Later Poems | ||
The Ballad of Lady Ellen
THE ARGUMENT
There was a very mighty famine in the land, and the people's cry went up day by day, and many of them died. And the Lady Ellen, their Duke's daughter, sold her jewels and her rich robes, that the people might have wherewith to stay their hunger: for her father, the Ruler of the land, cared not a whit whether the folk lived or died, and would not hearken to the praying of his daughter on their behalf.
Then, when she had spent all that she had, the lady went forth into the city, in the disguise of one of mean estate: that with her own eyes she might see the plight of the people, and hear it with her own ears.
And lo! she learned how the emissaries of the Evil One were buying the souls of the folk, and how the folk were selling their souls that they might have bread for themselves and for their children.
Then the lady, knowing this dreadful thing, prayed once more to the Duke, her father, on the folk's behalf, and found his heart as hard as the nether millstone.
And so she sold her own soul to the Evil One for a mighty sum, and bought therewith food and seed-corn for the people.
So plenty drave out famine, and the emissaries of the Evil One were hounded forth, not as at that time to return.
And the soul of the Lady Ellen fared forth to hell, and lo! at the very heart of hell she found the Lord's heaven, and was laid to rest on the bosom of Mary.
The flowers are springing fair and fine;
And the whole big world is glad but you.
Your fair white horse, the gift of the king;
He'll bear you away from your brooding care.”
I will not ride my horse to-day.”
With the voice as sweet as voice can be;
Your trouble will not tarry long.”
I will not hear the sounds of glee.
My kith-folk in their misery.”
They are banned and barred from your father's door.
“My soul hath eyes and I see with those.”
Where the king's son shall be banqueted;
As for mine only heir is meet.
With a golden circlet round your hair;
Set with the fine lace daintily.
The scented glove and the broidered shoe;
Your rosed-white ears and lilied neck.
Fling over all, fair daughter mine,
A faery mist from head to knee.”
With scented glove and broidered shoe?
What have I to do with them?
Wherewith to bid the people live.
When the people sit in rags to-day?
When the people have not what to eat?
Are the lands your father's fathers won;
Where a war-famed banner high doth float;
Are piles of the red and the white money.
To the worth of the souls the Saviour bought.
Swoops on their lives like a bird of prey,
For lack of needful flesh and bread.
And give it to the starving poor.
To help the souls for whom He came.”
“I care not for the folk a song!
I care not, daughter, by the Lord!
Instead of you, my daughter fair.”
The hard floor with the tears she wept:
Is the human heart to hardness grown.
“And see how they die for lack of bread.
Would to God I might die for these.”
Whose heart was gentle as heart can be;
Dight like women of low estate.
And saw themselves how the people died.
Than curse of famine and drought could be:
Than toll of a death-bell on the ear.
From the eastern to the western shore;
Never a moment's care gave he:
His powers to bring him great content.
Two swart men with raven hair.
They watch the people's misery.
Right well the language of the land.
Upon the lissom tongues of those.
And the hostess marvels at the store.
Day by day in their misery.
Gold enow ye have, and to spare.”
Each alone, to this our room.
Gold enow their ills to cure.”
And enter where the strangers be;
A room that was once a king's chamber.
With a dreadful change on every face.
Who dealt in souls for merchandise.
But for the young they gave much gold.
They said they would give a king's ransom
In a virgin body fair to see.
Before her footsteps home were turned.
Than curse of famine or drought could be.
Than toll of a death-bell on the ear.
Pierced to the heart with sorrow and shame;
That would not suffer a tear to flow.
With Lenten ashes upon her head,
And knelt in her anguish at his feet.
Your father's house and your father's name,
With the dust of Lent upon your head?”
“Father, father, save the folk!”
As low she bowed herself to him:
“To sell your own white soul were best!
Is worth a world of such as theirs!”
“Slay me, O God, for these,” she said.
Is nought to the fire in the soul that yearns
Or perish instead, if so may be.
She went alone to the evil men.
If I render you up my soul?”
For the goodliest soul that ever was spilt.”
And she signed her name to the bond in blood.
To deal with evil men no more.
To the cornlands of the far-off west;
Across the wide sea to be borne.
Which the western folk to the lady sold.
The corn would come to the waiting shore.
