A : i i 3 I 7 i 3 i • o : cr E rpi : 2 ? o ; 1> = CD - J3 ; ^ I -< THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES ■ 6 i^ ©ID TRIlorlD Series SONNETS OF THE WINGLESS HOURS ^^ SONNETS OF THE WINGLESS HOURS BY EUGENE LEE-HAMILTON Portland, Maine THomJis 'B. :moshei^ Mdccccvii^ TK This First Edition on t^an GelJtr paper con- sists of 92$ copies. 8529C1 CONTENTS I. A Wheeled Bed TO THE MUSE .... 5 FAIRY GODMOTHERS 7 IN DREAMS .... 8 TWILIGHT .... 9 TO HEALTH .... lO LOST YEARS .... II FOR THE FLY-LEAF OF " LE MIE PRIGIONi" .... 12 A SNAILS' DERBY . 13 RIVER BABBLE 14 TO OTHERS .... 16 KING CHRISTMAS 17 AN ELFIN SKATE 18 TO MY WHEELED BED . 21 CORSO DE' FIORI 22 AT REST 23 EAGLES OF TIBERIUS 24 TO MY TORTOISE CHRONOS 25 THE SUN-DIAL 26 II. Brush and Chisel ON A GROUP OF FRA ANGELICO'S ANGELS .... THE EVER YOUNG . 31 32 CONTENTS ON RAVHAKI.'S AKCIIANUKL MICHAEL ON TWO OK SIGNORELLI'S FRESCOES THE WAIKS OK TIME TO THE SO-CALLED VKNUS OK MII.O ON AN ILLUSTRATION IN D0R6'S DANTE ON MANTEGNA'S DRAWING OK JUDITH ON THE HORSES UK ST. MARK ON A SURF-ROLLED TORSO OK VENUS FADING GLORIES ON LEONARDO'S HEAD OK MEDUSA 35 36 38 39 4« 43 45 46 47 49 III. Like and Fate THE RING OF KAUSTUS SUNKEN GOLD LIFE'S GAME SOULAC . BY THE FIRE . LETHE HOUNDS OF FATE THE "EISERNE JUNGFRAU " THE SLEDGE THE WRECK ROCK BELL THE SILENT FELLOW NERO'S SAND . MEETING OF GHOSTS 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 VI CONTENTS THE RANSOM OF PERU . SIAMESE TWINS .... Ci^SAR'S GHOST .... A SPANISH LEGEND IN THE WOOD OF DEAD SEA FRUIT PAGE 66 67 68 69 70 IV. The After-Life WAIFS OF A WORLD 73 SEA-SHELL MURMURS • 74 IDLE CHARON .... 75 THE OBOL .... 76 ACHERON 77 THE PHANTOM SHIP 78 MY OWN HEREAFTER 79 WINE OF OMAR KHAYyAm 80 A FLIGHT FROM GLORY . 81 FIREFLIES .... 82 ALL SOULS' DAY 83 THE WRECK OF HEAVEN 85 Miscellaneous WHAT THE SONNET IS . 89 WINTER 90 SONNET GOLD 91 oberon's last council 93 IN MEMORIAM 95 • ROMAN BATHS 96 SPRING 97 VII CONTKNTS TO PHILIP MARSTON OXFORD . MUSSET'S LOUIS D'OR PROMETHEAN FANCIES GOLD OF MIDAS HAUDELAIRE . NIGHT THE DEATH OF PUCK TO FLORENCE SNOW TO A HANDFUL OF MUMMY WHEAT ON THE FLY-LEAF OF DANTE'S "VITA NUOVA" .... FAITH FUMES OF CHARCOAL ON THE FLY-LEAF OF LEOPARDl'S POEMS THE GRAVE OF OMAR KHAYVAm . TO MY TORTOISE ANANK6 EPILOGUE .... . PAOB 98 99 100 101 '03 104 105 106 108 109 no 1 1 1 1 1 2 114 "5 116 "7 SONNETS OF THE WINGLESS HOURS I A WHEELED BED 1873 -1893 TO THE MUSE To keep through life the posture of the grave, While others walk and run and dance and leap ; To keep it ever, waking or asleep. While shrink the limbs that Nature goodly gave ; In summer's heat no more to breast the wave ; No more to wade through seeded grasses deep ; Nor tread the cornfield where the reapers reap ; Nor stretch free limbs beneath a leafy nave : 'Tis hard, 'tis hard; and so in winter too, 'Tis hard to hear no more the sweet faint creak Of the crisp snow, the frozen earth's clear ring. Where ripe blue sloes and crimson berries woo The hopping redbreast. But when thou dost seek My lonely room, sweet Muse, Despair takes wing. II OH, were it not for thee, the dull dead weight Of Time's great coils, too sluggishly unroll'd, Which seem to creep across me fold on fold As I lie prostrate, were for strength too great : For health and motion are not all that Fate, As years go by, continues to withhold ; A yet more noble birthright once was sold For one small mess of pottage that I ate ; And like that king, who, prison'd underground In caves of treasure, saw his starving self Derided by uneatable gold all round, I fix my hungry eyes where, cruelly near. Are standing closed, on every mocking shelf, The books I dare not read and dare not hear. FAIRY GODMOTHERS I THINK the Fairies to my christening came : But they were wicked sprites, and envious elves, Who brought me gall, as bitter as themselves, In tiny tankards wrought with fairy flame. They wished me love of books — each little dame — With power to read no book upon my shelves ; Fair limbs — for palsy; — Dead Sea fruits by twelves And every bitter blessing you can name. But one good Elf there was ; and she let fall A single drop of Poesy's wine of gold In every little tankard full of gall : So year by year, as woes and pains grow old, The little golden drop is in them all ; But bitterer is the cup than can be told. IN DREAMS THINK not I lie upon this couch of pain Eternally, and motionless as clay — Summer and winter, night as well as day — Appealing to the heartless years in vain : VoT now and then the dreams at night unchain My stiffened limbs, and lift the links that weigh As iron never weighed, and let me stray Free as the wind that ripples through the grain. Then can I walk once more, yea, run and leap ; Tread Autumn's rustling leaves or Spring's young grass; Or stand and pant upon some bracing steep ; Or, with the rod, across the wet stones pass Some summer brook ; or on the firm skate sweep In ceaseless circles Winter's fields of glass. TWILIGHT A SUDDEN pang contracts the heart of Day, As fades the glory of the sunken sun. The bats replace the swallows one by one ; The cries of playing children die away. Like one in pain, a bell begins to sway ; A few white oxen, from their labour done, Pass ghostly through the dusk ; the crone that spun Outside her door, turns in, and all grows grey. And still I lie, as I all day have lain. Here in this garden, thinking of the time. Before the years of helplessness and pain ; Or playing with the fringes of a rhyme. Until the yellow moon, amid her train Of throbbing stars, appears o'er yonder lime. TO HEALTH OHhai.th, the years are passing one by one, The Springs succeed the winters ; but each Spring Finds nie where Autumn left me, and thy wing Touches me not, though priceless life-sands run. I see Life's pleasures lost, Life's work undone, And scan Life's waste, which knows no altering, Like those whose eyes, on sea or desert, cling To the horizon which engulfs the sun. Not the ten thousand, when they saw the sea, A pale blue streak, from Asia's endless sand, Shouted as I should shout at sight of thee; No, nor Columbus, when the dawn -breeze fanned His long-strained eyes, and round him thund'ringly Rose to the clouds the cry, " The land ! the land ! " ID LOST YEARS MY boyhood went : it went where went the trace Left by the pony's hoofs upon the sand ; It went where went the stream, sought rod in hand ; It went where went the ice on the pond's face. Then went my youth : it went where Dawn doth chase The ballroom's lights away with pearly wand ; It went where went the echoes of the band ; It went where go the nights that steal day's place. And now my manhood goes where goes the song Of captive birds, the cry of crippled things ; It goes where goes the day that unused dies. The cage is narrow and the bars are strong In which my restless spirit beats its wings ; And round me stretch unfathomable skies. FOR TIIK FLY-LEAF OF " Lli MIE PRIGIONl" TiiKRE was a Poet whom the Austrian cast From dungeon into dungeon ; one whose pains, Writ in this little book which ne'er complains, Helped to raise Italy, like him chained fast; Whose countless counted minutes, in the vast Silence of Spielberg, were to be as grains For Freedom's golden harvest ; till his chains. Made of