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POEMS.
page: 69LOVE‐TRILOGY.
I.
- SHE stood against the Orient sun,
- Her face inscrutable for light;
- A myriad larks in unison
- Sang o’er her, soaring out of sight.
- A myriad flowers around her feet
- Burst flame‐like from the yielding sod,
- Till all the wandering airs were sweet
- With incense mounting up to God.
- A mighty rainbow shook, inclined
- Towards her, from the Occident,
- Girdling the cloud‐wrack which enshrined
- Half the light‐bearing firmament.
- Lit showers flashed golden o’er the hills,
- And trees flung silver to the breeze,
- And, scattering diamonds, fleet‐foot rills
- Fled laughingly across the leas.
- Yea Love, the skylarks laud but thee,
- And writ in flowers thine awful name;
- Spring is thy shade, dread Ecstasy,
- And life a brand which feeds thy flame.
II.
- WINDING all my life about thee,
- Let me lay my lips on thine;
- What is all the world without thee,
- Mine—oh mine!
- Let me press my heart out on thee,
- Crush it like a fiery vine,
- Spilling sacramental on thee
- Love’s red wine.
- Let thy strong eyes yearning o’er me
- Draw me with their force divine;
- All my soul has gone before me
- Clasping thine.
- Irresistibly I follow,
- As wherever we may run
- Runs our shadow, as the swallow
- Seeks the sun.
- Yea, I tremble, swoon, surrender
- All my spirit to thy sway,
- As a star is drowned in splendour
- Of the day.
III.
- I CHARGE you, O winds of the West, O winds with the wings of the dove,
- That ye blow o’er the brows of my Love, breathing low that I sicken for love.
- I charge you, O dews of the Dawn, O tears of the star of the morn,
- That ye fall at the feet of my love with the sound of one weeping forlorn.
- I charge you, O birds of the Air, O birds flying home to your nest,
- That ye sing in his ears of the joy that for ever has fled from my breast.
- I charge you, O flowers of the Earth, O frailest of things, and most fair,
- That ye droop in his path as the life in me shrivels consumed by despair.
- O Moon, when he lifts up his face, when he seeth the waning of thee,
- A memory of her who lies wan on the limits of life let it be.
- Many tears cannot quench, nor my sighs extinguish, the flames of love’s fire,
- Which lifteth my heart like a wave, and smites it, and breaks its desire.
- I rise like one in a dream when I see the red sun flaring low,
- That drags me back shuddering from sleep each morning to life with its woe.
- I go like one in a dream, unbidden my feet know the way
- To that garden where love stood in blossom with the red and white hawthorn of May.
- The song of the throstle is hushed, and the fountain is dry to its core,
- The moon cometh up as of old; she seeks, but she finds him no more.
- The pale‐faced, pitiful moon shines down on the grass where I weep,
- My face to the earth, and my breast in an anguish ne’er soothed into sleep.
- The moon returns, and the spring, birds warble, trees burst into leaf,
- But Love once gone, goes for ever, and all that endures is the grief.
DEAD LOVE.
- MOTHER of the unfortunate, mystic form,
- Who calm, immutable, like oldest fate,
- Sittest, where through the sombre swinging gate
- Moans immemorial life’s encircling storm.
- My heart, sore stricken by grief’s leaden arm,
- Lags like a weary pilgrim knocking late,
- And sigheth—toward thee staggering with its weight—
- Behold Love conquered by thy son, the worm!
- He stung him mid the roses’ purple bloom,
- The Rose of roses, yea, a thing so sweet,
- Haply to stay blind Change’s flying feet,
- And stir with pity the unpitying tomb.
- Here, take him, cold, cold, heavy and void of breath!
- Nor me refuse, O Mother almighty, death.
A DREAM.
- IN dreams I met my Love; he stood alone,
- A sadness like pale mist lay on his face;
- His eyes met mine, then as with anguish prone,
- Or yet in shame—he turned away his gaze.
- I made no moan, but even as one in sleep
- Helplessly murmurs, murmuring fell his name,
- Like tears which tremulous eyelids may not keep,
- Or flicker of involuntary flame.
- Sharply he turned: I neither moved nor spoke,
- But all life’s pent‐up passion gathered form,
- Till on our eyes the full‐orbed lovelight broke,
- Even as the sun will break upon a storm,
- And opening wide his arms, he stood! But I,
- Like a pale wave with backward fluttering crest,
- Wavered awhile, then with a rapturous cry,
- Shivering in ecstasy, fell on his breast.
LOVE’S PHANTOM.
- SHUT out day’s wintry beams!
- Sleep, brood upon my brain!
- For sweet sleep bringeth dreams
- And love again!
- Love cold and wan and sere
- Heaped over with tears and snows;
- Lo, born within its bier,
- Blooms like a rose!