Corn enow for the people's need.
Till the fourteen days were past and gone,
By the Lady Ellen's martyrdom.
Out toward the land of the western star;
Her eyes on the wide sea far away.
The fair white ships of her love's ransom.
When the sails at last her eyes could see;
My soul that's lost for my people's sake.”
And she drew the bolts of her high chamber;
What anguish and woe to her were known,
Of her soul's exceeding bitterness.
To the heart of Hell and the fires thereof.
Laden each with a costly load.
For the food and the seed that came that day.
Never to come to the land again.
And the parched mouths for joy could speak.
At the place where Lady Ellen lay.
Was gone from the sound of their weal or woe.
And found her stark-dead on the floor.
Was the writhen spoil of her agony:
Of the death unhouselled, unannealed.
Fared alone to the gates of hell,
Clad in its great love's loveliness.
To the flame and the awe and the pain therein!
All unharmed and all unscared.
The flame was glory, the darkness light.
To hers the music of all the spheres,
Where the mystic Rose of the Blessed is,
From the very Uncreated Light.
And far apart are toil and rest,
And far apart are hell and heaven;
Where is the man who thinks to know?
The heart of hell, finds heaven is there.
When the soul came into Paradise;
To bring that soul to the sweetest rest.
With the sheen of the blessed on her feet;
And laid it upon her bosom fair:
The very self of Charity.
“Thee, whose love was a love like His:
“Here in the bosom where Jesus lay.”
—This ballad was suggested by a story included through a mistake in Mr. W. B. Yeats's collection of Fairy and Folk-tales of the Irish peasantry. This story of “Countess Kathleen O'Shea,” which Mr. Yeats has dramatised, and Mrs. Hinkson (Katherine Tynan), has made the foundation of a poem, neither of which works I have seen, is, I am informed, certainly no Irish legend. It was translated, or adopted, from the French by Mr. John Augustus O'Shea, and published in an Anglo-Irish newspaper, whence, in all good faith, Mr. Yeats reprinted it in his Irish Folk-tale book. I have made very considerable alterations and additions, as anyone who knows the version in Mr. Yeats's book will easily see at once.
The Passion of King Conor
An Old Irish Legend
The lime-bound brain of Mesgedra, whom Conall had sent to the dead;
Till the fools of Conor stole it, the creature of wreak and death,
And played therewith in their folly, till it came to the sight of Keth:
And Keth, the son of Magach, he stole the fate-ball then,
And carried the death in his girdle, for the king of the Ulstermen.
So great and comely and mighty, the peer of him ne'er was known:
So fair of the face and the body, and prudent, well-speeched and wise;
In race, in arms, and in raiment, full glorious in all men's eyes.
And he watched till his time was come, and he cast the ball from a sling;
And Fingen the leech was with him, and tended him night and day.
No more of the combat's glory or the lustre of love for him;
Nor anger nor joy must he cherish, but sit, a broken thing,
With the light gone out of his life, great Conor MacNessa, the king;
And seven were the years that went from the time of his quieting.
And the strong earth moaned and shook, and Barach the Druid came near,
When the king was fain to know why the earth was wrapt in shade,
With never a gleam of light but the levin that maketh afraid.
Is hanging nailed on a cross, between the earth and the sky.
And Conor the king said, Why? What evil thing hath He done?
What ill is laid to His charge? And Barach made answer, None.
Then Him, the Guiltless and Pure, said Conor the king, they slay?
And Barach, he bowed the head, and answered him only Yea.
From the seat where, seven slow years, his body its calm had kept;
He rushed to the woods amain, and wild in his passion drew
His sword, and hacked at the trees, as if each were the form of a Jew:
And the wrath of his soul foamed out at his lips all white and dry;
And the great veins swelled on his brow, and the fierce blood streaked his eye.
Yea, I would have sprung to His side; and a combat fierce and grim
Have waged for His sake, for His, Who is dying unhelpt, alone;
And a high king's valour and might those evil hearts should have known.
'Tis I would have conquered Thy foes, and set the innocent free;
O Christ! O Christ! they defile Thee! They slay that Body of Thine!
And I in my strength would have saved Thee, with even this body of mine.