mere steel, were stricken off at last. What of the shadowy grates, the clankless links, Which no lands watch, but which, like iron bars, Quench Hope's thin flame, which slowly sinks and sinks ? They serve no cause ; they rouse no patriot wars ; But through the bars of shadow and their chinks A face can look, and twilight's few great stars. A SNAILS' DERBY ONCE, in this Tuscan garden, Noon's liuge ball So slowly crossed the sky above my head, As I lay idle on my dull wheeled bed, That, sick of Day's inexorable crawl, I set some snails a-racing on the wall — With their striped shells upon their backs, instead Of motley jockeys — black, white, yellow, red; And watched them till the twilight's tardy fall. And such my life, as years go one by one : A garden where I lie beyond the flowers, And where the snails outrace the creeping sun. For me there are no pinions to the hours ; Compared with them, the snails like racers run : Wait but Death's night ; and, lo, the great ball lowers 13 RIVER BABBI.K THE wreathing of my rhymes has helped to chase Away despair from many a wingless day; And in the corners of my heart I pray That they may last, or leave at least some trace : Yet wpuld I tear them all, could that replace The fly -rod in my hand, this eve of May ; And watch the paper fragments float away Into oblivion, on a trout-stream's face. Thou fool, thou fool I thou weary, crippled fool ! Thou never more wilt leap from stone to stone Where rise the trout in every rocky pool ; Thou never more wilt stand at dusk alone Beside the humming waters, in the cool. Where dance the flies, and make the trout thy own ! M II AND yet I think — if ever years awoke My limbs to motion, so that I could stand Again beside a river, rod in hand. As Evening spreads his solitary cloak — That I would leave the little speckled folk Their happy life — their marvellous command Of stream's wild ways — and break the cruel wand, To let them cleave the current at a stroke, As I myself once could. — Oh, it were sweet To ride the running ripple of the wave As long ago, when wanes the long day's heat ; Or search, in daring headers, what gems pave The river bed, until the bold hands meet, In depths of beryl, what the trick'd eyes crave. 15 . TO OTHERS YK who can roam where thrills the tawny com, Or wade through seeded grass, or who can stray Across the meadows as they make the hay, Or where the dewdrop sparkles on the thorn — If you could lose, but for a single day. Your use of limb, your power to pluck the may In rutty lanes where thrushes sing all day, I wonder, would you speak of life with scorn ? God knows, I would not keep you pent for long In that close cage where anguish pecks the husk Of Life's spilt millet, upon which it thrives; But long enough to let you learn the song Which captive thrushes sing from dawn to dusk : An hour or two would make you love your lives. i6 KING CHRISTMAS Now Old King Christmas, bearded hoary -white, Comes with his holly and carousing noise, Barons of beef, mince pies, and wassail joys, And flame surrounds the pudding blue and bright ; And now the fir-trees, as he comes in sight, Acclaimed by eager blue-eyed girls and boys, Burst into tinsel fruit and glittering toys, And turn into a pyramid of light. I love, in fancy, still to see them all, Those happy children round the dazzling tree Which fills the room with scents of fir and wax ; For still I love that life's sweet things should fall Into the lap of others ; though, for me. The gift of Christmas is but pain that racks. 17 AN ELFIN SKATE I THEY wheeled me up the snowom Art's great wreck is suddenly set free, And stands before us as immortals stand. 38 TO THE SO-CALLED VENUS OF MILO THOU armless Splendour, Victory's own breath ; Embraceless Beauty, Strength bereft of hands ; To whose high pedestal a hundred lands Send rent of awe, and sons to stand beneath ; To whom Adonis never brought a wreath, Nor Tannhauser a song, but whose commands Were blindly followed, by immortal bands Who wooed thee at Thermopyls in death : No Venus thou ; but nurse of legions steeled By Freedom's self, where rang her highest note, And never has thy bosom felt a kiss : No Venus thou ; but on the golden shield Which once thy lost left held, thy lost right wrote : " At Marathon and briny Salamis." 39 II PKRHATS tliy arms are lying where they hold The roots of some old olive, which strikes deep In Attic eartii ; or where the Greek girls reap, With echoes of the harvest hymns of old; Or haply in some seaweed -cusliioned fold Of warm Greek seas, which shadows of ships sweep, While prying dolphins through the green ribs peep, Of sunken galleys filled with Persian gold. Or were they shattered, — pounded back to lime, To make the mortar for some Turkish tower Which overshadowed Freedom for a time ? Or strewn as dust, to make, with sun and shower. The grain and vine and olive of their clime. As was the hand which wrouglit them in an hour ? 40 ON AN ILLUSTRATION IN DORfi'S DANTE No, Heaven is not like this ; nor are the hosts Of the Eternal Sunrise like these flocks Of dim grey gulls, which seem from off the rocks Of utmost Thule's tempest-tortured coasts ; But brighter than the sparkling rosy frosts Of topless Himalay, when Dawn unlocks Light's doors on India ; and the glory mocks What rays then stream through Morning's cloudy posts. I know it as I once was taken there By one who held, though breathing still our air, The diamond clue to that broad dream-made shore " Where the great multitude that no man knows, In garments white as Lebanon's first snows. Walk in the sunrise, knowing death no more." 41 II WiiKN DatUe went with Beatrice of old To l.iRht's transcendent and eternal springs, Where clustered angels glow in wondrous strings Of mystic roses, wreathed and fast unrolled ; Or when he saw, on incandescent gold, The great quadrilles of seraphs form their rings And wind in endless figures — all the wings Were gleaming there, that Heaven can spread or fold. And gleam they ever will, in the pure height Of sky within us, when the soul upgoes To spheres of higher self, from clods and night, Where petals in the luminous gold unclose. And angels, clustered in a rose of light, Glow as a minster's great rose window glows. 42 ON MANTEGNA'S DRAWING OF JUDITH WHAT stony, bloodless Judith hast thou made, Mantegna — draped in many a stony fold ? What walking sleeper whose benumb'd hands hold A stony head and an unbloody blade ? In thine own savage days, wast thou afraid To paint such Judiths as thou mightst behold In open street, and paint the heads that rolled Beneath the axe, and that each square displayed ? No, no ; not such was Judith, on the night When, in the silent camp, she watched alone. Like some dumb tigress, in the tent's dim light Her sleeping prey ; nor when, her dark deed done, She seized the head, and feasted thought and sight Upon a ball that was no ball of stone. 