THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT A Masque-Drama In Five Acts and a Prelude By WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY Boston Small, Maynard & Company M c M Copyright /poo by Small, Maynard ff Company ( Incorporated) Entered at Stationers Hall Press of George H. Ellis Boston, U.S. 4. To E. D. S. PRELUDE The action falls immediately before the Incarnation Persons of the Prelude RAPHAEL URIEL THE ANGEL OF THE PALE HORSE A SHEPHERD A SHEPHERD BOY A YOUNG MAN (persona mut a) A GIRL SCENE I. A meadow and coppice near the sea ; beyond low hills the roofs of a town. Dawn. Raphael. Another night like this would change my blood To human: the soft tumult of the sea Under the moon, the panting of the stars, The notes of querulous love from pool and clod, In earth and air the dreamy under-hum Of hived hearts swarming, such another night Would quite unsphere me from my angelhood! Thrice have I touched my lute s least human strings And hushed their throbbing, hearing how they spake Sheer earthly, they that once so heavenly sang Above the pure unclouded psalmody. Sing as thou wilt, then, since thou needs must sing! For ever song grows dearer as I walk These evenings of large sunset, these dumb noons Vastly suspended, these enormous nights Through which earth heaves her bulk toward the dawn. With song I shelter me, who else were left 3 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Defenceless amid God s infinitudes, Bruised by the unshod trample of his hours. ( He sings. ) The late moon would not stay, The stars grow far and few ; Into her house of day Hung with Sidouian blue Stealeth the earth, as a maenad girl Steals to her home when the orgies are o er That startled the glens and the sleeping shore, And up from the passionate deeps of night Into the shallows and straits of light Softly the forests whirl. Laugh, earth ! For thy feigning- face is wise ; There is naught so clear as thy morning eyes; And the sun thy lord is an easy lord ! What should they be to him, Thine hours of dance in the woodland dim, The brandished torch and the shouted word, The flight, the struggle, the honeyed swoon Neath the wild, wild lips of the moon ? Beyond the seaward screen of hazel boughs The waves flash argent neath the clambering light ; But wherefore do these wondrous colours run THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Out of the place of morning ? The young leaves Are swept and winnowed upward as a flame, And in their whispering glories swiftly dawns A shape of lordly wings, each plume distinct "With dyes auroral. Where, mid store of light, Most spiritual silver burns, a face comes through. My comrade Uriel cometh from the sun ! Uriel (appearing). Why tarriest on thine errand, Raphael t Raphael. I do no errand here. "Uriel. Why earnest thou then f Eaphael. Since earth is dear to me. Sometimes it seems Treading the prairie s autumn sibilance, Or when the tongues of summer lightning speak In the corners of the cloud I could forget My station mid the deathless hierarchies, And change into a clot of anxious clay. Uriel. Mock not, sweet brother ! thou who knowest well Better than I or Michael or the rest THE MASQUE OP JUDGMENT The throes that shake these clots of passionate clay; Knowest their lewd harsh blood, their shell of sense So frail, so piteously contrived for pain. Raphael. I dare to say how little jest it was. Oft, as I leave these sliding shafts of dark, And homeward climb the immaterial cliffs, My heart makes question which were worthier state For a free soul to choose, angelic calm, Angelic vision, ebbless, increscent, Or earth-life with its reachiugs and recoils, Its lewd harsh blood so swift to change and flower At the least touch of love, its shell of sense So subtly made to minister them delight, So frail, so piteously contrived for pain. Uriel Brother, thou dost not well to wander here. If thou wilt roam, choose some less troubled star. The roaring midst of the insatiate sun Where God has set my watch, is peace to this ! Of all the bitter drops that dewed His brow In his old agony, this earth-drop fell 6 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Most bitter salt, and ever since hath, been Fuller of travailling than other worlds. EapJiael. Thy speech is dark. I understand it not. Uriel. Of a dark thing I speak a few dark words. Put from thy gaze the sweet bloom of these hills And all this gorgeous dapple of the sea, And let thy memory stand again with me On Time s untrodden threshold, that first day Which searched and stung our immemorial peace With pangs of vernal influence. Heaven rose As if from sleep, and, lo ! through all the void Clambered and curled creation like a vine, Hanging the dark with clusters of young bloom. Then from the viewless ever-folded heart Of the mystic Rose, stole breath and pulse of change, Delicious pantings such as seize the breast Of lovers when the love-tide nears its flood, Yet touched with endless potency of pain, As lips of mothers when their anguish ebbs And leaves the waifling life. Then first the Dove THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Began to mourn above the mercy-seat, And the dear sister spirits of the Lamps Bent all their shimmering wings one way to screen Their wicks from the wind-flaw. Large with question turned Angelic eyes to archangelic eyes, Archangels laid changed lips to the ears of Thrones, Thrones gazed at Dominations, Powers made sign To Principalities ; but not one dared, Voicing the fear that filled him, to cry, Lord, What hast Thou brought upon Thy kingdom, Thou Ancient of Days ! Their silence was right well. Raphael. All this the meditative spirits oft Have pondered. But thy meaning still is dark. Uriel. Ourselves who questioned why the world was made "Were born of the same questionable seed, And we who feared were the first cause of fear. Of a dark thing I speak a few dark words. Of old the miud of God, coiled on itself 8 THE MASQUE OP JUDGMENT In contemplation single and eterne, Felt suddenly a stealing wistfulness Sully the essence of his old content With pangs of dim division. Long He strove Against his bosom s deep necessity, Then, groping for surcease, put forth the orbs Of Paradise, with all their imagery, And the ordered hierarchies where we stand ; Some sharing more in his essential calm, Some, rebel spirits, banished now or quelled, The ill-starred sons of his disquietude, Disquietude not quenched when fell the pride Of Lucifer, long bastioned in the North. Demand of joy, hardly to be gainsaid, And vast necessity of grief, still worked Compulsive in his breast : our essence calm, Those lucid orbs accordant, could not bring Nepenthe long. His hand He still withheld Ages of ages, fearing the event, Till, bathed in brighter urge and wistfulness He put forth suddenly this vine of Time And hung the hollow dark with passionate change. Raphael. I think for me Heaven seemed not Heaven till then, When from our seats of peace we could behold 9 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The strife of ripening suns and withering moons, Marching of ice-floes, and the nameless wars Of monster races laboring to be man ; When we could hear the wrestle of hoarse sound Hurl gust on gust obscurely toward the time Of disinvolved music : till at last, Standing erect amid the giant fern Uriel. At last ! At last ! O shaken Breast, nowhere Couldstthou find quiet save in putting forth This last imagination ? Could no form Of being stanch thee in thy groping thought Save this of Man? Puny and terrible ; Apt to imagine powers beyond himself In wind and lightning ; cunning to evoke From mould and flint-stone the surprising fire, And carve the heavy hills to spiritual shapes Of town and temple ; nursing in his veins More restlessness than called him from the void, Perfidies, hungers, dreams, idolatries, Pain, laughter, wonder, anger, sex, and song ! Raphael. God had one other thought, more sweet, more dire ; Thy latest words remind thee. 10 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT (Behind the trees a girVs voice sings : ) O daughters of Jerusalem ! What said ye unto her Who took her love by the garment s hem, Where the tanned grape-gatherers were ? Did any go down and see If she led him into her house ? Or was it aloft where the wild harts flee, Was it high in the hills, neath the cedar- tree, That she kissed him and called him spouse I ( A young man and a girl come over the hill from the town. ) UrieL Unto man Woman was due. To hearts of fire more fire, To pride of strength a still subduing strength. (As they pass through the coppice, the girl sings : ) O keepers of the city walls ! Have ye taken her veil away, Whose hasting feet and low love-calls Ye heard at the drop of day ? Have ye taken her ankle-rings, Who is fair, who hath eyes like a dove ? Must she seek her lover, her king of kings, Naked, stripped of her costly things ? Must she have no garment but love f 11 SCENE II. A mountain glade and forest. Midnight. Shepherd. Here stand, if thou wilt see, by this great bole. This way they passed, and hither should return. But pray thee, gentle god, when they draw near Abate the splendor of thy face, fold close Thine eyed and irised plumage. God thou art, But thou must needs be mighty to escape The hill girls when they rage ! From these old boughs The climbing moon will soon pour deeper shade To screen thee more. Raphael. How looked they when they passed ? Shepherd Boy. Coney, how passed the hailstorm o er, quotha ! Patter ! patter ! twas sung beneath i the dark. I lost a birch cup full of whortleberries Scrambling to cover when I heard their songs. But when they burst across the glade, I pooped, And saw their breasts gleam through their angry hair. 12 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Evoe ! they had snared the village lad They hanker for so long. I hear them talk, Dawdling on well- curbs with their water-skins Or picking the May-apples. Shepherd. Tis the lad Who sat mute at the merry threshing-stead, Turned from their orgies in the sacred wood With large bright eyes unamorous, and sang In lonesome places piercing lonesome songs Of other lives and other gods than theirs Perchance of thee and thy bright- winged mates, If mates be thine, for god thou surely art. Shepherd Boy. To-night they have him limed ! Brow of the hawk, Throat of the hermit- thrush, and ring-dove eyes ! Shepherd. He came across the moon-drench dragged by three Whose bodies shone like the peeled willow wand ; The little snakes they knot into their hair Lipping his neck, where oozed the red of grapes From his crushed garland ; his hands flung aloft 13 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT To the symbol of their fierce licentious god. His eyes were large and fixed, his lips apart, As I have seen him in the lonesome woods, But madder than the maddest bacchant there ! Raphael. Who cometh yonder 1 Shepherd. Where ? Raphael. Across the glade. Sheplierd. I see nought. Raphael. There, behind the trailing mist The moonlight gathers to a ghostly shape, Unearthly silver, throbbing like a heart ! It seems a beast and rider. ( The shepherds make off. ) Ah, I know That icy influence, and the voice I know, First heard in Heaven when time began to be, A voice above our voices, and a hush Beneath our hush, freezing the heart with fear, With fear the heart even of spirit-kind. . . . 