Nor stay, though they pierced me and hewed me; and Thee, O Thou Fairest and Best,
Yea, Thee, for Whom earth is a-wailing, Thee, Lord, would I shield with my brcast.
Oh, but it slays me to listen; full grievous and bitter the cry!
And I hear, and mine arms cannot reach Thee, the sorrow of dying to stay;
And mine heart is crushed with the anguish; and yet they slay Thee and slay.
And even as the Saviour was speaking the great It is finished,
The anguish and torment were ended, and Conor MacNessa lay dead.
—It was the custom amongst the Ancient Irish to mix the brains of their slain foemen with lime, and knead them into a ball. Several of these balls have lately been found at Old Connaught, the estate of Lord Plunket, Archbishop of Dublin.
This story is to be found in O'Curry's Manuscript Materials of Irish History.
I may add that, had I known of Mr. T. D. Sullivan's fine treatment of this legend before I versified it, I should probably have left it untouched.
A Wolf Story
And reason only in lordly man! Well, think of it as you may,
I'll tell you of something not unlike to reason I saw one day.
Is it only men that are makers of law? Perhaps! Yet hearken a bit;
I'll tell you a tale; say you if e'er you have heard a stranger than it.
And many a year ago it happed, in the land of the Great White Czar.
It was morn; I remember how cold it felt, out under a low pale sky,
When we moored our boat on the river-bank, my comrade Leigh and I;
And the plunge in the water unwarmed of the sun was less for desire than pluck,
And we hurried on our clothes again, and longed for our breakfast luck;
When, all of a sudden, he clutched my arm, and pointed across. And there
We stood up side by side and watched, and as mute as the dead we were.
And the grey wolf left the body alone, and swift as the feet of fear
His feet sped over the brow of the hill, and we lost the sight of him,
Who had left the dead deer there on the ground, uneaten body or limb.
So, when he vanished out of our sight, we rowed our boat across,
And lifted the carcass, and rowed again to the other side. “The loss
For you, good Master Wolf, much more than the gain for us will be!
'Twere half a pity to spoil your sport except that we fain would see
The reason why, with hunger unstaunched, you have left your quarry behind;
Red-toothed, red-mawed, forgone your meal! Sir Wolf, we'll know your mind!”
At last we spied him a-top of the hill, the same grey wolf come back,
No more alone, but a leader of wolves, the head of a gruesome pack.
He came right up to the very place where the dead deer's body had lain,
And he sniffed and looked for the prey of his claws, the beast that himself had slain;
The beast at our feet, and the river between, and the searching all in vain!
Breaker of civic law or pact, or however they deemed of him,
He knew his fate, and he met his fate, for they tore him limb from limb.
Less like men that had cozened a brute than men that had murdered a man.
Two Women and a Poet
I. Elsa
My poet beautiful and great of soul!
The coming days may bring me joy or dole,
But naught remains for me to gain or miss.
My soul hath met his soul in that still kiss,
My life stands fearless out, a perfect whole,
My brow is lucent with the aureole
Set round it by his great love's emphasis.
I am as one who, after heavy noise
Of tempest and the shouting of the sea,
Comes to a Paradise of perfect joys,
Where every gift and grace, in equipoise,
Goes round a sun of light, eternally.
II. Mildred
The veriest bliss of blisses doth she taste;
And I, too, love him! Shall I bid him haste,
That fell Anatomy who bears the scythe,
White limbs with all their grace for aye disgraced,
And lay her perfect body's beauty waste,
Who holds my lover bound with cord and withe?
His ill slow fingers on with touches dim!
Leave her the radiancy of face and limb!
Let her be deadly fair a season yet!
But, if thou be just God, make her forget
That once she loved and was beloved by him.
III. A Poet
Gone by? We live in sense and not in years.
They said—what was it?—an ugly piece of work.
Well, one may think that out of ugliness
The perfect beauty shall be born some day:
Or shall we say, things are not as they seem?
Nothing is fair or ugly in itself?
Who would have thought that small-faced, soft-eyed child,
Mildred, who lay upon my breast and cooed,
Would slay another, and then kill herself?
The world is very evil; O dear God,
When shall Thy light arise and all be peace?
We poets are forerunners of the time
When all shall run in rhythmic harmony:
We, the great poets, like the Weimar sage,
Who keep us calm amid the tempest's roar.