43 II TiiKKE was a gleam of jewels in the (eiit Wliich one dim cresset lit — a baleful gleam — And from liis scattered armour seemed to stream A dusky, evil light that came and went. but from her eyes, as over him she bent, Watching the surface of his drunken dream, There shot a deadlier ray, a darker beam, A look in which her life's one lust found vent. There was a hissing through her tightened teeth, As with her scimitar she crouched above His dark, doomed head, and held her perilous breath. While ever and anon she saw him move His red lascivious lips, and smile beneath His curled and scented beard, and mutter love. 44 ON THE HORSES OF ST. MARK THERE be four brazen stallions of the breed That Nikd drove at Marathon abreast, Who march before St. Mark's with pace repress'd, As if her self were curbing-in their speed; Marching as they have marched through crowd and creed Down all Antiquity with clip-maned crest, And through the Middle Times with broad bronze chest, To trample down the Present like a reed. They march towards the Future of the world, In Time not Space; and what the path is through Is writ in shadowy scrolls not yet unfurl'd ; And as they march, the pigeons waltz and coo Upon their sunlit backs, when eve has curl'd The still canals, as eve is wont to do. 45 ON A SUKFRULLEU TORSO OF VENUS DISCOVERED AT TRII'OLI VECCHIO ONE day, in the world's youth, long, long ago. Before the golden hair of Time grew grey, The bright warm sea, scarce stirred by dolphins' play, Was swept by sudden music strange and low ; And rippling with the kisses Zephyrs blow, Gave forth a dripping goddess, whose strong sway All earth, all air, all wave, was to obey. Throned on a shell more rosy than dawn's glow. And, lo, that self-same sea has now upthrown A mutilated Venus, roH'd and roH'd For centuries in surf, and who has grown More soft, more chaste, more lovely than of old, With every line made vague, so that the stone Seems seen as through a veil which Ages hold. 46 FADING GLORIES THE gold of nimbus and of background sky, Around the auburn heads of sweet young saints Still glows in frescoed cloisters ; but the paints Are fading on the wall since Faith's good-bye. And you, blond angel throngs, who stand and try Your citherns' golden strings; the colour faints Upon your pure green robes, which mildew taints ; You sing your last hosanna, ere you die. The age that made the aureoled is long dead ; The gold behind their heads is sinking sun, And night will wrap them in its pall of lead : They are the dream-shapes of a time when none Hoped earthly good ; and long by man's dark bed They stood and smiled. They fade ; their task is done. 47 II IN or and azure were they shrined of old, \Vl>ere led dim aisle to glowing stained -glass rose, Like life's dim lane, with Heaven at its close; Where censer swung, and organ -thunder rolled; Where mitred, croziered, and superbly stoled, Pale pontiffs gleamed, in dusky minster shows; Where, like a soul that trembling skyward goes, The Easter hymn soared up on wings of gold. And now they stand with aureoles that time dims Near young Greek fauns that pagan berries wreathe, In crowded glaring galleries of dead art. Their hands still fold ; their lips still sing faint hymns ; Or are they prayers that beautiful shapes breathe For shelter in some cold eclectic heart .'' 48 ON LEONARDO'S HEAD OF MEDUSA THE livid and unutterable head, Fresh cut, lies welt'ring in its mane of snakes ; A slowly writhing tangle which still takes Its time to die, round temples that are dead ; While through the lips, wet as with froth of lead, Like the last breath of horror which forsakes Evil's cut throat, a poisonous vapour makes Its way from Hell to Heaven, vague and dread. Already blind, the dying vipers grope. Writhing in vain to leave the head they loathe. Now that it lies there, gory, dead and wan ; Each strangling each in coils of creeping rope. Till death invades them from the brows they clothe. And they coagulate. A toad looks on. 49 il Ill LIFE AND FATE I THE RING OF FAUSTUS THERE is a tale of Faustus, — that one day Lucretia the Venetian, then his love, Had, while he slept, the rashness to remove His magic ring, when fair as a god he lay ; And that a sudden horrible decay O'erspread his face ; a hundred wrinkles wove Their network on his cheek ; while she above His slumber crouched, and watched him shrivel away. There is upon Life's hand a magic ring — The ring of Faith -in-Good, Life's gold of gold; Remove it not, lest all Life's charm take wing ; Remove it not, lest straightway you behold Life's cheek fall in, and every earthly thing Grow all at once unutterably old. S3 SUNKEN GOLD IN dim green depths rot ingot -laden ships; And gold doubloons, that from the drowned hand fell, Lie nestled in the ocean -flower's bell With love's old gifts, once kissed by long-drowned lips ; And round some wrought gold cup the sea -grass whips, And hides lost pearls, near pearls still in their shell, Where sea -weed forests fill each ocean dell And seek dim sunlight with their restless tips. So lie the wasted gifts, the long-lost hopes Beneath the now hushed surface of myself, In lonelier depths than where the diver gropes ; They lie deep, deep ; but I at times behold In doubtful glimpses, on some reefy shelf, The gleam of irrecoverable gold. 54 t LIFE'S GAME Life's Evil Genius witii the sunless wings And our white Guardian Angel sit and play Their silent game of skill from day to day, Where thoughts are pawns, and deeds are set as kings. And every move on that strange chessboard brings Some change in us — in what we do or say ; Till with our life the winner sweeps away The last few pawns to which his rival clings. We seem permitted, ever and anon, To catch a glimpse of that great fatal game By which our soul shall be or lost or won. We watch one move, then turn away in shame ; But though we lack the courage to look on. The game goes on without us all the same. 55 SOULAC ASTRANCK square house, all battered, used to stand Upon the Gascon coast, where sparse pines keep A doubtful footing, as the salt winds sweep The restless hillocks of ill-bladed sand. A house? it was the bell-loft, Norman -plann'd, Of long -lost Soulac's minster, buried deep In sand, which Ocean never seized to heap In its eternal battle with the land. All else was gone : fit image of the fate That overtakes the rich and stately pile Which, arch on arch, life's early dreams create. The real slowly clogs it, nave and aisle. Transept and apse ; and we are glad, if late, Some humble vestige shelters us awhile. 56 BY THE FIRE I SAT beside the log-fire years ago, And, in the dusk made forecasts by its flare, Meting the Future out, to each his share, While danced the restless shadows to and fro. And when at last the yellow flame grew low And leapt and licked no more, I still sat there Watching with eyes fast fixed, but mind elsewhere The darkening crimson of the flameless glow. And now at dusk, I watch once more to-day The slowly -sinking flame, the faint dull crash Of crimson embers deadening into grey ; But see alone the Past, misspent and rash. And wasted gifts, and chances thrown away. The Present and the Future ? All is ash. 57 LETHE I II A I) a dream of Lethe, — of the brink Of shigp;ish waters, whither strong men bore Dead pallid loves; while others, old and sore, IJrought but their tottering selves, in haste to drink : And having drunk, they plunged, and seemed to sink Their load of love or guilt for evermore, Reaching with radiant brow the sunny shore That lay beyond, no more to think and think. Oh, who will give me, chained to Memory's strand, A draught of Lethe, salt with final tears. Were it one drop within the hollow hand ? Oh, who will rid me of the wasted years, The thought of life's fair structure vainly planned, And each false hope that mocking reappears ? 