- Its fragrance fills each vein,
- Its fervour flushes my heart,
- I feel through breast and brain
- Its rapturous smart;
- The look, the tone, the deep
- Supreme smile of delight:
- Ah, fickle as love, false sleep,
- Why take thy flight?
SNOW OR SNOWDROPS?
- IS it snow or snowdrops’ shimmer
- Whitens thus the bladed grass,
- With a faint aërial glimmer,—
- Spring or winter, which did pass?
- For the sky is dim and tender
- With the evanescent light,
- And the fading fields are white,
- White with snow or snowdrops, under
- The fair firstling stars of night.
- Little robin, softly, cheerly
- Piping on yon wintry bough,
- Why have all the fields that pearly
- Iridescence, knowest thou?
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- Did old Winter, grim and hoary,
- Aim a parting dart at Spring
- As she fled on azure wing,
- Or did she with rainbow glory
- In his face her snowdrops fling?
PAUPER POET’S SONG.
- SUN, moon, and stars, the ample air,
- The birds shrill whistling everywhere,
- Fields white with lambs and daisies;
- The pearls of eve, the jewelled morn,
- The rose rich blowing on the thorn,
- The glow of blush‐rose faces;
- The silver glint of sun‐smit rain;
- The shattered sun‐gold of the main,
- And heaven’s sweet breath that moves it;
- The earth, our myriad‐bosomed nurse,
- This whole miraculous universe
- Belongs to him who loves it!
- Why fret then for the gold of this,
- The fame of that man, or the bliss,
- Or such another’s graces?
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- Oh heart that chim’st with golden verse,
- My heart, thou art the magic purse
- Which all dull trouble chases;
- Thine too fruition of all fame
- When the live soul, as flame with flame,
- Weds the dead soul that moves it;
- Then sing for aye, and aye rehearse,
- This whole miraculous universe
- Belongs to him who loves it!
SUNDERED PATHS.
- TWO travellers, worn with sun and rain
- And gropings o’er dim paths unknown,
- Meet where long separate ways have grown
- To one, and then diverge again.
- They halt anigh the green wayside,
- Where groves pant with the impassioned song
- Of nightingales; wild roses throng
- There round them leaning side by side.
- As close and still more close they cling,
- Like some weird tale—once more in dreams
- Lived through with ghastlier horror—seems
- That old, cold, lonely wayfairing.
- Oh close sweet clasp of hands! oh sweet
- Close beat of heart on happy heart;
- Beating as though no more apart
- Their pulses ever again should beat!
- One look of love! one long embrace!
- One kiss that welds two lives in one!
- And lo, the sudden lifted sun
- Lights their slow feet on separate ways.
- Fledged by strong love, their wingèd speech
- Is borne awhile from soul to soul,
- Then ever‐widening waters roll
- And drown their voices each from each.
LINES.
- THOU camest with the coming Spring!
- With swallows, and the murmuring
- Of unloosed waters, with the birth
- Of daisies dimpling the green earth.
- And when the perfect rose of June
- Responded to the golden noon,
- My heart’s deep core, suffused with bliss,
- Broke into flower beneath thy kiss.
- But now the swallows seaward fly,
- The winds in chorus wail, “Good‐bye!”
- The dead leaves whirl, and like a leaf
- My heart shakes on the gusts of grief.
- And yet awhile earth’s flowerless breast
- In lethal folds of snow will rest;
- On thee too heart, with all thy woe,
- Death falls one day like falling snow.
LOVE AND THE MUSE.
- STRUCK down by Love in cruel mood,
- That I ever met Love I rued,
- Bleeding and bruised I lay,
- Wet was my face as with the salt sea spray.
- A lovely Muse on sparkling wing
- A painless elemental thing,
- Free as bird did float,
- Swift flames of song light leaping from her throat.
- And being more pitiful than Love
- Stooped glowing from her path above,
- And an unearthly kiss
- Laid on my lips: Muse, answer, what is this?
- In dreams or drunkenness divine
- My life is all transfused with thine;
- Like bubbles swept along,
- My tears dissolve on cataracts of song.
SONG.
- OH haste while roses bloom below,
- Oh haste while pale and bright above
- The sun and moon alternate glow,
- To pluck the rose of love.
- Yea, give the morning to the lark,
- The nightingale its glimmering grove,
- Give moonlight to the hungry dark,
- But to man’s heart give love!
- Then haste while still the roses blow,
- And pale and bright in heaven above
- The sun and moon alternate glow,
- Pluck, pluck the rose of love.
SONG.
- ALL my heart is stirring lightly
- Like dim violets winter‐bound,
- Quickening as they feel the brightly
- Glowing sunlight underground.