14 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The Angel of the Pale Horse (sings). The scourge of the wrath of God We swing and we stay : (Rest, my steed, rest /) On the green of the hill we have trod, And the green is grey. Ours is his scourging rod. Yea, thy hoofs long to be fleet On the armied hills ; ( Yet rest, my steed, rest /) Scent of the arrowy sleet Broadens thy nostrils ; The mown field smelleth sweet. God giveth his loins increase Into our hand ; (Rest, my steed, rest /) We shall establish his peace By sea and by land. Soon shall their troubling cease ! Raphael. What makes thine errand here ? Angel of tlie Pale Horse. Still as of old. 15 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Raphael. I think tliou art way-wandered. Here is life. Angel of the Pale Horse My horse s feet err not ; they are way- wise. Raphael. Stand by rne in the shade of these old boughs, And let no anger fan thy wings alight Or flake the nostrils of thy horse with fire When the young bacchants halloo down the steep. Angel of the Pale Horse. Thou feedest thy giddy and half-human mind Still on these little spectacles of change, Forgetting Heaven s great woes ! Raphael. What woe can come Into those courts of old oeatitude f Angel of the Pale Horse. Hast thou not felt its presence there ? Raphael. i es nay I know not . . . When I enter Heaven gate, Fear comes upon me, for I seem to feel 16 Some subtle waning of accustomed joy, Some dying off of music thin, minute, As the single cricket ainid chorusing fields, Whose ceasing breaks the rapture. Often, too, Wan faces shun me in the woods of light And voices of vague dolor die away Along the living lilies as I come. But this I held a phantasy of dream, Bred of too earnest looking on the blight That falls on mortal things. Angel of the Pale Horse. It is no dream ; Though more mysterious, more dark than dream. Momently fades the splendor, momently Silence and dissonance like eating moths Scatter corruption on the choiring orbs. Eaphael. No one declares the cause ? Angel of the Pale Horse. The cause is here, Here in the vagrant courses of the moon, Who makes her lair and wanders for her love After her own loose law ; in yonder stars, Gay spendthrifts of their plenitude of fire ; In this most dissolute earth, who decks herself 17 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT With gorgeous phantasy and delicate whim, And paces forth before the worlds to dance A maiden measure, modest lids downcast To hide her harlot s guile ; but more than these, And more than all, unutterably more, Here in the wild and sinful heart of man, Of all the fruits upon creation s vine The thirstiest one to drain the vital breast Of God, wherein it grows. Raphael. Too fiery sweet Gushes the liquor from the vine He set, Man the broad leaf and maid the honeyed flower ! (The shepherds creep back, and stand peering from behind the tree at the angels. ) Raphael (musing). What if they rendered up their wills to Hist Hushed and subdued their personality 1 Became as members of the living tree ? Angel of the Pale Horse. A whisper grows, various from tongue to tongue, That so He will attempt. Those who consent To render up their clamorous wills to Him, 18 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT To merge their fretful being in his peace, He will accept : the rest He will destroy. (The boy whispers to Raphael.) Raphael. What wilt thou, little friend ? Shepherd Boy. Hither, sweet god ! But let the ghostly centaur stay behind. Shepherd. Lean o er this rock and look into the gorge. See how their torches dip from ledge to ledge. They race beside some shape the torrent bears : The eddies seize it now, and leaning out Over the pool they stop to howl their hymns, And, now it plunges, how they madden down With laughter keen above the drumming foam ! Raphael. Is t not a man s torn trunk? Shepherd Boy. See those behind Grasping the antlers of the lunging stag, That bellows when their torches bite his flanks ! I know the witch who rides him ! 19 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Jiaphael. Conic away ! That is a bleeding head she holds aloft Above the clutching of her comrades hands ! Shepherd Boy. No more thou lt shun their orgies in the wood, Throat of the hermit-thrush and ring-dove eyes ! Throat of the mourning thrush, thy songs are done ; Sad ring-dove eyes, the lids have shut you in ! Shepherd. That is his harp the dancers bear before, Mocking his solemn songs of other gods And other lives than theirs. Raphael (musing). Those who consent He will accept : the rest he will destroy ! Shepherd Boy. Look ! look ! the ghostly centaur goeth down. 20 A C T I. Time : as in the Prelude Persons of the Masque RAPHAEL URIEL MICHAEL AZAZIEL THE ANGEL OF THE TALE HORSE THE ANGEL OF THE WHITE HORSE THE ANGEL OF THE RED HORSE SPIRITS OF THE THRONE-LAMPS THE LION OF THE THRONE THE EAGLE OF THE THRONE THE ANGEL OF THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE SPIRITS OF THE SAVED SPIRITS OF THE LOST MOON-SPIRITS VOICES 22 ACT I. SCENE I. A high mountain pass, down which flows a brook, with pools and waterfalls. Early morning. Raphael (climbing, sings). On earth all is well, all is well on the sea ; Though the day breaks dull All is well. Ere the thunder had ceased to yell I flew through the wash of the sea Wing and wing with my brother the gull. On the crumbling comb of the swell, With the spindrift slashing to lee, Poised we ; The petrel thought us asleep Till sidewise round on stiffened wing, Keen and taut to take the swing With the glass-green avalanches in their swerv ing plunge and sweep, Down the glassy, down the prone, Swift as swerving thunder-stone, We shot the green crevasses And we hallooed down the passes Of the deep. On earth all is well, all is well. In the weeds of the beach lay the shell 23 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT "With the sleeper within, And the pulse of the sleeper showed through The walls of his delicate house That will wake with the sun into silver and purple and blue. Where the creek makes out and the sea makes in Between the low cliff-brows Was borne the talk of the aldered linn Matching the meadow s subtile din ; And hark, from the grey high overhead The lark s keen joy was shed ! For what though the morning sulky was And the punctual sun belated, His nest was snug in the tufted grass, Soft-lined and stoutly plaited, And shine sun may or stay away Nests must be celebrated ! Drowsy with dawn, barely asail, Buzzes the blue-bottle over the shale, Scared from the pool by the .leaping trout ; And the brood of turtlings clamber out On the log by their oozy house. Bound the roots of the cresses and stems of the ferns The muskrat goes by dodges and turns ; Till she has seized her prey she heeds not the whine of her mouse. 24 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Lovingly, spitefully, each Kind unto kind makes speech ; Marriage and birth and war, passion and hunger and thirst, Song and plotting and dream, as it was meant from the first ! {He climbs higher, and sings. ) Peering in the dust I thought "How all creatures, small and great, For his pleasure God hath wrought ! " When I saw the robins mate Low I sang unto my harp, " Happy, happy, His estate ! " Down curved spaces He may warp With old planets ; long and long, Where the snail doth tease and carp, " Asking with its jellied prong, A whole summer He may bide, Wondrous tiny lives among, Curious, unsatisfied." {Still climbing. ) The trees grow stunted in this keener air, And scarce the hardiest blossoms dare to take Assurance from the sun. Southward the rocks 25 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Boast mosses and a poor increase of flowers, But all the northern shelters hold their snow. Such flowers as come, come not quite flower- like, But smitten from their gracious habitudes By some alarm, some vast and voiceless cry That just has ceased to echo ere I came. These white buds stand unnaturally white, Breathing no odors till their terror pass ; Those grey souls toss their arms into the wind, Peer through their locks with bright distracted eyes And hug the elfin horror to their breasts Poor brain-turned gypsy wildlings, doomed to birth In this uneasy region ! . . . Yonder lift The outposts of the habitable land. Ages of looking on the scene beyond Have worn the granite into shapes of woe And old disaster. (He climbs higher, to where the ravine debouches into the Valley of the Judgment. ) Each time when I stand Upon the borders of this monstrous place, I still must question wherefore it was flung Thus ruinous with toppled peak and scaur, 26 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Sheer from the morning cliffs that hold up Heaven To nether caverns where no foot of man Has clambered down, nor eye of angel dared To spy upon the sluggish denizens, If any dwell so deep. What giant plow Harnessed to behemoth and mastodon Set this slope furrow down the side of the world ? And to what harvest? . . . Here the sons of men, Living and dead and yet unborn, might come Unto the final judgment ; here the lost Might make one desperate stand. . . . What moveth there? What leonine and winged shape is he Steals up yon gorge all desolate of light Whence voices of fierce-tongued and desperate streams Sound faint as throats of nooning doves ? Till now Never have I beheld a living thing Amid these wastes. What manner beast is he That he hath power to awe me, though removed So far the fallen vastness of a cliff Wherefrom a temple might be quarried, looks Fit for a shepherd s sling? . . . Surely he comes 27 From nameless battle yonder in the depths ; But whither steals he homeward there aloft ? What lair is his cloud-hidden in the snows, Whose mates and loves wait neath the desert palms To hear him tell his deed! Huge was the fight That left that mighty prowess broken so ! For sorely is he broken : now he stops And lies exhausted by an icy pool, Now labors up the shale, skirts the bald top, Drops with fierce caution down the further siope Eyeing the next hard pass. I wonder . . . ? No. ... Strange ! twas a blood-drop fell upon that flower A-tremble from the brink. Another here Upon the ground-moss nay, upon iny hand It falls all round me ! . . . (looking upward} Ah, an eagle goes Lame from the battle, mate or duellist Of him who crept by yonder. Even here I see the vast wings, shattered and unpenned, Almost refuse their labor ; now he swerves To rest upon a needled dolomite, Then upward grievously another stage Toward some sad eyrie where his heart abides. 28 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT I too must seek my eyrie sad enough, Since there my heart abides not any more, Amid the waste infinitudes of light Missing the flow of day, the refluent dark ; Amid the bliss of unconcerning eyes Eeinemberiug woman s anguish, man s resolve, Youth s wistful darling guess, kindled and quenched And quenched and kindled yet a little year In eyes too frail to hold their meaning long Where chance and enmity conspire with death. (He flies up the Valley.) 29 ACT I. SCENE 1 1. Above the peaks Hint crown the head of the Valley of Judgment. Raphael (flying). Soon will the cliffs of Heaven give easier way, For though my heart grows human, yet iny frame With immaterial things accordance keeps, And to my feet these spiritual hills Feel native, and the climate kind to breathe ; Still kindlier for the shredded mist of song That wanders here at morning and at eve Whispering witless words and prophecy. Voices (above). Through the vines of tangled light In the jungles of the sun Swept the Hunter in his might And his lion-beagle dun Gaped for prey to left and right O er the passes of the moon Strode the Hunter in his wrath : The eagle sniffed the icy noon, " Master, k newest thou the path? Shall we meet thy foe-man soon T 30 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Oil what interstellar plain, Mid what comet s blinding haze, Storm of star dust, meteor rain, Shall we spy his crouching gaze, Leap at him, and end thy pain? " Peace is on the heavenly meres, Sabbath lies on Paradise ; But the little Throne-lamp fears, For she sees the Master s eyes, And she tastes the Master s tears. Raphael. Many an age your song has hovered round This theme of Heaven s distress. What mean ye now? Was that the lion-hound of which ye sing Crept wounded hither, masterless, this hour ? Voices (as before). Where had his gadding spirit led? Beside what peopled water-head Stooped he, or on what sleeping face Was he intent the dream to trace ? Had creature love upon him fawned Or had he drunk of mortal mirth That he knew not what a morning dawned 31 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Over his darling earth? Heard not the storin, heard not the cries, Heard not the talk of the startled skies Over the guilty earth ? Raphael. Those dubious voices fade, and in their stead Succeeds a sound more anxious and perturbed, Voices and mutteriugs of supernal wrath Or whisperings of fear. . . . Ah, there aloft Upon the beetling rosy crag they stand, The pale horse and the white horse and the red! What rage vermilions his expanded wing ? Why streams his mane so fiery on the wind Back from his staring eyeballs? What should make His brother s steady candor pulse and throb And falter like the light on cavern walls Rocked under by the tide ? O never yet Did the pale horse seem terrible as now, Pawing the margent cliff and snorting down Pale fire into the Valley ! . . . Brothers, hail ! I fare from outland. Tell me what befalls. Angel of the White Horse. He strays too much abroad. He hath not heard. 