The lesser poets are beaten, driven about,
Are passion's slaves. Well, well, they have their place;
They take the big world's anguish on their heart,
And so their songs, half-stifled, only rise
To sink; a poet should be no mere man,
To float immortal song on: I am calm,
Yet touched by gentle sorrow's tenderness,
Which lies on me like dew upon a flower.
Mildred's small face, white star in glooms of hair,
Slight body like a child's, and little soft
Child-hands; who would have thought she could have slain
That Elsa, glorious-limbed and Juno-tall?
O my poor Elsa, I would not see you dead,
I keep the memory of your beauty safe!
She poisoned you. She said—what was it she said?—
I did not mean to make the woman die,
But take a memory away from her.
They thought her mad, and shut her up away
From fair world-life: and then she slew herself;
And all for love—why should she not have known
That love is but a little part of life,
As poets know, and all harmonious souls?
Mildred was not harmonious; Elsa was;
One living harmony of spirit and sense,
One flame-like motion quick and passionate.
In life, to make the harmony of song.
Shall Mildred's tear-drenched kisses leave a taste
Of brine upon my lips? Not so, not so.
Nothing shall break this splendid calm of mine.
One cannot sing in tempest, therefore, peace.
The small among us cannot do the work,
The great wait for the greater ones to come.
Shall I keep earth a-waiting? Surely not.
Mildred, poor passion-beaten barque! God brings
Such to the haven where they fain would be.
And so my Art will be the richer much.
I, Goethe-like, will drink experience
In at each pore. Good-night, dear Mildred, now.
If Elsa blended spirit more with sense,
You sounded passion's glorious monochord
Full deeply. Well, good-night, my lady dear!
Good-night, dear Elsa!
It is night, and peace.
The Lady of Comfort
Glad for my joy, sad for my tears;
She gave the grace of her sympathy.
Suffering and rejoicing too.
Tacit covenant naught should break.
Our Lady of Comfort needed aught;
From the very source of life, we said.
Our souls undid their barriers;
Even as the walls of Jericho,
Around, and the trumpets' blast was blown.
From her gracious calm and sweet reserve;
Over herself and her world a queen.
The quivering heart of her agony.
And spake in words like unto these:
Me who so long have worn a smile!
As a little child for its broken toy.
Oh, let me weep for myself to-day!
Upon the heart of the world to press.
About the gone that no more may come.
I have but played at being wise.
I have but played at being strong.
I have but played at being good.”
I had thought her before, and I think her still;
The tears that awed as a man's might awe;
A weight that was heavier than pain.
Except that now I had learned to see.
Betwixt us twain till the day she died.
Baa, Baa, Black Sheep
They hint it isn't right,
To love one little black sheep
Far more than all the white!
And never apt to stray;
My black sheep is often cross,
And sometimes runs away.
The very naughtiest
Of all naughty things that be!
Yet I love him best!
Pretends to butt me too;
He scampers when I want him, off
To the hillside blue;
But e'en must sit and wait
Until he comes back again,
When he has gaed his gait.
Comes my bonny thing;
(Bonny heather-smell doth love
Round his fleece to cling.)
A strange depth in his eyes,
Caught from where I do not know,
In some unknown wise:
Till indeed I seem
Like to one that knoweth not
If he see or dream.
Broken is the spell;
Off goes my black sheep,
Where, I cannot tell!
How you plague me,—oh,
They tell me I must tether you,
Never let you go!
You'd have!—but where's the good?
I wonder who could tether you,
If indeed he would!
If you make me fret,
Just a minute's look at you,
And I quite forget!
Even if I could;
Naughtiest of naughty things!
Best of all the good!
Have you any wool?”
“Yes, sir, that I have,
Three bags full!”
Very soft and fine!
Richest fleece on all the downs,
Bonny black sheep mine.
Is worth the Golden Fleece
Brought in the olden time
From the land of Greece.
I would not have you tame:
Oh, but life has gone on wings,
Since the day you came!
Weariness, annoy,
Better than the fairest calm,
Is your gift, joy.
Wander at your will;
Come belated, early come,
And welcome still.
Right well I know
Little were the whole world's worth,
If you must go.