- Yea, this drear and silent bosom,
- Hushed as snow‐hid grove but now,
- Breaketh into leaf and blossom
- Like a gleaming vernal bough.
- Oh the singing, singing, singing!
- Callow hopes that thrill my breast!
- Can the lark of love be winging
- Back to its abandoned nest?
IN SPRING.
- THE young birds shy twitter
- In hedges and bowers,
- Fields brighten and glitter
- With dewdrops and flowers.
- Over flood, over fallow,
- Impelled by old yearning,
- The nest‐building swallow
- Exults at returning;
- For dark days and hoary
- Are routed and over,
- Dark Winter is gone;
- Resplendent in glory,
- The earth meets her lover,
- Her bridegroom the Sun.
- Must I alone sorrow,
- Despairingly languish,
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- Breaks never a morrow
- On the night of my anguish?
- The jubilant gladness
- In bird, beam, and blossom,
- But deepens the sadness
- That weighs on my bosom.
- Oh, Spring, in whose azure
- Wake follow the starling,
- The daisy, the dove;
- Sweet spendthrift of pleasure,
- Brings also my darling,
- Oh bring me my love!
RENUNCIATION.
When ich Dich liebe was geht es Dich an?
- THE air is full of the peal of bells,
- The rhythmical pealing of marriage bells;
- But athwart and above their ringing—
- Throbbing clear like the light of a star
- Lost in the sunrise—I hear afar
- The skylark’s jubilant singing.
I.
- The clouds all woollen and white on high,
- Like flocks of heavenly sheep go by,
- Go through heaven’s sapphire meadows;
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- While here on the earth’s green meadows, deep
- In sapphire flowers, our earthly sheep
- Loll in their loitering shadows.
II.
- Come, we will sit by the wayside here,
- They must cross this field to the chapel, dear,
- The loved by the side for her lover.
- Grey, through the glimmer of vernal green,
- Its time‐worn tower may just be seen
- Through the yews which curtain it over.
III.
- Nay, little brother, why should I pine?
- Dare a violet ask that the sun should shine,
- The shining sun shine for it solely?
- Lowly it lifteth its meek blue eye,
- And yields up its soul to the sun on high,
- Nor asks for love, loving so wholly.
IV.
- He passed by the garden where, snow‐white and red,
- I tended the flowers which give us our bread,
- And watered my lilies and roses;
- He passed and repassed both early and late,
- And lingering, often would lean on the gate
- While I tied for him one of my posies.
V.
- Day after day would he pass this way,
- And his smiling was sweet as the flowers of May,
- Or the scent of the bee‐haunted clover;
- And a softer flame seemed to light up his eye
- Than the lily‐white moon’s in the rose‐hued sky,
- Ere the blush of the May‐day is over.
VI.
- Aye, day after day he would stop on his way,
- While the trees were in leaf and the meadows were gay,
- And the curled little lambs were grazing;
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- As he went, or returned in the waning light
- From the smoke‐capped city whose lamps by night
- Turn the black clouds red with their blazing.
VII.
- It’s a year to‐day when the young sun sets
- Since I gave him that first bunch of violets
- From the root on the grave of our mother.
- Though thou seest them not with the bodily eye,
- The language of flowers much better than I
- I know that thou knowest, my brother.
VIII.
- Violets—then golden daffodils
- Which the light of the sun like a wine‐cup fills—
- Tall tulips like flames upspringing—
- Golden‐brown wallflowers bright as his locks—
- Marigolds—balsams—and perfumed stocks
- Whose scent’s like a blackbird’s singing.
IX.
- You see, my darling, I never forget!
- Aye, those were your own very words—ere yet
- Our father lost his all in yon city,
- Where the people, they say, in their struggle for gold,
- Become like wild beasts, and the feeble and old
- Are trampled upon without pity.
X.
- Poor father was better to‐day: for the smile
- Of the sun seemed to gladden him too for awhile
- As he sat by the bright little casement,
- With buttercups heaped on his knees without stint,
- Which, deeming them childishly fresh from the mint,
- He counted in chuckling amazement.
XI.
- The air is full of the peal of bells—
- The rhythmical pealing of marriage bells!
- And there floats o’er the fields, o’er the fallows,
- Borne on the wind with the wind‐blown chimes,
- From the old house hidden in older limes,
- A chatter of maidens and swallows.
XII.
- Ah, give me the flowers!—the last year was all
- In tune with the flowers from the spring to the fall,
- And with singing of birds in the bowers;
- And once—ah, look not so angry, dear!—
- He whispered so softly I scarce could hear,
- “You yourself are the flower of all flowers!”
XIII.
- But oh, when the wind was loud in the trees,
- When the fluttering petals snowed down on the leas,
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- And the dim sun went out like an ember,
- He stood by the gate all drenched with the mist,
- And I gave him my last Christmas rose, which he kissed
- For the last time that last of November.