58 HOUNDS OF FATE THE Spaniards trained their bloodhounds once to play A fearful part in battle, and to track The Indians in the swamps where they fell back ; And every hound received a soldier's pay. Sooner or later, where the Indians lay, Hiding their last red gold from screw and rack, Scenting men's flesh, appeared the Cuban pack And filled the forest with their booming bay. And so the hounds of Fate have hunted down The luckless owners of the virgin gold Which we call Genius, since the world began ; Save that the hunted Indians are unknown. While poet and discoverer are enrolled In bitter glory on the Book of Man. 59 THE "lilSERNE JUNGFKAU" TO KATE THOU art that Virgin all of screws and steel, Born in some feudal dungeon of the Rhine, Whose arms were lined witli knives; whose gory shrine Stood in the torture -room with rack and wheel. First at her feet they made the victim kneel, Then kiss her lips ; and, on a silent sign, Her steel arms opened — daggers line on line — And gave the hug that never walls reveal. Thy arms of horror close not upon all : Long whiles they never move; and nothing shows What means the silent riddle of thy face. But now and then, when scarcely we recall What thing thou art, they turn upon their screws And lock us in their murderous embrace. 60 THE SLEDGE MEN throw their better instincts to their worse Much as that Russian mother threw her young Out of the sledge, to stop the wolves that sprung Faster and faster than the maddened horse. With each new victim, taking fresher force. The wild pursuit goes on with shriller tongue ; Another and another child is flung In dizzy panic and without remorse ; The snow-clad firs fly past in endless line ; But faster bound the wolves, still eight or nine, Nearer and nearer, brazen -eyed and shrill ; And when the furious courser stops at last, Vaguely we look around for what we cast Out of Life's sledge, as if we had it still. 6i TllK WRECK ROCK HELL ABOVE Life's waves, with wild ill-omened toll, Just like that warning buoy bell which is washed I5y livid breakers, where a ship has crashed, I hear a bell of shipwreck in my soul. The bitter waste surrounds it ; woe's waves roll For ever t'wards it ; spray of hope long dashed Leaps over it ; and, ever faster lashed, It howls its dirge of ruin on the shoal. " Too late, too late," it thunders through the dark, With brazen tongue, that drips eternal brine, " Thy race is run; thou wouldst not heed or hark. " Too late, too late. Man sails, by foul or fine, One voyage only in his life's swift bark ; One and no more. What made thee shipwreck thine ? " 62 THE SILENT FELLOW ii 1 T 7 HO art thou, silent brother ? Art thou Pain, — VV In face so like me ; sitting on the bed In which I lie ? " — " Pain for to-day has said Good-night." — " Then Weariness ? " — " No ; wrong again.'' " Thou hast a branch of bay, still wet with rain : Art thou my former self, from years long fled ? Or Hope or Loneliness?" — "No, Hope is dead, And thy old self lies low in Time's dull plain. " None of all these am I ; although men say I have a look of all. The part I play Is to reflect what stronger gods control : " I am thy Sonnet Spirit ; and to-day I bring a branch of Dead Sea fruit, not bay. Plucked by the bitter waters of the soul." 63 NERO'S SAND ONCE, under Nero, there was lack of bread In mighty Rome ; and eyes were strained to meet The shi])s from Egypt, laden with the wheat With which the Mistress of the World was fed. Hut when at last, with every swelled sail spread. They hove in sight, there ran from street to street A sudden rumour that the longed-for fleet Brought sand for Nero's circuses instead. So Fate misfreights the vessel of our lives Which might have carried grain of very gold And nils it to the water-mark with sand; And Folly's breezes helping, it arrives Safely in port, where Death unloads the hold. And all the cheated angels round it stand. 64 MEETING OF GHOSTS WHEN years have passed, is't wise to meet again ? Body and Mind have changed ; and is it wise To take old Time, the Alterer, by surprise, And see how he has worked in human grain ? We think that what once was, must still remain ; Ourself a ghost, we bid a ghost arise ; Two spectres look into each other's eyes, And break the image that their hearts contain. Mix not the Past and Present : let the Past Remain in peace within its jewelled shrine, And drag it not into the hum and glare ; Mix not two faces in the thoughts that last ; The one thou knewest, fair in every line, And one unknown, which may be far from fair. 65 THE RANSOM OF PERU THE conquered Inca to Pizarro said: " I swear to fill this hall with virgin gold, As high as any Spaniard here can hold His steel-gloved hand, if thou wilt spare my head." Then streamed the ingots from their rocky bed : For weeks and weeks the tide of treasure roll'd To reach the mark ; but when the sum was told, The victor only strangled him instead. And many have said to Fate : " If I may eat Life's sweet coarse bread, the ransom shall be pour'd In rhymes of gold at thy victorious feet." But like Pizarro waiting for his hoard, Fate gave them chains ; and letting them complete The glittering heap, then drew the strangling cord. 66 SIAMESE TWINS KNOW you how died those twins, famed far and near, Who, tethered hip to hip, with Fate's strong thread. Were forced to walk through life with equal tread, And to be friends and share at last one bier ? How one awoke one day, and could not hear His brother's breath, and felt, and found him dead ; And how, compelled to share a dead man's bed. He died of an unutterable fear ? Body and Mind have link of like dread kind : Woe to the Body, blind and helpless clod. That wakes one day, and hears the Mind no more; But ten times woe to the surviving Mind, Bom to create, command, and play the god : Bound to a corpse, it struggles still to soar. 67 OESAR'S GHOST IN that sharp war where Caesar's slayers died, There was a moment when it seemed decreed, As sank tlie sun blood-red in clumps of reed, That victory should take the guilty side: liut just as they were winning fast and wide, The ghost of Ca;sar, on a phantom steed, Bore down on Cassius with a soundless speed, And with a sword of shadow turned the tide. I think that in Life's battle, now and then. The ghost of some high impulse or great plan, Wliich they have murdered, may appear to men. And, like the shade of Ccesar, check the van Of their success, though odds to one be ten, And cow their soul, as only phantoms can. 68 A SPANISH LEGEND THERE is a story in a Spanish book, About a noisy reveller, who, one night, Returning home with others, saw a light Shine from a window, and climbed up to look ; And saw, within the room, hanged to a hook, His own self-strangled self, grim, rigid, white; And, stricken sober by that livid sight. Feasting his eyes, in wordless horror shook. Has any man a fancy to look in, And see as through a window, in the Past, His nobler self, self -choked with coils of sin. Or sloth, or folly? — round the throat whipped fast, The nooses give the face a stiffened grin : 'Tis but thyself; look well; why be aghast? 