32 Angel of the Pale Horse. They say that he has lived too much in the sun And waxes mortal, mortal. We shall see. Angel of the Red Horse. Saw st thou aught stirring in the valley deeps? Raphael. Far down below a beast crept wounded hither. Why gaze ye on each other thus aghast ? Angel of the Red Horse. Oast ye that way the passes and denies ! This way will I. ( The Angels of the Horses disappear. ) Raphael. What news has spread concern Even to these marks and purlieus of God s dream ! Below the sun s pale rim a paleness moves, Grows larger, blots the disc with deepening light. . . . And now above the Valley treads a shape Too lordly to be aught but Uriel ! 3.3 Poised on a peak he halts to gaze behind ; Now wingeth nearer, iu tlie Eagle s track Uriel (approaching}. Hail, brother. Raphael. Hail ! Saw st thou the fight below? Uriel Of what I saw I cannot spell the sense, Too darkly hid for me ! Raphael. Share me at least Thy news, though scant. That winged and brindled bulk, Whence came it and what quarry did it seek ? And the great eagle, was it mate or foe? Uriel. No earthly beast it was, no earthly bird, Seeking no earthly quarry. More than this I know not how to say, ere I have mused Where in the sun s core light and thought are one. Raphael. But yet conjecture clamors at thy heart. 34 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Uriel. Thou knowest what whispers are abroad in Heaven ; How God pines ever for his broken dream, Broken by vague division, whence who knows ! And pangs of restless love too strong to quench Save by the putting of creation forth, Quenched then but for a moment, since the worlds He made to soothe Him only vex Him more, Being compact of passion, violent, Exceeding quarrelsome, and in their midst Man the arch-troubler. Fainter whispers say He ponders how to win his prodigal By some extremity to render back The heritage abused, to merge again Each individual will into His will : Till when, his pangs increase. Raphael. A nine days tale. I hold Him no such weakling ! Yet . . . and yet ... I have beheld ... I know not . . . pallor couched On brows that wont to beacon ; through the orbs Quivers of twilight, hints and flecks of change. . . . 35 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT We cannot be, we would not be, I deem, The same as ere space was, or time began To trellis there life s wild and various bloom. We linger. Let me hear. Uriel Some things lie made Out of his wistfulness, his ecstasy, And made them lovely fair ; yet other some Out of his loathing, out of his remorse, Out of chagrin at the antinomy Cleaving his nature j these are monstrous shapes, Whereof the most abhorred one dwells below Within the caves and aged wells of dark Toward which this Valley plunges. There it waits Hoarding its ugly strength till time be full. Raphael. How nam st thou him ? Uriel The spirits meditative Darkly name him : The Worm that Dieth not, Perhaps the scourge reserved for those who prove Rebellious in the event, perhaps himself Scourge of the Scourger, biding but his hour 36 To venge his miscreation. So lie lies, A thing most opposite to spirit-kind, Most hated by the Four who guard the Throne, Within the viewless panoply of light Immediately ministrant. To them, But to the Lion and the Eagle most, Is given to gaze in the Eternal eyes Like hounds about a hunter s knee, that watch Each passion written on their master s brow, And having read his trouble, steal away To taste the troubler s flesh beneath their fangs. So stole away the Lion of the Throne, The Eagle for his aid. Beneath the rnoon Last night I came upon them stealing down, Too eager on the scent to mark my flight. Even to the splintered curb of the last profound I followed, and thence heard the battle rage Bellowed above by the loath elements, Till dawn showed in the east, an ashen dawn Clotted and drizzled o er with sullen light. Rapliael. Their hearts were faithful. They were fain to save The Master from some sad extremity. . . . But not in yonder depths, alas, doth lie The arch- foe of his peace. Would it were so ! 37 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT A monster bred to hatred in the dark. Would it were so ! not rather, as we fear, Man the uplifted stature, the proud mind, The laughter ! Uriel. Speedily our doubt shall end, For not much more delayeth the event. My watch is set within the sun, and thither My hour constrains me. Raphael. Heavenward I. Farewell ! ACT I. SCENE III. A garden in Heaven. The Eagle sits on the Tree of Knowledge ; the Lion and the Angel of the White Horse rest beneath. Angel of the White Horse. Deep in the purple umbrage droops the bird, His sick eye sealed beneath the weary lid Which scarce his right wing s torn and gaping gold Disfeathered hideth, since long hours ago He sidewise tucked his wounded head away, Shunning the light s offence ; and through the boughs Let sink this mighty pinion sinister A vast and ruined length, whereof the plumes That yesterday planed sunlike o er the Throne Are all blood- rusted now and misted on With obscure breathings of a nadir clime. Between the Lion s paws a thousand flowers Have withered since he laid him groaning down, And in uneasy slumber racked with dreams Flingeth at whiles a sanguine froth abroad To sear what rests of herbage or of bloom Unwithered by his breath. They saw me not 39 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Though close I tracked them up the cloudy heights, Nor once have marked me through the exhausted hours While here I wait the time to question them. Hark ! in their dreams they speak, and in their dreams Do act again their awful enterprise. The Eagle. Creep softly, softly ! Heaven s streets are still, Each seraph sentry drowseth on his hill, The winds of song are folded, and as flowers Folded are all the domes and dreaming towers. Creep softly, softly ; I am with thee, mate ! Softly I soar above the shrouded gate, And till thou comest past the warding swords Lone in the outer moonlight I will wait. The Lion. Wing swiftly ! For the walls of chrysopras Have melted at my roar to let me pass ; But Heaven is up and peers with mazed eyas, And wings are weighed to hinder our emprise. Wing swiftly, swiftly, down the glooming air, Past cloud and precipice and mountain stair, 40 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT For ere another morning drowns the stars We must have met the Worm within his lair. The Eagle. Drear are the depths, O brother, Bitter the fight ! Vainly we stand by each other. Thy might and my might Are as straw, in the flame and the smother. Angel of the White Horse. O ye familiars benedite, Who, hidden in the eternal glow, Keep guard about the Throne, What things were given to your sight Ere to the hold of such a foe Ye dared to venture down ? The Lion (awaking). Ages and ages we gazed, Stricken at heart and amazed, Till the morning look From His brow was strook, Silver and vair In the flame of his hair And his lip with anguish crazed. THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT "My heart must unburden its hate. I will walk through the pathless woods Where the wild stars hatch their broods, I will girdle the steppes Where the meteor creeps Like a slug on the rimy sward. Perhaps at the trampled brink Where the Bear goes down to drink, Perhaps where on the purple leas Dance the young Pleiades, Somewhere at length I shall laugh in niy strength Spying the Shape abhorred, Somewhere at last I shall break my fast On the flesh of the Foe of the Lord ! " The Eagle. Wearily thoti crept st back Sore from the track ; Thy hide was torn and thy tongue was black. Long thou did st slumber and deep. The Lion. A. voice came in my sleep Saying, " Why wander so far ! Nearhand lieth the earth 42 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Full of rumors of war, Of passion and pride no dearth. There in his cavern cold Lurketh the Dragon old ; He lies and pastures, plain to see, On God s heart, sluggishly, As once he sucked of the fruits of gold Ages ago, on the Eden tree. Angel of the Wfiite Horse. Hearken ! A wind walks in the Tree Though the lily-heads are still, From bough to bough inscrutably It feeleth out its will ; And now the leaves, atrenible long, Utter impulsive song. The Angel of the Tree. Not in the loosened whirlwinds that invade The sun s white core with shade, Not in the wandering tribes of fire that sweep With rapine through the deep, Not in the venom of the caverued Worm That drowseth out his term, Nay, not in these or aught akin to these Consisteth of God s groaning and disease The incorporeal germ. 43 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Though all that He hath made Rebels and is exceeding turbulent, Though all his loins increase Go after pleasures other than He meant) And with excessive claims Drain and defile the founts of his content, Yet only one of all the shapes He brought Out of the gulfs of thought, One only creature of his quickening hands Hath from its brow With reckless laugh and with reiterate vow Stripped clean away all decencies and shames ; Till with continual strife And divagant demands Of separate life, The searching and the scornful heart of Man God s inmost being maims. The Eagle. For naught have my wings been broken, Vain are the wounds of thy paws ! Hark what the Tree hath spoken. Angel of ihe Pale Horse. Hush ! For a murmur shakes the bloom That once drank Eden dew, A shadowed wind like a word of doom Darkens the branches through. 44 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The Angel of the Tree. Now draweth on the time declared of old When He shall make division of the fold, Shall winnow out the kernels from the chaff, Shall tread his grapes, and in a silver cup Chalice the good wine up And cast away the pummace and the draff. Too long and much too long He hath endured his wrong. A little vine of life He set to grow Not far off from the footstool of his feet, That it might be in spring a pleasant show Of budding charities, In autumn clothe itself with temperate sweet Of love s long- mellowing fruit So mild the angel youth might pluck and eat Nor feel the mortal savor trouble shoot Across their holy ease. But now the vine, Grown waste and riotous, has sent its root With monstrous loop and twine In circles nine times nine About the bowels of his holy hill, And million-fold its mouth Has drunk his songful springs and quenched his veins with drouth. 45 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Twelve shapes of sculptured dream On Heaven s twelve gateways gleam, Jasper, chalcedony, and jade, Beryl and lazuline ; And there-amid the rank leaves of the vine Earthy and lush At morn with laughter push, At evening droop and fade. Its carnal fruits are insolently laid, With stealth and hasty birth, Even in God s streets and in his garden bowers, And from the topmost glory of his towers Singeth and maketh mirth The exultation of its sudden flowers. Long and too long hath his compassion shrunk From laying of the axe unto the trunk ; Nor, though the blade is ground, and kindled white The furnace, will He quite Even now, Even now, though day is late, Utterly burn and cast into the slough The thing He made to love and still is loath to hate. But first He will put off eternity And put on body of their flowering clay, That thus brought near He may familiarly 46 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Close in each ear the word of pleading say. Each blindling heart that stubborns all astray Shall hear Him calling closer than the blood That both its ruby gates with tumult fills ; And to the wild procession of their wills Eaving idolatrous in the sacred wood, His voice of poignant love Though quiet as the voice of dust to dust Shall clearly sound above The beaten cymbal and the shrewd-blown shell, Saying as soft as rain, The gift I gave I fain would have again, Ye have not used it well ! Break ye the thyrsus and the phallic sign, Put off the ivy and the violet, A dearer standard shall before you shine And for your lustral foreheads ye shall twine A fairer garland yet, When the processions mild Shall greet you and behold you reconciled And sing you home across the deathless asphodel. But ye who will not so, Take up the phallus and the wreathed snake, Let the wine flow, And let the mountains echo to your yell. Your ways lie by the burning of the lake Long kindled for your sake : 47 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Be ye riot slow, But go Urging your panther teams through the wide woods of Hell !" 