SONG  OF  SONGS 

THE    LIBRARY    OF 
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London  :  john  lane,  the  uodley  head,  vigo  street,  w. 
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PEACE  AND  OTHER  POEMS 

By  ARTHUR  CHRISTOPHER  BENSON 

Uniform  with  Lord  Vyet  and  other  Poems. 

The  Professor  and  other  Poems. 

Price  5s.     Fcap.  8vo. 

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LYRICS 

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THE    PROFESSOR 
AND   OTHER    POEMS 

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INTERLUDES    AND    POEMS 

By  LASCELLES  ABERCROMBIE 
Crown  Svo.     5s.  net. 

"  Mr.  Abercrombie  has  power  and  he  has  originality.  His  mind 
is  fearless,  rebellious,  sinister.  He  quails  at  notliing.'lightheartedly 
frolicking  among  the  most  tremendous  ideas  and  emotions.  His 
words  pour  hot  from  his  pen,  always  vigorously  and  always  warm 
with  life.     His  power  and  originality  are  beyond  question." 

Times. 

"  Any  half-dozen  lines  in  this  book  would  prove  Mr.  Abercrombie 
a  poet.  In  these  poems  a  whole  man,  imaginative,  intuitive,  reflec- 
tive, observant,  passionate  in  his  relations  with  life,  is  to  be  seen 
burning  with  original  language." — Daily  Chronicle. 


.^^^ 


\S> 


UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA  LIBRARY 

.\i^"  Los  Angeles 

This  book  is  DUE  on  the  last  date  stamped  below. 


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