69 IN THE WOOD OF DEAD SEA I'KUIT I LAY beneath the trees of Dead Sea ¥nih, Whose every leaf records a life's mistake; And pored with eyes eternally awake Upon the bitter waters at their root ; Searching dead chances ; letting If's eyes shoot Through depths that profitable thoughts forsake As birds forsake Avernus, when the lake Yields its old fumes, that numb both man and brute. This is the pool which mirrors him who bends Over its stillness, such as once he was, Not such as now he is, in face and eyes : Its depths are strewn with all that youth misspends; With all the wasted chances that life has ; And there all Ophir, all Golconda, lies. 70 IV THE AFTER-LIFE « WAIFS OF A WORLD LONG ere Columbus in the breeze unfurled His venturous sail to hunt the setting sun, Long ere he fired his first exultant gun Where strange canoes all round his flagship whirled, The unsailed ocean which the west wind curled Had borne strange waifs to Europe, one by one : Wood carved by Indian hands, and trees like none Which men then knew, from an untrodden world. Oh for a waif from o'er that wider sea Whose margin is the grave, and where we think A gem-bepebbled continent may be I But all in vain we watch upon the brink ; No waif floats up from black infinity. Where all who venture out for ever sink. 73 SEASllELL MUKMUKS Till, liollow sea-shell which for years halh stood On dusty shelves, when held against the ear Proclaims its stormy parent ; and we hear The faint far murmur of the breaking flood. We hear the sea. The sea ? It is the blood In our own veins, impetuous and near, And pulses keeping pace with hope and fear And with our feelings' every shifting mood. Lo, in my heart I hear, as in a shell, The murmur of a world beyond the grave, Distinct, distinct, though faint and far it be. Thou fool ; this echo is a cheat as well, — The hum of earthly instincts ; and we crave A world unreal as the shell -heard sea. 74 IDLE CHARON THE shores of Styx are lone for evermore, And not one shadowy form upon the steep Looms through the dusk, far as the eye can sweep, To call the ferry over as of yore ; But tintless rushes, all about the shore. Have hemmed the old boat in, where, locked in sleep. Hoar-bearded Charon lies ; while pale weeds creep With tightening grasp all round the unused oar. For in the world of Life strange rumours run That now the Soul departs not with the breath, But that the Body and the Soul are one ; And in the loved one's mouth, now, after death. The widow puts no obol, nor the son, To pay the ferry in the world beneath. 75 THE OIJOL" StARCK have I rhymed of Charon looming grey Amid pale rushes, through the dusky air, And of the obol we no longer care To put in dead men's mouths as ferry-pay, When, lo, I find, among some pence, to-day Received as common change, I know not where, A stray Greek obol, seeming Charon's fare To put between my lips when I be clay. Poor bastard Obol, even couldst thou cheat The shadowy Boatman, I should scarcely find The heart to cross : extinction seems so sweet. I need thee not ; and thou shalt be consigned To some old wliining beggar in the street. Whose soul shall cross, while mine shall stay behind. I The coin referred to in this sonnet was a modem Greek piece of five lepta, rather smaller than a halfpenny, and bearing the word Obolos on the reverse. 76 ACHERON WHERE rolls in silent speed through cave on cave Soul -freighted Acheron, and no other light Evokes the rocks from an eternal night Than the pale phosphorescence of the wave, Shall men not meet, and have one chance to crave Forgiveness for rash deeds — one chance to right Old earthly quarrels, and, in Death's despite, Unsay the said, and heal the pang they gave ? See, see ! there looms from yonder soul-filled barque That passes ours, a long-loved, long-lost face, And with a cry we stretch our ghostly arms. But heeding not, they whirl into the dark, Bound for a sea beyond all time and space, Which neither life nor love nor sunlight warms. 77 THE PHANTOM SHIT WK touch Life's shore as swimmers from a wreck Who shudder at the cheerless land they reach, And find their comrades gathered on the beach Watching a fading sail, a small white speck — The phantom ship, upon whose ample deck There seemed awhile a homeward place for each. The crowd still wring their hands and still beseech. But see, it fades, in spite of prayer and beck. Let those who hope for brighter shores no more Not moum, but turning inland, bravely seek What hidden wealth redeems the iron shore. The strong must build stout cabins for the weak ; Must plan and plough ; must sow and reap and store ; For grain takes root, though all seems bare and bleak. 78 MY OWN HEREAFTER WHERE angel trumpets hail a brighter sun With their superb alarum, and the flash Of angel cymbals dazzles as they clash, Seek not to find me, when my sands are run ; Nor where, in mail of sapphire every one, God's sentries man the walls, that Light's waves wash With an eternal angel -heard faint plash — But in some book of sonnets, when day's done. There in the long June twilight, as you read, You will encounter my immortal parts, If any such I have, from earth's clay freed ; Divested of their sins, to be the seed Perhaps of some slight good in other's hearts. That is the only after-life I need. 79 WINE OF OMAR KHAYYAM HE rode the flame winged dragon steed of 'ihought Through Space and Darkness, seeking Ileav'nand Hell And searched the furthest stars where souls might dwell To find God's justice; and in vain he sought. Then, looking on the dusk-eyed girl who brought His dream filled wine beside his garden well. He said : " Her kiss ; the wine-jug's drowsy spell ; Bulbul ; the roses ; death ; — all else is naught : " So drink till that." — What, drink, because the abyss Of Nothing waits ? because there is for man But one swift hour of consciousness and light ? No. — Just because we have no life but this. Turn it to use; be noble while you can ; Search, help, create ; then pass into the night. 80 A FLIGHT FROM GLORY ONCE, from the parapet of gems and glow, An Angel said, " O God, the heart grows cold On these eternal battlements of gold, Where all is pure, but cold as virgin snow. " Here sobs are never heard ; no salt tears flow ; Here there are none to help — nor sick nor old ; No wrong to fight, no justice to uphold : Grant me Thy leave to live man's life below." " And then annihilation ? " God replied. " Yes," said the Angel, " even that dread price; For earthly tears are worth eternal night." " Then go," said God. — The Angel opened wide His dazzling wings, gazed back on Heaven thrice, And plunged for ever from the walls of Light. 8i FIREFLIES Ni)\v one by one the live winged sparks of night, l^ike souls allowed to wander as they please Througli old loved haunts, go by between the trees In silent zigzags of alternate light; And grow in number, bodiless and bright, So that the eye, too slow to count them, sees Nothing but fire all round ; till by degrees Quenched in the dawn, they vanish from the sight. And those more subtle sparks, which they recall. The countless souls with which regret and love Once peopled Death's great night, are they quenched too ? Has Thought's strong dawn, which searches into all. Reached even them, unpeopling Heaven above. To leave us nothing but the empty blue ? 