The Children's Knight
The knights of Love ride onward,
To fight the fight;
They ride, the wrong redressing,
The weak ones lifting, blessing,
With heart and life confessing
The true, the right.
And courteous as the royal,
Noble and true;
Our eyes have looked upon them,
With hearts that fain had won them
All blessing fair to crown them
That life e'er knew.
Discern and know among them
His armour bright;
The vow his heart hath made is
To none of all sweet ladies;
He rideth where the shade is;
The children's knight.
The little children, lying
Where devil's hoof
And green grass lay blood-sodden;
For them he fought, Childe Roden,
In armour proof.
(The swift stag for his cresting),
Well hath he fought.
The legend which he beareth
Below that crest he weareth,
(Oh, well for him who dareth!)
All good or nought!
None loveth you above him,
Your minstrel knight;
On heart, voice, life, so fully,
He bears your passion duly;
Would give his life up truly
For your sweet right.
True knight, good knight, ye found him;
O childhood's eyes,
Smile into his who gave you
Love that so burned to save you;
Heart to heart must he have you,
His great love's prize.
“Your Joy no Man taketh from You”
O child, whose Father's will was the first of thy drink and meat;
That circleth his brow alone who layeth his life adown;
For the anguish of all the world and the woe its lovers reap.
And patience lives on the lips of the smitten of God and scroned.
At the bar of the human heart are one and all arraigned:
The flush of the sunset sky, the light that is early spring's;
The spirit making its form in the body manifest;
The solemn calm that broods on the everlasting snow;
The joy of the warrior-soul whom nothing maketh afraid.
In a dreadful silence lapt, struck dead by thy lightning eyes.
A beam of the warm sun-smile alive on the lips of God.
Who came in the morn of the world with beauty and cheer for us.
Thou wonder of all the world, God-strong, more pure than a child.
The less in the more; not thee in Pan, but Pan in thee.
And the rise to the shining heights of love-begotten bliss.
Is the gate to the life of life; the gate to the light of light.
To a Wee Laddie
No font-name is enough for me,
All prettiness of call I bring
From fairy tale and history;
But mostly after two whereon
A light from Shakespere's spirit fell,
I love to call you, little one;
Even after Puck and Ariel.
A little of this laddie's kind,
His pretty ways and mischievousness,
In Ariel and Puck combined;
His nimble, supple movements—oh,
Full oftentimes I cannot tell
If here be Robin Goodfellow,
Or here be delicate Ariel!
My little tricksy Puck, some day
To see the dairy at your touch
Play some queer prank and melt away.
I know when bowls of cream are set
Their calm is very oft assailed;
And sometimes, Puck, you quite forget
That butter fails if cream has failed.
Most bravely for an hour or so,
And 'neath your gravity scarce will lurk
A touch of Robin Goodfellow;
But then you claim, as Ariel claimed,
That shortly I should set you free,
And boldly ask, and unashamed,
For time of gladsome liberty.
You seldom let one quite forget
You want the time of spriting gone,—
Away from task and lesson set!
Away, away, to joyous play,
Such play as Ariel could not know;
You sport with human younglings gay,
More blest than Robin Goodfellow.
My bonnie Robin Goodfellow!
And yet I know the girl, unpaid,
Would gladly follow you to and fro:
For you have that within you, dear,
Which somehow seems to cheer and bless;
The ether is always blue and clear
Beyond fleece-clouds of naughtiness.
In melody at church, as though
Your soul were just an incense-cup
Wherefrom sweet clouds of worship go!
One scarce would think that, in the pause
Antiphonal, it could be true
You fain would eat that apple, was
Under the rose bestowed on you.
Times when my whole soul knoweth well
Beside me walk an angel's feet,
Not feet of Puck nor Ariel:
A human angel, with the eyes
That sure have met the eyes of God,
In walking through some Paradise
Where feet of mine have never trod.
My darling, at such times as this;
I only watch you reverently,
And in the silence bend to kiss
That sweetest face and loveliest
Has e'er been looked upon by me,
Who entertain this angel guest,
Not unawares, but wittingly.