48 ACT II. Time : during and immediately after the Crucifixion ACT II. T he outlying plains of Heaven. Storm and darkness. Raphael. But now the air was thick with panic shades Who made no answer when I cried to them Across the vortices of spiritual dark. Upon what stricken plain have I been flung, Whose iniscreations blot with leaves like hands The far horizon light? Some glow-worm ghost Flees yonder, pauses, turns, and flees again : A woman spirit, by the anguish sweet Wakes in me at her anguish. Sister, hear ! The Spirit of the Throne-Lamp. O Light undimmed, if thou art powerful, Speak to the wind ! For see, my wings are torn And shelter not my lamp : tis almost spent. Raphael. Me too the wind afflicts. Together thus Our wings will shield the flame. Already, see, It climbs and steadies in the crystal bowl, And purges half the terror from thine eyes, 51 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Thou love-lamp of the Lord ! Are these his storms ? By his allowance are we thus distraught t The Spirit of the Lamp. His throne is empty and Himself is gone. Raphael. Child, fright hath crazed thee. Lean thy shak ing breast On mine : shut out the terrifying dark. The Spirit of the Lamp. He died with grieving o er the world He made. Raphael. We live in Him ; with Him shall all things die. Bright burns thy lamp ; take heart, and tell me soon What hath befallen in Heaven. The Angel of the Lamp. I know not well. My secret lies upon my heart too long. . . . Raphael. Nay, tremble not. Rather look out and see What presence comes : its influence makes cheer ; 52 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Twill be some spirit glad and resolute. Put by thy wings and look ; my eyes are blind Watching the feverous pulsings of thy lamp. The Angel of the Lamp. ? Tis he whose tent is pitched within the sun, But hardly glad, no longer resolute. Even Uriel s lordly light the wind subdues. Raphael. Hail, Uriel ! The Angel of the Lamp. Hail! Uriel. Hail, brother ! Sister, hail ! Raphael. Close, lend thy breadth of wing ! Thou art a strength. Speak, if thou knowest what has come to pass. Uriel. Something I know, and hither through the storms That vex the deeps and on disastrous shores Fling all frail stars that coast and merchant there, 53 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT I coine to learii the sequel if to learn Be mine, iu such a matter. Raphael. Speak. The Angel of the Lamp. Oh, speak ! Uriel Neath pleached boughs and vines of ancient fire In the white centre of the sun I lay, And watched the armies of young seraphim Xaked at play on the candescent plains, When suddenly the skies of flame were rent In sunder, and the plain became a sea Whereon the whirlwind walked through welter ing lanes To the sun s core. With pain I made my way Twixt element and angry element. Vast shapes of gathering and dissolving fire That seemed as beast and bird, and awful frames Of shadow, dubious whether bird or beast Or fish or reptile, hidden until now In shifting caverns of the photosphere, Rose up across my path ; and in their eyes Sat fear, and on their limbs astonishment. 54 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT At last, long battling and bewildered oft, I gained the solar coasts. Wide round I saw Each planet passion-changed, each haggard star Eeeling from flight and swoon, and the great deep Toiled like a runner s heart who runs with death. Calm at confusion s centre stood the Earth, A spiritual nimbus round her brow Like as a woman angel-visited, Sightless and deaf to all things save her swoon And her heart s solemn hallelujah. The Spirit of the Lamp. Oh, What hath He sent upon the joyous Earth ? The Earth that has the blue and little flowers Thou brought st me once to wreath my lamp withal, Earth -lover ! But they faded very soon, And left a nameless hunger in my heart. Thy Earth was chosen, Baphael ! Art thou glad ? Raphael. Not glad nor sorry, sister, since not yet 1 know the meaning of our brother s words. Earth-wandering, and the shows of restless time, 55 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Have weighed the eyelids of my spirit down. Speak, Uriel, and speak plain. What followed then ? Uriel. That rapt and solemn aspect of the Earth Soon drew me to her through the shuddering air ; And circling swiftly round her as she went I neared the twilight verge that dipped toward night. Here on a sunset hill I stayed my wings. Babble of people and much soldiery Poured thence into their city gates ; the place Was steeped in level splendor after storm, And like to pillars of advancing fire Three trees of crucifixion loomed, whereon Three men hung crucified, one beautiful Beyond the measure of Man s flowering clay, Conspicuous o er the world placed for a sign. Slowly to meet my gaze the dying lids Were lifted, and the faint eyes swam on mine Raphael. Nay, sister, sink not ! We are three : be strong. The Angel of the Lamp. I know whose eyes swam faint on thine ! I know The sorrows that He suffered for his world, 56 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Ere ever He put off eternity And put on clay, to be by hands of clay Hung for a sign ! Raphael. Above the pausing wind Hearken ! a rush of pinions. Who are these That put an influence in this bitter air Like Spring when she comes galliard from the south 1 Uriel. The globe of amber light wherein they fly Goes ashen in the flaws. That ship of souls Tacks in the wind s teeth and is blown abroad Nigh Heaven s last confines. Now it veers again, And groweth larger : they will pass this way. Brother, lift up thy voice and sing to them. These be the spirits that within the moon Wander the lucent forests ; shy are they Amid their wood-thoughts and their shy love- thoughts, Only by song their minds are quickly swayed. Wide has the ocean been for their frail wings, And wild the panic that has driven them forth From their still lunar isle. Thy song shall be A kindly net to snare them as they pass. 57 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Raphael (sings). Shore-birds wet with deep-sea dew, Fold your wings and stay your flight ; Stay, stay ! Long was the way, Grieved with wind is your tender light, Stay, till our love rekindle you. Wood-birds that through lunar glens Flood the noon of night with singing, Hearken, hearken ! Our minds undarken : O er your phosphor forests winging, Say, what shadow scared you thence 1 (The moon-spirits alight in a circle round the three an gels. ) The Spirit of the Lamp. How fair they must have been ere yet their light Was ruined with the wind and flying spume, Being so fair, though ruined ! First Moon-spirit. Who are ye That seem so safe when every shaken world 58 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Voideth its tenantry, and even those stars That keep the marches and strongholds of space Flee with affrighted eyes down alien deeps, Or cling to the necks of comets, whispering words That stop them in their courses, though they be Violent souls and outlaw. Uriel. We are such As share God s sorrow in his evil time, And wait the issue of the desperate draught He drinks this hour to win surcease of pain. Second Moon-Spirit Speak simply to the simple ; make thy words Accordant to our minds ; our element Is the moon s meek, unintellectual day. Uriel. You in the moon have felt His pangs more near Than may the passionate dwellers in quick worlds Wrapped in their own hot being ; for your sphere Has cooled the angry metal in its veins, 59 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Its spent volcanoes utter now no more Their proud and hasty meanings ; age by age Your world tends back to silence, rendering up Its selfhood and control into his hands Whence it rebelled, like all his prodigals, To spend the hoard of fire He dowered them with Too rashly. So it hangs, a doubtful ground : Now, brooded on by powers of heavenly peace, It goeth darkling and your hearts are dumb, Now, caught within the orbits of desire, It gathers ghostly splendor ; in your woods Old rites are paid, and o er your crystal peaks, That burn at the heart like genie-haunted gems, Sweeps revelry so wild that mortal men, Shepherds or sailors, gazing half a night, Wander at dawn brain-crazed. Third Moon-Spirit. Angel, we wait, We wait with trembling till thy lips declare This present hour s disaster. Whose the arm That broke our steppes in twain, and from the roots Of cloven hills haled shapes of former men And frames of monstrous ravin, ages dead! 60 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Whose mouth was set against the moon-children, To blow their sheeny pleasances to dust And scare them from their world ? What plains are these Whose spiritual pulse of light and dark Throbs as if hope and terror struggled there ? Uriel. These are the plains of heaven, least create Of God s creation, nearest to his hand When He would discreate, as now perchance, The deeps that teem with rebel energies Wanton, uuteachable, intolerable, Whereof the soul of man, though meant to be His dearest pride and joy, is frowardest And first to vex him : were Man s will subdued, The rest beneath his banners soon would swarm. Long hath He warned and pleaded, but to-day With a most searching bosom- whisper pleads ; For in their likeness clad He gives Himself To die that they may live, accepting Him, Or, still rejecting, and preferring still Their own unto his pleasure, may be cast To outer darkness and the second death. These storms and perturbations are his throes, And here we wait until He reassume His attributes and kingdom. 61 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The Angel of the Lamp. "Will He come ? And will the ancient peace be ours again t Speak, brother, will it be J Uriel. Hope still is ours. Tremble no more, sweet Flame ! Good hope is ours. The Angel of the Lamp. My secret lies upon my heart too long ! Since first the trumpet told of Time begun, And in the seven bowls the seven flames, So white before and still, a patient praise, Leaped up in restless colours, fear hath stood A whispering eighth among the sisters seven, A thin small voice singing above our songs, A hush beneath our hush. Each side the throne The mystic olive trees began to blow, And on the candlesticks that burn beneath Dropped dying bloom and fruitage mortal ripe. When evening spread upon the holy hill Its excellence of peace, small restless wings, To Heaven unnative, fluttered round our lamps, Forever circling nearer till they threw Into the flame their lives of longing dust, And though we plucked the char out hastily 62 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT A climbing rust had dulled our torch of praise. Nay, where the very breast of God should be, Forever panoplied with viewless light, Gnawed darkness like a worm, and when this wind That never came till now, blew wide and thin The splendor of the Throne-stead hush, bend close ! His eyes were old with pain. Then all at once brothers, is it hours or aeons since ? Intolerable lambence lit the air ; The sea of glass whereon the nations stand At morn to carol, curdled red as blood, And rolled a moaning billow to the shore ; The Eagle screamed ; upon the tabled gem Where was the footstool of God s feet, lay prone The Lion s whining muzzle ; and the Calf Bleated beneath his six- times- folded wing. My sister lamps were quenched, but ere I fled 1 crept up past the Lion s awful paws, Up past the shrouding light, and saw His place Was empty. ... Is it hours or seons since? I found the shadowed fields about me, grey Each hearted amaranth and asphodel, The living forests with their veins of light Looped thickly, and the burning flowers between, The living waters, and the lily souk 63 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Along the waters all a stricken grey ! Where er I fled or turned it still pursued That Nothingness that sat upon the Throne ; And now it waits to seize me yonder, here ! Uriel. Hush, be of better comfort. Through the plain Auroral pallors wake the asphodels ; The wind at last is still ; and eastward far Beyond the friths and islands of that sea Which spreads before His dwelling in the Mount, Behold, beginning glories star the dusk, As if the clouds rolled burning from the throne, To show us signs and wonders risen there. And hark ! the happy presage of keen wings Ingathering from the corners of the winds ; Large light, and silvery calls and far replies, And deeps of song that call unto the deeps. Raphael. His agony is done : a little while He tarries, but He surely comes again Even though but for a little. The Spirit of the Lamp. Let us join These hasting companies whose steady flight 64 Goes tempered to all manner instruments Borne in their midst by hidden taborists, Lute-players, and them that pluck the dul cimer- All sweet musicians ! Surely these go in Unto some holy matter. Raphael, Surely. Come ! 