82 ALL SOULS' DAY ALL Souls' Day's wintry light is on the wane ; The Tuscan furrows darken deeper brown : And still the sower, ever up and down, Is hard at work, broad scattering his grain : As since dim times, again and yet again (Beginning with old nations scarcely known, Pelasgi and Etruscans) he has thrown His seed upon this old Italic plain. And what became of all those shadowy dead Who sowed their wheat, built Cyclopean walls And left their lives unwritten on man's scrolls ? Just what became of what they sowed for bread — Of grain that breeds fresh grain that falls and falls : Earth had their bones : and who shall find their souls ? 83 II WHAT heavens that grow, what hells that still expand, Would hold the close-packed souls of all who found Earth's bread or sweet or bitter, and were bound In sheaves of shadow by the silent hand — The close -packed souls of every time and land ; Millions of millions mingled with the ground ; Of all the mounded mummy -dust all round; Who, back on earth, would fight for room to stand, Nor find his square foot each ? — But dusk has grown ; The fields are empty ; day is dying fast ; And, save one figure, all is grey and lone ; The figure of the sower who has cast Wheat for the quick where countless dead have sown. And passes ghostlike on his way at last. 84 THE WRECK OF HEAVEN I 1HAD a vision : naught for miles and miles But shattered columns, shattered walls of gold, And precious stones that from their place had roll'd, And lay in heaps, with litter'd golden tiles ; While, here and there, amid the ruined piles Of gold and sardius, and their sparkling mould, Wild tufts of amaranth had taken hold. Scenting the golden desert like sweet isles. And not one soul, and not one step nor sound. Until there started up a haggard head Out of the gold, from somewhere underground. Wildly he eyed me and the wreck all round : " Who'rt thou ? " quoth I. He shrilled a laugh and said ; " The last of souls. I haunt this dazzling mound." 85 II AY, ay, the gates of pearl are crumbling fast ; The walls of beryl topple stone by stone ; The throngs of souls in white and gold are gone; The jasper pillars lie where they were cast; The roofless halls of gold are dumb and vast ; The courts of jacinth are for ever lone ; Through shattered chrysolite the blind winds moan ; And topaz moulders into earth at last. And earth is the reality : its hue Is brown and sad ; its face is hard to till ; Upon man's brow the sweat must hang like dew. But grain takes root, in valley, plain and hill, Tho' never Heaven's amaranth here grew. And grain breeds grain, and more and more grain still. 86 V MISCELLANEOUS WHAT THE SONNET IS FOURTEEN small broidered berries on the hem Of Circe's mantle, each of magic gold ; Fourteen of lone Calypso's tears that roll'd Into the sea, for pearls to come of them ; Fourteen clear signs of omen in the gem With which Medea human fate foretold ; Fourteen small drops, which Faustus, growing old. Craved of the Fiend, to water Life's dry stem. It is the pure white diamond Dante brought To Beatrice ; the sapphire Laura wore When Petrarch cut it sparkling out of thought ; The ruby Shakespeare hewed from his heart's core ; The dark, deep emerald that Rossetti wrought For his own soul, to wear for evermore. 89 WINTER Now is the time when Nature may display Her frosty jewelry in ail men's eyes, And every breeze that through the brushwood sighs Brings down her brilliants in a glittering spray. Like drops of blood upon the snow -strewn way, The crimson berries lie, the robins' prize ; While, in the leafless woods, the poor man tries To find some faggots for the bitter day. On every sleeping pool the winter fits With unseen hand a strong and glassy lid; The frightened fish beneath the skater flits, And quaking, in the lowest depths lies hid; And old King Christmas at his revel sits. Where all whom hunger pinches not are bid. 90 SONNET GOLD WE get it from Etruscan tombs, hid deep Beneath the passing ploughshare ; or from caves Known but to Prospero, where pale -green waves Have rolled the wreck-gold, which the mermaids keep And from the caverns, where the gnomes up -heap The secret treasures, which the Earth's dwarf slaves Coin in her bosom, till the red gold paves Her whole great heart, where only poets peep ; Or from old missals, where the gold defies Time's hand, in saints' bright aureoles, and keeps. In angels' long straight trumpets, all its flash; But chiefly from the crucible, where lies The alchymist's pure dream-gold. — While he sleeps The poet steals it, leaving him the ash. 91 II WHAT shall we make of sonnet gold for men ? The dove-wreathed cup some youth to I'hryne gave ? Or dark Locusta's phial which shall have Chiselled all round it. snakes from Horror's den ? Or that ill ring, which sank in fathoms ten, When Faliero spoused the Venice wave ? Or Inez' funeral crown, the day the grave Showed her for coronation, all myrrh then ? The best to make would be a hilt of gold For Life's keen falchion, — like a dragon's head Fierce and fantastic, massive in your hold ; But oft our goldsmith's chisel carves, instead, A fretted shrine, for sorrows that are old And passions that are sterile, or are dead. 92 OBERON'S LAST COUNCIL I IF, on some woodland lawn, you see a ring Of darker hue upon the paler grass — The strange green growth which children as they pass Still tell each other is a fairy thing Left by the Elves o'er-night — let your soul cling To the sweet thought that there the Elf King was With all his crew at dawn ; but that, alas ! They met their for their last, last gathering. For they are fled: and though the sunshine still Dances in flecks, as dance the leaves above, And still the squirrel nibbles and the mouse. The little folk are gone who used to fill The hazel copses where the wild wood -dove With cross -laid twigs still builds her breezy house. 93 II HE called a last assembly of the Elves. Hundreds of Fairies in the forest met Round one huge oak-tree — Sprites of dry and wet, Pixies and Imps, and every gnome that delves: And Oberon said: " We lurk by tens and twelves, Starved in the woods. Man's faith — our food as yet Feeds us no more ; the F"airies' sun has set : We are but shadows of our former selves. " 'Tis time to leave the woods and we must part. When faith quite ends — so say the High Decrees — Then Death will strike us with his icy dart. " Ixjng have we nestled in the hearts of trees ; Now we must nestle in the Poet's heart — The only place where fairies never freeze." 94 IN MEMORIAM MARSTON, mourn not; Rossetti is not dead, Though chill as clay is now his shrouded brow Nor grudge the grave the flesh it gathers now The soul remains, to live on earth instead. And thou that wast his friend, if e'er I said A word in harshness, hear me disavow. While such small wreath as I can wreathe I throw Upon the stone that covers now his head. The wintry breath of Azrael hath swept A green leaf to the heap of bygone leaves Where Alighieri and where Shakespeare lie. Mourn not. Each day some brother dies unwept, But he for whom the distant stranger grieves, Outlives mere life ; for men he doth not die. April 14, 1882. 