I Think of You as of a Good Life-boat
That, once a-launch, thrilled aye and throbbed to meet
The mastered waves against her bow to beat,
And leap to the great ocean full afloat,
Where, wild about the sharp rocks of the world,
There was a storm of angry spray upswirled,
As passionate hands, in wanhope's struggles fierce,
Beat the strong waves till foam arose on foam,
Yet drew them none the nearer life and home.
And oh, to save them from the loss and curse,
And snatch them from the moaning deep, and bring
Safe to the quiet place of sheltering!
The dreadful surges and the tempest's swell;
Who brought the wrecked from terror of the sea
Into the haven where they fain would be.
A Mill Ballad
Where the unbelievers be,
Was a king so good and wise,—
Long, long ago lived he:
He was kind as a father is,
And rich as the earth, ywis.
Not yet have I filled my sack.
Against his majesty,
And drove him from the throne,
Nobody knoweth why:
From town to town he past;
A mill his shelter at last.
Not yet have I filled my sack.
This king, as he worked alway;
No murmur lived on his lips;
This miller he sang all day;
All night he slumbered deep:
Of yore could he never sleep.
Not yet have I filled my sack.
Of those who had driven him away,
A host of folk to his cote,
For changeable souls are they:
“Take back the crown for thine head!”
“Nay! I give it to you instead!”
Not yet have I filled my sack.
And millers my sons shall be:
The water runs in the stream:
The corn in the field grows free:
All else doth change,” he said;
For now have I filled my sack.
In a Swiss Wood
I sat and watched the water fallAdown the gray rocks rough and tall,
Which Nature there did robe and crown
With marvellous wealth of green and brown.
A small white butterfly did flit
Across the rainbowed breast of it.
One up on high, one down below,
I saw two monkshood clusters grow.
The long fair grasstufts which the sun
In southering glory looked upon
Lay soft and delicate, like the hair
Of little maidens kneeling there;
And the high mountains caught the glow
On crests of everlasting snow.
The whortleberries on the bank
Beside me of the sunshine drank,
That flushed their green to living red;
And on the happy air was shed
The sunkissed pinetrees' quickening scent;
Its fragrance through and through me went.
The little ants moved busily
O'er shed pine-needles close to me;
And now and then the human folk
Passed by; I knew not if they spoke
So loud, and bonny bell-flowers rang;
And budding grasses at my feet
Thrilled as they felt the live air beat
In rhythmic rapture all around,
A glory of sense and light and sound.
Through voiceful peace and restful stir
There Nature drew me so to her,
That, were it but for once, I vaunt
I knew not either wish or want.
To the Czar Nicholas II.
On the high dreadful splendours of the world;
With Death's eternal calm upon his eyes;
From all the glory and terror of that sway.
To thee, life's very sorest strain and stress;
Care by thy throne, and trouble by thy bed.
With eyes that oft have wept, and still are wet.
But thine the present, and the near-to-come.
To give the larger gift, and more divine!
No gift avails the land that is not free.
The cry sent up to God from year to year:
Guarded by Fear and Sloth, in night's profound.
Against the clash of elemental fight.
Bear, as the saviours of the world must bear.
And if thou perish, perish for Love's sake.
Death and Life
All our earth-time, you and I,
Must be strangers utterly.
And the due probation ends;
Then comes Life to make amends.
Quickening what was fallen numb.
Death stood there, and smote us dumb.
Leapt the sudden rose-red levin,
From the mighty-clouded heaven.
Then a roof, with sudden groan,
Fell, and smote us twain to one.
Then the crash and darkness came;
Light and darkness all the same.
In the rapture of the night;
Earth and earth's evanished quite.
From our passion-wrought reserve;
Dominated, heart and nerve,
For we thought we were to die
There together, you and I.
Struggle o'er for me and you,
Now our happy spirits knew.
All Love's glory unveiled, unclad;
We beheld it and were glad.
Lovely death whose hand had prest
Mouth to mouth and breast to breast.
All our knowledge, verily,
Death was gone from you and me.
Sunlit peaks all gray and dim:
Death was gone, and Life with him.
The Ship from Tirnanoge
I, and the man I loved with me.
As we sat by the sea, my love and I;
Then white, white grew his ruddy lip;
Into the heart of some deep awe.
Never a token gave nor sign;
And I sat still and wondered.
Who was her captain, whence her crew?
With fair eyes full of unknown light.