65 ACT III. Time : Scene I. before dawn, Scene II. after sunset, of the Day of Judgment ACT III. SCENE I. A peak above the Valley of the Judgment. Be tween midnight and dawn. Raphael. Alas, on this lone height my pinions fail, And half iny dreaming world unvisited ! As a sick woman, who, when morning glooms Must leave for aye the house where she was wed, Yearns to behold the thrice- familiar rooms, And rises trembling, and with watch-lamp goes From chamber unto chamber, stopping now To muse upon her dead child s pictured brow, And now to dream of little merriments Enacted, and of trivial dear events, Until her weakness grows Upon her, and she sinks and cannot rise, So, since upon the sad and prescient skies The darkness of this ultimate night was shed, My feet from haunted place to haunted place Of my familiar earth have kept their pace : Alas, that ere the half be mused upon, And while the coming up of dreadful day 69 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Is still an hour away My wing is broken, and my strength is gone ! Star after star goes out above the peak, And only from the morning star is shed Keen influence. Great star ! He is not weak, His pinions fail not ; for he never quaffed This frail and fiery air that mortals drink : He has not heard when little children laughed j He has not watched old pensioners break their bread ; To woman s lips he never held the draught Of anguish, that a man-child might be born ; The May woods never saw him hiding there His wings and flaming hair To watch the young men pluck the budded thorn ; Nor has his mouth put off its seraph scorn To hang with startled cry Of grievous inquiry Above the stoic forehead of the dead. O heart of man, how I have loved thee ! Hidden in sunlight what sweet hours were mine Of lover-like espial upon thine ; Thrilled with thy shadowy fears, half-guessing The hope that lit thy veins like wine, 70 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Musing why this was bane and that thy blessing, My angel-ichor moved by all that moved thee ; Though oft the meanings of thy joy and woe Were hid, were hard to know ; For deep beneath the clear crystalline waters That feed the hearts of Heaven s sons and daugh ters, The roots of thy life go. O Dreamer ! O Desirer ! Goer down Unto untravelled seas in untried ships ! O crusher of the unimagined grape On unconceived lips ! O player upon a lordly instrument No man or god hath had in mind to invent ; O cunning how to shape Effulgent Heaven and scoop out bitter Hell From the little shine and saltness of a tear ; Sieger and harrier, Beyond the moon, of thine own builded town, Each morning won, each eve impregnable, Each noon evanished sheer ! Thou fiery essence in a vase of fire ! What quarry gathered and packed down the clay To make this delicate vessel of desire ? Who digged it t In what mortar did he bray 1 Whose wistful hand did lead 71 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT All round the lyric brede ? Who tinted it, and burned the dross away t He, He, ( doth some one say ? ) "Whose mallet-arm is lift and knitted hard To break it into shard ! " Were that the Maker s way f Who brings to being aught, Love is his skill untaught, Love is his ore, his furnace, and his tool ; Who makes, destroyeth not, But much is dashed in pieces by the fool. struggler in the mesh Of spirit and of flesh Some subtle hand hath tied to make thee Man, That now is unto thee a wide domain To laugh and love and dare in for a span, And straightway is a prison-house of pain, A den of loathing, and a violent place, A hold for unclean wing and cruel face That mock the seared heart and darkened brain, - My bosom yearns above thee at the end, Thinking of all thy gladness, all thy woe ; Whoever is thy foe, 1 am thy friend, thy friend ! As thou hast striven, I strove to comprehend The piteous sundering set betwixt the zenith 72 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT And nadir of thy fates, Whose life doth serious message send To moon and stars, anon itself demeaneth Below the brute estates. Wild heart, that through the steepening arcs art whirled To a bright master- world, And in a trice must blindly backward hark To the subterrene dark, Deem not that mighty gamut-frame was set For wanton finger- fret ! No empty-hearted gymnast of the strings Gave the wild treble wings, Or living the shuddering bass from hell s last parapet. Though now the Master sad With vehemence shall break thee, Not lightly did He make thee, That morning when his heart was music-mad : Lovely importings then his looks and gestures had. Whatever corneth with to-morrow s light, Oh, deem not that in idlesse or in spite The strong knot of thy fate Was woven so implicate, Or that a jester put thee in that plight. 73 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Darkly, but oh, for good, for good, The spirit infinite Was throned upon the perishable blood ; To moan and to be abject at the neap, To ride portentous on the shrieking scud Of the aroused flood, And halcyon hours to preen and prate in the boon Tropical afternoon. Not in vain, not in vain, The spirit hath its sanguine stain, And from its senses five doth peer As a fawn from the green windows of a wood ; Slave of the panic woodland fear, Boon-fellow in the game of blood and lust That fills with tragic mirth the woodland year, Searched with starry agonies Through the breast and through the reins, Maddened and led by lone moon-wandering cries. Dust unto dust complains, Dust laugheth out to dust, Sod unto sod moves fellowship, And the soul utters, as she must, Her meanings with a loose and carnal lip ; But deep in her ambiguous eyes Forever shine and slip Quenchless expectancies, 74 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT And in a far-off day she seems to put her trust. O Morning Star ! that dost arise Haughtily now from off thy flaming throne, And standest in thy wings outspreaded zone, With hand uplift and intense vision glad, More kindling while thy brother planets fade, "Wilt thou, the seldom-speaker, speak and say If this, if this be then the far-off day When God shall give the substance for the shade ? When Man shall wake, and be no more adrad To lose the precious dream he dreamed he had, And the long groping of his heart be stayed ? He answers not ; the globed light he wears Largens and largens like a wondrous flower, And in the midst his wavering radiance fades. Behold, upon the waters, them that be Above the heavens, how the lily light Blooms mystical and vast ! till all the stars And all the gathered clouds that wait the day Are blotted by its rondure. Dimly grows From, height to depth of that magnificence A splendor sad that taketh feature on. . . . Lo ! where God s body hangs upon the cross, Drooping from out yon skiey Golgotha Above the wills and passions of the world ! THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT O doomed, rejected world, awake ! awake ! See where He droopeth white and pitiful ! Behold, his drooping brow is pitiful ! Cry unto Him for pity. Climb, oh, haste, Climb swiftly up yon skiey Golgotha To where his feet are wounded ! Even now He must have pity on his childish ones ; He knoweth, He remembereth they are dust ! Earth slumbers ; and the freshening winds begin To blow from out the unuprisen east ; Yet still abides that awful Eidolon Large on the face of Heaven, and its light Is as the patience of a thousand moons Upon the peaks and gorges of the vale. Xow on that giant forehead slowly dawns Again the star, the bright, the morning star ; Amid the changeful lampings of his orb The Angel stands, with keen out-spreaded wings, And lifted hand and intense vision glad, As when lie led his brother orbs in song. But yet no word nor any breath of song Begins upon the region silences : All s hushed as ere the first-created throat Was vocal. Xow remoter wonders wake, Impatient glories gather and trauspeer 70 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT That sky-suspended linage. Three by three The beryl gates, the gates of chrysoprase, And those that are a very perfect pearl Open, and all the citadel of God Even to the bright acropolis thereof, The temple of the ark of the covenant, Lies open, steeped in wroth light from the Throne ; And all the heavenly folk are busy there. 77 ACT III. SCENE II. A peak above the Valley of the Judgment. Twilight. Michael. God s vengeance is full wrought, unless this form That labors from the dark mists of the Vale Be one whose strength has overlived our wrath, And the last hunger of whose heart shall be To creep from out that mass of death, and wait High on these ruined hills for death to come At nightfall, when the last strong soul must die. Nay, tis no mortal creature, though he wears A fallen unhappy splendor, and his wings, All eyed and irised like the gladdest ones That glimmer in the pageantry of Heaven, Are folded sadly o er his downcast eyes As now he sits and dreams. Tis Raphael. (Michael descends. ) Why sitteth Raphael disconsolate After the manifest glories of this day? Eaphael. The rest may keep the glory. 78 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Michael. Wilt thou share The love-feast of the saved in Heaven to-night With hidden traitorous thoughts clouding thy heart? Raphael. Never again ! Never again for me ! Never again the lily souls that live Along the margent of the streams, shall grow More candid at my corning. Never more God s birds above the bearers of the Ark Shall make a wood of implicated wings, Swept by the wind of slow ecstatic song. Thy youths shall hold their summer cenacles ; I am not of their fellowship, it seems. God s ancient peace shall feed them, as it feeds These yet uplifted hills. I would I knew Where bubbled that insistent spring. To drink Deep, and forget what I have seen to-day ! Michael. What thou hast seen? The splendor of his power Sent forth against the wicked ; his right arm Cleaving unbearable glories, lifted high To hurl his chivalry down slopes of flame 79 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT With wheels and tramplings; the wide thresh ing-floor Become a furnace ; drop by anguished drop The oozing of the wine-press of his wrath ; The gross pulp cumbering the floor of the world, The little priceless liquor chaliced up, Borne back mid plaining silver and sweet throats For the Spirit s earliest house-gift to the Bride ! Thou would st forget this gladly, Eaphael? Raphael. Yes, yes ; right gladly. Michael. Yonder where the fight Flung its main sea of blood and broken souls Into the nether dark, I saw a youth Cling for a moment to a jutting rock And gaze back at the angel shapes that rode The neck of the avalanche ; between the wings Of the pale horse and the red his vision pierced, Between the ranks of spectral charioteers, Supernal arms and banners prone for speed, Up to the central menace of the Hand That launched that bulk of ruin ; and I saw A light of mighty pleasure