95 ROMAN BATHS THERE were some Koman baths where we spent hours Immense and lonely courts of rock -like brick, All overgrown with verdure strong and thick, And girding sweet wild lawns all full of flowers. One day, beneath the turf, green with the showers Of all the centuries since Genseric, They found rich pavements hidden by Time's trick, Adorned with tritons, dolphins, doves like ours. So, underneath the surface of To-day, Lies Yesterday, and what we call the Past, The only thing which never can decay. Things bygone are the only things that last : The Present is mere grass, quick -mown away ; The Past is stone, and stands for ever fast. 96 SPRING THERE lurks a sadness in the April air For those who note the fate of earthly things ; A dreamy sense of what the future brings To those too good, too hopeful or too fair. An underthought of heartache, as it were, Blends with the pjean that the new leaf sings ; And, as it were, a breeze from Death's great wings Shakes down the blossoms that the fruit-trees bear. The tide of sap flows up the forest trees ; The birds exult in every bough on high ; The ivy bloom is full of humming bees ; But if you list, you hear the latent sigh ; And each new leaf that rustles in the breeze Proclaims the boundless mutability. 97 TO PHI LI r MAKSTON To walk in darkness through the sunlit wood, And know no leaves but dead ones on the ground, While Spring's young green is waving all around, And joyous Nature spurns her widowhood ; To have no share in each successive mood Of wayward Day, by Night for ever bound ; To know the Morn but by the growing sound. Eve by its chill, not by its Sunset flood : Such is thy portion in this world of light. Where only voices — more like souls set free Than living men — surround thee in thy plight. God said from out the Darkness, " Let Light be ;" And Day sprang dazzling from the lap of Night. Alas, my Friend, He said it not for thee. 98 OXFORD So you will see what I can see no more ; The old black stone, all round the bright young grass ; The towers, panelled halls, and fair stained glass ; The sunlit turf through some old oaken door ; And that green river with the sedgy shore ; The motley barges, and the huddled mass Of breathless cheerers, as the swift eights pass In desperate race, with long bent feathering oar. The years go by, and all is fading fast ; The crowd in cap and gown are mere ghosts now And that bright river glides into the Past ; The colleges and elm -girt towers grow Each year more unsubstantial than the last, Like fair dissolving views that lose their glow. 99 MUSSET'S I,()UIS IVOR ASLEEP, a little fisher-girl one day Lay on the shingle in an old boat's shade; Her skirt was tattered, and the sea-breeze played With her brown loosened hair a ceaseless play. A poet chanced to pass as there she lay ; Her sun -burnt face, her tatters he surveyed ; A golden coin between her lips he laid. And, letting her sleep on, he went his way. What came of that gold windfall ? Did it breed Those long-loved coins which patient thrift can show With proud pure smile, to meet the household need ? Or stolen gold ? or those curst coins which grow Each year more sought, more loathed, and are the meed Of women's loveless kisses ? Who can know ? ICO PROMETHEAN FANCIES I WHEN on to shuddering Caucasus God pours The phials of his fury hoarded long, Plunging in each abyss his fiery prong As if to find a Titan ; when loud roars The imprisoned thunder groping for the doors Of never-ending gorges ; when, among . The desperate pines, Storm howls his battle song — Then wakes Prometheus, and his voice upsoars. Yea, when the midnight tempest hurries past, There sounds within its wail a wilder wail Than that which tells the anguish of the blast ; And when the thunder thunders down the gale, A laugh within its laugh tells woe so vast That God's own angels in the darkness quail. lOI II PKOMKTHKUS— none may see him. Hut at night, When heaven's bolt has made some forest flare- On Caucasus, and when the broad red glare Flushes from crag to crag at infinite height, Staining the snow, or running ruby -bright Along the myriad glacier crests to scare The screaming eagles out of black chasms, where. But half dislodged, the dark still grapples tight : Then on some lurid monstrous wall of rock The Titan's shadow suddenly appears Gigantic, flickering, vague ; and, storm-unfurled, Seems still to brave, with hand that dim chains lock Midway in the unendingness of years, The Author of the miscreated world. 102 GOLD OF MIDAS THE poet is the alchymist of thought — The Midas whose too sovereign touch, of old, Transmuted every trifle into gold, And gilt the very clay the potter wrought. No common mountain torrent he has sought And bathed his soul in, but has straightway roll'd Auriferous sands ; no maze where he has stroll'd, But gleams with ponderous ingots rich as aught That Midas ever gilt. — But woe, thrice woe, If, locked in his own gold, he should forget, Like that same Midas, how and why we live : He craved a Universe of gold; and lo, The bread became a nugget as he ate, And filled his mouth with all that gold can give. 103 BAUDELAIRE A Paris gutter of the good old times, Black and putrescent in its stagnant bed, Save where the shamble oozings fringe it red, Or scaffold trickles, or nocturnal crimes. It holds dropped gold ; dead flowers from tropic climes ; Gems true and false, by midnight maskers shed ; Old pots of rouge; old broken phials that spread Vague fumes of musk, with fumes from slums and slimes. And everywhere, as glows the set of day. There floats upon the winding fetid mire The gorgeous iridescence of decay : A wavy film of colour, gold and fire, Trembles all through it as you pick your way, And streaks of purple that are straight from Tyre. 104 NIGHT THOU heedest not, inexorable Night, Whether besought from some lone prison cell To stay thy hours, by one whose dying knell Will sound not later than return of light, Or prayed to urge them by some suffering wight Who notes their creep as wearily and well As men not for eternity in Hell May note the purging flames' decreasing height. Hark 1 in the street I hear a distant sound Of music and of laughter and of song. As go a band of revellers their round : And under prison -walls it comes along, And under dull sick-rooms, where moans abound ; For who shall grudge their strumming to the strong ? 