Where they had heard my true-love's name:
Of one who must bide for ever young.
Song rose up from many a throat.
A lovely new companion.
And rowed to meet their passenger:
That told of joy at the heart of change.
And she waited there till the turn o' the tide.
A song that was passing sweet to hear:
Away from any thought of pain.
And I saw their hands were beckoning,
That passed to the air from their silent tongues.
And left me sitting in my place,
I, who was not called like him.
And the tide turned, and she rode the wave;
With a rose-light about his brow.
With all its lovely women and men.
His hand held in the captain's hand.
With eyes a-change in depth and blee;
Blue, and purple, and black, and gray;
In the heart of a trail of white sea-foam.
But he whose name is Manannan.
Out of the day into the day.
“And After This—”
And when he turned I followed, shivering
For lack of that lost body used to cling
About me till God smote off its disguise.
So followed I who could none otherwise,
Until he brought where God had bidden him bring,
Even to a place wherein was everything
That erst exceedingly I used to prize.
There heard I voices pealing forth acclaim;
There saw I lust in fullness banqueted.
Lust's dearth and fullness were to me the same;
And nought to me was wealth and nought was fame;
And nothing had I won to love instead.
To R. N
For he who said it did not sleep, but die.
Close not thine eydlids on our agony;
Stay with us, hold our hands in fellowship,
While darkness broods above us dread and deep.
Lift thou thy silver-trumpet voice on high,
And let it bear up to God's ear the cry
Of souls too numb to plain themselves and weep.
Into the calm awhile! Dear brother, stay!
The world hath need of mighty ones to-day
To raise the right, the wrong to overthrow.
No loon can draw the great Odysseus' bow:
No weakling wield the hammer of Thor's grim play.
To Miranda, who Sleeps
The dawning light hath set the world astir
With chirp and warble of birds, and faery whirr
Of winglets, quivering in the broken spell
That sleep had laid on nature: strange to tell,
Miranda sleepeth yet; strange, for it were
A wonder if the delicate ear of her
Knew not this multitudinous matin-bell.
In dreamland, what, or whom, for thee to lie
Unmindful of the glory of earth and sky,
With little quiet hands and quiet feet?
And still thou sleepest, and thy sleep is sweet.—
Dear heart, I would not waken thee, not I.
Love and Grief
I
I give thee rainbowed hope to be thy shroud:
I lay the beauty maketh women proud
On thy dead heart: I set my girlhood's glee
In that strait bed which now doth compass thee,
Immortal as I thought, to mortal bowed,
With all thy supreme godhead disallowed.
Dead Love, dead Love, and what shall comfort me?
From his dear dust and ashes, his that erst
Made the whole realm of beauty pale and dim?
What blossom of glory from his grave shall burst?
I will not look and see it with the eyes
That opened at his kiss, and looked on him.
II
Next year, perhaps, and next year I may shun
The full sweet life of things beneath the sun,
But only now am I of mourners chief.
Too soon I shall have drunken Time's relief!
A little while, and healing will have run
Through every vein, forgetfulness begun!
O Love, dead Love, that woe should be so brief!
The sleepy drench of Time to soothe and lull
Into the calm that now I shudder from?
This hand, which felt thy bosom throb, to cull
Flowers from thy grave for memory-coronal?
O Love, that to this fashion Grief should come!
A Choice
What would I crown my life withal to-day?
With love, or gold, or fame, or absolute sway,
Or beauty such as women's who have thrilled
Men's souls and senses till no more they willed
With their own wills, but only must obey?
Or would I choose to have my mother-clay
Lapping me round, whose pain at last were stilled?
Would all desire go up in that swift cry,
Were it one little minute's space, to know
God's love which passeth knowledge, verily;
And, ere the glory fadeth off, to die?
Would God, that I were sure of choosing so!
Ad Poetam
God's benison for music sweet and true.
A warp that's joy across a woof that's love.
Blest, with the Rose upon your heart, you stand.
Your element was still the eternal Light.
More wholesome-sweet for that your song hath been.
No taste of morbid gall hath ever clung.
Have ever clogged your spirit, fouled your sense.
Of earth and heaven, O poet, you are free.
Who hath the heavens' blue road, the earth's brown nest.
Later Poems | ||