fill his eyes At all that harness and despatch of war 80 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Storming aslope. He laughed defiance back Ere down cascades of blood and fire was flung His body indistinguishably damned. How should this puny valor rise in glee To greet the power that crushed it, and thy heart, Angelically dowered, stand listless by ? Eapliael. Perhaps for thinking on another sight. After thy chivalry passed down and left The valley-trough cumbered and heaped with death, A broken girl o er- lived to find the breast Her arms had clung to in the awful fall Strange, alien, not her lover s boyish shape She deemed she held, but gross with years and sins. Her changed eyes heavily a moment roamed, Then settled back on his, the darkened mate Whom chance had flung her at the hour extreme In scornful bridals. From his brow she drew The war-worn locks, and laid her kisses there Unutterable with life s extreme tenderness. Hark ! where the last of those redeemed go by, Companioned of the hasting paranymphs Who hear afar the Spirit and the Bride 81 THE MASQUE OP JUDGMENT Say "Conie," and see the nuptial torch alight Ere they have put their saffron vesture on, Too eager for their goal to join the song Those throats redeemed raise, save that their hearts Throb rhythmic with it, systole dim And bright diastole, with wax and wane Of spirit-splendor pulsing to the tune. Redeemed Spirits (sing, as they lly past below). In the wilds of life astray, Held far from our delight, Following the cloud by day And the fire by night, Came we a desert way. O Lord, with apples feed us, With flagons stay ! By Thy still waters lead us ! As bird torn from the breast Of mother-cherishings, Far from the swaying nest Dies for the mother wings, So did the birth-hour wrest From Thy sweet will and word Our souls distressed. Open Thy breast, thou Bird ! 82 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Raphael. Another neareth, chill upon the wind ; Wan fire-flakes stain the clustering spires of cliff, From ledge to shoulder hapless echo clings And falters up. Michael. The pale one s homing-song ! To-day he makes good harvest, and his voice Has autumn meanings ; jealously and late His steed foregoes the trampled threshing-stead. Raphael. Terrible angel ! Never until now Have I beheld his features through the veil Of pallor that enwrapped them ; now at last Their terror is distinct, for triumph now And large appeasement lights them visibly, As o er his horse s neck he strains for speed. Michael. One flieth with him, rosy-lit within. Raphael. Not as the battailous breathing of thy mates Enrubies them : more vesperine and sad. Twill be the lordly light of Uriel, dimmed. Hail, Uriel ! Quench thy speed. 83 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The Angel of the Pale, Horse (flying). Why tuny now ? God s acts are throughly complished : Heaven stays Till all her SOILS be gathered. (Flies past.") Uriel (alighting). Here I wait To see the swift reprisals Man shall take. Michael. Blaspheme not, lest I hurl thee down to swell The carrion sin that Raphael mourns above ! Raphael. Uriel s place is there, by those pale heads, Those sightless eyes with awful question changed, Those desperate broken hands cheated in death With poor embraces chance and alien. Not Uriel s only, mine, and thine, and theirs Thy warrior mates, and chiefly His whose breast Bathed in some dawn s bright urge and wistful- ness Put out this lovely fruitage, this sweet vine Of man the leaf and maid the honeyed flower In mystic alternation, and when noon Spread clamor in the pulses of the vine, 84 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Was pined and plucked it up ! Not so shall one Deal with another s, much less with his own. Michael. For sins not to be borne he cut them off. Murders, adulteries, and acts unclean, Idolatries, and broken covenants, Violent hearts and unconsidering tongues. Uriel. The violence and the unclean acts were his ; Unto Himself himself brake covenant ; Before the monstrous fancies of his heart His heart made heathen mummery and song. AYherefore to-day himself He punishes. Michael. Thy mouth uttereth darkness. Is all dream 1 Human and heavenly deed unmeaning both ? Raphael (to Uriel). Brother, thou art all wisdom, as I know And still have proved rejoicingly, but now Thy word indeed is difficult and dark. Take not away Man s ancient dignity, The privilege and power to elect his ways, His kingly self-possession. Level not 85 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The head that lies too low to-day. Snatch not From brows abased the crown of personal will "Which made them noble, though it brought them down, Being worn too carelessly, too like a wreath Of ivy or poppies meant for holiday. Man s agonies and ecstasies obscure Were more than shadow-show ! Not all in vain Ilis groping toward some quaint imagined good, His blood shed for a scruple, his low days Winged and illumined with long-suffering love ! Uriel. Nay, not in vain were these, though otherwise Bound with the sum of things than unto Man Seemed likely, wearing that glad wreath he wore, And going after good the headstrong way. Raphael. We wait to hear this riddling talk made plain. Uriel, Truth is not soon made plain, nor in a breath Fluently solved while the chance listener waits, Nor by the elemental wrestling mind Wrung from the rock with sobs. Myself have held, 86 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Where in the sun s core light and thought are one, 2Eons of question, and am darkling still. Raphael. Speak, brother, though thy words be hard and scant. The candle flame goes far a moonless night. Uriel. The worlds and all their tenantry are Him, Even to the utmost archipelagoes Gazed at by maritime angels ere they veer Homeward, awestruck by omens and sea-signs Known to no pilot of them, and far-off Watch the scared islanders beside the straits, All these, and whatso lies beyond our hail, Are effluence of the life that moves in Him, Thought of his brain, wish of his working blood : Yet every separate creature of his thought Hath separate claims and separate potencies. Oh, not a sparrow falleth to the ground But He regardeth it ! Since ere it fell A little gladness died away in Him. And not a creature sinneth but He weeps His own sin with his creature s fourfold pain, 87 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Since god and creature, false each to itself, Was false each to the other. Not a heart O ercometh evil and mounts up to good, But He o ercometh and is lifted too. Each life of clay that flowered in fragrant deed, Each grass-blade that grew willingly, each bird That through the churlish weather hoarded song, Not only worked its own salvation out But helped Him in his old struggle with him- self- Or might have helped or might have helped, it seems. . . . Rapliael. Yet did not, thy disconsolate ending says. Uriel. Who shall dispute finalities with Him ! Not Uriel. But as far as Uriel sees, Salvation lies annulled in yonder Vale And prone are God s true helpers. Michael. Clay of clay ! Wassailers, fleshlings, quarrel -mongers, thieves Of pleasure, plighters of unholy troth, Mimes, gypsies, idol -breakers, idol-smiths, Dervishiug fantasists most likely help ! 88 THE MASQUE OP JUDGMENT Uriel. Unlikely : yet the marrow of his bones ; Heat of the breath of his mouth ; corpuscles red Energic in his veins, loud gainsayers Of death s insinuating whisper, "Peace!" . . . Before the Heavens were spread, or He himself Eose from his changeless and unpictured dream, These stirred in Him, demanding to be dowered With individual shape and destiny, Each one a soul, yet each incorporate With his great soul, which to far happy ends Should henceforth in a million shapes of will Immensely groan and travail, not with tears Alone, but laughter, with singing as with sobs. Oh, many a golden station on that march Lie backward of us ! when the armed worlds Broke leaguer round some conquered capital, And in the pleasure-places of its kings Sat down to feast, the unhelmed gleemen chanting Victory past and victory to come. Let me not darken thought with imagery ! Still the naked word escapes me, being too vast, Too simple, for our little pictured speech. This chiefly I would say : the restless joy Which called God from his sleep and bade his hand 89 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Depict much life and language on the dark, Had other aims and meanings than are writ In yonder Valley for an epilogue. Man s violence was earnest of his strength, His sin a heady overflow, dynamic Unto all lovely uses, to be curbed And sweetened, never broken with the rod ! Raphael. Why did He quench their passion! I have walked The rings of planets where strange-coloured moons Hung thick as dew, in ocean orchards feared The glaucous tremble of the living boughs Whose fruit hath eyes and purpose ; but no where Found any law but this : Passion is power, And, kindly tempered, saves. All things declare Uruggle hath deeper peace than sleep can bring : The restlessness that put creation forth Impure and violent, held holier calm Thau that Nirvana whence it wakened Him. Uriel. This day declares He deemeth otherwise. The Shining Wrestler, tired of strife, hath slain 90 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The dark antagonist whose enmity Gave Him rejoicing sinews ; but of Him His foe was flesh of flesh and bone of bone ; With suicidal hand He smote him down : Soon we shall feel His lethal pangs begin. Raphael. Fiercer than those that clove thy burning realms And sent grey winds to waste the plains of Heaven When on the Cross He sought to purchase peace And lure his wayward world back to His hand ! Michael. His lightning dry thy tongue ! Why should our minds Peer and conjecture of the danger past I Thou knowest what glory followed. Raphael. Yes, I know. The clouds at last rolled burning from the Throne And let us see the risen wonders there. Again I hear the gathering psalmody Chant out the clement tale eternal God Made clay, by hands of clay unto the Cross Hung for a sign, that who beholding Him Should find Him very God, might dwell with us 91 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT In endless light and life. Again I hear The deep consenting chorus mount and merge The wayward crests of treble into one ; But still between the calling deeps of song Vague and unacquiescent hung my heart, Conning the burden wistfully anew In hopes to find the joy my comrades found Hid in the dubious notes. Vague hung my heart, Wistful as morning boughs that watch the moon, Not strong as now when I have seen all clear And o er the ashes of the world declare Listen ! Are there not voices in the Vale ? Michael. They talk together. Some die not till dark. Raphael. Aye, until dark ! Twill be a starless night. ACT IV. Time : evening of the Day of Judgment ACT IV. A rocJc in the Valley of the Judgment ; about the rock, and filing the whole trough of the valley, lie the bodies of the lost. Twilight. Raphael. My lot is cast with these : I watch to-night Here islanded in death. Say me not nay : Till from the last lip anguish is unwreathed, From the last brow the frown of horror fades, Here I must sit, witness and comforter If any more conspicuous strengths survive To mutter or make signal in the dusk. Michael. Nay, brother, stay not. Though thy words are calm, Thy desperate eyes betray thee ; thou resolvest Some sudden irremediable thing. The past is done, and, whether well or ill, Necessitously. Put on that robe of song Woven of youngest light and over-runed With flickerings of the golden elder speech, Wherein thou led st the lily souls along Choregic o er the unclouded psalmody And wert so starry long agone ! Arise ! 