105 THE DEATH OK TUCK I IKEAR that Puck is dead — it is so long Since men last saw him — dead with all tiie rest Of that sweet elfin crew that made their nest In hollow huts, where hazels sing their song; Dead and for ever, like the antique throng The elves replaced ; the Dryad that you guessed Behind the leaves; the Naiad weed-bedressed; The leaf -eared Faun that loved to lead you wrong. Tell me, thou hopping Robin, hast thou met A little man, no bigger than thyself, Whom they call Puck, where woodland bells are wet ? Tell me, thou Wood -Mouse, hast thou seen an elf Whom they call Puck, and is he seated yet, Capped with a snail -shell, on his mushroom shelf? io6 II THE Robin gave three hops, and chirped, and said : " Yes, I knew Puck, and loved him ; though I trow He mimicked oft my whistle chuckling low; Yes, I knew cousin Puck ; but he is dead. " We found him lying on his mushroom bed — The Wren and I — half covered up with snow, As we were hopping where the berries grow. We think he died of cold. Ay, Puck is fled." And then the Wood-Mouse said : " We made the Mole Dig him a little grave beneath the moss. And four big Dormice placed him in the hole. " The Squirrel made with sticks a little cross ; Puck was a Christian elf, and had a soul ; And all we velvet jackets mourn his loss." 107 TO FLORENCE SNOW I'UR THE FI.Y-LKAK UK A HOOK OK SONNETS I SEN I) these berries which in sweet woods grew ; Small crimson crans, on which has slept the deer; Spiked red-dropt butcher's broom, the bare foot's fear; Blue berries of the whortle wet with dew; And gummy berries of the tragic yew ; With mistletoe, — each bead a waxen tear; And ripe blue sloes that mark a frosty year ; And hips and haws, from lanes that Keats once knew. I know not if the berries of the West Are such as those of Europe; but I know That Kansas breeds a flower, which, unguessed, Can climb up prison-walls, and gently grow- Through prison -bars where suffering has its nest, And where the wingless hours crawl sad and slow. 1 08 TO A HANDFUL OF MUMMY WHEAT Thou'rt older than would be that pale gold wheat Which, on a harvest evening, in the youth Of fields of corn, the wistful gleaner Ruth Saw in the fragrant twilight at her feet. Wave after wave of human life has beat Against the silent tomb in which, like truth Locked in dark error, thou hast braved the tooth Of nibbling Time, safe in a mummy's sheet. Go forth, go forth, that once again the sun May kiss thee into ripeness, and the breath Of morn make ripples in thy golden dun ; And multiply till every grain beneath My finger, fills a garner ; so that none May say that in the Past there is but Death. 109 ON THE FLY-LEAF OF DANTE'S "VITA NUOVA" THERE was a tall stern Exile once of old, Who paced Verona's streets as dusk shades fell, With step as measured as the vesper bell, And face half-hidden by his hood's dark fold ; One whom the children, as he grimly stroll'd. Would shrink from in the fear of a vague spell, Crying, " The man who has been down to Hell," Or hanging in his footsteps, if more bold. This little book is not by that stern man. But by his younger self, such as he seems In Giotto's fresco, holding up the flower, Thinking of her whose hand, by Fate's strange plan, He never touched on earth, but who, in dreams. Oft led him into Heaven for an hour. I lO FAITH THERE is a startling legend that is known To Spanish scholars : how the fertile land For years was ravaged by a robber band, Led by a Knight with visor ever down ; And how, at last, when he was overthrown. The shape which made so desperate a stand And quivered still, was found to be, when scann'd, A suit of armour, empty heel to crown. Nought fights like Emptiness. — Beneath the veil Of Islam's warlike Prophet, from Bagdad To Roncevaux, it made the nations quail ; And once, as Templar and Crusader clad, It shook the world. — Ev'n now. Faith's empty mail Still writhes and struggles with the life it had. 1 1 FUMES OF CHARCOAL SfpUmber, 1889 I DEATH has no shape more stealthy. — There you sit, With all unchanged around you, in your chair, Watching the wavy tremor of the air Above the little brazier you have lit, While Death begins to amorously flit In silent circles round you, till he dare Touch with his lips, and, crouching o'er you there. Kiss you all black, and freeze you bit by bit. Yet she could walk upon the bracing heath. When steams the dew beneath the morning sun, And draw the freshness of the mountain's breath : Were charcoal fumes more sweet as, one by one. Life's lights went out, beneath that kiss of Death, And, turning black, the life-blood ceased to run ? 112 II IF some new Dante in the shades below, While crossing that wan wood, where the self slain, Changed into conscious trees, soothe their dull pain By sighs and plaints, as tears can never flow. Should hear an English voice, like west wind low. Come from the latest tree, and, letting strain His ear against its trunk, should hear quite plain The soul's heart tick within, though faint and slow : Then let him ask : "O Amy, in the land Of the sweet light and of the sweet live air. Did you ne'er sit beside a friend's wheeled bed, " That you could thus destroy, at Hell's command, All that he envied you, and choke the fair Young flame of life, to dwell with the wan dead ?" "3 ON THE FLY-LEAF OF LEOPAKDl'S I'OEMS TiiF.RK was a hunchback in a slavish day, Crushed out of shape by Heaven's iron weight, Who made the old Italic string vibrate In Freedom's harp, on which few dared to play ; A Titan's soul in ^sop's cripple clay ; A dwarf Prometheus, blasted by Jove's hate, Who scorned the God that held him locked in fate, And called the world the mud in which he lay. And mud it is ; but mud which can be tilled To grow the wheat, the olive, and the grape. And fill more gamers than men's hands can build. And those bare tracts, whence all would fain escape, Conceal, perchance, some buried urn all filled With golden Darics stamped with a winged shape. 114 THE GRAVE OF OMAR KHAYYAM THEY washed his body with a wine of gold, And wrapped it round, to meet his last desire. In leaves of vine, whose every pale green spire Tightened about him with an amorous hold ; And then they buried him in vineyard mould, Where vintage hymns in Summer's dusk expire, And where great vine -roots sucked all round him fire For fiery cups, as ages o'er him roU'd. A lethargy creeps o'er us on this spot Where bulbul warbles on Oblivion's brink, And all that man should live for is forgot. The wine-girl floats towards us with her cup ; Or is it Azrael with darker drink ? Wake up, wake up ; shake free thy soul ; wake up I "5 TU MY TORTUISE ANANKfi SAY it were true, that thou outliv'st us all, O footstool once of Venus ; come, renew Thy tale of old Greek isles, where thy youth grew In myrtle shadow, near her temple wall ; Or tell me how the eagle let thee fall Upon the Greek bard's head, from heaven's blue, And Apathy killed Song. — And is it true That tliy domed shell would bear a huge stone hall ? O Tortoise, Tortoise, there are weights, alack, Heavier than stone, and viewless as the air, Which none have ever tried upon thy back ; Which, ever and anon, we men must bear; Weights which would make thy solid cover crack ; And how we bear them, let those ask who care. ii6 EPILOGUE {WROUGHT them like a targe of hammered gold On which all Troy is battling round and round ; Or Circe's cup, embossed with snakes that wound Through buds and myrtles, fold on scaly fold ; Or like gold coins, which Lydian tombs may hold, Stamped with winged racers, in the old red ground ; Or twined gold armlets from the funeral mound Of some great viking, terrible of old. I know not in what metal I have wrought ; Nor whether what I fashion will be thrust Beneath the clods that hide forgotten thought ; But if it is of gold it will not rust ; And when the time is ripe it will be brought Into the sun, and glitter through its dust. PRINTED BY SMITH 6- SALE PORTLAND MAINE Thi« book ii DUE on iht- last dale itatnped below. Il^TERLIBRARV LC NOV 1 4 1963 LOANS FOUR WEEKS FROM NON RENEWABLE iM DAIL 0^ KLCUei REMINGTON RAND INC. 20 213 (533) THK UDHRAKT oNivsRsmr OF cau UM iLNfiBUBB PR 1879 L516s