XIV.
- Say, could he help if a hope as sweet
- As the wild thyme had sprouted under his feet?
- If his face in my heart is enfolden,
- As the sun‐smit globes of the summer rain
- Reflect and hold and refract again
- The sun, the eternally golden.
XV.
- He cometh, he cometh, oh brother, there!
- Ah would that you saw the glint of his hair,
- For he looks like that saint in the story
- Whom you loved so to hear of in days of old,
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- Till he lit up your dreams with his curls of gold,
- Exhaling a mystical glory.
XVI.
- The unseen wings of the morning air
- Fan his brow and ruffle his hair
- As he steps with a stately measure;
- White daisies under his feet are spread,
- White butterflies hover above his head,
- White clouds high up in the azure:
XVII.
- Pelt him with sunlit April rain,
- Rain which ripens the earth‐hid grain,
- Which brings up the grass and the heather!
- Hark at the peal of the bridal bells,
- How their musical chiming swells and swells
- As they enter the church door together.
XVIII.
- Let us go hence now—’tis over—the twain
- One will they be when they pass here again:
- All my flowers in their pathway I scatter;
- Though he forget me as yesterday’s rose,
- My heart with a sweet tender feeling o’erflows:
- If I love him, to whom can it matter?
XIX.
- Yea, let us go now; the stile, love, is here:
- Henceforth I live but for thee. What! a tear
- Splashed on thy hand? Nay, a drop from the shower
- That has passed over, for yon, on that dark
- Ominous cloud, dearest brother, the arc
- Of the Lord’s bow now breaks into flower.
XX.
THE ABANDONED.
- SHE sat by the wayside and wept, where roses, red roses and white,
- Lay wasted and withered and sere, like her life and its ruined delight;
- Like chaff blown about in the wind whirled roses, white roses and red,
- And pale, on night’s threshold, the moon bent over the day that was dead.
- She sat by the wayside and wept; far over the desolate plain
- A noise as of one that is weeping re‐echoed in wind and in rain,
- And the long dim line of the spectral poplars with dolorous wail
- Nodded their bald‐headed tops as they chattered with cold in the gale.
- She sat by the wayside and wept in a passion of vain desire,
- And her weak heart fluttered and failed like the flame of a faltering fire,
- Fluttered and failed in her breast like the broken wing of a bird
- When its feathers are dabbled with gore, and the low last gurgle is heard.
- And behold, like balm on her soul, while she sat by the wayside and wept,
- There came a forgetting of sorrow, a lulling of grief, and she slept;
- Yea, like the wings of a dove when cooing it broods on the nest,
- So the wings of slumber about her assuaged and filled her with rest.
- And a light that was not the sun’s nor the moon’s light illumined her brain;
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- From afar in the country of dreams three maidens stole over the plain,
- Three loveliest maidens they were, like roses, red roses and white;
- And behold the earth and the heavens were glorified in their light.
- And the first of the maidens was fair, as fair as the blue‐kirtled Spring,
- When she comes with a snowfall of blossoms and a rustling of birds on the wing,
- When a glimmer of green like a tide rolls over the woodland and vales,
- And odours are blown on the winds with the song of the nightingales.
- The second was loftier of stature, a huntress of grief;
- The wilderness glowed as she passed and broke into blossom and leaf;
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- Yea, it seemed that her upturned eyes, with their fathomless gaze,
- Could pierce to the shining stars through the veil of the noonday blaze.
- But the third was a splendour incarnate, a luminous form,
- Thrilling with raptures that keep the heart of the cold earth warm,
- Who hidden far in the mystical glory of quivering rays
- Sets the whole world on fire for an absolute sight of her face.
- But darkling ever they see her, and ever as through a veil,
- For if naked she lightens upon them, their lives must shrivel and fail,
- Must fail and shrivel consumed by that burst of insufferable light,
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- As a tree set on fire by lightning which burns to the ground in a night.
- The first one kissed her cheek, her cheek grew pallid and wan:
- “Goodbye,” she cried, “we must part; I am Youth, and I follow the sun;
- I am Youth, and I love to build in the heart that is buoyant and gay;
- Goodbye, we shall meet not again,” she cried, as she fluttered away.
- The second she kissed her eyes, then the glamour went out of their gaze,
- Through the magical show she beheld life staring her straight in the face;
- With a terrible Gorgon stare that turned her heart into stone—
- “Adieu,” she sighed, “I am Hope, all is over between us and done.”
- The third one she kissed her lips, and the kiss was a quenchless fire,
- It burned up her life like a victim’s in the flames of a funeral pyre—
- “Farewell,” she wailed, “I am Love,” and her wings were spread as for flight—
- It seemed like the wail of the wind as they left her alone with the night.