95 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT My soul is heavy at thee. Thou art wan ; Thine eyes are dull yet wild, even as these Who lie involved and heaped along the Vale Seeming in death to threaten and to rave. Arise and come away ! Why tarry here To inourii above these outcast, since the fan Hath winnowed them and left no righteous one ? Rather arise, make glad thy countenance, And through the courts of day let herald throats Softly declare thy coming, virgin hands, From that oraculous tree whose leaves are tongues, Laurel thee best of Heaven s lutanists And seat thee at the minstrel -hand of God. Raphael. You urge me well. I think my songs to-night Would cheer their festivals : I have a theme Of very present gladness, deeply conned. But if amid the gratulating chant, If through the dances orbed and interorl>ed Furnished with solemn symbol and device, Perchance there stole a quite unfurnished shape Nakedly risen from this company ? Holding up horrible accusing hands Against the nuptial light? That were scarce well. 96 I fear my lute would glance and jangle off To themes as good unsung. Hark ! Michael. Twas a voice, Not distant. Raphael. Nay, tis yonder, lie who lies Half- lifted from the jetsam of this sea Across that ragged reef. Another, hush ! A woman s voice, was t not? And see, below That aged throat would fain articulate. . . . They taste sweet speech ere the long silence comes. A Youth s Voice. Do any live but me 1 Do any wake to hear A word spoke in the dark before I die ? An Old Man. An old and wakeful spirit rests thee near. A Young Woman. Long had I lain asleep, but wakened at thy cry. Youth. Not all discourteous is the Conqueror s heart, Since now of that good strength I wore at noon Ebbs back a little part. 97 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Old Man. Enough to syllable thy soul s young scorn, Though all unripe, unwise ; And haply rouse some one of these that lie Fixing the dark with undivining eyes Of human wit and seemliness forlorn, To speak their separate word or unto thine reply. Youth. A song of scorn I minded to have sung, But all the words are faded from my tongue. Mysteriously withdrawn, Out of this desolation I am gone Aloft into the light of other days. My heart runs naked in the wind, more fleet Thau are my flying feet, Above the misty foss and up the mountain lawn To seek the place of Morning where she stays. The silver summits held across the dawn liy some gigantic arm, like wrought candelabras, Kindle their wicks of praise To light the temple builded not with hands Above the prostrate lands, And the religious winds, soug-stoled, Pacing the mighty nave Fill azure dome and star-held architrave With hymns unto the gods that grow not old, 98 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Lords of the joy of life made known Not unto gods alone, But perfectly to man and beast and stone, And by the atomies with rapture shared, But ne er by poet s golden mouth Nor by the west wind singing to the south Fitly declared. Oh, for a voice Here in the doors of death To speak the praise of life, existence mere, The simple come and go of natural breath, And habitation of the body s house with its five windows clear ! O souls defeated, broken, and undone, Rejoice with me, rejoice That we have walked beneath the moon and sun Not churlishly, nor slanderous of the bliss ; But rather leaving this To the many prophets strict and sedulous Of that sad-spoken god Who now hath conquered and is surely king, Have given our lips for life to closely kiss, Have heard the sweet persuasion of the sod And been heart- credulous To trust the signs and whispers of the spring. 99 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Second Youth. Various the reasons why we could not pay The price exacted from us ! My ear, though fain, I might have turned away From spring s love-startled promise, I might have given up the glorious sea And the majestic mountains might for me Have ceased to be ; God, with one sudden rinsing of his hand, Might have wiped bare The earth-ball of its deeds and pageantries, Yea, even of light and air, That on the stark circumference I might stand And choose deliberately, uu vexed of these, Between my will and his. Then I had said, with cheerful voice and strong, Somewhat dismayed, yet with a cheerful voice, "This many days, Lord, I have thought it long Till I could put away creation s noise, The tragic streets, the poignant drip of rains, But chiefly the loud speaking in my veins Concerning this and that desirable. Now you have put me in a quiet place, Take but away your too expectant face, And all shall then be well. 100 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Then I can ponder, as I meant to do And as I singly long since thought was mine, The mysteries divine ; Make quiet proof of you If you be verily my lord or no, And, having found you to be truly so, Shall understand for sooth, That down the eternities I may launch my mind Not as a tame hawk haggard down the wind, Whom huntsman s cry pursueth, But as an eagle without bell or jess, Obedient alone to his soul s lordliness. Third Youth. Better with captives in the slaver s pen Hear women sob, and sit with cursing men, Yea, better here among these writhen lips, Than pluck out from the blood its old compan ionships. If God had set me for one hour alone, Apart from clash of sword And trumpet- pealed word, I think I should have fled unto his throne. But always ere the dayspring took the sky, Somewhere the silver trumpets were aery, Sweet, high, oh, high and sweet ! 101 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT What voice could summon so but the soul s Paraclete f Whom should such voices call but me, to dare and die ? O ye asleep here in the eyrie town, Ye mothers, babes, and maids, and aged men, The plain is full of foemen ! Turn again Sleep sound, or waken half Only to hear our happy buglas laugh Lovely defiance down, As through the steep Grey streets we sweep, Each horse and man a ribbed fan to scatter all that chaff! How from the lance-shock and the griding sword Untwine the still small accents of the Lord f How hear the Prince of Peace and Lord of Hosts Speak from the zenith mid his marshalled ghosts, 11 Vengeance is mine, I will repay ; Cease thou and come away ! " Or having seen and harkened, how refrain From crying, heart and brain, "So, Lord, Thou sayest it, Thine 102 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT But also mine, ah surely also mine ! Else why and for what good This strength of arm my father got for me By perfect chastity, This glorious anger poured into my blood Out of my mother s depths of ardency ? A Confuted Voice. Not very long to-day Thy arm held back the mischief of the tide ! Thou could st not check the play Of scythes, the awful chariots beside ! Thy blood has ebbed a little from its pride. A Girl s Voice. I waited patiently and thought to hear The secret reason dark, The secret reason dark and dear Why none of us had heart to mark The pale evangel whispering from the sphere. For oft the moon between the garden boughs Her looks of summer longing would efface, And come to be a halo round the brows Of Him who died to give the sinner grace, Now saddening o er His purchase from that place. And oft at dawn I heard the Sons of Morning 103 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Silvered with lovely menace fill the sky, And heard their solemn lips deliver warning What time the central singer lifted high, In the deep hush twixt ode and palinode, The sangrael of the sun, brimmed with redeem ing blood. But how might I attend the minatory Voices of many angels breathing doom, When from the window of the little room My love s face had not faded, and the story His wakeful mouth had whispered in the gloom Spake in my pulses yet! And how at evening turn To feel those sad eyes down the moonlight yearn, When mouth to mouth and breast to aching breast I held my lover close, and by his nest The nightingale, scarce master of his mood, Now after faint essay And amorous dim delay Suddenly steeped his heart in song s mad pleni tude? A Woman s Voice. What unripe girl is this who maketh bold To speak for lovers at the extreme hour, Yet fancy-paints the flower f Yet hides with image-gilt the naked gold! 104 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT sisters, brothers, help me to arise ! Of God s two-horned throne I will lay hold And let Him see my eyes ; That He may understand what love can be, And raise his curse, and set his children free. Another Woman s Voice. My life was a rank venomed weed And hers, I think, a flower ; But my harsh voice shall have a power Fiercer than hers to plead. About His knees with curses I will cling, My veins I will break open, till He see The barb of the intolerable sting, The tongues of the immitigable fire He planted there to fret and fumble through me, To craze and to undo me, Till on the cruel altars where He threw me 1 slew my heart s desire ! Old Man. Of double fetters be not fain, my child, To these thou wearest be thou reconciled. Spread not before his dark averted gaze (Now that He holds his hand and seemeth satis fied) The love that called you unappointed ways 105 THE MASQUE OP JUDGMENT And filled your hearts with pride. A little while He left you free In passion s privilege To god it on the peaks of personality, But ye have walked too near the hither edge. Yet once I thought My old heart meekened to an evening mood By dint of years and much beatitude He was not jealous as the prophet taught, Nor loving-tolerant as mild teachers held, But swayed to mystical participation Of various delight By every chrysalid s meandering flight And million-footed onset of heroic nation ; To instant joy impelled By every jet of life that from Time s fountain quelled. So deemed I, musing on the headstrong glee Of children at my knee, But He ordained his ways after another fashion. Fourth Youth. Twas not the lover nor the warrior stirred His jealous arm to smite, Xor he who longed to launch forth as a bird In far and lonely flight 106 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT To seek the truth of things, nor he who heard The choral winds in Nature s temple chaunting. All these He could endure, Since his creation and its furniture They merely used, nor vexed his ears with vaunting Themselves creators too And fashioners of worlds, and pilots of them flaunting Beside his in the blue. But some there were infatuate, audacious, To whom the world s vast girth Seemed niggard and unspacious ; "Who, having clambered or been borne on wings Above the realms of sense From off God s secret altars ravished thence The plastic fire of his imaginings And brought it down to earth. Then, pale with supernatural intention, We builders of the over-world arose, And softly to their houses of ascension, Orbing as soft as April buds unclose, But bowelled of the furious lava-stream, Star after ordered star went up the heavens of dream : Each from the other ever differing, 107 Glory from glory, And each a world summed and replete With all the human heart forebodeth well Or hoardeth to repeat Of tragical and sweet In earthly summer and the mortal spring And man s peculiar story, Yet by the mind made an immortal thing, Patiently purged and weaned of its corrupti ble. Oh, how should Man into the dust be trod, Who is himself a god ! How should the lord of each enchanted isle For gazing on a brother-god s high sacrificial sorrow Say himself low and vile, Or for that Sufferer s sake Teen to his own undarkened being borrow, And in a gloom of abnegation break The wand wherewith he summoned from their sleep The whirlwinds of the everlasting deep, And souls of men and spirits of lost hours And spring s sequestered firstlings, the sky flowers, Bound to his golden powers f 108 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Michael. I wait no longer on their stammering tongues ! Once more I pray thee rise and come away. The Valley darkens fast, and Heaven stays Thy single voice to make its concord full. Raphael. These voices we have hearkened lack as well, To make such concord as I care to hear. Michael. Then curse thee for a stubborn heart ! Nay, nay, I will not curse thee whom I love. . . . Take heed Lest any wing patrolling in the dark, Mistaking thee for one of these, should smite. Raphael. Already from the deeps approacheth one, Staining the limbs and faces of the dead With amber as he flies. What clime has blown Azaziel s radiance to so blear a tinct? Azaziel (flying past). Woe ! Woe ! unto the dwellers in this Vale. Woe unto them who wait the second death ! Prepare to meet the Worm that dieth not ! 109 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Raphael. Azaziel, hear ! What meaneth . . . ! Michael. He is past, Bearing his message further. How it sobs And falters 011 the wind ! Raphael. In the deeps begins A myriad lamentation. . . . Michael. Nearer now, And mixed with keener individual cry. . . . Raphael. The sea of death sways moaning and recoils, Bristling with serried surf of forms uplift, Postures of supplication and despair, Forlorn attitudes ! Michael. From the starless sky A star shoots screaming, hushes in mid-flight, And stands at gaze above the vasty cavas, The cjifions and the aged wells of dark Toward which this valley plunges. 110 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Kapluiel. Far below Disastrous splendor glares above the abyss, And in the midst a bulk of sinuous shade That lifts and swings a snaky head aloft Surveying where to strike. . . . Michael. Away ! Away ! Even now his pendulous neck doth sweep the Vale From wall to wall, incredibly advanced Leagues hither, though his lewder folds are still Hid backward in the abyss. Away ! Away ! From yonder peak we may behold all safe : To linger here even spirits dare not. Raphael. I tarry. Let me take thy mighty sword. A minstrel s hand can swing a blade at need. Michael. Not so. Forgive me this my violence ! Thy soul is all distraught and desperate, And I must save thee iu thine own despite. (He overpowers Raphael, and bears him aloft just as the enormous swinging head of the Serpent blots out the scene. ) 111 ACT V. Time : as in Act IV. ACT V. SCENE I. An exposed upland : one side looks down into the Valley of the Judgment, on the others the snow-peaks fade into the visionary cliffs and slopes croivned by the battlements of Heaven. Sunset glow still lingers on the heights : the moon is rising. Raphael (awaking). Where are we, brother ? I remember naught. Michael. Safe lifted o er the Vale, and none too soon. Raphael. Help me to rise. Michael. Nay, rest thee yet a while. Raphael. Something of portent passes in the Vale I cannot well recall, but know tis so By thy wild looking. Can thy vision pierce So downward through the mists ? Mine eyes are weak And blink at the mild moon. 115 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Michael. Spare thou to look. Even ine it grieveth, thee it will destroy With preseiit heart-break. Raphael. O remembrance now Creeps moaning through the sea-halls of my mind, A sluggish neap, with loss and wreckage strewn ! Michael. The Serpent enters now that last defile High lifted toward the spiritual hills. Behind him as he came has silence fallen And gesture ceased : final ineloquence. These hither people are the lesser thewed But more inspirited, who held the fight Vauward against us, and who fell the first Before the whirlwind of our going down. Raphael. Is it too late to save this remnant few For seed of a new world, planted afar Beyond this trouble? Come, thy might and mine ! He lifts a questioning head and seems to stand 116 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Hesitant at the mouth of the defile : There give him battle. . . . Michael. Nay. Raphael. Then I alone. Michael. Too late ; and even if sooner, much too late ! He brings the second death ; his fangs have power, Tis whispered, on the naming seraphim To tarnish or to quench j one venom fleck Flung from his jaws, how might it lame and scar Our substance archangelical. Raphael. Yes, yes, You give me reasons to it. Lovelier Such scars upon the breast, though mortal proven, Than that fair sigil set upon thy brow The morn of thy first victory. Why live, Why live, when all these wills that searched the earth Until they found their one and inward love, Eefusing to be still have ceased to search, Though quite unsatisfied ? To feel the night 117 THE MASQUE OP JUDGMENT Uuvexed of longing, and the day purged blank Of laughter and of sorrow and of brawl ; No pride of life to glory in the sun, No ecstasy to mate the moon s increase, No heart interpreting the twilight thrush All the heart s business done ! Nay, not for me ! Mine ear hath lain too long on Nature s pulse, I cannot miss that music. Let me go. Michael (still detaining him). Govern thy heart and tongue. Nature, thou knowest, "Was but a bye-thought of the Eternal Mind, A whim extravagant, repented of, And now in its chief element of Man Annihilate and put away, save those Who rendered up their wills to His, and share This night with Him the immortal quietudes. Lo, where the Serpent enters ! Quick and dead Loosen their maimed embraces. From beneath Heaves the incumbent carnage. In the clefts And on the headlands scattered souls arise Expectant or imploring . . . Now he reigns Instant among them, and their sayings-nay Decrease and come to nothing. 118 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Raphael. All is done : The great refusal made. The wayward heats That might have moved God s blood to sweetest ends In dreams and deed, have bled themselves away, And peace is his, though profitless. Michael. Hush ! Look ! The Worm goes on ! Raphael. What say st thou ! Speak ! Mine eyes are still too dim, I see not well What passes neath the drifting fogs. Michael Ho mounts , He lays his length upward the visioned hills, The inviolable fundaments of Heaven ! There where he climbs the kindled slopes grow pale, Ashen the amethystine dells, and dim The starry reaches. . . . Now he coils his bulk About a foreland, and the nacrous light It beetled with turns cinder. High he piles His folds, and seems to note the upward way. Hark, the trump sings to battle ! I am called. (He flics upward toward the walls of Heaven.} 119 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Raphael (alone). O darkest creature of God s shaping thought, Shamefullest born, in that unsacred hour A^ien, pining for the pools of ancient sloth, His soul repenteth Him that he had made Man, and had put that passion out to use ! Clearest thou inward now to find the heart That bore thee shuddering and hath fostered thee With secret sweat of agonizing brows ! Has this day s great defection armed thy fang And lit thy wrath to seek Him where He sits Sickening amid his harsh-established peace f On which side then shall Raphael be found, The sociable spirit, very friend of mail And Nature s old-time lover T Surely there At God s right hand, with a loud song for sword To beat the Spectre back when armies fail, And cheer Him as the shepherd Israel s king. (He flics offer Michael.) 120 ACT V. SCENE II. Raphael stands on a promontory of the cloudy tfope up which the Serpent has passed. The Valley of the Judgment lies far below. Eaphael. A mortal weariness beats down my wing ; I cannot farther. Here I must remain, Whether I will or no a truant still, While battle rages round the heart of God, A recreant on the very slopes where first With wistful feet from Heaven adventuring I sought those little flowers of shyest light Whose earthly hue and palpitance would speak A wild distress of sweetness, till my blood Sang wander-songs, and pictured to itself The happy outland chances of the spring. I think none grow now in the muted dells Nor on the chidden reaches ; yet perhaps If I should search as earnestly as once. . . . My mind strays like a fevered child s to-night And plays with leaves and straws, regarding not How fate comes on next instant ! . . . Not alone, Not all companionless must I abide Its coming, love be praised who sends me love 121 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT And comradeship now at my dearest need ! For hither through the wintry windelstrae Flee, veer, and flee a fluttered company With hands outstretched and groping. Woman kind, By the lorn influence that companions thorn And hangs grief in the wind. . . . A. taper . flame Streams backward o er each trembling hand. Twill be The seven dear sister spirits ancillary Who tend their lamps of laud before the Throne. Stay, sisters, stay ! They swerve aside and Hoc More terror-stricken still. I prithee stay ; Tis Raphael calls ! First Lamp. O then art thou too fled ? Haste, let ITS flee together ! We had thought All but the timid spirits still abode The battle s outcome. Timid thou art not, Though woman-gentle ; is the battle lost ? Or won? Oh, surely won, since thou art here. Raphael. I come from earthward. Mortal weariness 122 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Beat down my wing, and I was forced to stay. How goes the struggle ? First Lamp. In and in it stormed From ring to lessening ring, until we fled, I and the sister Lamps, save only one, Our meekest and most patient flame of praise, Whom naught could make afraid. Now by the wind Distract, we wander on these withered hills. Second Lamp. How withered from the day thou brought st us hence Flowers for our lampads ! tiny troublous things That living pierced us with a faint unrest And dying left a nameless woe behind. Raphael. Call up each sweetness over-lived, for soon Sweet shall be sweet no more, nor sad be sad. Momently yonder Heaven s heart of light Throbs feebler, and the dark gains on the day. Now where he runs afar, the sun hath felt Sharp pangs delay his feet, for swiftly hither 123 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT In the distressful beaming of the moon Comes on the wasted light of Uriel. Uriel (approaching). The dream is done ! Petal by petal falls The coronal of creatured bloom God wove To deck his brows at dawn. Raphael. No hope remains ? Uriel. To save Him from himself not cherubim Nor seraphim avail. Who loves not life Beceiveth not life s gifts at any hand. Raphael. And life He loved not, though it sprang from Him? Uriel. He loved it not entirely, good and ill. Raphael. For what end should we love an evil thing! Uriel. Better than I thou knowest, truant soul ! Who all the summer hours didst love to stoop O er insect feuds, herb- whisperings, and watch 124 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT The prurient-fingered sap startle the trees To sudden laughter of bloom. Better than I Thou knowest what lewd rebellion stings the core Of nature, bidding every seed awake To sacramental life after its kind ; Better than I thou kuowest what cruelties Rage round about each starry heroism, Out of what murky stuff the lover builds His soul s white habitation. Tis not mine To lesson thee how height and depth are bound So straitly that when evil dies, as soon Good languishes, nor how the flesh and soul Quicken with striving, and when strife is done Decline from what they were. Raphael. Would He had dared To nerve each member of his mighty frame Man, beast, and tree, and all the shapes of will That dream their darling ends in clod and star To everlasting conflict, wringing peace From, struggle, and from struggle peace again, Higher and sweeter and more passionate With every danger passed ! Would He had spared That dark Antagonist whose enmity Gave Him rejoicing sinews, for of Him 125 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT His foe was flesh of flesh and bone of bone, With suicidal hand He smote him down, And now indeed His lethal pangs begin. First iMinp (to Uriel). Brother, what lies beyond this trouble? Death ! Uriel All live in Him, with Him shall all things die. Second Lamp. And the snake reign, coiled on the holy hill ? Oriel. Sorrow dies with the heart it feeds upon. Raphael. Look, where the red volcano of the fight Hath burst, and down the violated hills Pours ruin and repulse, a thousand streams Choked with the pomp and furniture of Heaven. In vain the Lion ramps against the tide, In vain from slope to slope the giant Wraths Rally but to be broken. Dwindling dim Across the blackened pampas of the wind The routed Horses flee with hoof and wing, Till their trine light is one, and now is quenched. 126 THE MASQUE OF JUDGMENT Uriel. The spirits fugitive from Heaven s brink Put off their substance of ethereal fire And uiourn phantasmal on the phantom alps. Fourth Lamp. Mourn, sisters ! For our light is fading too. Thou of the topaz heart, thou of the jade, And thou sweet trembling opal ye are grown Grey things, and aged as God s sorrowing eyes. First Lamp. My wick burns blue and dim. Second Lamp. My oil is spent. Raphael. The moon smoulders ; and naked from their seats The stars arise with lifted hands, and wait. 127 ,,i UCSOUTHE NREGjONA LIBRARY A UTY III 111 II HI 1 " L, * -j r\ A C. r\